industry
The music world is characterized by a blend of constants and continuous change; Beat examines the inside of the industry from recording studios to record labels, live performances, music streaming technology and beyond.
7 Signs Jay-Z's New Album Will Drop Before 2025 (Proof Inside)
We Analyzed Every Rumor: Here’s What a New Jay-Z Album Actually Means for Hip-Hop Let us be honest for a moment. The rumor of a new Jay-Z album is not just news. It is a cyclical event in hip hop, a cultural phenomenon when it happens. We have stood on this exact rumor before, wishing into the abyss of possibility, ever since the final, confessional notes of 4:44 faded out seven years ago. Yet here we are again, the spark ignited this time by none other than Cash Cobain on Billboard’s Unfiltered live. The claim is simple, yet monumental. Hov is cooking.
By NWO SPARROW5 months ago in Beat
10 Music Videos That Shaped Me. AI-Generated.
### 10. *Wannabe* – Spice Girls **The music video that made girl power global.** The first time I saw this video, I didn’t even know who they were—but I knew they were *something*. They came in loud, confident, and totally unbothered. It was silly, catchy, wild, and bursting with personality. This video introduced a cultural moment that never really left.
By Travis Johnson5 months ago in Beat
10 Obscure 90s Rock Albums That Deserve Another Listen
In the past, if you wanted to find old albums, you had to dig through CDs at the used record store and hope you'd uncover a few lost treasures. Today, Spotify hosts thousands of obscure albums that you can check out for free. This includes the 90s alternative rock genre, which has plenty of one-hit and one-album wonders who might've been forgotten without Internet archivists.
By Kaitlin Shanks5 months ago in Beat
Modern Rap Serves Time in a Regressive Rehab Program, c/o the Prison-Industrial Complex
In the era where perception often trumps reality, modern rap finds itself in a paradoxical predicament: artists are praised for playing gangsters, yet panic when faced with the consequences of gangster life. Once a platform for marginalized voices to speak truth to power, hip-hop today seems caught in a feedback loop, regurgitating performative rebellion while actively sidestepping the realities it once sought to expose. At the heart of this shift lies a tangled relationship between rap culture, the commodification of crime, and the looming shadow of the prison-industrial complex.
By Victor Trammell5 months ago in Beat
Dear DJ Enuff, From New York With Love by NWO Sparrow
When you talk about the voices that shaped New York City radio, DJ Enuff’s name rises to the top without hesitation. From Brooklyn to the airwaves, his career has been a living history of hip-hop, a career that has touched generations of listeners and artists. His presence on Hot 97 was more than just music, it was a ritual, a reminder that the culture was alive and moving forward every single day.
By NWO SPARROW5 months ago in Beat
10 Eighties Emo Albums That Defined the Genre
Eighties music has a reputation for being bright, sparkly and poppy, but in Washington, D.C., a darker genre was starting to evolve. The first "emotional hardcore" bands emerged from the 80s punk scene, setting the stage for mainstream emo to explode in the 2000s while giving listeners an outlet for their heartache, grief and rage.
By Kaitlin Shanks5 months ago in Beat
Music at the Margins: Why the Church Needs Outsiders to Lead Revival
God Moves at the Edges History makes one truth clear: revival rarely begins at the center of power. It begins at the margins, among those dismissed, overlooked, or rejected by polite society.
By Sunshine Firecracker5 months ago in Beat
Brandon Lake: The Chuck Smith of a New Generation?
Is Brandon Lake sparking a Jesus Revolution 2.0 as the Chuck Smith of our time? The original Jesus Revolution began when Chuck Smith welcomed the outsiders of his day into Calvary Chapel. Today, worship leader Brandon Lake may be playing a similar role—tearing down barriers through music, radical love, and collaborations that reach the margins. Could his ministry be the beginning of a new awakening?
By Sunshine Firecracker5 months ago in Beat
10 Nineties Emo Albums You Should Hear
I'll admit it: I've been a bad emo kid. Like a lot of millennials, I sincerely thought that emo started in the 2000s, when bands like Taking Back Sunday and Aiden appeared on the scene. However, when I did some research, I learned that emo's roots go all the way back to the mid-eighties.
By Kaitlin Shanks5 months ago in Beat








