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Music Reviews
1:42 pm
Tue June 18, 2013

Kanye's 'Yeezus' Packs A Bite

Credit Shareif Ziyadat / FilmMagic
Kanye West at his album listening party at Milk Studios last week in New York City.

Originally published on Tue June 18, 2013 6:18 pm

Music Interviews
1:30 pm
Tue June 18, 2013

Samberg, Taccone And Schaffer: Three's Not A Lonley Island

Originally published on Tue June 18, 2013 2:48 pm

Deceptive Cadence
9:03 am
Tue June 18, 2013

Distinctive Voices: Three Must-Hear Violin Albums

The violin, though centuries old, remains a popular yet remarkably unwieldy instrument. Just squeezing the contraption between your chin and shoulder, then raising your bow arm to the proper height, is enough to induce a pinched nerve. Yet every day countless numbers of people try to make the instrument sing.

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Tiny Desk Concerts
2:13 pm
Mon June 17, 2013

Billy Bragg: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit Marie McGrory / NPR

Originally published on Tue June 18, 2013 8:49 pm

OK Go helped us move the Tiny Desk from our old building to NPR's new headquarters, and The National performed the first full new-building Tiny Desk Concert we posted to the site, but Billy Bragg gave us the first full Tiny Desk Concert

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The Record
12:55 pm
Mon June 17, 2013

Don't Kill Your Idols: J. Cole Looks For His Place In Hip-Hop

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Even the name of J. Cole's new album, Born Sinner, is a nod to the hip-hop lineage from which he descends: Biggie > Jay > J.

Originally published on Tue June 18, 2013 10:52 am

Music Interviews
5:59 am
Sun June 16, 2013

The Beatles' Defining Moment (Hint: It's Not 'Sgt. Pepper')

Credit Michael Ward / Getty Images
The Beatles pose in Liverpool's Derby Square in February 1963 — the year, according to author Colin Fleming, that yielded the band's most definitive work.

Originally published on Sun June 16, 2013 6:15 pm

Music Interviews
4:43 pm
Sat June 15, 2013

Terence Blanchard Turns A Tragic Champion Into An Opera Hero

Credit Nitin Vadukul / Courtesy of the artist
Terence Blanchard is one of today's foremost jazz composers.

Originally published on Sat June 15, 2013 6:19 pm

The Record
5:28 am
Sat June 15, 2013

Songwriters' Group Calls Pandora's Radio Station Buy A Stunt

Credit Jim Herrington / Courtesy of the artist
Blake Morgan's songs were played some 28,000 times over a 90-day period on Pandora, earning $1.62 in royalties.

Originally published on Sat June 15, 2013 4:40 pm

This week, the Internet radio broadcaster Pandora made what seems like a backward move — technologically speaking. Pandora purchased a local radio station in Rapid City, S.D. The company says it's aiming to get the more favorable royalty rates given to terrestrial broadcasters, but the move has songwriters and composers up in arms.

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Tiny Desk Concerts
5:26 am
Sat June 15, 2013

NO BS! Brass Band: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit NPR

Just southeast of the Virginia Commonwealth University campus in Richmond, Va., lies a compact neighborhood called Oregon Hill. Historically, it's been a (white) working-class part of town, affordable for students and various bohemian types. Recording engineer Lance Koehler was drawn to the place when he moved to Richmond from New Orleans; it's where he eventually found a two-story garage and converted it into his own recording studio and home. It didn't take him long to start doing business across the Richmond music map: Koehler is good at his job, and he's affordable.

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Deceptive Cadence
3:31 pm
Fri June 14, 2013

Playing Mozart — On Mozart's Violin

Credit Kathy Wittman / Courtesy of the Boston Early Music Festival
Violinist Amandine Beyer holds Mozart's own violin backstage at Boston's Jordan Hall on Monday.

Originally published on Fri June 14, 2013 7:46 pm

The violin and viola that Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart played himself are in the United States for the first time ever. The instruments come out of storage only about once a year at the Salzburg Mozarteum in Austria. The rest of the time, they're kept under serious lockup.

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