Today's Lead Story · Streaming Strategy New today

The Skip Threshold: What Spotify Actually Counts, and What Artists Should Watch Instead

The 30-second threshold governs how Spotify counts a stream for royalty and reporting purposes. It is not a public algorithmic pass/fail score. Here is what the counting rule actually means and which metrics inside Spotify for Artists give you more honest signal.

Published

Read the full Stem →

Today's New Articles

Newly approved · Wednesday, June 3, 2026 · The day's three Stems

From Tuesday, June 2

Previously published · Three Stems

From Sunday, May 31

Previously published · Three Stems
Editorial photograph of an independent artist and a music industry representative reviewing documents together at a modern creative workspace with exposed brick walls, both focused on the paperwork, no logos or readable text visible.
Modern Music Industry · Pillar

Label Services Deals Explained: What They Are and Where They Fit

Label services is the category between self-release distribution and a traditional record deal. Understanding where deals on that spectrum sit -- and what questions to ask before signing any of them -- is one of the more consequential decisions an independent artist can make while growing.

Published May 31, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Editorial photograph of a musician at a home desk reviewing a document and financial figures with a calculator and laptop nearby, natural window light, acoustic guitar visible in the background, no readable text on documents or screen.
Royalties and Ownership · Pillar

Advances, Recoupment, and the Math Artists Need Before They Sign

A label advance is money paid upfront and repaid from your own royalties. Recoupment is slower than most artists expect. Royalty financing is a structurally different alternative. Here is how both work and what to know before any deal conversation.

Published May 31, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Editorial photograph of a developing artist performing on stage at a small intimate venue with an engaged crowd visible in the foreground, warm stage lighting, artist-audience connection clear, no arena scale, no readable logos.
Artist Development · Pillar

Live Performance as a Development Accelerator: What the Data Shows

The live music industry generated $9.5 billion across the top 100 worldwide tours in 2024. For a developing artist playing a 200-capacity room, those figures describe a different world. But the infrastructure logic behind live performance applies at every scale.

Published May 31, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Saturday, May 30

Previously published · Three Stems
Editorial photograph of a musician at a modern workstation reviewing printed legal documents beside a monitor displaying a blurred audio waveform, no readable screen text, no platform logos, neutral studio environment.
AI and Music · Industry Brief

Royalty and Rights Frontier for AI Generated Works

Three institutional actors have staked out formal positions on AI-generated music since 2024: the US Copyright Office, the RIAA, and the federal court system. None of these developments is final. All are shaping the landscape working musicians are navigating now.

Published May 30, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Friday, May 29

Previously published · Three Stems
Editorial photograph of a songwriter and publisher working desk in warm afternoon side light: blank music manuscript paper with printed staff lines, a vintage fountain pen, manila folders, a guitar pick, and an upright piano keyboard visible in the background, no PRO logos or readable text.
Royalties and Ownership · Pillar

What ASCAP and BMI Actually Do

Most independent artists know they are supposed to sign up with ASCAP or BMI. Fewer understand what those organizations actually collect, how the money flows, and what rights they are protecting on an artist's behalf.

Published May 29, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Editorial photograph of a modern home recording studio workspace in soft warm lamp light: laptop open to a blurred dark audio waveform display, compact audio interface, MIDI keyboard at the desk edge, microphone on a short stand, and open notebook with pencil beside the laptop, no readable text or software logos.
AI and Music · Pillar

Generative Music Models in Plain Operator Language

The conversation about AI-generated music has been moving fast enough that most operational guidance has lagged behind the actual legal and regulatory record. This article covers what is in that record as of the time of publication.

Published May 29, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Thursday, May 28

Previously approved · Still on the home desk
Abstract editorial graphic: concentric horizon arcs and vertical signal bars in deep slate and warm gold on a dark background, representing audience engagement data flows without readable text or logos.
Spotify Growth · Hub Sprint

The 28 Day Listener Is a Career Signal, Not a Scoreboard

Most independent artists read their monthly listener count like a popularity score. It is not. It is a 28-day window into who is intentionally choosing your music, and it tells you more about where your career is going than any single stream count will.

Published May 28, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Abstract editorial graphic: vertical signal bars and a diagonal beam in deep teal and warm amber on a dark background, representing the contrast between campaign stream spikes and durable catalog signals without readable text or logos.
Indie Label / Artist Dev · Streaming Strategy

When Paid Promotion Helps a Catalog, and When It Just Buys Streams

Paid promotion on Spotify is not one category. The tools have different mechanics and different post-campaign effects. The question artists get wrong is whether a campaign that produced high stream numbers was a success.

