the thug manifesto

For a period of about four months in the summer of 2014, when cars screeched by blocks with windows rolled down and volume knobs twisted right until they twisted no more, America was Bobby Shmurda’s. It was a quiet year, a twelve-month-long industry-wide collective gulp of air before plunging into the breathless string of hip-hop releases that have punctuated 2015, and during these twelve months of pretty-good, “Hot Nigga” was a punch to the gut. But even as parties collectively raised their drinks and erupted into choruses of “get up out my trap house” deep into the iciness of November and December, Bobby Shmurda never had hip-hop like he had the rest of America.

This is nothing new. Last summer it was Bobby Shmurda, before Shmurda it was iLoveMakonnen, and before iLoveMakonnen it was Chief Keef, Lil B, and countless others. And for each of them and their predecessors there’s always been an uneasy, awkward, and always unstated sense that this must surely all be a joke — that everyone must be, at some level, kidding. For the vast majority of artists, this simply accelerates an inevitable regression to the mean, but for the real gems, the ones that thrive between the lines and defy classification and that deserve better than relegation to seven-second Vine soundtracks, this disconnect is potentially fatal.

There’s always been a refusal to consider whether Yung Lean has any appeal beyond the inherent humor behind watching an awkwardly proportioned eighteen-year-old Scandinavian rap in a bucket hat [1]. There’s always been a refusal to consider whether Future has any depth or skill beyond being able to compellingly and repeatedly tell you about how he fucks up commas [2]. There’s always been a wholesale refusal to consider whether a song can be repetitive and oddly humorous and helplessly catchy and simultaneously be skillful and genuinely good. It’s not even that artists are being held to an unreasonable standard, they’re being held to a nonsensical one. It’s like being angry at J Dilla because Donuts doesn’t bump hard enough in the whip.

This disconnect is particularly ironic and unfair in a world where J. Cole can make music videos where two dogs act out the gripping saga of his first time with a girl and get anointed as the second coming in the process [3], but the division between Bad and What Can Even Be Potentially Considered As Being Good has become increasingly murky. This, too, isn’t particularly surprising: that’s what tends to happen when you move an entire industry to a platform (streaming) that hosts the fundamental triviality of memes alongside sternly serious work and measures their success by the same metrics, and under these circumstances, the conception that catchiness and critical quality aren’t just separate but mutually exclusive is easy to adopt.

A full disclosure is in order here. Young Thug is not my objective favorite rapper (Nas) or my subjective favorite rapper (Kanye West) or even my current favorite rapper (Future), but in the last twelve months, I’ve logged more times on obscure Young Thug throwaways combed from HotNewHipHop.com than I have on Illmatic, Yeezus, or 56 Nights. I’m also interning for Young Thug’s label, 300 Entertainment, for the summer, so you can proceed through the rest of this piece with knowledge of that potential bias. But here, I submit that The Young Thug Question is not whether he is Good, full-stop, or Not Good, but whether he possesses a practically generational ability to seize music, and I also submit that phrased as such, the answer is very clear.

There are rappers, brilliant and transcendent rappers, that do exactly what’s expected of them. Not in the stick-to-the-script, smile-for-the-camera sense or even a broader creative sense, but in a very technical, elementary sense — they know exactly when a song calls for them to segue from snarl to drawl, when to hold back on a syllable for a half-second delay to land with a drum kick, when to wind up their pace and when to explode into double-time. They’re crowd-pleasers at the most fundamental tier, so fundamental that it hardly registers as an intentional choice (there are far more immediately compelling elements to hip-hop than a rapper’s rhythmic synchronization), but even if it’s a subconscious skill, it’s a commanding one. Rappers like Jay Electronica or Freddie Gibbs draw authoritative magnetism from it; you know exactly what they’re about to do because it’s the flip-to-the-back-check-it-in-the-answer-key correct thing to do but despite that, it’s executed so thoroughly impeccably that all you can do is shrug. There are incredible artists in hip-hop that never truly had it [4], so it’s not a non-negotiable requirement, but when it’s present, it’s present.

But the security in understanding and knowing precisely how Jay Electronica will dismantle a song, however dazzling it may be, is uncomfortable. It’s a predictable sort of brilliance, giving you assurance where musical experience has taught you to expect uncertainty. It’s juxtaposed against this type of brilliance that Young Thug’s volatility becomes so special. Young Thug’s unpredictability lives on several different tiers: he’s a criminal who wails his threats, and when you call him unpredictable you don’t mean it in a “what direction will he go next?” kind of way but in a “he might literally break out a ukulele for his next single” kind of way.

