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More stories from NPR Music |
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Did you know a K-pop girl group just topped the Billboard Hot 100 for the first time? Well, a fake K-pop girl group, that is. Stephen Thompson reports on how a song from the movie KPop Demon Hunters has climbed the charts.
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Fans who pre-ordered new albums by Lil Wayne and The Weeknd on vinyl got a rude awakening: More than half the songs that appeared on the streaming version were missing on the LP. Reporter Marc Hogan has this story on why it’s becoming increasingly common for vinyl albums to arrive incomplete.
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The British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was a generational success story before his death at 37. Garrett Schumann writes about how keeping that legacy in view has always been a challenge, even during his lifetime.
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Since 2020, the Ghanaian-American artist Amaarae has made a case for being the most dynamic avant-pop artist the world over. NPR Music editor Sheldon Pearce writes that on her new album BLACK STAR, she’s never sounded more free.
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The pop star Audrey Hobert began her career writing for a Nickelodeon sitcom and co-writing hits with her best friend Gracie Abrams. Isabella Gomez Sarmiento interviewed the artist about her unconventional new album, Who’s the Clown?
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What’s the perfect road trip playlist? NPR’s Stephen Thompson, Lars Gotrich and Robin Hilton debated that question on All Songs Considered.
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Sheila Jordan, named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts and a singular voice in jazz, died this week at age 96.
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Here are some things that make me want to play this week: |
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If you want to better understand what goes into writing a classic song, check out the treasure trove offered within the new boxed set You Can’t Hip a Square: The Doc Pomus Songwriting Demos, now available from Omnivore Recordings. A foundational writer in rock, pop and R&B – responsible for so many hits, from “This Magic Moment” to “Save the Last Dance for Me” – Pomus was mind-bogglingly prolific, and this set contains many demos of songs never heard before.
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I’ve been throwing shade on Swift-driven personal essays, but this is a good one. May all the others soon to hit our feeds emulate its honesty and tenderness.
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This profile of Severance’s breakthrough star Tramell Tillman by Clayton Davis has a truly gorgeous lede. Applause.
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I actually got off my couch to see a screening of High and Low, the Kurosawa classic that inspired Spike Lee’s latest joint, at my beloved Belcourt — I highly recommend catching this visually stunning film in a theater if you can. But it’s also on streaming services, including Criterion, which has plenty of juicy extras like a 30-minute interview with star Toshiro Mifune from 1981.
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In an amazingly generous move, the folks behind the music-tech research group Water & Music have made its massive archive free as the organization focuses more on its consulting efforts. So much to explore here on subjects like AI, the ethics of streaming, fan-first marketing, TikTok and more.
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Breaking: Rare Colorado species sighted -- and heard! |
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