Not Our Beat
The submitted article covers Madrid-born producer Roy Borland's October 2025 performance at KEXP's first Spanish session in Bilbao. He performed "Ramblin' Rose" and "Aleluya" with cello, sax, and keys at the historic Iglesia de la Encarnación.
This is a music industry story. There's no enterprise tech angle here - no cloud infrastructure powering the stream, no novel broadcast technology, no digital transformation of music distribution. Just a good performance at a music conference.
Why This Matters (It Doesn't, For Us)
KEXP is Seattle's indie radio station. BIME is a music industry conference. The venue is a 16th-century church in Spain's Basque region. Borland handled both performance and audio mixing, which is notable for musicians but not relevant to our CIO and CTO readership.
The video went live on YouTube about 13 hours before February 2, 2026. Borland has an album coming in 2026. Spanish music organizations supported the event.
The Real Issue
This appears to be a content routing error. Our readers are enterprise technology leaders making infrastructure, security, and platform decisions. They're not commissioning live music sessions.
If there were a story here about KEXP's streaming infrastructure, their CDN strategy for global delivery, or how they're using cloud services to manage international broadcasts, we'd cover it. But that's not what this is.
Someone sent a music review to a B2B tech publication. It happens.
Editor's note: If you're looking for music coverage, try actual music publications. If you've got news about enterprise technology in APAC, we're listening.