It also means that Young Thug’s music is unexpectedly dense, heavy, only rocketed along by a pace that too often translates into unintelligibility. He’s too fast to keep up with, too fast to identify patterns, and when you manage to form an expectation about how he’ll complete a bar he smashes it. This makes him difficult to listen to solo, and the whole Rich Gang exercise illustrated that in broad strokes: Rich Homie Quan or Birdman’s presence forces Thugger into a series of recognizable roles (the first verse or the hook or, more broadly, the foil to Quan), but when he’s alone, his abstractness can be overwhelming. Our ears are trained to search for certain things in music, like hooks, and Thug often refuses to abide those rules. But at his absolute thrilling technical best, like on “Givenchy”, it’s worth it — at one striking point, he even plays the old MF DOOM card of tossing out a red herring rhyme, rapping, “You should know me and sharp shooters sponsored by FOX/split the money up in eight ways like I’m an octopus”. Looking at a transcription of his lyrics is always disorienting: you recognize the vividness and momentary absurdity of his punchlines (“I’m the President, baby, blacker Barack,” he declares at one point in “Givenchy”), but how he possibly managed to rap the lines you see in the song that you know is difficult to understand. They don’t look like his lyrics, because everything you know about rap tells you that these words shouldn’t slot into the spaces allotted to them — to try and match the two is to try and shove something abstract into a concrete structure.

This is, largely, an encapsulation of the entire Young Thug Question: to evaluate Young Thug on the realism of his punchlines or his seriousness is to walk right by the point. It’s a logical method of judgment: the debt owed to Lil Wayne is obvious, for example, and he makes music with plenty of relatively straightforward Atlanta trap rappers who do relatively straightforward things with their voice and their music. But it’s a structural evaluation of a rapper whose entire style ignores the very conception of structure, dropping into extended hooks or leading into codas that don’t loop back to anything. When Thugger tells you he splits his money eight ways like an octopus, to knock points off for the simile’s ridiculousness is to miss what makes Young Thug Young Thug. Young Thug punchlines are not Lil Wayne punchlines: writer Andrew Nosnitsky noted once that Young Thug “is writing in a sphere closer to Ghostface or De La Soul than the modern-day trap stars he’ll inevitably be lumped in with,” and this is crucial. Thugger overloads you, refuses to give you a point of stability, snaps you back into focus with sharp, shocking moments of lyricism.

There’s a piece I started writing nearly a year ago off the heels of Young Thug and Rich Homie Quan and Metro Boomin’ running riot across Travi$ Scott’s Day Before Rodeo: it’s striking to read through the draft I had now, because a year ago, Thug was still a relative mystery.  Still riding off the coattails of “Danny Glover” and “Stoner” and 1017 Thug, he’d left people grasping at offerings like Black Portland without a definitive project to latch onto — post-rise, all we’d had then was a string of features [5] that appeared dominant and impossible to escape. But go through them now and the progression is striking, because where he’d previously allowed his distinctiveness to flood his entire persona on a verse, he’s now learned a certain amount of restraint, an ability to hold back. His most definitive song, Rich Gang’s “Lifestyle”, is a perfect example: he let his wailing go too far, and the song suffers for it.

This is partly what makes Barter 6, his first true project after 1017 Thug from earlier this year, so important — it let Thug float. Until then, we’ve only seen his solo ability in flashes of hyper-concentrated focus, when he washed T.I. on “About the Money” or flipped Drake’s “The Language” with Metro Boomin’. Even Rich Gang wasn’t an ideal stage for Young Thug, because superficially, it’s easy to read Quan as the more deliberate and conventional (read: skilled) member of the duo and let Thugger’s manics become exciting moments of madness that exist primarily to be pulled back into reality by Quan — that’s largely been the issue with his feature-heavy presence, too, because as a featured artist Thug is more of an exhibit than anything else. In Barter 6, though, everything is on Thugger’s terms. Young Dolph and MPA Duke spit the verses of their lives, legends T.I. and Lil Boosie show up on the same track, even Birdman pulls out the stops for a song, but it’s all in Young Thug’s world. Thug gets to breathe, let his idiosyncrasies shift from sideshow to main act, and prove that he’s still an equally compelling artist. If Barter 6 wasn’t enough, the seventy-song-leak from early May proves the point [6]: he’s an artist that’s learned to sit back. He doesn’t plunge right into “Mine”, instead letting the song gather pace on its own, and “Got My Mind Right” is skeletal, throbbing, even slowing to complete silence at certain points. What this newfound maturity means for Young Thug is a powerful presence that’s no longer simply contained to Atlanta and the occasional radio hit, and his stunning turn on Jamie xx’s “I Know There’s Gonna Be (Good Times)” is a fitting mission statement in that regard. Much in the same way Drake’s appearance on SBTRKT’s remix to “Wildfire” in 2011 shifted him from “good rap artist” to “potential star”, Thugger’s profile is suddenly very, very different, and much in the same way that Drake has shed punchline status, the option to take Young Thug seriously or not is rapidly receding from sight.

