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Banjo Player and Geologist Benny Bleu Announces New Album ‘When I Am A Fossil,’ Out June 5

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Benny Bleu spent a decade making ‘When I Am A Fossil’, and the patience shows in every note. The New York-based banjo player, songwriter, and former environmental geologist announces his new album arriving June 5th, a deeply personal and philosophically rich collection of songs shaped by years spent witnessing, as Bleu puts it, “the residue of man’s progress.” The result is one of the most quietly ambitious folk records of 2026, rooted in the Anthropocene and asking a question that lingers long after the music stops: how might a scientist from the deep future know we were here?

The album bridges old-time banjo traditions with jazz phrasing, global rhythms, and modern sonic exploration across a concept record anchored in climate change, mortality, and resilience. Recorded live to tape over four days in Pennsylvania with collaborators Gus Tritsch, Huck Tritsch, Eric Heveron-Smith, and Katie Martucci, the record captures ensemble interplay and spontaneity that ten years of careful crafting has not smoothed away. It feels immediate and unhurried at the same time, equally at home on a front porch or in a late-night philosophical spiral.

Bleu’s background as an environmental geologist gives the album a grounding that most folk records simply cannot access. His work took him not to mountains and lakes but to gas stations and factories, and that specific, unglamorous perspective on human impact gives ‘When I Am A Fossil’ a moral weight that never tips into preachiness. The title track channels that perspective into something genuinely haunting, a meditation on deep time that manages to feel both vast and intimate. This is the kind of album that announces a distinctive artistic voice fully formed and worth following closely.

A 2026 tour supports the release, mixing intimate solo sets with full band performances across the East Coast and beyond, including a full band release show at Bop Shop Records in Rochester on June 6th and a Caffe Lena appearance in Saratoga Springs on May 3rd. ‘When I Am A Fossil’ is available for pre-order now ahead of its June 5th release.

2026 Tour Dates:

April 10 – Rochester, NY – Little Theatre

April 17 – Frostburg, MD – Clatter Cafe (w/ Dakota Karper)

April 18 – Westminster, MD – Common Ground Downtown (w/ Dakota Karper)

April 19 – Naples, NY – Hollerhorn Distilling

May 3 – Saratoga Springs, NY – Caffe Lena (full band)

June 6 – Rochester, NY – Bop Shop Records (full band)

June 13 – Rochester, NY – Abilene (full band)

June 14 – Naples, NY – Hollerhorn Distilling (full band)

September 20 – Walton, NY – Music on the Delaware

November 12 – Soquel, CA – Ugly Mug

November 16 – Portland, OR – Hostel Cafe

Taiwanese Soul-Psych Favorites Sunset Rollercoaster Bring ‘QUIT QUIETLY’ to North America This Fall

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Sunset Rollercoaster have been one of the music world’s best-kept secrets for over a decade, and ‘QUIT QUIETLY’ is the album that keeps closing that gap. The Taiwanese soul-psych outfit have announced a North American fall tour behind their 2025 release, hitting Toronto, Boston, Brooklyn, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, and Vancouver between September and October. Tickets go on sale Friday, March 27th at 2pm EST.

The numbers behind ‘QUIT QUIETLY’ tell their own story. The album surpassed one million Spotify streams on its first day of release, landed ten songs in the Spotify Top 200 in its opening week, and earned a spot on the U.S. NACC Top 200. Single “Bluebird” has already passed four million streams. For a band that has always built momentum through word of mouth and relentless touring rather than industry machinery, that kind of immediate impact reflects just how deep their audience runs.

The Taipei five-piece has been building toward this moment since their debut album ‘Bossa Nova’ arrived in 2011, followed by the globe-traveling EP ‘Jinji Kikko’ and its runaway single “My Jinji,” which has independently accumulated over 117 million Spotify streams. Fuji Rock, Coachella, sold-out runs across Asia, Europe, and the U.S., praise from NME, Paste, Hypebeast, and Brooklyn Vegan, and a Beats By Dre mini-documentary later, they remain one of those rare acts whose reputation consistently outpaces their mainstream profile. ‘QUIT QUIETLY’ is their most mature and contemplative work yet, and these North American dates are the fullest expression of that record on a live stage.

The venues selected match the moment perfectly, from History in Toronto and Brooklyn Steel to The Warfield in San Francisco and Showbox SoDo in Seattle. For anyone who has not yet caught Sunset Rollercoaster live, this is the tour to fix that.

