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| | - This week’s All Songs Considered New Mix kicks off with a strong protest message from Margo Price featuring Mavis Staples. Plus, a song whose inspiration surprised Bob Boilen, new music from The Mountain Goats and more.
- The Italian composer Caterina Barbieri's euphoric new album, Spirit Exit, was made in pandemic isolation. But it’s her lushest work yet, longing for the outside world in all of its imperfections and wonder.
- This week on New Music Friday from All Songs Considered: Singer, rapper and all-around life-celebrator Lizzo is back this week with the effervescent Special. Hear our panel’s conversation about that record, plus new releases from Steve Lacy, Superorganism and more.
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- Three exemplary musicians born and raised in Detroit will soon be recognized as NEA Jazz Masters: drummer Louis Hayes, saxophonist Kenny Garrett and violinist Regina Carter. They, along with producer and author Sue Mingus, are among the 2023 class of inductees, as the National Endowment for the Arts announced this week.
- You likely know BTS’ hits like “Dynamite” and “Butter,” but the K-Pop group’s discography is farther-reaching than casual fans might think. So our friends at Pop Culture Happy Hour got together to showcase some of the best deep cuts in the BTS catalog.
- American musicologist Richard Taruskin died earlier this month in Oakland, Calif. at age 77. Nearly two decades ago, shortly before the publication of his 4,000-page magnum opus, The Oxford History of Western Music, Taruskin agreed to sit with NPR for a very long interview about, well, the very long history of Western music. In remembrance of the great writer, we’ve republished the five-part series that was the result of that conversation; if you listen, you’ll get a glimpse of the Grand Canyon-sized scope of knowledge that Taruskin had at his fingertips.
- Canceled concerts, lawsuits, existential turmoil: As Russia has cracked down on anti-war speech, the country's music scene is facing a new reality.
- This week, our friends at WFUV shared a video of Soccer Mommy performing live at Rockwood Music Hall.
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In the last two years of Tiny Desk (home) concerts, we’ve seen performances filmed in all sorts of interesting locations. But I have a special place in my heart for the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (also known as MASS MoCA), so I was delighted to see the museum used as a backdrop for Animal Collective’s mesmerizing performance of tracks from its new album, Time Skiffs, plus an unreleased song. Also this week: We shared a (home) concert from Curse of Lono, including a performance of Bob Boilen’s favorite song of 2022 (so far), plus an emotional and reflective Tiny Desk concert from pianist and composer Ludovico Einaudi. |
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