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On the cover
On the Cover Featured on "5 Signs a Spotify Playlist Is Fake"

i can excuse Dua Lipa, but i draw the line at Jeff Bezos

Hilde's Visions uses Dua Lipa's new gig as Nespresso's Global Ambassador to ask a question anyone in artist marketing has quietly sidestepped: how much does progressive branding actually survive contact with the corporations writing the checks? Nestle's rap sheet — child labor, water extraction in drought zones — isn't obscure. It's Google-able. The essay isn't really about Lipa. It's about the math we all do when the brand deal lands.

Voice & Culture Read on Hilde's Visions →
The Atlantic · AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The Millions of Songs Mashed Into AI-Generated Music

The Atlantic digs into the training data behind Suno and Udio, and the picture isn't pretty: millions of copyrighted tracks ground into slurry, then reassembled into outputs that occasionally spit back recognizable lyrics verbatim. The piece uses Olympic figure skaters performing to an AI track with New Radicals fragments as its hook, but the real weight is in the questions it raises about what AI-generated music actually contains.

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Stems · Music Industry Analysis

Qobuz's Boom Shows the Spotify Backlash Isn't Just a Media Thing

Stems talks to Qobuz's U.S. managing director about the French streamer's 45% growth year — five times the industry rate. The throughline: Liz Pelly's Spotify critique drove a measurable subscriber bump, and ICE recruitment ads on Spotify triggered their biggest signup day ever. At 1.2 million subscribers and 100 employees, Qobuz is a rounding error for majors. But the pitch is resonating: curated picks, actual music writing, no algorithm. Sometimes the backlash is the product.

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01 Music & Scene

Honest Songcraft in the Slop Era

Nate Chinen and Gabriel Kahane conducted a Substack Live conversation about creative practice, productive friction, and making art during precarious times. The discussion ranged from Stephen Sondheim's theatrical music to artificial intelligence and automation, with nuanced perspectives on both topics.

Read on The Gig →

Training our ears to what's real

Keith Jopling builds his case around a simple symmetry: if AI trains on songs, listeners need to train their ears in return. Anchored in David Hockney's work ethic and a Manchester trio whose practice showed in every note, the piece argues that deliberate listening — learning to hear transients, spotting AI's smoothed-off attack — is the fan's side of the bargain.

Read on Song Sommelier →

The '80s Black New Wave Sound

Nelson George makes the case that Black new wave — Prince's Minneapolis sound cross-wired with UK dance, Linn drums, and skinny ties — was its own coherent genre moment, not just a detour. Writing from memory (he was at Trax and the Peppermint Lounge), George maps the movement through Cameo, Shalamar, and Jermaine Jackson, then hands you the playlist.

Read on The Nelson George Mixtape →

Rap Is Rebellion: An Interview with AZ

An in-depth interview with 54-year-old rap veteran AZ discussing his new album 'Doe or Die III', his observations about gentrification and changing New York City, his lyrical approach to aging, and his evolution as an artist since his 1995 debut and his famous verse on Nas's 'Life's A Bitch'.

Read on POW MAG →

Angel Olsen on Leonard Cohen

Angel Olsen writes about Leonard Cohen's "Night Comes On" in The Line of Best Fit's Friday Dispatch — specifically what the song unlocked about fatherhood, distance, and a 90-year-old neighbor named David who lets strangers borrow his canoe. It's a small, precise piece of music writing: the kind where a song arrives on shuffle and suddenly reorganizes something you'd been circling for years.

Read on The Line of Best Fit →

Wiki - Ancient History

Wiki's new LP Ancient History is a gorgeous, blooming album centered on New York City's park benches and creeping flora, representing a deepening of technique and personal insights following Ratking's dissolution.

Read on POW MAG →
02 Music Industry Analysis
03 Music Recommendations

B0YG1RL & KAY NIVE$ — "Rage & Rave"

From EXIT 2B, B0YG1RL's third album of 2024 produced largely by Novagang founder prblm, this track exemplifies the Miami-based queer Haitian diaspora scene's fusion of kompa, bouyon, electro-pop, and baile funk. Pitchfork highlights how vocalist June Vinette delivers militant Creole lyrics—'Nou pral batay/Nou pral genyen' (We will fight/We will win)—over what the review calls an 'exorcism at a houseparty,' with Novagang's Kay Nive$ matching Vinette's ravenous energy. The production treats the DAW 'less as a tool to go viral and more like a pathway toward divine experience.'