2026 North American Tour Dates:

September 9 – Toronto, ON – History

September 11 – Boston, MA – Citizens House of Blues

September 13 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Steel

October 16 – Los Angeles, CA – The Novo

October 18 – San Francisco, CA – The Warfield

October 21 – Seattle, WA – Showbox SoDo

October 24 – Vancouver, BC – The Centre in Vancouver

TikTok’s New Ad Tools Give Artists and Labels More Power to Reach Audiences at the Right Moment

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TikTok has always been where music breaks first. The platform’s ability to turn a track into a cultural moment overnight is well established. What has evolved considerably is the sophistication of the tools available to artists, labels, and their marketing teams to capitalize on that momentum, and the new ad solutions announced at IAB NewFronts this week represent a meaningful step forward.

The most immediately useful addition for music campaigns is Prime Time, a sequential ad format that delivers up to three ads from a single advertiser to the same user within a fifteen-minute window. For album releases, tour announcements, or single drops timed to peak engagement periods, the ability to tell a continuous story in a compressed window rather than serving isolated impressions is a genuine upgrade. Release day campaigns in particular stand to benefit from that kind of concentrated storytelling.

TopReach combines two existing high-visibility placements, TopView and TopFeed, into a single buy for maximum one-day reach. For major launches where broad awareness matters immediately, collapsing those two placements into a single purchase simplifies the buy while extending the reach. Logo Takeover, meanwhile, gives brands and by extension artists and labels the ability to co-brand with TikTok at the moment the app opens, before any other content appears. First impression, undivided attention, no competition.

The expansion of TikTok Pulse is where things get particularly interesting for music. Pulse Mentions places ads adjacent to content where users are already talking about a specific brand or category, meaning an artist campaign can now surface precisely inside conversations that are already happening organically. Pulse Tastemakers lets advertisers align with specific eligible creators, building brand association through trusted voices rather than generic adjacency. For artists with strong creator communities already engaged with their music, that targeting capability is a powerful amplification tool.

Taken together, these tools give music marketers considerably more precision and narrative control on a platform that already drives discovery better than anywhere else. Understanding and using them is now part of the job.

BLOND:ISH Headlines Daybreaker’s Miami Music Week Gathering at Wynwood Walls This Sunday

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Daybreaker is bringing its global sober dance movement to one of Miami’s most iconic cultural spaces this Sunday, and the lineup is worth paying attention to. Taking place at Wynwood Walls Museum on March 29th from 11am to 2pm, the Miami Music Week edition features a headlining set from internationally acclaimed DJ and producer BLOND:ISH, an opening set from rising house artist GUDFELLA, a guided yoga session with Mimi Yoga, and a closing speech from artist Peter Tunney. Surrounded by large-scale murals from some of the world’s most celebrated street artists, the setting alone makes this one of the most distinctive gatherings of the week.

BLOND:ISH brings a presence that fits the Daybreaker ethos precisely, a globally recognized artist whose community-driven approach to dance culture has always prioritized connection over consumption. GUDFELLA, the Philippines-born, LA-based DJ and producer behind the breakout track “Morning Coffee,” arrives as one of house music’s most exciting new voices, with Miami Music Week buzz building ahead of an upcoming Coachella appearance. The two together make for a daytime dance floor that punches well above its weight.

Daybreaker began in Brooklyn with a single early-morning dance floor and has grown into a movement spanning 66 cities and more than one million community members. Every event is alcohol-free and open to all ages, designed around joy, self-expression, and genuine human connection rather than the trappings of traditional nightlife. Co-founder Radha Agrawal frames it cleanly: “We’re offering a new expression of that same spirit, one that leaves you feeling more alive than when you arrived.” That is not marketing language. For anyone who has attended a Daybreaker event, it is simply accurate.

The event is powered by iHeartRadio and Einstein Bros. Bagels, with complimentary fresh-baked bagels and cold brew on offer to fuel the morning. Wynwood Walls Museum sits at 2516 NW 2nd Ave, Miami, FL. For tickets and full information, visit daybreaker.com/event/miami-03-29.

