Body of Work : How the album outplayed the algorithm and survived playlist culture
Body of Work : How the album outplayed the algorithm and survived playlist culture
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Author: Keith Jopling
Music: styles & genres
Published on 10 February 2026 by Watkins Media Limited (Repeater Books) in the United Kingdom.
Paperback | 176 pages
130 x 197 x 15 | 162g
Since 1999, the album has been declared dead more times than we can count—yet it refuses to disappear. Body of Work traces its turbulent journey through the digital era and asks why listening in forty-minute chunks still matters.
Weaving insider accounts with cultural history and personal reflection Jopling tells the story of the album’s unlikely survival. From bloated CD culture to Napster’s atomization, from Apple’s unbundling to Spotify’s shuffle wars (and Adele’s famous intervention), the album has not only endured, it has re-emerged stronger than ever.
Body of Work makes the case that the album remains the perfect vessel for the art of song—the format every artist aspires to, even after decades of digital disruption. As producer and artist Jack Antonoff (Bleachers) put it: “the album is God.” It is the defining artform of popular music, and it always will be.
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