04 Voice & Culture

Planet UFC

The New York Review of Books traces the deepening convergence between the UFC and MAGA politics, using Conor McGregor's surreal White House visit — days after the Irish PM's — as its entry point. McGregor, found liable for sexual assault in 2024 and eyeing an Irish presidential run, is the piece's emblem: a sports-entertainment figure whose brand now runs entirely on political spectacle.

Read on The New York Review of Books →

The Joy of Analog Tools

Mia Quagliarello's ode to analog tools — pencils, annotated books, marginalia — as a deliberate counter to frictionless digital life: choosing attention and intention ('choose rather than be chosen') in an age of algorithmic defaults.

Read on Mia's Queue →

Young and Thin-Skinned

What changes when you're no longer the youngest person in the room? This Substack from a working orchestral oboist — 23 seasons in — traces that shift through a sharp early memory: a colleague who simply sat out a difficult passage mid-concert, composed as a statesman. The piece uses ensemble life to think about aging, craft, and what we quietly stop attempting before we admit it.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

Sacrifice Zone: Eastwick

Emma Copley Eisenberg's piece for The Believer's guest column uses Eastwick — Philadelphia's southwesternmost, perpetually flooded, industrially sacrificed neighborhood — to ask who gets left out of the city's story. The writing is grounded and precise: prayer candles at a telephone pole, a tank farm ringed by dumped tires, no other pedestrians for a mile.

Read on The Believer →

Nixonmaxxing the 37th president on Instagram

After School clocks something genuinely strange: the Richard Nixon Foundation is 'Nixonmaxxing' the 37th president on Instagram — cutting archival footage to rap tracks to recast Tricky Dick as a sigma male antihero for Gen Z. The Don Draper cameo seals it. 107K followers, 1.5M views on the top post. Archival rebranding as platform-native content strategy.

Read on After School →

It's the Summer of Showgirlmanship

An essay exploring the concept of 'showgirlmanship' as an attitudinal approach to work and creative production in 2025. The piece distinguishes showgirlmanship from the showgirl archetype itself, arguing it represents a severe work ethic shaped by AI, behind-the-scenes collaborators, and capitalist influence on modern cultural products.

Read on i-D →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The Great AI De-Skilling is Upon Us

Shae O's piece argues that AI isn't just automating tasks — it's quietly eroding the capacity to do them at all. The antidote she offers is deliberately low-tech: listen to a full album without multitasking, learn three chords badly. Small acts of attention as resistance to a creeping loss of skill most people won't notice until it's gone.

Read on Shae O. →
06 AI Product News

If AI Is Sentient Then So Is 'Age of Empires II'

Matthew Gault covers a Microsoft paper that takes AI sentience claims to their logical endpoint — and exposes how absurd they are. The throughline is Ted Chiang's provocation: if LLMs are conscious, so is every Word document containing a transcript. The paper runs the same logic through a video game AI and arrives at the same place. A useful inoculation against breathless anthropomorphizing.

Read on 404 Media →

How AI Is Changing the Job Market in 2026

AI's actual impact on the 2026 job market is murkier than the headlines suggest. A recent Yale report finds no clear evidence of AI-driven labor disruption — but Challenger, Gray & Christmas data shows AI was cited as the top reason for U.S. job cuts for three straight months.

Read on Luiza Jarovsky, PhD →

AI Coding Tools Are Quietly Re-Pricing Themselves

TLDR Founders flags the moment the AI cost crunch started hitting the tools themselves. Microsoft pulled its engineers off Claude Code after token bills hit ~$2,000 per person monthly, shifting them to flat-rate Copilot. GitHub simultaneously moved every Copilot plan to usage-based credit billing. The flat-rate era for AI tooling may already be over.

Read on TLDR Founders →

Midjourney is taking on the MRI industry and opening spas

A report on Midjourney's hardware expansion into healthcare, specifically building MRI scanner technology. The company plans to open a boutique spa in Union Square with 10 scanners and aims to eventually deploy 50,000 units globally, offering scanners that are 10x cheaper and 60x faster than traditional MRIs.

Read on Sources →

Dario Amodei's full picture: 10 takeaways that matter

The AI Corner distills ten takeaways from the Circuit documentary featuring Dario Amodei — jobs, war, government power, and a 25% economic collapse bet. The throughline: once AI owns execution, the edge shifts to judgment and go-to-market craft. The automation curve's brutal second half is the real argument — 90% is productivity, 100% is an existential question about what work actually is.

Read on The AI Corner →
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