The James Hunter Six Return to the U.S. This Summer Behind Critically Acclaimed Album ‘Off The Fence’

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The James Hunter Six are heading back to the United States, and American soul music fans should take note. The British singer, songwriter, and GRAMMY-nominated artist dubbed “The United Kingdom’s Greatest Soul Singer” by MOJO has announced a summer tour beginning July 1st in Denver, running through Nashville, Minneapolis, Chicago, and more. The tour celebrates ‘Off The Fence’, Hunter’s eleventh studio album on Easy Eye Sound, a critically acclaimed record that also marks 40 years since his recording debut.

‘Off The Fence’ has drawn some of the strongest notices of Hunter’s career. MOJO awarded it four out of five stars, calling it “the very best of Hunter’s skill set.” Living Blues Magazine placed him in company with Lee Fields as one of the rare artists who can “sing soul music as if the 1970s simply never happened.” Relix, No Depression, PopMatters, AllMusic, and WBGO have all weighed in with praise. Twelve self-penned tracks delivered with Hunter’s customary blend of smooth vocal control, heart-worn grit, and dry wit, the album moves from the infectious blues blaster “A Sure Thing” to the beautifully moving “Here And Now” and includes a rare duet with Van Morrison on “Ain’t That A Trip,” a collaboration that alone makes ‘Off The Fence’ essential listening.

Hunter announces the tour with characteristic deadpan: “The U.S. Embassy finally granted me the official ‘Oh Go On Then If You Must’ certificate, and we’re all set. We’ve had fun knocking these tunes together (one of them is quite good), and we’re looking forward to inflicting them on you at the earliest opportunity.” That kind of wit, delivered with complete commitment, is exactly what makes Hunter one of the most distinctive and genuinely beloved figures in contemporary soul music. A performer this assured and this deep in the tradition is worth catching whenever the opportunity presents itself.

April dates in Washington DC, Sellersville, and New York City precede the summer run, which stretches through August with stops at storied rooms including the Dakota in Minneapolis, Space in Evanston, Knuckleheads in Kansas City, and The Iridium in New York. Full tour information and tickets are available at jameshuntermusic.com.

‘Off The Fence’ Tracklist:

  1. Two Birds One Stone
  2. Let Me Out Of This Love
  3. Gun Shy
  4. Believe It When I See It
  5. Here And Now
  6. Off The Fence
  7. Ain’t That A Trip (feat. Van Morrison)
  8. One For Ripley
  9. Trouble Comes Calling
  10. Particular
  11. A Sure Thing
  12. Only A Fool

The James Hunter Six 2026 U.S. Tour Dates:

April 19 – Washington, DC – The Hamilton

April 20 – Sellersville, PA – Sellersville Theater

April 21 – New York, NY – Iridium

July 1 – Denver, CO – The Bluebird

July 2 – Vail, CO – Vilar Performing Arts Center

July 8 – Nashville, TN – Franklin Theater

July 10 – Kent, OH – Kent Stage

July 11 – Ann Arbor, MI – The Ark

July 12 – Milwaukee, WI – Vivarium

July 14 – Minneapolis, MN – Dakota

July 15 – Minneapolis, MN – Dakota

July 16 – Evanston, IL – Space

July 18 – St. Louis, MO – Music at Intersection

July 19 – Kansas City, MO – Knuckleheads

August 5 – Natick, MA – The Center for Arts in Natick (TCAN)

August 7 – Fall River, MA – Narrows Center

August 8 – Shelter Island, NY – Sylvester Manor

August 9 – Old Saybrook, CT – The Kate

Sublime Announce ‘Until the Sun Explodes,’ Their First Full Album With Jakob Nowell, Out June 12

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Sublime are back with something that carries real emotional weight. ‘Until the Sun Explodes’, the band’s first full-length album with Jakob Nowell as frontman, arrives June 12th on Atlantic Records, and the title track and lead single is out now. A 21-track record featuring collaborations with H.R. of Bad Brains, Fletcher Dragge of Pennywise, G Love, FIDLAR, and Skegss, the album stays rooted in the band’s classic sound while opening a chapter that could only exist with this lineup, at this moment.

The title track is the emotional center of everything. Jakob Nowell wrote it as a direct tribute to his late father Bradley Nowell, and he frames the album with clarity and honesty: “Until the Sun Explodes the album is an epilogue, and ‘Until the Sun Explodes’ the single is the epilogue to the epilogue. It is a tribute to the expansive works of Sublime, it is an acknowledgment for all that my father has done for me my entire life, and most importantly it is a thank you.” That kind of candor, delivered over music this deeply rooted in Long Beach’s punk and reggae DNA, makes the single one of the most emotionally resonant releases of 2026.

