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On the Cover Featured on "How Gen Z Is Shaping Live Music's Future"

How Gen Z Is Shaping Live Music's Future

Luminate's Live Music 2026 report lands on a counterintuitive finding: Gen Z now outspends Millennials on concerts, dropping $101 a month to their elders' $94. More striking is what's fading. Ticket price has always topped the survey's list of reasons people stay home, but the share of Gen Z citing cost fell from 75% in 2024 to 57% now. If you're pricing tours or festivals, the demo you assumed was priced out is the one leaning in.

Music Industry Analysis Read on Luminate →
Chartmetric · Music Industry Analysis

Musicians Speak on the Impact of Getting a U.S. Artist Visa

Chartmetric talks to the artists and lawyers actually stuck in the O-1 pipeline, and the numbers alone should give any label or booking agent pause. The "extraordinary ability" visa now runs $2,965 per filer, up from $460 two years ago, with total costs hitting $6,000. Worse is the wait: processing that's supposed to take two weeks is now running 10 to 12 months. You can't confirm a tour that far out. The U.S. market's gatekeeping is a scheduling problem now.

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The New Yorker · Music & Scene

The Summer When Everyone Wanted a Good, Good Night

Writer Jia Tolentino turns her attention to DJ Earworm and the golden age of the pop mashup, that stretch when user-friendly editing software let anyone stack Christina Aguilera over the Strokes and watch it go viral. The piece traces a lineage from "A Stroke of Genius" through Girl Talk's "Night Ripper" to "Blame It on the Pop," and if you work in music, it's a reminder of what happened when the tools got cheap and the culture got remixable. The AI parallels write themselves.

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01 Music & Scene

The Octopus: Morris Levy, Roulette Records and the Mob at the Heart of American Music

Morris Levy figured out early, running Birdland and then Roulette Records, that the money in music was never in the performance but in who owned the publishing. Bass Culture traces how a coat-check kid with Mafia connections turned that insight into an empire, integrating a Broadway club while quietly building a copyright racket. A sharp reminder that the industry's foundational logic was set by people who saw songs as assets first.

Read on Bass Culture →

How Lizzo Became One of Pop Culture's Great Flops

Spencer Kornhaber examines Lizzo's fall: her fifth album Bitch sold just 2,650 copies in its first week and missed the Billboard 200 entirely, a steep drop from 2022's No. 2 debut Special. Lizzo leaned into her own unpopularity as a marketing campaign, blaming her label, algorithms, and the decline of radio. Kornhaber reads her 'downward mobility' against a pop culture newly fascinated by failure, where flops now draw more talk than hits.

Read on The Atlantic →

How The World Cup Brought Me To Cape Verdean Morna Music

The generic reggaeton-club soundtrack of World Cup broadcasts flattens a sport built on pivots and poise, argues Tom Moon in EchoLocator. His fix: watch with Cesaria Evora's morna instead. The tie-in is real, as YouTube comments under Evora's tracks now read "World Cup 2026 Brought Me Here," trailing Cabo Verde's improbable run past Spain and Uruguay into the knockout round.

Read on EchoLocator →

Tribal Guarachero Is Having A(nother) Moment

The word "tribal" flattens regional sounds for Western ears, but First Floor argues tribal guarachero complicates the critique: born in 2000s Mexico as "tribal prehispánico," it was originators like Ricardo Reyna and Monterrey's 3Ball MTY specifically engaging pre-Hispanic influence. The piece traces how a genre built on triplet-driven, seasick rhythms and pointy-boot fashion keeps resurfacing for outside tastemakers.

Read on First Floor →

Officially, the dance music songs of the 90s are…

An essay celebrating defining dance music tracks from the 1990s, covering genres including Big Beat, progressive house, jungle, and acid funk. The piece discusses songs by Bentley Rhythm Ace, Grace, Bomfunk MC's, and Josh Wink, analyzing what made them emblematic of their era.

Read on Line Noise →

Scaring The Bros: Sha Ray & DJ Haram's 'Critical Thot'

A review of Sha Ray and DJ Haram's collaborative album 'Critical Thot,' examining its place within experimental hip-hop and responding to JPEGMafia's recent claims of dominion over the genre. The piece contextualizes the album within recent debates about experimental rap and features analysis of the project's opening track.

Read on CABBAGES →

Jeff Mills: Seeing Is Believing

Resident Advisor's summer cover story finds Jeff Mills, now 63, restaging his 1995 Live at the Liquid Room film and DJ set in New York and asking whether techno, as sound, practice, or culture, is still fit for purpose. The Detroit pioneer argues the music took a wrong turn into talk of machines, synthesizers, and image while forgetting what it is trying to communicate. A meditation on techno's unfinished promise from one of its architects.

Read on Resident Advisor →

FR 178: Ben Vida, Booker Stardrum, and Will Epstein Are Play Time

Play Time, the improvising trio of Ben Vida, Booker Stardrum, and Will Epstein, talk to Futurism Restated about Magic Object, their Balmat debut. The pull of the conversation is Vida's claim that their goal is dodging idiom entirely, never pointing to a genre or history. He ties that to how streaming is quietly producing listeners who hear connective tissue where older ears heard categories.

Read on Futurism Restated →

I reviewed "The Star-Spangled Banner" for Pitchfork

Grayson Haver Currin uses his Pitchfork review of "The Star-Spangled Banner" to write about the country itself, tracing the anthem from a British social club through Francis Scott Key's hypocrisy to Whitney, Aretha, and Hendrix. Here he frames it against 12,000 miles walked and three years in a van: a place run by incorrigible idiots he can't quite stop believing in.

