by Marissa Lorusso and Lyndsey McKenna |
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| | - This week’s episode of All Songs Considered opens with the improbable story of Sparks — aka musicians Ron and Russell Mael, who have been making music for more than 50 years and are finally getting the attention they deserve. Plus, new music by Courtney Barnett, Ben Gibbard and more.
- The Grammy-winning Attacca Quartet made its reputation with an eclectic musical palette. The group’s latest project, Real Life, features adaptations of electronic dance music by Flying Lotus, Daedelus and Louis Cole, among others.
- From Willow Smith’s impressive pop-punk turn to a stirring posthumous release from Alice Coltrane to John Mayer’s surprisingly good and oh-so-'80s album Sob Rock, it’s a great week for new releases. Hear about all these and more on New Music Friday from All Songs Considered.
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- A Los Angeles Superior Court judge has cleared Britney Spears to hire her own lawyer in the long drawn-out battle over her conservatorship.
- Whether you’re ready to get out or need a slower reentry to everyday life, our newest roséwave playlist, Stay or Go?, featuring selections from our very own DJ Cuzzin B, aka Tiny Desk producer Bobby Carter, is here to help you through the summer no matter your decision.
- Cubans are taking to the streets in unprecedented protests and voicing their outrage through a viral hip-hop song “Patria y Vida,” or homeland and life, a spin on the communist regime’s decades-old slogan of “patria o muerte,” or homeland or death.
- From West Virginia Public Broadcasting: Funded by $5 admission and $1 hot dogs, carpenter Dusty Anderson brings music to his hometown with the ultimate DIY venue, Jerry Run Summer Theater in Cleveland, W.Va.
- This week, our friends at member station KUTX shared a video of Cautious Clay performing three songs from his album Deadpan Love.
- Ted Gioia’s The History of Jazz is an ambitious survey of the genre that was almost immediately recognized as among the most authoritative and thorough books of its kind when it was first published in 1997. It was updated for the first time in 2011, and again this year, after a very important decade for the genre. Gioia spoke to NPR Music contributor Natalie Weiner about why he updated the book now, and what he's learned about jazz in the 24 years since he first published his exhaustive history.
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Lucy Dacus has already performed two Tiny Desk concerts – one with boygenius, one in support of 2016’s No Burden – but for her (home) concert, she returns to her alma mater in Richmond, Va., Maggie L. Walker Governor’s School, to plays songs from her latest album, Home Video. Also this week: Jack Antonoff gave us a sneak preview of his forthcoming Bleachers’ record, Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night, from a sun-drenched spot outside Electric Lady Studios, where the album was made. |
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Gyms in Seoul are no longer allowed to play music faster than 120 beats per minute, the speed of “Call Me Maybe” by Carly Rae Jepsen. |
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