The music video deepens the tribute further, moving through Long Beach locations tied to Sublime’s history, with skateboard legends Christian Hosoi and Omar Hassan appearing in a timeless backyard party scene that bridges generations. Bradley Nowell’s presence runs through every frame. Bud Gaugh and Eric Wilson are equally direct about what the record means. Gaugh calls it an expression of “the gratitude we all feel,” while Wilson is characteristically concise: “I think it will set the tone for the summer of 2026.”

The album lands amid a year already packed with landmark moments for the band. Two sold-out nights at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on April 17th and 18th celebrate the 30th anniversary of their groundbreaking self-titled album. The Grammy Museum’s exhibit ‘Sublime: Straight From Long Beach,’ running March 27th through September 7th, features handwritten lyrics, instruments from the original lineup, and rare photography. A new touring festival launches May 9th at Panther Island Pavilion in Fort Worth, with dates in Portland on June 27th and Salt Lake City on July 18th. The Sublime Reef Madness cruise sets sail November 15th from Miami. And ‘Ensenada,’ the album’s opening track, already spent eight consecutive weeks at number one on Billboard’s Alternative Airplay chart, the longest run at number one on alternative radio in 2025.

‘Until the Sun Explodes’ is out June 12th on Atlantic Records. Pre-save and pre-order links are live now at sublime.lnk.to/UntilTheSunExplodes. For the full festival lineup, cruise details, and Red Rocks information, visit sublimelbc.com.

‘Until the Sun Explodes’ Tracklist:

  1. Ensenada
  2. Wizard
  3. Can’t Miss You
  4. Backwards (feat. FIDLAR)
  5. Maybe Partying Will Help Pt 1
  6. Favorite Songs (feat. Skegss)
  7. Personal Hell
  8. F.T.R.
  9. Evil Men
  10. Trey’s Song (feat. H.R. of Bad Brains)
  11. Casino Taormina
  12. The Problem With That Is It Makes Me Stoked
  13. Gangstalker
  14. Figueroa
  15. Froggy
  16. Come Correct (feat. G. Love)
  17. What For
  18. 247-369 (feat. Fletcher Dragge of Pennywise)
  19. Maybe Partying Will Help Pt 2
  20. Until The Sun Explodes
  21. Thanx Again

Buy Spotify Followers Fast from Trusted Providers

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By Mitch Rice

Growing on platforms like Spotify isn’t just about making good music anymore.

Nowadays, your perception and what your profile looks like plays a pretty big role in how new listeners and even the app’s algorithm works with your content. For people like playlist makers, they’re always looking at follower numbers to try and figure out which artists are worth promoting.

And so if you’ve got your numbers high up, chances are that your music is going to be put on many more playlists. And that brings in more plays and followers through whoever follows along with that playlist.

That’s why you’ll find that many artists choose to buy Spotify followers as a way to give their accounts that boost that it needs to get recognized. These additional followers can help build on that social proof, which ultimately helps the artists bring in more followers and revenue through Spotify.

But there is definitely a right and wrong way to go about buying Spotify followers.

If you go around trusting the first Spotify growth service you see, you’re more likely to get stuck with bot followers. And that won’t just harm your reach, but you’ll even notice larger follower drops. In turn, that kind of behaviour can get your account flagged.

When you trust the right sites, you don’t have to deal with such issues. These sites focus on high quality followers and delivery speeds that help avoid any follower drops. In turn, this leads to growth that actually helps your music get more plays.

So how do you find the right sites to trust?

Look no further! As you read on, you’ll find five of the best sites that you can use to get yourself some high quality followers. With these sites, you won’t have to continue looking for reliable platforms to buy from.

Let’s start!

A Quick Summary Of The Top 5 Trusted Sites To Buy Spotify Followers

In a rush and don’t have the time to read through the detailed descriptions of each site? Here’s a quick comparison where you’ll be able to see the good and bad things about each site, side-by-side:

SitesBest ForPricesFollower QualityDelivery SpeedRetention RatesRefill Policy
SocialWickHigh Quality And Affordable Packages$HighFast & ControlledHighYes
SocialGregFast Delivery Services$GoodVery FastGoodYes
SubscriberZLarge Follower Bundles$$GoodFastHighYes
StreamBoostTargeted Followers$$$Medium – Lower Quality With Larger PackagesFastGoodYes
FollowerFuelDrip Engagement Delivery$$$GoodSlowGoodNo

Top 5 Trusted Sites To Buy Spotify Followers

SocialWick – Best For High Quality & Affordable Followers

There are very few sites that deliver results better than SocialWick. This platform has built its reputation around providing the most accessible services while still offering high quality results. If you’re not looking to break the bank trying to grow your followers, this site is the ideal choice to choose from.

