The Cities Are Starting to Connect
On mining an idea in the dark — and what it means when the world starts searching for it
I didn't know if anyone was out there.
That's the honest version. When I started building Tracks & Tales, there was no map, no precedent, no guarantee that the thing I was reaching for — a guide to the spaces where music is listened to, really listened to — was something the world wanted or even recognised. I was mining in the dark. Some days I wasn't sure what I was digging for. I just kept going.
The early signals were quiet. A reader in Osaka. Someone in Lisbon clicking through at midnight. A search for listening bars in Kyoto from somewhere I'll never know. Each one felt less like data and more like a hand appearing through the wall.

This week, I looked at the numbers properly for the first time in a while. And something has shifted.
The cities are indexing. Osaka, Barcelona, Madrid, Copenhagen, Lisbon, Athens, Cairo, Seoul. Fifty-eight cities now appearing in search. People looking for Frankfurt, Stockholm, Istanbul, Warsaw — finding us. Not because we advertised there, but because the writing arrived before we did.
And then the one that stopped me. The top search query this week, the term converting at the highest rate of anything on the platform: Tracks and Tales. Not a city. Not a genre. The name itself. Someone typed it in and came looking.
That is a different kind of signal. It means the idea has detached from me. It is moving on its own.
I still don't know exactly where this is going. The listening room I want to build. The members who gather around these albums each month. The cities we haven't reached yet — Tokyo waiting, Paris still to crack, Los Angeles just beginning to turn. The map is not finished. It may never be.
But the cities are connecting. And that, for now, is enough to keep digging.
FAQs
What is Tracks & Tales? Tracks & Tales is the world's first guide to listening culture — covering listening bars, kissa-ten, audiophile venues and the spaces where music is taken seriously, across more than 150 countries. Start here.
How do you decide which cities to cover? We follow the listening. If a city has a culture of intentional sound — a room where the system matters, where silence is respected, where music is the point — it belongs in the guide. Explore the city guides.
What is The Listening Club? The Listening Club is the founding membership of Tracks & Tales. Members receive monthly album sessions, a private weekly letter, full platform access and a permanent rate lock at the founding price. Places are limited. Join here.
Every month, The Listening Club gathers around the world. Join here.
Rafi Mercer writes about the spaces where music matters. For more stories from Tracks & Tales, subscribe or click here to read more.