It’s possible that this broader point of Thugger’s undeniability negates my more specific ones: if Young Thug is bound to be a star whether or not he’s taken seriously, perhaps it doesn’t particularly matter whether people recognize him as a legitimately exceptional rapper. But to me it does. It matters to me that Young Thug doesn’t end up grudgingly accepted, an inexplicable star churned out by an increasingly inexplicable industry, and it matters to me that I stop getting skeptical glances and “really? “Stoner” is seriously your favorite song of last year?”. While everyone around him is scrambling to decide whether they want to be Kendrick, Drake, or Chance, Young Thug is living in a different planet, an unbelievably talented rapper that’s making music without peer, and there’s not much more I can ask for.

[1] He does.

[2] He does.

[3] In reality, J. Cole’s entire fandom probably clings to him based on a desperate backlash against this entire phenomenon and the according need to find someone who raps okay over okay soul samples and keeps it sufficiently real. I don’t like J. Cole.

[4] There’s a decent argument that “All Day” is good primarily because it’s the first time in years that Kanye has really caught a beat, a skill that he promptly proceeded to lose with his next few features.

[5] Most notably Low Pros’ “Frankie Lymon”, Metro Boomin’s “Chanel Vintage”, Young Scooter’s “Drugs”.

[6] You can make at least two cohesive projects better than Barter 6 from these leaks. I know because I spent half an hour at 3AM doing this a week ago.

best of 2014

last year I nearly fucking killed myself doing 40 writeups on my favorite shit of the year. definitely not doing that again, but i’ll still gladly force my opinions on you.


albums

15. Kevin Abstract MTV1989

14. Travi$ ScottDays Before Rodeo

13. Blu - Good to Be Home

12. Big K.R.I.T. - Cadillactica

11. Mick Jenkins - The Water[s]

10. Lil Herb - Welcome to Fazoland

9. PRhyme PRhyme

8. Rich Gang - Tha Tour, Pt. 1

7. Vince StaplesHell Can Wait EP

6. Open Mike Eagle - Dark Comedy

5. RATKINGSo It Goes
A nice, timely reminder that “New York” doesn’t have to mean “revivalist” in hip-hop. Wiki, Hak, and Sporting Life thrive in the underground grime that they’ve illustrated – gritty in an oddly beautiful way.

4. Run the JewelsRun the Jewels 2
Probably seized up more press than it might’ve deserved by fulfilling the “independent rap coverage” quota for 75% of music publications, but that doesn’t mean it’s not incredible. It’s a spiked wrecking ball disguised as a rap album, smashing through haters and social norms alike with equal aplomb. 

3. MiloA Toothpaste Suburb
Milo is the type of rapper that revels in his words, and it’s infectious. Rory Ferreira the Human Being is buried deep in references to cult ‘80s movies and wry non sequiturs, daring you to seek him out. In the first song alone, Milo spends six months laughing in the front room of his first apartment with his girlfriend, crowns himself the “corduroy coon prince,” and hides his suicidal tendencies with a toupee. Nothing’s dealt straight in A Toothpaste Suburb.

2. YGMy Krazy Life
My Krazy Life is an album both painfully narrow and daringly ambitious in its aims – it’s a concept album masked in a stream of singles, but veiled in YG and DJ Mustard’s apparent determination to wring every last Billboard spot out of their signature “ratchet music” sound is a remarkably powerful and effective album. The singles are uncompromising in their grip (at least seven or eight songs that could’ve run rampant on Top 40), but even so, there’s an unshakable West Coast authenticity to the album that’s impossible to discount. It’s brutally immoral and devotedly filial at the same time and in the Compton that YG sketches for us, that makes perfect sense.

