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| | - As October came to a close, we rounded up our favorite music that was released during the month. Among our favorite albums, you'll find veterans of varying ages — including Angel Olsen and Wilco — making some of the best music of their careers and a promising R&B debut. And in our list of favorite songs of the month, love reigns supreme.
- On this week’s All Songs Considered new music mix, your newsletter editors joined Bob Boilen to play a distressing board game (courtesy of Canadian punk band PUP) and share great new songs by Julien Baker, Torres, Trupa Trupa and more.
- This week, Dan Deacon announced his first album since 2015. And, in true Dan Deacon fashion, the gifted experimentalist paired the first single with a creepy video starring a decomposing corpse. (Happy Halloween?)
- Our friends at KUTX shared a video of Molly Sarlé performing “Human,” one of our favorite songs of September, live in the studio.
| - All Songs Considered’s exploration of music in the 2010s continued this week with two new installments: First, our panel talked about the decade’s increase in visibility for queer pop artists and the complexities that come with mainstreaming. The team also got an assist from NPR’s Elise Hu for a roundtable on the globalization of music in the 2010s, including a look at BTS and the BTS Army, plus Rosalía, Bad Bunny, J Balvin and more.
- Rock criticism was still in its adolescence in 1969, which meant that working critics didn’t always catch what became some of the era’s most iconic music in its day. Revisit the classic albums from 1969 that were reviled then but are revered today.
- Can Dolly Parton heal America? On All Things Considered, Ari Shapiro talked to WYNC’s Jad Abumrad about his new podcast which explores the life and legacy of the iconic songwriter and her ability to bridge divides in America.
- Prince left behind an unfinished memoir when he died in 2016. Dan Piepenbring, his co-writer, told Fresh Air’s Terry Gross about the moment he knew he could make The Beautiful Ones happen, even in Prince's absence.
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When it comes to bands performing at the Tiny Desk, there's dressing up, and then there's dressing up. In honor of Halloween this week, we put together a Tiny Desk playlist of artists whose stage wear crosses over from "outfits" to "costumes." |
“Man Magically Transforms Into Music Historian While Talking to Women,” and other mostly-true punk rock stories. |
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