Lenny Vaughn here, keeping the needles steady while the news spins a little faster than 45 RPM.
Today’s crate of headlines starts with new music flooding the digital bins. PopGoestheCharts reports a stacked New Music Friday with fresh projects from A$AP Rocky, Madison Beer, and more, while Shatter the Standards runs down singles from Bruno Mars, redveil, Kehlani, Chief Keef, and a wave of underground rap, R&B, and jazz drops, reminding listeners that discovery still lives beyond the playlists. LifeMinute highlights January albums from The Kid LAROI with Before I Forget and Zach Bryan’s With Heaven On Top, plus late‑month fire from Megadeth’s self‑titled return, Van Morrison’s Somebody Tried To Sell Me A Bridge, and punk lifers Buzzcocks with Attitude Adjustment, proof that legacy artists are still cutting fresh lacquer, not just reissuing the past.
On the performance front, BBC-style radio culture stays vibrant: KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic marks what would have been David Bowie’s 79th birthday with deep cuts and live shoegaze from rising artist Wisp, plus a world premiere from LA alt‑pop duo Haute & Freddy at the station’s HQ, a reminder that live rooms and in‑studio sets still matter for breaking acts. WKMS’s Sounds Good blends Bob Dylan and The Killers with newer voices, framing a continuum where catalog and current live side by side in the same set, the way good mixtapes always have.
Industry power plays are shifting the ground under artists’ feet. Music Business Worldwide shares Universal Music Group boss Sir Lucian Grainge’s new memo, doubling down on “Streaming 2.0” and an “artist‑centric” model, warning against AI “slop” while simultaneously striking alliances with AI players like YouTube and NVIDIA to build tools for creation, discovery, and superfans. New Industry Focus reports that AI-powered platform LANDR is acquiring Reason Studios, promising an Artist Council to steer the DAW’s evolution, another sign that the studio of the future is being coded as much as it is wired. In executive news, Ethiopia Habtemariam has been appointed President of Music at HYBE America, according to Music Business Worldwide, giving the K‑pop giant serious U.S. R&B and hip‑hop leadership as they chase the next BTS‑level wave.
Tech and controversy stay locked in a two‑step. New Industry Focus notes Ticketmaster facing a class action in Quebec over alleged illegal tracking and surveillance, keeping pressure on one of live music’s most powerful gatekeepers. Meanwhile, Bloomberg Tech dives deep on AI’s impact, with will.i.am predicting AI “bands” and even AI versions of stars like Adele and Bruce Springsteen, as majors quietly ink deals with AI music companies to stay ahead of the curve rather than get run over by it.
Out in the physical world, Ministry of Sound is finishing a massive renovation with a new KV2 sound system and multi‑dimensional lights ahead of its 35th anniversary, according to Record of the Day, signaling that the club experience is still evolving, not dying. And Independent Venue Week preps its 2026 run with Nova Twins and others championing the small rooms where future legends still learn to command a stage.
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