1. Freddie Gibbs & MadlibPiñata
I’ve written enough words about Piñata already that I won’t wax poetic again here, but it’s a shame that it’ll forever be relegated to “overrated cult classic” status. Nine months later, it’s the best rap album of the year and second isn’t even in sight. 


songs

15. Yung Lean - “Yoshi City” (prod. Yung Gud)

14. DeJ Loaf - “Try Me” (prod. DDS)

13. Open Mike Eagle feat. Toy Light - “Dark Comedy Morning Show” (prod. Toy Light)

12. iLoveMakonnen feat. Drake - “Club Going Up on a Tuesday (Remix)” (prod. Metro Boomin & Sonny Digital)

11. Kevin Abstract - “Drugs” (prod. Romil)

10. Big K.R.I.T. - “Mt. Olympus” (prod. Big K.R.I.T.)

9. Vic Mensa - “Down on My Luck” (prod. Stefan Ponce)

8. T.I. feat. Young Thug - “About the Money” (prod. London on da Track)

7. Vince Staples - “Blue Suede” (prod. Hagler Tyrant)

6. Run the Jewels feat. Zach de la Rocha - “Close Your Eyes (And Count to Fuck)" (prod. El-P)

5. Jay Electronica - "Better in Tune with the Infinite” (prod. Ryuichi Sakamoto)
His one verse here ends with the proclamation, “Staring out the windows is for love songs and house flies,” and this is neither absurd nor unacceptable. We’d all be better off with Act II in our iTunes, but Jay ElecHannukah can come out spitting truth and justice over Ryuichi Sakamoto every six months and that’s not too bad either.

4. Rustie feat. Danny Brown“Attak” (prod. Rustie)
“Attak” is a career’s worth of brutality distilled down into three minutes and a second during which Brown reminds you of his drug-dealing credentials, pops bottles, and metaphorically refers to a blow job as a police raid. Ultimately, though, the only line that matters is the last, repeated – “I ain’t gotta say shit,” he snarls, “tell your bitch to suck my dick.”

3. Drake - “0-100/The Catch Up” (prod. 40, Boi-1da & Nineteen85)
Drake’s throwaways get Grammy nominations, and that’s possibly the most categorical statement of a rapper’s dominance ever. “0-100” is ice cold stunting from a man who’s capable of dictating hip-hop discourse with 3AM SoundCloud releases and knows it. “Trophies” might have the victory horns, but this is Drake placing the crown atop his head and daring everyone, anyone, to snatch it away.

2. Flying Lotus feat. Kendrick Lamar - “Never Catch Me” (prod. Flying Lotus)
While J. Cole’s accumulated his critical acclaim by settling into safe hip-hop traditionalism, Kendrick is leveraging his goodwill to catapult himself into increasingly unfamiliar territory. Don’t mind the smoothness, because FlyLo’s jazzy backdrop here doesn’t let up on the (lack of) structure to give Kendrick a rhythmic foothold – it’s only his deftness that veils how uninhabitable “Never Catch Me” is. That’s a mark of greatness in its own: so good you don’t even notice.

1. Young Thug - “Stoner” (prod. Dun Deal)
Thug’s the rapper who’s rattled off a ridiculous string of incredible singles and features in the past year, running his genre with random SoundCloud drops even while mired in label purgatory. He’s the rapper who showed up on national TV in skin-tight ripped maroon jeans (pink scarf sticking out his back pocket) and hair buns worthy of Princess Leia. And he’s arguably hip-hop’s most important figure moving forward, standing head, shoulders, and dyed dreadlocks above his ATLien peers as the indisputable face of the Atlanta renaissance.  While he’s gladly walking the roads paved by his predecessors (most notably Lil Wayne and Future), everything about Thugger’s aesthetic embodies the type of offbeat approach to music that nearly every one of Atlanta’s recent stars has shared.  Thugger is what happens when you take Future, Migos, and the like’s pure weirdness to (beyond, even) its logical conclusion.  Explain him and you’d end up with something parodic: he’s alternately yelling and snarling and squealing, fidgeting on the fence between English and gibberish.  And a parody is what he might be if he wasn’t so talented. Technically he’s a marvel, almost absurdly skilled, but it’s in a way that we’re not traditionally trained to think of as a representation of proficiency in the realm of hip-hop.  Melodically, lyrically, structurally — Thug does things with words that no one else in his genre does. In that sense, “Stoner” is the quintessential Thug song: Dun Deal mostly steps back, letting Thug take center stage. But then again, it’s not like it’s anyone’s choice. Thug takes the stage when he wants it.

