More to read, watch and hear |
- Julia Wolfe is a Pulitzer winner, a MacArthur "genius" and the co-founder of Bang on a Can. This week, we shared an interview with the composer about her own battles for representation, her progressive approach to her career, her love of Led Zeppelin and the folk and rock traditions that are woven into her very American sound.
- Quinn Christopherson won the 2019 Tiny Desk Contest with a moving song about gender and privilege called “Erase Me.” That song is now the final track on the Alaskan singer-songwriter’s new debut album, Write Your Name In Pink — a fitting closer for a collection of intimate, detailed-oriented songs that try to make peace with the hand life has dealt.
- Rina Sawayama’s 2020 debut album was filled with clever, surprising hybrids that pilfered from Y2K pop and nu-metal. But her new record, Hold The Girl, doesn’t quite keep pace, writes critic Laura Snapes. While her sophomore release sometimes matches intensity with innovation, it more often “grinds her nuanced story to a paste.”
- This week, our friends at WNXP shared a video of Silvana Estrada performing live from the station’s Sonic Cathedral, and Jazz Night in America shared a video of a live performance by pianist and vocalist Damien Sneed.
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This week, we hit a huge (Tiny) milestone: the 1,000th Tiny Desk concert. For the occasion, Angélique Kidjo gave an inspiring, celebratory performance behind the Desk, with a special appearance from Sampa The Great. Plus, to celebrate, we made a supercut of some of our favorite Tiny Desk moments. We also shared a Tiny Desk concert from Allison Russell, who performed songs from her astounding, unclassifiable album Outside Child. |
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Inside the hidden world of an opera prompter |
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| Listen to your local NPR station. |
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Visit NPR.org to hear live radio from WUFT 89.1 (edit station). |
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