Published May 28, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Wednesday, May 27

Previously approved · Still on the home desk
Photograph of a musician home studio workspace in warm afternoon light: a laptop open to a streaming dashboard with blurred non-readable data, a wall calendar with pencil circles on dates, vinyl records on a shelf, a small acoustic guitar leaning nearby, an open notebook with a pen, a ceramic mug. No readable text. Quiet documentary still-life, restrained Americana palette.
Streaming Strategy / Independent Artist Growth · Hub Sprint

How Streaming Changed the Country Music Release Calendar

Streaming rewrote when country artists release music. The old country calendar ran on radio promotion cycles and album rollouts that took months. The new one runs on Spotify's Friday window, algorithmic freshness signals, and catalog depth.

Published May 27, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Photograph of a wide empty award venue stage in warm stage lighting: rows of empty theater seats, a podium at center stage with a microphone, deep red curtains, soft gold and amber lighting across the floor. No people, no readable text.
Country · Feature Stem

The CMA Awards Turned Industry Consensus Into a National Story

The CMA Awards are not just a televised ceremony. They are the mechanism by which the country music industry converts internal consensus into a national story. Understanding how that mechanism works tells you something real about how Nashville constructs its own narrative.

Published May 27, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Photograph of a worn sunburst electric guitar on a wooden floor stand in a rehearsal room with warm incandescent lamp light, a vintage tube amplifier in the background, guitar picks scattered on a small wooden table beside it. No people, no readable text.
Country / Southern Rock / Guitar-Driven Music · Feature Stem

Southern Rock's Guitar Language Still Shapes Country's Streaming Era

Southern rock's guitar vocabulary did not disappear when the format faded from radio. The dual-lead harmony, the slide work, the tube-driven electric tone: these are a working grammar that country producers and players reach for because it works.

Published May 27, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Tuesday, May 26

Previously approved · Still on the home desk
Photograph of a warm wooden desk near a window in morning light: organized songwriter royalty paperwork in manila folders, a simple calculator, a pencil resting on a blank sheet, an open spiral notebook, and a laptop showing a blurred non-readable spreadsheet. Natural side light, quiet documentary still-life, restrained Americana palette.
Royalties and Ownership · Hub Sprint

How Songwriter Royalties Actually Work for an Independent Americana Songwriter: A Patient, Source-Backed Read of the Four Streams the Writer Earns From

An independent Americana songwriter does not earn from one royalty. The writer earns from four. Each one comes from a different source, each one is collected by a different agent, and each one compounds at a different speed. The honest read separates them.

Published May 26, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Photograph of a songwriter's writing table in warm side window light: an open notebook with blurred non-readable handwriting, a fountain pen resting on the page, a ceramic coffee mug, a small vintage key, and a face-down old photograph on the worn wooden surface.
Americana · Craft Stem

The Specific Image Is the Songwriter's Discipline: How Naming the Room, the Hour, and the Object Earns the Americana Lyric Its Weight

The Americana lyrics that last almost always name something. A kitchen window, a porch step, a county road, the hour the call came. The specific image is not decoration. It is the discipline that lets the song carry weight a vaguer line cannot.

Published May 26, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Monday, May 25

Previously approved · Still on the home desk
Photograph of an independent artist's working desk with a closed laptop, paper notebook of catalog notes, a small-body acoustic guitar by the window, a shelf of vinyl LPs and books, headphones, and folders on the wooden tabletop.
Independent Artist Strategy · Hub Sprint

The Catalog Is the Asset: How Independent Artists Should Read Their Body of Work as a Long-Term Asset Without Treating It Like an Investment Vehicle

An independent artist's catalog is the asset. It is not a portfolio. It is not a derivative. The honest read of catalog value is a decade-long read, made on writing days, not on quarterly statements, and held by the writer who owns it.

Published May 25, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Photograph of an independent artist's home office with a closed laptop on a wooden desk, a notebook open to a handwritten decision-tree diagram, release-schedule index cards, a brass desk lamp, an audio interface, and an electric guitar on a stand.
Independent Artist Strategy · Operator Stem

The Independent Distributor Decision Is Not a Vendor Decision: A Working Framework for Choosing How Your Songs Reach the World

Choosing a distributor reads like buying a service. It is really a rights and operating decision that shapes how an independent artist's catalog reaches the world for the next decade. The vendor frame undersells what is actually being decided.