why i care about kanye west

Firstly, I care about Kanye West because I think hero worship is funny in its weirdly excessive self-deprecation and apparently other people do too so I feed into that. Secondly and more pointedly, though, I care about Kanye West because he’s the one figure in all of hip-hop that’s been able to snag the elusive term of “genius” without letting it turn him (completely) into a joke or a caricature. Sure, 2Pac is a genius – a thug genius.  Jay-Z’s a genius too – but a business genius. Kanye’s managed to take that term and force the general public to come to terms with, if not the certainty, then at least the looming and very probable possibility that he’s a genius on a creative and musical level.  It doesn’t really matter if he is or not to anyone who isn’t invested in his music. It only matters that he’s defiantly shouldered his way into the center of that discussion (either in spite of or because of his antics).  

Kanye West is the type of rare artist that’s somehow managed to part humanity into two polarized sides on every aspect of his personality like Moses did the Red Sea: or, at least, everything but his music.  That, we’ve somewhat grudgingly conceded, he’s got covered (easy to forget in the wake of Drake and Kendrick Lamar’s ascendances and subsequent warring for the metaphorical throne of hip-hop that My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy was one of the most unanimously and immediately praised hip-hop albums in the genre’s history, and that came after all of the amazing shit he did before it that I could write and have written about for thousands of words).  That’s also why Yeezus won’t ever be one of my favorite Kanye albums, because it finally permitted Kanye’s polarizing nature extend to his music in a way it hadn’t before (Watch the Throne and Cruel Summer were big steps in that direction, but breaking the string of universally praised Kanye solo albums is a big deal), in the process shattering Kanye’s final and most fundamental barrier from public ridicule.  

I’m doubtful that the recently strengthening tides against Kanye (71% unfavorable, according to Rasmussen) have the Kardashian clan to thank as the proverbial straws that broke the camel’s back.  In my mind, it’s because Kanye’s finally showing cracks in the unassailable helm of “creative genius” that he wore so proudly for a decade.  And thirdly, that’s why I care so much about Kanye – because if Kanye isn’t a genius anymore, whether because he’s actually making worse music or because the public has decided that Kim Kardashian and/or his consistent barrage of shockingly, incredibly, unbelievably dumb declarations in the media, that means that hip-hop is having to stake its reputation (and potentially its hopes of ever shedding its primary status as a shallow music form) on the likes of the afore-mentioned Kendrick and Drake.

Yeah, I know and you probably know that hip-hop is more than that, and I know and you probably know that Kendrick and Drake are both generational talents who are very potentially capable of transforming and shaping a genre like Kanye before them. But that’s beyond the point, because most of the public doesn’t. Drake is the guy who raps about girls who don’t love him back and calling them at 5AM, and Kendrick is the new guy who raps about swimming pools and really deep shit about the hood in some order.  Kanye had built up a reputation with critical and public acclaim – not one that Drake and Kendrick can’t build, but one that they haven’t just yet.

So that means that in the wake of Kanye meticulously self-destructing every facet of his public reputation, hip-hop has to hope that someone can step up and grab that “genius” mantle, because especially in the wake of this kind of over-generalizing, stereotyping, predetermined-narrative-searching bullshit, hip-hop needs a figure that can be taken seriously outside of its own bubble.  And it doesn’t look like Kanye can be that person anymore. 

Now go listen to the best Kanye song and remember why he’s one of the most singular talents hip-hop will ever have.

If you haven’t realized how much of a roll Atlanta is on recently – you’re not paying enough attention.  Metro Boomin’s “Chanel Vintage,” set to live on his upcoming 20 and Boomin project, is anchored by two of hip-hop’s most influential artists of the moment in Future and Young Thug. But what’s notable about this record beyond its excellence is the way in which Thugger sweeps the rug out from his equally offbeat partner-in-crime with his frenetic closing verse: it’s yet another show-stealer in a long string of show-stealers, and it’s becoming increasingly clear that Young Thug is pushing rap in the direction that *he* wants, whether rap likes it or not.

