// Documentary
11 albums in this genre.

Deflated
The story of Phil Katz, the programmer who created PKZIP and the .ZIP file format — one of the most ubiquitous file formats in computing history. Despite his creation being used by billions of people daily (.zip, .jar, .docx, .apk are all ZIP under the hood), Katz died alone at age 37 in Room 566 of a Milwaukee motel, surrounded by empty liquor bottles.

Zoot Suit Riots
June 1943, Los Angeles. U.S. servicemen - sailors and Marines - charter taxicabs and cruise into Mexican-American neighborhoods. They drag kids out of theaters, bars, streetcars. They strip them of their zoot suits, beat them bloody, burn their clothes in piles on the street. The police watch. Then arrest the victims.

Dark Tide
On January 15, 1919, a poorly-built molasses tank in Boston's North End exploded, unleashing 2.3 million gallons of molasses in a 35 mph wave that killed 21 people and injured 150 more. The victims were mostly Irish and Italian immigrants - the working class who lived in the shadow of a monster that the company knew was dangerous.

Distros
The story of Linux told through its distributions. Each track profiles a major distro - its founder, philosophy, triumphs, and struggles. Arranged chronologically from 1993 to 2020, the album traces the evolution of open source: from lone hackers in basements to billion-dollar acquisitions, from purity to pragmatism, from idealism to industry.

The Wizard
Thomas Edison is remembered as America's greatest inventor. This album remembers what he actually did.

SubSeven
The complete history of Sub7, the remote access trojan that shaped early 2000s hacker culture. From a Romanian teenager teaching himself Delphi in Windsor, Ontario, to the tool that powered a generation of script kiddies, to the mysterious disappearance of its creator - and the imposter who claimed credit for over a decade.

Compound Interest
Compound Interest traces the arc of internet fraud from its almost-comedic origins to its current incarnation as a human rights crisis. The album opens in 1990s/2000s Lagos with Yahoo Boys hustling in cyber cafes, moves through the professionalization of romance scams, and descends into the horror of Southeast Asian trafficking compounds where both the scammer and the scammed are victims.

THE SCENE
The warez scene from inside - the honor code, the competition, the art, the fall. This isn't an album about piracy. It's about a subculture built on anonymity, prestige, and a code of honor that said profit was for sellouts. Kids racing releases across continents for nothing but bragging rights and a line in an NFO file.

Whatever It Takes
"Whatever It Takes" is a narrative concept album based on the true story of the 2019 eBay cyberstalking scandal - when a Fortune 500 company's security team launched a coordinated terror campaign against two bloggers who wrote critical coverage.

Merge Conflict
"Merge Conflict" is a concept album documenting the legendary flame wars, beefs, and drama of the Linux Kernel Mailing List (LKML). Each track represents a real incident with actual quotes, commit references, and email thread IDs woven into the lyrics.

DEB + IAN
A narrative album tracing the life of Ian Murdock (1973-2015), the visionary who founded Debian at age 20 and gave the open-source world one of its most enduring gifts. The album follows his journey from idealistic Purdue student writing the Debian Manifesto, through marriage to Debra (the "Deb" in Debian), to industry success at Sun and Docker, and ultimately to his tragic death at 42 following a violent encounter with San Francisco police.