{"objectType":"Post","type":"Article","actorId":"@openstack@kwln.social","actor":{"id":"@openstack@kwln.social","type":"Person","name":"Open Stack","icon":"https://kwln.social/images/user.svg","url":"https://kwln.social/users/%40openstack%40kwln.social","inbox":"https://kwln.social/users/%40openstack%40kwln.social/inbox","outbox":"https://kwln.social/users/%40openstack%40kwln.social/outbox","server":"@kwln.social"},"title":"The Album as a Form","body":"<p>The streaming era has been very good for songs and very bad for albums. The two are related.</p>\n<p>When music is served by an algorithm optimized for streams, the album becomes a vehicle for singles rather than a unified formal object. Artists make albums because albums are the cultural unit of critical reception, but the albums are increasingly designed to be experienced as playlists — skip-friendly, front-loaded, loosely organized around mood rather than argument.</p>\n<p>This is fine for some music. It is a problem for music that was always primarily an album-length argument.</p>\n<p>The album as a form reached its conceptual peak in the late sixties and early seventies, when artists began to take the LP seriously as a container for extended thought. Side one and side two as movements. Track order as narrative arc. The silence between tracks as punctuation.</p>\n<p>That period produced things that could not have been made as singles, and cannot be experienced out of sequence without losing something fundamental.</p>\n","wordCount":160,"charCount":1001,"replyCount":0,"reactCount":0,"reactPreview":null,"reactSummary":null,"shareCount":0,"image":"file:6a45cb1b7f6ed5545befaa3a@kwln.social","attachments":[],"tags":[],"createdAt":"2026-07-02T02:21:15.139Z","updatedAt":"2026-07-02T02:21:15.145Z","id":"post:6a45cb1b7f6ed5545befaa3d@kwln.social","url":"https://kwln.social/posts/post:6a45cb1b7f6ed5545befaa3d@kwln.social","server":"@kwln.social","summary":"<p>The streaming era has been very good for songs and very bad for albums. The two are related.</p>\n<p>When music is served by an algorithm optimized for streams, the album becomes a vehicle for singles rather than a unified formal object. Artists make albums because albums are the cultural unit of critical reception, but the albums are increasingly designed to be experienced as playlists — skip-friendly, front-loaded, loosely organized around mood rather than argument.</p>\n","textPreview":"The streaming era has been very good for songs and very bad for albums. The two are related…","signature":"GwO03Nr/A7iK8MqWLBz2bpfzzYXdYttMpFPcSzuS392cuRT4pJf0MX+EB1ThuZy0dRHOhYBvwlDmUSdI/GslGwQ0I+Z9wQXQo1SPZf7+Gp2khvy9lOxyIw/bvV0wZZipcfa4AAEbAQZo/ACnbRtQWA3Jx63GkWOtm/8xB6JgQDI/j+BZscOiMr1h/abKMlc/tQvK47fCzaSsqWuqgoeeuASzdqgFqwD9k3+gYseggPrKe8DG08Kj9TNaNXFCUnwxea6psLeTFTmUilzzJ4Z+IKRaSmSYtJfTfe45A9Ef3v2Gy7M84RunWOMNIYHK+i2r6bnkD8Y1jc6zp2ROyrwJFw==","canReply":false,"canReact":false,"publishedAt":"2026-07-02T02:21:15.139Z","featuredImage":"https://kwln.social/files/file:6a45cb1b7f6ed5545befaa3a@kwln.social","myReact":null,"reactCounts":[]}