Louder: Billie Eilish, Peter Frampton and Taj Mahal come alive
Plus: Kacey Musgraves, 8 songs we’re talking about, Ron Carter and more
Louder
May 9, 2026

I like to see pop concerts multiple times — for serotonin, yes, but also to try to figure them out. So I can’t fathom why I caught one of the best I’ve ever seen only once: Billie Eilish’s Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour, a masterly live-music spectacle where 90 percent of the spectacle is simply Eilish herself.

This week, the 3-D movie version of the concert, which she made with the director James Cameron, arrived, underscoring what had blown me away the first time and revealing a lot more: the weightiness and yet incredible lightness of Eilish onstage, zooming around the arena floor and pausing for stretches of stunning stillness; the quality of her songwriting, and her vocals (especially with the sprinting and bouncing); and of course the thing the film most wanted us to notice, the role her fans play in the experience. (Onscreen, they are around 30 percent of the spectacle, and in a callback to last week’s Louder, I can scarcely recall a face that wasn’t streaked with tears.)

Pop docs like to remind us how much rests on one person’s shoulders, but on Eilish’s stage there are no dancers or distractions — the point of the show is purposeful focus. The film similarly doesn’t take many excursions, but I loved it as a pure distillation of the live experience, and I would take any opportunity to have her grand epics (“The Greatest,” “Happier Than Ever”) blasted into my face. You can read more about the making of the movie here, and our critic’s review here.

Our biggest features this week also centered on musicians known for their stage work: Grayson Haver Currin spent time with Peter Frampton (can you even say his name without “Comes Alive!” attached?), who is grappling with a progressive muscular disease, making music with his son and very much at peace: “In my mind, I’m more successful than I’ve ever been — because I like myself, I like what I do.” And Jon Pareles gave us a beautiful portrait of Taj Mahal, productive as ever at nearly 84, who told him, “Jazz will give you back your mind, reggae will give you back your body, but the blues will give you back your soul. That’s why they ain’t goin’ nowhere.”

A black-and-white photo of a man in an African-style two-piece suit, a cap, a bandanna and sunglasses.

Taj Mahal’s Music Takes It All In: ‘My Sweep Is Global’

Rooted in the blues and connected worldwide, the musician, 83, is still looking ahead.

By Jon Pareles and Daniel Weiss

Billie Eilish stands on the lip of an arena stage, wearing a basketball jersey that reads “Hard and Soft 01” while throwing her head back and singing into a microphone as a large crowd surrounds her.

Henry Hwu/Paramount Pictures

How Billie Eilish and James Cameron Captured a Pop Show in 3-D Glory

The musician and director teamed up to bring Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour — with poignant moments onstage and off — to theaters.

By Steve Knopper

A woman with a mane of brown curly hair dressed in jeans, a white button-up shirt and a black blazer poses, leaning against an overpass next to a chain-link fence.

Towa Bird Can Shred With the Pop Stars and the Riot Grrrls

The 27-year-old singer, songwriter and guitarist got her start on TikTok in 2020. Now she’s releasing “Gentleman,” her second LP of confident, clever rock songs.

By Phoebe Reilly and Adali Schell

Kacey Musgraves, in a black rhinestone-studded halter top, jeans and a black cowboy hat, holds a microphone in one hand onstage.

Critic’s Pick

Kacey Musgraves Sounds Right at Home in the ‘Middle of Nowhere’

The country singer and songwriter’s sixth album is a triumph of self-realization that reunites her with early collaborators and a former foe (Miranda Lambert).

By Lindsay Zoladz

A photo of Miranda Lambert, in a tan cowboy hat and brown suit jacket and vest, singing into a microphone; and a photo of Kacey Musgraves, in a brown cowboy hat and white tank top, playing an acoustic guitar.

6 Stellar All-Female Country Duets

Hear Kacey Musgraves and Miranda Lambert making peace on the record, and more outstanding collaborations between women in Nashville.

By Lindsay Zoladz

Charli XCX, in sunglasses and tall boots, sings into a microphone onstage.

8 Songs We’re Talking About This Week

Charli XCX rediscovers rock, while Beatles and Rolling Stones keep making it.

By Jon Pareles

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Dante Zaballa

5 Minutes That Will Make You Love Ron Carter

Christian McBride, Endea Owens, Large Professor and more writers and musicians share favorite tracks from the bass maestro, who turned 89 this week.

By Giovanni Russonello

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5 Minutes That Will Make You Love Musicals

Streisand, LuPone, Holliday, Menzel: Broadway’s Biggest Voices

Lea Michele, Christine Ebersole, Jennifer Hudson, Kristin Chenoweth, Adam Lambert and 10 others reflect on their favorite belters.

MOVIES & VIDEO GAMES

A woman in a jersey that reads "hard and soft 01" and plaid shorts stands onstage with arms outstretched under bright spotlights.

‘Billie Eilish — Hit Me Hard and Soft’ Review: 3-D Is What She Was Made For

The pop superstar teamed up with James Cameron to create a concert movie that, playing with shiny camera technology, reinvigorates the concert experience.

By Brandon Yu

In a video game screenshot, three girls skateboard down a road curving through a colorful forest. A bridge is in the background.

Video Game Review

Teenagers Bond With the Help of an Eclectic Soundtrack

In Mixtape, you can skateboard to Devo’s “That’s Good,” film a party to Iggy Pop’s “Candy” and wallow in sadness to B.J. Thomas’s “Most of All.”

By Harold Goldberg

OBITUARY

A close-up of a young Andy Kershaw.

Steve Pyke/Getty Images

Andy Kershaw, Radio D.J. Who Tuned Britons Into World Music, Dies at 66

A longtime BBC host, he traveled the world in search of artists his audience “didn’t know they wanted.” Then he took an unexpected turn into war reporting.

By Clay Risen

NEWS

M.I.A., wearing a gray jacket and pants, standing on a stage and pointing a microphone toward the crowd.

Kid Cudi Fires M.I.A. From Tour After Onstage Comments About Immigrants

M.I.A. made the comments at a concert in Dallas, drawing boos from the audience and criticism online.

By Neil Vigdor

Musicians play a harp and stringed instruments on a dimly lit stage for a crowd. They wear black suits with colorful details.

Once Detained by ICE, Mariachi Brothers Open for Kacey Musgraves

The teenagers, who had faced deportation after a high-profile detention, took the stage on Sunday thanks to an invitation from one of country music’s biggest stars.

By Edgar Sandoval

Britney Spears smiling.

Britney Spears Pleads Guilty to Reckless Driving After D.U.I. Charge

As part of a plea deal, the pop star will serve 12 months probation, complete a three-month substance abuse program and pay a modest fine.

By Matt Stevens and Esmé E. Deprez

WORLD & STYLES

A woman with dark hair in a bun looks up at white blossoms on a tree.

Woohae Cho for The New York Times

the global profile

Chasing K-Pop Stardom Nearly Destroyed Her. Then Came ‘Demon Hunters.’

Ejae, the movie’s breakout star, was the face of K-pop in 2025. Facing questions of art, national belonging and authenticity, she wants to be much more.

By Max Kim

Courtney Barnett, curly brown hair cut in a loose shag, sits on a wooden stool, somewhat awkwardly regarding the camera. She is slightly hunche</div><script type=