βAI slop, begone! The viral musical virtuosos bringing brains and brilliance back to social media
Whether making microtonal pop or playing Renaissance instruments with sheep bones, a crop of bold artists are making genuinely strange music go mainstream β but are they at the mercy of the algorithm?
ChloΓ« Sobek is a Melbourne musician who plays the violone, a Renaissance precursor to the double bass. But instead of playing it in the traditional manner, she puts wobbling bits of cardboard between its strings or uses a sheepβs bone as a bow, and these weird interventions have become catnip for Instagramβs algorithm, getting her tens of thousands β sometimes hundreds of thousands β of views for each of her self-made performance videos. βDespite how it might appear, Iβm a reasonably shy person,β she says.
When Laurie Andersonβs robo-minimalist masterwork O Superman hit No 2 in the UK charts in 1981, thanks to incessant airplay on John Peelβs radio show, it was a signal of a media outletβs power to propel experimental music into the mainstream. Thatβs now happening again as prepared-instrument players such as Sobek, plus experimental pianists, microtonal singers and numerous other boundary-pushing solo performers, are routinely breaking out of underground circles thanks to videos β generally self-recorded at home β going viral on TikTok and Instagram.
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Β© Photograph: Sandra Ebert

Β© Photograph: Sandra Ebert

Β© Photograph: Sandra Ebert