Music

Pages

All Songs Considered Blog
12:53 pm
Wed June 20, 2012

Results: Listener Picks For The Year's Best Albums (So Far)

Credit Courtesy of the artist

Originally published on Wed June 20, 2012 6:15 pm

The results are in and it turns out most of you who voted in our mid-year poll really love Jack White's explosive and eclectic Blunderbuss. But the race was close: White's album beat-out the Alabama Shakes record Boys & Girls by less than 25 votes. Beach House's Bloom, one of the most popular records ever in our First Listen series, came in at third. The Shins' Port Of Morrow and Of Monsters And Men's My Head Is An Animal round out the top five.

Read more
Thistle and Shamrock
11:38 am
Wed June 20, 2012

Thistle And Shamrock: Bass Rock

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Alain Genty and Patrick Molard.

Contributions by acoustic and electric bass to Celtic music are subtle, imaginative and, with players like Alain Genty, firmly in the foreground.

Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Mountain Stage
10:03 am
Wed June 20, 2012

Henry Girls On Mountain Stage

Credit Brian Blauser / Mountain Stage

Henry Girls' members perform songs from their recent album December Moon.

Originally published on Wed June 20, 2012 5:10 pm

The Irish sisters in Henry Girls make their first American appearance on this episode of Mountain Stage. From Inishowen in County Donegal, Ireland, Joleen, Lorna and Karen McLaughlin create a seamless mix of folk, bluegrass and traditional Irish music, framed by their chilling three-part harmonies.

Read more
Deceptive Cadence
8:47 am
Wed June 20, 2012

Getting Kids To Practice Music — Without Tears Or Tantrums

Originally published on Tue September 18, 2012 3:45 pm

When friends learn that my nearly six-year-old has been playing violin for three years, their voices shift a bit, especially if they also have a child learning an instrument. Two questions come in quick succession: "Does she like it?" and "How do you get her to practice?" There's a nervous energy to their queries, and usually a little laugh, too. Either they've been struggling with kids who have a hard time practicing, or they recall their own childhood boredom.

Read more
In Practice
8:19 am
Wed June 20, 2012

In Practice: New York Polyphony

Credit Mito Habe-Evans / NPR
New York Polyphony perform Renaissance songs for an In Practice recording session.

The four-man vocal ensemble New York Polyphony sings ancient music built for big resonant spaces. Since they can't just pop into St. Patrick's Cathedral any time they need to practice a renaissance mass, the group rehearses sometimes in the Jackson Heights home of bass singer Craig Phillips. There, in a modest-sized living room, they can hear every detail. "It's a very different experience rehearsing in a dry room and a small room," says tenor Geoffrey Silver. "You actually hear what you and your colleagues are singing, there's no watercolor wash over what you are doing."

Read more
In Practice
8:16 am
Wed June 20, 2012

In Practice: Jonathan Biss

Credit Mito Habe-Evans / NPR

It's tough to concentrate on the rigors of Beethoven with jackhammers pounding in your ears. So when they started demolishing the building next to Jonathan Biss, he moved his piano out of his apartment into a separate studio, away from the commotion. "I would get up in the morning, the piano wasn't there, and I had to leave my apartment to go practice and I've decided that's a much more productive way of working," he says. Biss needs a good working environment for his massive project.

Read more
In Practice
8:15 am
Wed June 20, 2012

In Practice: Jeremy Denk

Credit Mito Habe-Evans / NPR

Jeremy Denk has his own personal "piano boot camp." Actually, it's his cramped Manhattan apartment. Beside his beloved books, a trusty coffee pot and a laptop, there's not much to do except practice. Which Denk does, hours and hours a day on a Steinway wedged into his living room. On a good day, he brews pot of coffee number one at about 11, then plays for about five hours. Perhaps a run to the gym, then pot number two is brewed at about 6, followed by more playing — until the neighbors complain.

Read more
All Songs Considered Blog
8:03 am
Wed June 20, 2012

First Watch: JBM, 'On Fire On A Tightrope'

Credit Courtesy of the artist

Back in March, former All Songs intern Dan Raby used this space to sing the praises of Montreal singer-songwriter JBM, a.k.a. Jesse B. Marchant, whose deliberately paced folk-pop hangs on the lingering empty spaces between notes.

Read more
The Mix
7:25 am
Wed June 20, 2012

The Mix: The Songs Of The Summer, 1962-2012

Credit Tom Kelley / Tom Kelley Archive/Stringer/Getty Images
This group is most likely singing yet another rendition of "Call Me Maybe."

Originally published on Thu July 19, 2012 5:13 pm

People have funny ways of describing hit pop songs. A song is "infectious," an "earworm." It "gets under your skin." It's not summer without little annoyances — sunburn, mosquito bites, sweat — just as it's not summer without the Song of the Summer. This is a song (or two, or three) that explodes and quickly permeates pop culture. It runs rampant up and down your radio dial, around your parties and deep in your brain. Perhaps this is why such pop music is described in terms usually reserved for the plague.

Read more
All Songs Considered Blog
3:08 pm
Tue June 19, 2012

Hear 'Follow,' A Warmly Chiming Mood-Setter From Diiv

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Diiv.

Originally published on Fri June 22, 2012 7:09 am

There's more than one way to qualify as a "guitar band": You can shred, sure, or you can lay down layer upon layer of guitars to weave an intricate tapestry. For Diiv — yes, the group was once called "Dive," and yes, it's from Brooklyn — guitars dominate, but as warm, chiming mood-setters.

Read more

Pages