At just $0.93 for 200 followers, SocialWick stands a site that can be used by all kinds of artists no matter how big or small they are. Additionally, artists can even customize their packages in any way they want. Follower packages are entirely flexible, allowing artists to buy as many followers as they want. All they have to do is just put in a number.

The delivery speeds are also fast but still controlled. This ensures that you get your followers quickly, but they aren’t dumped all at once. This helps avoid any of those unnatural growth spikes. Each package also comes with a great refill policy, ensuring that you don’t lose out because of any follower drops.

Pros

  • Affordable Packages
  • Easy Ordering Process
  • Flexible Packages
  • Fast Delivery
  • Refill Policy

Cons

  • No Live Customer Support Option

SocialGreg – Best For Fast Delivery Services

With apps like Spotify, the timing really matters.

When you’re pitching your music to be added to playlists, you’ll need your follower numbers to be high. That’s what improves your chances of getting your music promoted and heard by many more people. And platforms like SocialGreg are made just for that.

This platform prioritizes speedy delivery to ensure that you get your followers in next to no time. With packages priced at just $1.30 for 200 followers, this site also stands as another affordable platform. Many orders are actually estimated to be deliver in around 1 hour, making this site one of the fastest providers available.

Like SocialWick, this platform also has flexible packages. This allows artists to type in the exact number of followers they want to purchase. Each package also comes with a refill policy to ensure that even if followers are removed, your purchases are automatically replaced.

Pros

  • Very Fast Delivery
  • Affordable Packages
  • Flexible Packages
  • Refill Policy
  • Live Customer Support

Cons

  • No Slower Delivery Possible
  • Limited Advanced Options

SubscriberZ – Best For Large Follower Bundles

When looking to grow on Spotify, some artists prefer to opt for larger bundles. This helps them avoid coming back for multiple purchases. And that’s what platforms like SubscriberZ are made for.

This platform offers a wide range of pre-made bulk packages, making the selection process easier for artists. With packages starting at just $10.99 for 1000 followers, you’ll find that this platform offers some of the cheapest and still high quality bulk packages.

The delivery speed with this platform is generally slightly slower than with other platforms. However this helps the site maintain a high retention rate, lowering your chances of dealing with any follower drops. And even if that happens, the packages come with refill policies to automatically replace lost followers.

Pros

  • Wide Range Of Packages
  • Bulk Packages
  • High Retention Rate
  • Affordable Pricing
  • Refill Policy

Cons

  • Not The Cheapest Site
  • Delivery Not As Fast As Other Sites

StreamBoost – Best For Targeted Followers

With Spotify growth services, the regional targeting of followers matters. While Spotify makes it easy for artists to go international, this is generally harder with smaller musicians. And so it’s better to opt for follower packages that match the location you’re in. And that’s what you’ll get with StreamBoost.

This platform offers advanced targeting follower packages. This means that any followers you purchase will come from locations where your music is more likely to go famous first as small artists. There is also a wide range of packages that artists can choose from, making this a platform usable by all kinds of artists.

However, with the advanced features, artists have to keep an eye out for higher prices. Additionally, the follower quality seems to drop with the site’s larger packages.

Pros

  • Targeted Followers
  • Wide Range Of Packages
  • Good For Smaller Creators
  • Refill Policy

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Follower Quality Drops With Larger Packages

FollowerFuel – Best For Drip Engagement Delivery

With many sites, sudden spikes in followers can look unnatural. And more often than not, sites are not careful about this. In turn, this can get your account flagged. But that’s not something you’ll have to deal with when you use FollowerFuel.

This platform focuses on paced delivery services. Instead of delivering everything instantly, this site spreads out your followers over a longer time period. This can last a few days. As a result, it helps maintain a good retention rate and avoids any suspicious growth.

However, once again with the delivery speed, artists have to deal with generally higher price points. We also didn’t like how the site does not offer a refill policy.