Published May 25, 2026 Read the full Stem →
Photograph of an independent artist's planning table with a twelve-month wall calendar marked with release-window blocks, a notebook of role-allocation notes, release-art index cards, a ceramic mug, an open laptop showing a waveform, a small acoustic guitar, and a small monitor speaker.
Independent Artist Strategy · Operator Stem

A Release Strategy Without a Label: How Independent Artists Should Operate a Release Year When the Label Is the Artist

A release year without a label is not a year without a label's work. It is a year in which the artist does that work themselves, vendors it out cleanly, or accepts that it will not get done. The honest read is to choose which on purpose.

Published May 25, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Sunday, May 24

Previously approved · Still on the home desk

From Saturday, May 23

Previously approved · Still on the home desk
Working musician's listening corner in warm window light: a sunburst electric guitar against an old Wurlitzer electric piano, a vintage hardshell guitar case open with an electric bass laid inside, a crate of vinyl LPs, and a small combo amp.
Editorial Feature · Feature Stem

The Crossover Is the Catalog: How American Roots, Rock, and Soul Keep Borrowing Themselves Forward

Crossover is treated as a marketing move and read as a marketing move. The honest version is structural. The American roots, rock, and soul catalogs that compound across decades almost always cross at least one genre line on purpose, and the catalogs that do not cross tend not to last.

Published May 23, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Wednesday, May 20

Previously approved · Still on the home desk
Country rock stage at dusk with worn Telecaster, pedal steel guitar, road map of the American South, and Nashville skyline on the horizon.
Country Rock · Feature Stem

Country Rock Was Never a Detour. It Was the Bridge.

Country rock was not a side road off Nashville or rock. It was the load-bearing bridge that carried country storytelling, Southern rock grit, and independent artist authority into the streaming era.

Published May 20, 2026 Read the full Stem →

From Tuesday, May 19

The previous day's approved articles · Still on the home desk
Americana songwriter circle with acoustic guitar, dobro, fiddle, and a notebook of lyrics on a weathered wooden table.
Americana · Feature Stem

The Artists Who Redefined Modern Americana

Modern Americana was built by songwriters who carried country, folk, gospel, blues, soul, and rock into the same room and made the story matter more than the label.

Published May 19, 2026 Read the full Stem →

Editor's Note

From the desk · Joshua Mollohan, Editor-in-Chief

From The Stem exists because the catalog of American music, the songs that get sung at weddings, funerals, and small-room bars, is built by independent writers, producers, and small-label teams who almost never get a fair-sized hearing in mainstream music press. We started this publication inside Mollohan Production Inc. because we kept running into great work that nobody was covering, and decided to build the room ourselves.

We are editorially independent from MPIArtist, the artist-development arm. When we cover a Mollohan Production or MPIArtist project, we say so plainly. Most of what we cover has no connection to us at all, and that's the point.

What we cover
  • · Americana & roots
  • · Singer-songwriter craft
  • · Country & country-rock
  • · R&B, blues, and soul
  • · Christian & gospel
  • · Song production & engineering
  • · Independent label & artist development
Editor-in-Chief
Black and white portrait of Joshua Mollohan, Editor-in-Chief of From The Stem.

From The Stem is edited by Joshua Mollohan, an independent artist, songwriter, and producer based in Castle Rock, Colorado. The publication covers the songs, stories, production choices, and independent systems shaping modern roots music, country rock, gospel crossover, and artist-owned music careers.

From the Archive · Streaming, Royalties, Release Strategy

Retrospectives from the desk · Archive labeled honestly Full archive →

Americana

From the archive · Roots · Folk · Alt-Country All Americana →

Song Production

From the archive · Studio · Engineering · Arrangement All Song Production →

Independent Label · Artist Development

From the archive · Business · Strategy · The Long Game All Artist Dev →

More in Country & Country Rock

Today's new articles, with vertical-archive context All Country →
From The Stem Brief

A short, honest dispatch from independent music, three mornings a week.

Articles, field notes, one production tip, and one development idea. No press releases dressed up as news.

Ethics & Disclosures

Who we are · How we operate
Editorial

Joshua Mollohan, Editor-in-Chief
Founder, Mollohan Production Inc.

Maren Holloway, Senior Editor, Songcraft

Caleb Reyes, Staff Writer, Country & Country Rock

From The Stem, Staff byline for short-form work

Publisher

From The Stem is published by Mollohan Production Inc. The publication shares a parent company with MPIArtist, our artist-development arm.

Editorial decisions are not coordinated with MPIArtist sales or signing activity. When we cover an MPIArtist project, we disclose it in the article.

Standards
  • No paid placements presented as editorial.
  • No fabricated quotes or invented chart positions.
  • Awards, sales, and credits are verified against public records.
  • Corrections are posted with the original article, dated.