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When a Song Becomes an Object: “Pooky Doesn’t Dance” and the Staying Power of Onchain Music

Endodeca releases “Pooky Doesn’t Dance” as an interactive onchain music object — a Base-native drop that elevates listening into active flirtation.

Most music releases are built to move fast — music releases built around the empire of DSPs, and rapid release music, or attention drifts, they tell us. But this is more than other rental on an MP3. “Pooky Doesn’t Dance” by Endodeca moves in the opposite direction. Interactive and tokenized onchain via Transient Labs, the track is not positioned as an audio only media share, but as an objet de vertu: something owned, preserved, and intentionally placed in your music collection as an experience.

This concept of creating a place to experience music, a vibe to step into for minutes or hour, reflects a growing shift in how artists like Endodeca approach distribution. Instead of treating the blockchain as an echo chamber, Endodeca treats onchain as a source of the fullest expression of the works of music — a place where the work can live beyond royalty eligibility clamoring, algorithmic hijinks, and shakedowns.

From Downloads to Stream to Release Objet de Vertu

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It's easy to share the interactive experience directly from the Transient Labs Mint page where you can experience it live. To learn more about the controls, visit the singer's website or blog.
You can sign up for the Endodeca mailing list, here.

Onchain music is often misunderstood as a technical novelty. In practice, it’s simpler than that. An onchain release is more like heirloom music — music you own that comes with provenance. The audio, metadata, and provenance are anchored together so the work can be traced, verified, and revisited, including your ownership of it — without intermediaries rewriting the story later.

“Pooky Doesn’t Dance” embodies this approach. The track is minted as a discrete release object, meaning collectors aren’t just listening — they’re acquiring a verifiable edition of the work itself. Ownership isn’t abstract here; it’s explicit, legible, and durable.

Why This Matters for Music Artists

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Endodeca releases “Pooky Doesn’t Dance” as an interactive onchain music object — a Base-native drop minted via Transient Labs that invites listeners to step into a vibe in addition to pressing Play.

For artists like Endodeca, this model changes the power dynamics of release cycles. Instead of optimizing for reach alone, the focus shifts to intentional drops — moments where the artist decides how the work enters the world, who can collect it, and where it will live long-term.

By releasing on Base, the project benefits from a chain designed to be accessible and scalable, without asking listeners to become finance experts. The experience is straightforward: view the release, understand what it is, and choose whether to collect. No jargon, no speculation — just music with a clear home.

Why This Matters for Music Collectors: Collecting as Participation

For collectors, onchain music offers something streaming never could: participation with context. Collecting “Pooky Doesn’t Dance” is not about resale or hype; it’s about being part of the release itself. The chain records that relationship permanently, creating a transparent history between artist and audience.

This is where platforms like Transient Labs matter. They provide infrastructure that respects the work — presenting music as culture first, technology second. The result is a cleaner signal for everyone involved.

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Endodeca releases “Pooky Doesn’t Dance” as an interactive onchain music object — a Base-native drop that turns listening into participation. Learn how on the interactive walkthrough with Endodeca.

What this signals: A New Expansion, Not a Trend

Artists can publish without surrendering authorship. Listeners can collect rare and special editions with the thought of this: a tokenized work of music can be listed on multiple global marketplaces and sold more easily than a physical music album because the music remains verifiably in pristine condition.

That’s the real innovation here: not new tools, but a clearer alignment between art, ownership, posterity and provenance.

Onchain music doesn’t replace streaming. It complements it by answering a different question — not how many heard this, but where does this hail from, and who is connected to this specific edition that I now own or once sold.

In that sense, music collectors who collect "Pooky Doesn't Dance" or any tokenized Endodeca record are becoming a part of the story: together we are building a multidimensional record.

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New Song: Dinner Out by ENDODECA

Dinner Out – ENDODECA

Supreme Racket Records

It opens like a secret.
A violin, murmurs about the rise and fall of gold, bowing across a void of slow-burning bass and cinematic tension.

Ghosting words to create more space for velvety textures - for the sound of a wise friend's finest story being served upon fine china.

ENDODECA’s “Dinner Out” feels like the ghost of Vivaldi just ordered another round for all his friends at the bar - just as you belly up to it. It’s lush, meticulous, and unsettlingly human.

Subscribe to text notifications from Endodeca for new music drops where the first 100 friends to buy, collect or claim the album enjoys special perks.

The piece moves like slow film — cinematic downtempo with orchestral overtones, heavy spatial layering, and microtonal violin swells that haunt the stereo field. It’s both high cinc and high tension, scored in the key of D Minor — that melancholy signature ENDODECA uses like a weapon.

The result?
A sound that’s part dinner service, part séance.

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"Dinner Out", a darkly whimsical classical composition by ENDODECA is dropping on Transient Labs as an interactive musical experience developed by Maxximillian BLAQQAT. Go on and throw $5 in at the upper right corner of this page to Support this post — to make you eligible for limited editions of this release. SupremeRacketRecords.trade

“Dinner Out” as a soundtrack to your life brings color into everything you do - it's the musical score that transforms any sequence of action into a rich scene you inhabit. It belongs in the booth of a midnight lounge, in the streets among the people, and atop a clandestine mansion terrace where unseen market gods and goddesses appreciate higher spirits and trade teachable lessons into tilted glasses.

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Collector Access

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Eligible backers get early access to limited edition materials and collectible drops tied to this release.

Microtonal refers to music that uses microtones, which are intervals smaller than a semitone (half step). This includes music that uses intervals not found in the standard Western 12-tone equal temperament system and is common in many non-Western musical traditions, as well as experimental Western music. Microtones can be produced on instruments like the guitar or violin or by using specialized instruments, electronic tunings, or even by bending notes.  

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