Read on Out + Back →
02 Music Industry Analysis

The Death of the Middleman

An essay examining how distribution has been commoditized across film, music, and other industries through streaming and digital platforms. The piece argues that infinite shelf space has made traditional distribution worthless as a utility, forcing distributors to shift their value proposition from shelf space to access and relationships.

Read on Joel Gouveia →

The Music Industry Has an Engineering Problem

The people building the systems that move money from platforms to artists don't have a name for what they do, and Hypebot argues that's a real problem. Royalty math on a three-second clip means cascading calculations across composition and master rights, UGC terms, and currency conversions, billions of times daily.

Read on Hypebot →
03 Music Recommendations

Play Time — "Q&A"

From the trio's debut LP Magic Object, where percussionist Booker Stardrum (SML, Weyes Blood), saxophonist Will Epstein (Nicolás Jaar, Darkside), and synth player Ben Vida oscillate between spiritual jazz and Krautrock. Epstein's brass becomes the focal point above a Vida-Stardrum rhythm section, with overdubbed saxophone unisons giving the illusion of multiple horns in conversation. Grown out of a bar-band residency at Tubby's in Kingston, New York.

04 Voice & Culture

Just be gay

Douglas Greenwood's essay makes a case for militant homosexuality as a political act, not a lifestyle choice. Writing from inside a sweaty techno party he didn't fully belong to, Greenwood argues that queer visibility — cruising, latex at the airport, Folsom — matters more now precisely because assimilation keeps looking like the safer, smarter option.

Read on i-D →

A College Fling

Jessica Gentile's essay for Psyche sat in a digital junk drawer for nearly a decade before finding its shape: a college hookup whose significance only registered after the man's death. Published in the Turning Point series at Psyche, it's a precise piece about how meaning arrives late, and how the right editorial container can finally unlock work that never quite gelled.

Read on Psyche.co →

Fashion Forward

Jed Perl's piece in the NYRB argues that the Met's new Condé Nast Galleries represent institutional capture dressed up as curatorial vision. The inaugural show pairs couture with art-historical works, but Perl's verdict is blunt: it's a fashion industry vanity project wearing scholarly clothes. Worth reading for anyone tracking how money reshapes cultural institutions from the inside out.

Read on The New York Review of Books →

Why does my jaw hurt?

Unfit to Print starts with a sore jaw from too many Skittles and lands somewhere more useful: the way anticipating the end of a good feeling accelerates its exit. The observation that we are pleasure-seeking animals who nonetheless fixate on suffering is not new, but the personal grounding keeps it from going abstract. Short, human, worth the two minutes.

Read on Unfit to Print →
05 Sound on Sight Video Archive

Björk — "All Is Full of Love"

1999 · art pop

Chris Cunningham built two porcelain Björks and let machine arms assemble them into a kiss. Coolant, sparks, and tenderness share a single frame. It's among the very few music videos in MoMA's permanent collection, and twenty-five years of CGI later the robot romance hasn't dated a second.

06 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The Industry Is About to Hand AI Agents a Credit Card

The same week AI agents gained real purchasing power, researchers confirmed they could be manipulated into spending it wrong. That collision is the piece's argument, and it lands hardest on music: poisoned license fees, bad catalog quotes, compromised ticketing endpoints aren't edge cases here, they're the core business.

Read on Bruce Ramos →

Google's mistakes are your problem now

The Media Copilot makes the case that Google AI Overviews errors have become a publisher problem, not just a Google one. The Gemini summaries sitting atop search results have been misfiring since launch, and the piece argues that tuning them out is no longer an option.

Read on The Media Copilot →

The Uncertainty Principle

Tow-Knight Center's (Re)Structured News makes a case that journalism's bias toward certainty is partly an economic artifact, not a purely editorial one: newsrooms chase the stories they can assert rather than the ones still in motion, because resources push them that way. The argument isn't to abandon verification, but to reconsider what gets published at all when uncertainty is the honest answer.

Read on (Re)Structured News | Tow-Knight Center at CUNY →
07 AI Product News

Zuckerberg's $14B Bet: Glasses Kill the Phone in 5 Years

Zuckerberg's sharpest claim right now: smart glasses replace phones as the primary device within five years. The AI Corner breaks down the logic, which hinges on the 2 billion people already wearing optical glasses as an installed base. The more interesting detail is that Meta's new glasses are the first designed with Essilor Luxottica from the ground up, treating AI as a core design constraint rather than a feature layered onto existing frames.

Read on The AI Corner →

Stop prompting. Start writing loops

An exploration of how the head of Claude Code, Boris Cherny, has shifted from prompting Claude to running agent loops that can autonomously complete tasks. The piece discusses how companies like Bun and Stripe have used agent loops for massive code migrations and other complex tasks, and defines four types of loops: turn-based, goal-based, time-based, and proactive.

Read on The AI Corner →

Anthropic gets closer to an AI super app

Alex Heath reports that Anthropic's Claude Cowork sessions can now run in the cloud after you close your laptop, which is the meaningful unlock here: scheduled tasks no longer need a machine running. Heath quotes Anthropic's Mike Krieger previewing exactly this move back in May. Cross-device sync still lags, but the gap between power-user tool and genuine super app is narrowing.

Read on Sources →
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