Raise a glass to members of the Oppression, Aggression, Depression Trio ... |
Here are some other things that are more than Kenough this week: |
- Odie Leigh is my new favorite artist, and it was a thrill to see her enrapture a crowd in New Orleans last weekend. She’s got pop smarts and folk roots and a voice that absolutely glows. Keep an ear out for her new album later this year.
- If you’re in need of a guide to discovering new songs, my beloved colleague Lars Gotrich kicked off a new column at NPR Music this week that delivers eight tracks (hmm…) sourced from a wide array of genres that feel essential this week. Lars calls it an “antidote to the algorithm” and he’s right — you’ll find new songs by Kim Gordon and Jlin next to a classic by The Shangri-Las in memory of Mary Weiss, the group’s singer who died last week. A thrilling list of new and old music pulled together by a singular vision: Beat that, robots.
- The continued carnage afflicting media, with layoffs hitting the Los Angeles Times right after last week’s Pitchfork news, has prompted some beautiful writing on why criticism matters. But maybe my favorite predates this current round of pain: this essay by the legend Greil Marcus on his life’s work.
- All the floppy-haired, slightly odd looking male ingenues of today – Timothée, Barry, Dominic – have me longing for a Harvey Keitel renaissance. I recently watched the jolie-laide king of 1970s cinema in Bertrand Tavernier’s dystopian and prescient tale of media intrusion on our lives, Death Watch, and his performance as a roguish journalist in pursuit of a beautifully vulnerable Romy Schneider is extraordinary. Plus, Harry Dean Stanton is the villain! You can find it streaming in a few places.
- It’s still winter, but sometimes it’s spring? (Even the seasons are genre-fluid.) That’s true where I live, anyway. For this fickle weather I pull out one of the long-sleeve merino wool-bamboo blend t-shirts I got while traveling in Scandinavia last fall. I like this Swedish brand but there are great ones available in the U.S., too.
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