Source: http://soundcloud.com/metroboomin/metro-boomin-chanel-vintage-ft-future-young-thug

Statik Selektah - “The Imperial (prod. Statik Selektah)” feat. Action Bronson, Royce da 5'9" & Black Thought

I mean, we could talk about how Statik Selektah continues to be the one artist who actually fulfills those dream collaborations thrown around in the depths of Reddit and KanyeToThe (like, you really couldn’t make up some of the lineups for his tracks). Or we could talk about how Black Thought steals the show on yet another star-studded Selektah track (like he did on his verse-of-the-year for last year’s “Bird’s Eye View”): there might not be a better verse-structurer in the history of hip-hop. There’s a lot of things going for Black Thought that throw him into contention for top five (top one?) rappers ever, but the almost textbook-brilliance and flair that infuses each of his tracks is what really sets him apart (today, it’s probably really only Freddie Gibbs and maybe Kendrick Lamar and Jay Electronica who rival this aspect of Thought’s multifaceted talents). Each syllable perfectly placed, his cadence perfectly floating up and down and revving the accelerator/smoothly hitting the brakes in perfect sync with each of his fifty-plus bars.  Absolutely perfect.

Source: https://soundcloud.com/statikselekt/statik-selektah-ft-action-bronson-royce-da-59-black-thought-the-imperial-shade-45-rip

the best rap music of the year kinda halfway through

It’s not June 30th yet but I feel like writing up this list so I’m gonna do it.

albums

1. Freddie Gibbs & Madlib - Piñata

2. Open Mike Eagle - Dark Comedy

3. RATKING - So It Goes

4. YG (& DJ Mustard) - My Krazy Life

5. Blu - Good to Be Home

6. Future - Honest

7. Lil Herb - Welcome to Fazoland

8. Muja Messiah - God Kissed It, The Devil Missed It

9. Dag Savage - E&J

10. Vince Staples - Shyne Coldchain Vol. II

songs

1. Drake - “Draft Day (prod. Boi-1da)”

2. Cam'ron & A-Trak - “Dipshits feat. Juelz Santana (prod. A-Trak & Just Blaze)”

3. Open Mike Eagle - “Dark Comedy Morning Show feat. Toy Light (prod. Toy Light)”

4. Freddie Gibbs & Madlib - “Real (prod. Madlib)”

5. YG - “Meet the Flockers feat. Tee Cee (prod. Mikely Adam)”

6. T.I. - “About the Money feat. Young Thug (prod. London on Da Track)”

7. Big K.R.I.T. - “Mt. Olympus (prod. Big K.R.I.T.)”

8. Metro Thuggin’ - “The Blanguage (prod. Metro Boomin)”

9. RATKING - “Canal (prod. Sporting Life)”

10. Vic Mensa - “Down on My Luck (prod. Stefan Ponce)”

The oral* history of Music Tumblr, 2008-2014

crumbler:

Once upon a time, my Tumblr Dashboard was full of writing about music. I started a Tumblr with my friend Steve in the spring of 2008, and at first it was the random short-form tumblog I thought that Tumblr wanted from us. But owing first to Steve’s departure for law school, and my own all-consuming passion for music news and criticism, Crumbler gradually became a place to thinks about songs and artists and the strange collisions between them. In part, that was because my Tumblr Dashboard had been taken over by music writers, or writers who wrote mostly about music: perpetua, agrammar, tomewing, maura, barthel, tombreihan, and twentyfourbit, to name some. Many of those writers had grown famous on other platforms. But Tumblr also helped to nurture a new generation of music writers — some who were enthusiastic hobbyists, like hamtunes, and softcommunication, and 1000xpm; and some who would go on to write for Pitchfork, Time, and many other established music publications. Music writing was always a hobby for me, and as I grew older it became less important to me. Crumbler posts these days are now few and far between, and are mostly reblogs. Good reblogs! But reblogs nonetheless.

At some point I had the idea of reaching out to some of my favorite writers and ask them a bunch of questions about Music Tumblr, in hopes of putting together an “oral history” that was actually an “email history.” I reached out to a dozen or so people and just about everybody responded. The only people who did not respond, unfortunately, were the women writers that I contacted, and I felt really bad about that, and shelved the project for a couple months. But now that folks like markrichardson and popcornnoises are talking about the death of Music Tumblr I felt like I should just let you know what I found out through my half-assed journalism, because the writers who did respond were generous with their time and brilliant, as ever, in their responses. What follows makes no claim to be totally representative, and acknowledges that there are many still people on Tumblr writing well about music. 

SO. 

What follows are 2,500 or so words about the life and death of what some folks, myself included, are presumptuously calling Music Tumblr. It died for four main reasons:

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