by Marissa Lorusso and Lyndsey McKenna |
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| | - This week saw the release of Billie Eilish’s highly anticipated sophomore release, plus a new, long-lost Prince album. Hear about those records (and more) on New Music Friday from All Songs Considered.
- In 1968, a young Jimi Hendrix recorded two sets by Joni Mitchell, who was playing at a coffeehouse in Ottawa, Canada just days before the release of her debut album. Now, over 50 years later, those legendary and newly unearthed recordings will be released as part of Mitchell’s archives series. Tom Huizenga wrote about the haunting power of one of those tracks — “The Dawntreader” — for #NowPlaying.
- Lately, Bob Boilen has been noticing a crop of bands that remind him of late-’70s post-punk. This week on All Songs Considered, he plays new songs from a couple of those new bands — Gustaf and Wet Leg — plus a new song by an artist he used to play while directing All Things Considered back in the '90s.
- Since signing to Top Dawg Entertainment, this century's most celebrated rap label, Isaiah Rashad has released two critically acclaimed projects and twice disappeared from public view due to struggles with substance abuse and his mental health. Now, he’s back with The House Is Burning; he talked to NPR Music about the community of musical collaborators and friends that helped make the record possible.
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- This summer — after a silent year in which artists were sent grants instead of invitations to perform — Newport Folk Festival was determined to get musicians back on stage in front of an audience, as carefully as possible. NPR Music contributor Hilary Hughes attended the beloved festival to see how it balanced optimism and precaution.
- Mach-Hommy’s latest album was released earlier this year and is already being considered one of the year's best; simultaneously, as a member of the Haitian diaspora, he’s watched as a place he cares about deeply has been suffering through a period marked by violence and political turmoil. He spoke to Weekend All Things Considered about what it’s like to hold these disparate thoughts in his head at the same time.
- When the pandemic paused festivals around the world, the Exit Zero Jazz Festival kept the music going — and Jazz Night in America was there. This week, the team shared three concert highlights from the festival featuring Gabrielle Cavassa, Shemekia Copeland and Pedrito Martinez.
- By the time Yola burst onto the American music scene with her debut album, she had already spent 20 years in the music industry in her native England. Now, she lives in Nashville, and she's fully ready to claim her spotlight with her sophomore release, Stand For Myself. She spoke to All Things Considered about her process of reclaiming creative independence after years in the music industry.
- This week, our friends at member station WXPN shared a World Cafe At Home Session from Dawn Richard, live from Studio Mill in New Orleans.
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“For the last decade, the world of rap has lived, learned and been liberated while under the influence of Young Thug,” writes our colleague Sidney Madden. So we were thrilled to share a Tiny Desk (home) concert from the Atlanta iconoclast — and even more excited that he used his Tiny Desk debut to usher in his next era, one that he says is meant to represent "authenticity, consciousness and overall purity." Also this week: a Tiny Desk (home) concert full of unfiltered feelings, self-interrogation and wry humor from Anna B Savage, and a performance from the post-punk band shame backed by a compendium of violins, horns and more. |
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