Pros

  • Gradual Follower Delivery
  • Natural Growth
  • Good Retention Rate
  • Live Customer Support
  • Flexible Packages

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Not Ideal For Faster Campaigns
  • No Refill Policy

The Bottom Line

On platforms like Spotify, your follower numbers really matter. Especially considering this app is one of the biggest music platforms in the world.

But growing your numbers on a platform where you’ll find millions of artists is very difficult. It’s even harder for the smaller musicians that are just starting off.

That’s where buying Spotify followers can be that strategic move to help get your account noticed. Buying followers can give you that social proof boost which helps the algorithm take notice of your music. It also helps give you that fame which playlist makers keep an eye out for.

However, this entirely depends on whether you end up choosing the right sites to buy from.

With the sites in this list, you won’t have to worry about getting stuck with low quality followers. Each of the sites has been tried and tested to ensure that you get the high quality follower boosts that you’re looking for.

And once you’ve bought your followers, don’t just expect these numbers to grow your fame alone. You’ll still have to continue making your music and running ads in order to get the algorithm to continue promoting your music.

Combining your organic efforts with smart moves like follower purchases is what actually gives your music the boost it needs to be discovered. So just pick a platform that matches what you’re looking for and get to boosting your numbers!

Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.

Photo Gallery: Gary Numan And Tremours At Toronto’s Concert Hall On March 24, 2026

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All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her through Instagram or X.

How Artists Are Turning Recordings Into Lyrics With AI

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By Mitch Rice

There’s a specific kind of frustration every musician knows. You record something quickly—maybe a melody, maybe half-formed words—and in that moment it feels right. Not perfect, but alive. Then later you hit play, trying to figure out what you actually said.

And it’s gone. Or almost gone.

You catch pieces. A word here, a phrase there. The rest dissolves into guessing. You rewind. Again. And again. At some point, you start filling gaps with something new, and the original idea quietly slips away.

That gap used to be part of the process. Annoying, but normal. Now it’s shrinking, and not because artists suddenly got more organized. It’s because something else started listening.

Talking First, Writing Later

A lot of artists don’t really “write” at the beginning anymore. Not in the traditional sense.

They mumble. They hum. They talk over a beat like they’re explaining something to themselves. Words show up halfway, then disappear again. It’s messy, and that’s the point.

The difference now is that the mess doesn’t stay messy for long.

AI tools take those recordings and turn them into text almost immediately. Not perfectly, not always clean, but readable. Enough to work with. Enough to recognize what was actually there in the first place.

And that changes the order of things. Voice first. Structure later.

The Weird Relief of Seeing Your Own Words

There’s something slightly strange about seeing lyrics you didn’t consciously write.

You said them, sure. But you didn’t sit down and decide on each word. They just came out. Then suddenly they’re on a screen, lined up like they were planned.

Sometimes it’s disappointing. A line that sounded deep turns out flat.

Sometimes it’s the opposite. A throwaway phrase ends up carrying the whole idea.

That moment—when sound turns into something you can read—is where a lot of editing actually begins now. Not before, not during. After.

Its Faster, But Thats Not the Point

Yes, it saves time. That part is obvious.

What matters more is the shift in attention.

Instead of spending energy trying to catch what was said, artists spend it shaping what’s already there. The focus moves forward. Less decoding, more deciding.

And because of that, the process feels lighter. Not easier exactly, just less clogged.

There’s no need to babysit every idea as it happens. You can let it run, knowing it’ll be there later in some form.

Not Everything Comes Out Right

AI doesn’t really understand what’s being said. It guesses. Pattern matches. Fills in blanks based on probability.

So it gets things wrong.

Names get twisted. Slang turns into something more “formal.” Emotions flatten out. Sometimes a line comes back completely different from what was intended.

And yet… those mistakes aren’t always useless.

A wrong word can sound better. A misheard phrase can open a different direction. It’s accidental, but it works.

Some artists don’t even correct everything anymore. They pick what feels interesting and move on.

The Middle of the Process Feels Different

There used to be a long stretch between recording something and actually working on it. A kind of dead zone.

Now that stretch is shorter. Almost gone.

You record, you transcribe, you tweak. Then maybe you record again. It loops quickly. No big pause in between.

That rhythm changes how ideas develop. They don’t sit untouched for hours or days. They evolve immediately, while they still feel fresh.

