RIP Steve Albini
- tragabigzanda
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Sun January 11, 2026 10:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- zeb
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
Yeah, it would be hard not to appreciate that sort of recognition of your body of work and its impact.
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
Even if he individually might have scoffed at the concept I'm sure his family, friends and colleagues would see it as appropriate.
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
Naming For Stevie
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- VinylGuy
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
He would have cried in his home then tweet something like “ I don’t give a fuck about a street in just an engenieer “ and Trag would have cried with the tweet and reposted it here
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
has it been long enough to make fun of this nerd again?
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- dimejinky99
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- BlakeWB
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
This is a big thread, but have you all touched on Albini’s outburst about the Odd Future crew? I remember it being a very bad look for him.
- VinylGuy
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warehouse
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
he used the n word a number of times to describe them.
the guy helped with some incredible records and has a unique ear. he was also a fucking asshole who probably needed to be slapped more as a kid. some of his interviews where he talks about being violent are so weird, considering you could pick your teeth with his arms. and i remember him ripping college kids starting radio shows and zines...isn't that what this guy did? his work is impressive, but any time i've heard or read him talk he came across as an idiot.
the guy helped with some incredible records and has a unique ear. he was also a fucking asshole who probably needed to be slapped more as a kid. some of his interviews where he talks about being violent are so weird, considering you could pick your teeth with his arms. and i remember him ripping college kids starting radio shows and zines...isn't that what this guy did? his work is impressive, but any time i've heard or read him talk he came across as an idiot.
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
He was definitely an absolute asshole and edgelord for a long period of time. He mellowed into an interesting, thoughtful guy later in life.
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- VinylGuy
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
Even though trag and albini have both gone (mostly) silent, I think the board could benefit from their voices on various topics.
Moving forward, with the aid of AI, I would like to use this thread as a space to imagine what they would have to say about various topics.
(Tragz if you're reading and find this offensive, that was not my intent. I genuinely think that yours and albinis views on all things music is a need for this board.)
On streaming platforms:
Moving forward, with the aid of AI, I would like to use this thread as a space to imagine what they would have to say about various topics.
(Tragz if you're reading and find this offensive, that was not my intent. I genuinely think that yours and albinis views on all things music is a need for this board.)
On streaming platforms:
Code: Select all
tragabigzanda
I’m not here to moralize anyone’s habits, but I’ve been feeling increasingly alienated from the way streaming platforms frame listening as a kind of passive utility. Mood playlists, algorithmic nudging, endless abundance — it all seems designed to discourage engagement rather than foster it.
Last year I went deep into vinyl again, not out of nostalgia, but as a way to slow myself down and actually choose what I hear. It’s not about warmth or format fetishism so much as reclaiming a sense of intention. Streaming feels frictionless in a way that’s actively hostile to meaning.
I’m curious how others square this with the reality that, for better or worse, streaming is now the primary interface between music and listeners.
Steve Albini
You’re describing a system that works exactly as intended.
Streaming services aren’t trying to help you listen to music. They’re trying to keep you occupied long enough to sell your attention to advertisers or justify a subscription fee. Music is just the raw material. It’s not even the product.
The idea that listening should be “frictionless” is a lie borrowed from tech marketing. Anything worth engaging with requires effort. Removing effort doesn’t make art more accessible — it makes it disposable.
tragabigzanda
That tracks, but I guess where I get stuck is the practical side. It’s hard to fully opt out without cutting yourself off from how new music circulates now. Discovery is mediated almost entirely through platforms, even for people who want to resist their logic.
Is intentional listening still possible inside these systems, or does participation inherently compromise the act?
Steve Albini
Listening is a private act. Platforms can’t actually stop you from paying attention — they can only encourage you not to.
The real damage happens when people confuse listening with support. Streaming a song doesn’t help the band. It helps the platform. Once you understand that, the moral fog clears pretty quickly.
If you’re using streaming as a reference library — fine. That’s what it’s good for. But don’t pretend it’s a relationship. Relationships involve reciprocity. Streaming is surveillance wrapped in convenience.
tragabigzanda
That distinction helps. I think part of the unease is cultural, not just economic. Playlists flatten context. Records used to arrive with a sense of place — liner notes, sequencing, even limitations. Now everything exists in a single undifferentiated feed.
It feels less like music culture and more like content management.
Steve Albini
That’s because it is content management.
Records were artifacts. They had edges. They began and ended. Someone made decisions and stood behind them. Playlists are just inventories optimized for retention metrics.
But this isn’t new. The industry has always tried to turn art into furniture. The difference now is that the system is better at hiding its intentions and worse at pretending artists matter.
If you want context, you have to supply it yourself. Read, ask questions, buy the record, talk to the band. The machine isn’t going to do that for you.
tragabigzanda
So the responsibility shifts almost entirely to the listener?
Steve Albini
It always was there. People just outsourced it.
You don’t need better platforms. You need clearer expectations. Music doesn’t exist to fill silence or regulate your mood. It exists because someone made it and wanted it heard as a thing, not as background radiation.
If you treat it that way — even occasionally — you’re already doing more than the system wants you to.
tragabigzanda
That’s strangely reassuring. Not exactly hopeful, but clarifying.
Steve Albini
Hope isn’t part of the transaction. Honesty is.
Listen how you want. Just don’t let corporations tell you that consumption equals participation. It doesn’t. It never did.dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
what the fuck is wrong with you
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
I thought it would be fun?
I'm guessing "LV and Ebert go to the movies" is off-limits?
I'm guessing "LV and Ebert go to the movies" is off-limits?
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- VinylGuy
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
ok, im considering that conversation as canon in my head. That happened. And it was at a very cool coffee shop that doesnt have wifi and were you can read the printed newspaper from last week.
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
Thanks, VG. I feel like there's potential here.
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
- VinylGuy
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Re: RIP Steve Albini
Oh totally, i would call it a podcast but im not sure these guys would actually do one, its way too mainstream. Maybe if its in the past yes, it could have happened.
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