Pitchfork news is devastating, and symbolic.
We don't have the career we do without the curiosity and context building of publications like Pitchfork. If they can fall, it all can, and it all may well be in the process of doing so.
I take no pleasure in feeling unsurprised despite the shock.
Mat Dryhursttwitter.comPitchfork news is devastating, and symbolic. We don't have the career we do without the curiosity and context building of publications like Pitchfork. If they can fall, it all can, and it all may well be in the process of doing so. I take no pleasure in feeling unsurprised despite the shock.
How Music Criticism Lost Its Edge
newyorker.comIn just under one generation, we moved from appreciating albums as cohesive works to consuming individual tracks, and then to music becoming reduced to muzak: background noise for gaming, viral videos, or endless scrolling. Disappearing is music as an art in its own right, which commands sustained attention and deep engagement. A song’s success is... See more
Default Friend • No, Culture is Not Stuck
But this obviously contributed to a feeling of decline in the long-run, because mass culture continued to do the thing it always does: avoid artistic innovation in order to maximize profit. But once poptimism established that only the mainstream "mattered," it set up audiences to judge the health of culture on its least artistic output. If we have... See more
The Missing Piece in Conversations about “Cultural Decline”
I Am Going to Miss Pitchfork, but That’s Only Half the Problem
https://www.nytimes.com/by/ezra-kleinnytimes.com