Short cycles. Quick reactions.

Sometimes that’s all a song needs.

Doing More With Less

Not everyone has a team. Or time. Or patience for the technical side of things.

This is where tools like AI music transcription quietly become useful. No setup, no complicated workflow. Just upload, wait a bit, and get something you can actually read.

For independent artists, that’s enough.

It removes one more barrier. One less step where things can get stuck. Especially for people who think in sound, not sentences.

And there are a lot of those.

Catching Things That Wouldve Disappeared

Some ideas only exist for a few seconds.

You don’t plan them. They just happen. Usually at the wrong time—when you can’t stop and write, when you’re too tired, when it doesn’t feel “important enough.”

Those are the ones that get lost most often.

Recording everything used to help, but only partially. If you couldn’t understand it later, it didn’t matter that it was saved.

Now it does.

Even a rough transcription can bring back enough of the idea to rebuild it. Not perfectly, but close enough.

And close enough is often all you need.

Sharing Without Explaining

Collaboration used to involve a lot of explaining. “Wait, listen to this part.” “No, go back a bit.” “That line right there.”

It’s slower than it sounds.

Text cuts through that.

You send a recording with a transcript, and suddenly the other person knows where to look. They don’t have to guess what matters. It’s already outlined.

They might still hear it differently, but at least they’re starting from the same place.

That makes feedback quicker. And sometimes more honest.

Not Clean, Not Perfect, Still Useful

There’s a tendency to expect tools like this to be flawless. Especially when they’re called “AI.”

But in practice, they’re not. And that’s fine.

Creative work isn’t about clean input and perfect output. It’s about reacting to what’s there.

A slightly messy transcript still does its job. It captures enough. It gives something to push against.

In a way, it matches how ideas actually form—uneven, incomplete, a bit off.

The Process Feels More Continuous

One thing that stands out after using this kind of workflow for a while is how little separation there is between stages.

Recording blends into writing. Writing blends into editing. Editing loops back into recording.

There’s no clear line where one part ends and another begins.

That can feel chaotic at first. Then it starts to feel natural.

Because that’s closer to how ideas actually move—back and forth, not step by step.

Still Human at the Core

Even with all this, the important parts haven’t changed.

Choosing what to keep. Deciding what a line actually means. Cutting something that doesn’t fit, even if it sounds good. That’s still on the artist.

AI doesn’t replace that. It just gets you to that point faster.

Or maybe just with less friction.

And that’s enough to make a difference.

Where It Settles

This isn’t some dramatic reinvention of songwriting. It’s smaller than that.

But also more practical.

Artists are still doing what they’ve always done—trying to hold onto ideas long enough to shape them into something real. The tools are just better at helping them not lose those ideas halfway through.

And sometimes, that’s the only thing that matters.

Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.

Colin Asher’s ‘The Midnight Special’ Rewrites the Hidden History of American Music and Incarceration

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Colin Asher has written one of the most urgent and genuinely original music history books in years. ‘The Midnight Special: The Secret Prison History of American Music’, out June 30th from W. W. Norton, traces the deep and largely untold story of how the criminal justice system shaped American popular music from blues to hip-hop, and the portrait it draws is both revelatory and damning. Asher, the critically acclaimed author of ‘Never a Lovely So Real’, brings the same forensic depth and narrative precision to 336 pages that reframe the entire arc of twentieth century American music culture.

The book opens with Huddie “Lead Belly” Ledbetter, made to perform in prison clothes, and moves forward through the Jim Crow-era Southern prison farms, the heroin-driven mid-century drug wars that criminalized a generation of jazz artists, and into the crushing weight of mass incarceration decades later. The throughline Asher draws is consistent and sobering: the suggestion of criminality has often benefited white artists while active prosecution devastated Black musicians. The divergent trajectories of jazz pianist Elmo Hope and country singer Johnny Cash make that argument with particular force, Hope’s career stifled by violent discriminatory policing while Cash’s leniency produced a masterpiece at San Quentin.

The book closes with Tupac Shakur’s ‘Me Against the World’ and stories of music in prisons today, completing a narrative that is as musically astute as it is sociologically essential. Asher never loses sight of the individual lives behind the argument, and that human grounding is what separates ‘The Midnight Special’ from academic analysis and places it firmly in the tradition of essential American music writing. This is one of the most important music books of 2026, and one that demands to be read widely.