Practically a decade in the past, Billie Eilish, then 13 years outdated, put “Ocean Eyes” on SoundCloud and catapulted to world tremendous stardom.
It was the type of ascent aspiring singers dream of, propelled by a platform that on the time wasn’t recognized for unearthing pop stars. However for those who ask her now, even Eilish, now 24, doesn’t know if another person might replicate her success. “Oh my god!” she says when requested the place the following Billie Eilish is likely to be found. “I do not know.”
{Photograph}: Darrell Jackson
Lately it’s widespread for brand spanking new artists to share their music on SoundCloud, however again then it was nonetheless comparatively new. “I’m very curious to see what the longer term holds,” Eilish says. “I don’t know the place the following whoever is gonna come from. I can’t wait to see them and I can’t wait to cheerleader them, whoever it might be.”
In the event that they ever come. Ten years in the past artists might construct followings, like Eilish did, by livestreams, Instagram posts, and movies on social media. In 2026, the panorama appears to be like very completely different. Everybody appears to know, or claims to know, tips on how to beat the algorithms to get streams and views, however little or no of it feels genuine, particularly in a world stuffed with AI slop. Eilish and her followers grew up on-line, however they could not wish to grasp on the market the best way they as soon as did.
Eilish, to be clear, nonetheless believes true expertise can break by the noise. Artwork, she says, must be “attainable for everybody” and the web, whereas messy, allows that. “There’s all types of applied sciences now the place it looks as if we’re all doomed, however we’re not,” Eilish tells WIRED. “If we maintain making actual stuff, actual artwork made by people—dwell music, dwell audiences—I don’t see that ever dying.”

