NPR Music - New Music Friday: The best albums out Feb. 27
Episode Date: February 27, 2026Bruno Mars. Mitski. Grief and celebration from Gorillaz. Robin Hilton welcomes Raina Douris from WXPN in Philadelphia to chat about their favorite albums out Friday, Feb. 27. Plus, a handful of NPR ...Music writers and critics offer personal picks in the lightning round.The Starting 5(00:00) Introduction & Bruno Mars, 'The Romantic'(03:54) Mitski, 'Nothing's About to Happen to Me'(09:44) Gorillaz, 'The Mountain'(15:04) Heavenly, 'Highway To Heavenly'(20:34) Voxtrot, 'Dreamers in Exile'(27:12) Nothing, 'a short history of decay'(32:52) The Lightning Round- Buck Meek, 'The Mirror'- Maria BC, 'Marathon'- Bill Callahan, 'My Days of 58'- GENA, The Pleasure is Yours'- Sarah Kirkland Snider, 'Forward Into Light'Sample the albums via our New Music Friday playlist and see our Long List of notable releases on NPR.org.Credits:Host: Robin HiltonGuest: Raina Douris, WXPNAudio Producer: Noah CaldwellDigital Producer: Dora LeviteEditors: Otis Hart, Elle MannionExecutive Producer: Suraya MohamedSpecial thanks to Hazel Cills, Ann Powers, Sheldon Pearce and Tom HuizengaSee pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Happy Friday, everyone, for MNPR Music.
I'm Robin Hilton sitting in for Stephen Thompson, who is away this week.
It is New Music Friday.
And here to talk about the best new albums out on February 27th.
Is host of World Cafe on WXPN, Raina Duras.
Hello, Robin. It's great to be here.
Please excuse my sort of scratchy voice.
I have the same cold everybody else seems to have right now,
and I'm just getting over it.
So I'm happy to be here.
We can do this.
We're going to get through it together.
This is a bonkers release day.
Absolutely stacked.
Mitzki, guerrillas, Buck Meek, Bill Callahan, incredible release week.
Do you ever wonder, like, what's going on?
Like, are they planning this?
Yeah, like, talk to each other.
Spread it out, you know?
Yeah, I also, I feel like this time of year, it's a great time to release an album
because, like, nothing else is really happening.
People aren't distracted.
Yeah, we've got all the time in the world.
We're going to get to as much as we can on this episode of New Music Friday,
but I want to start with one of the most anticipated releases out today
that we weren't actually able to hear in its entirety.
It is the long-awaited new album from Bruno Mars called The Romantic.
And the one single that they've shared ahead of it is called I Just Might.
Well, Raina, this is one album that they really kept under wraps,
and I mean, you and I've got some pull, but...
No, I think I asked if you guys had an advanced stream,
and the response I got was definitely not.
Definitely not.
But let's talk about what we do know.
His first solo album in a decade,
he did have that project with Silk Sonic
with Anderson Pack back in 2021.
But his first album since he put out 24K Magic in 2016,
and people are ready for it.
This song that we're listening to,
it debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
He performed it at the Grammys.
Big tour plan this year.
Yeah, and number one in lots of countries.
I mean, Costa Rica, Kazakhstan, Belgium, Peru.
Everybody loves Bruno Mars.
And in this song, you know, he kind of, it's not like he's switching anything up too majorly here.
It's boppy, it is groovy, it is retro, which is really where he seems to be comfortable lately,
especially like when you're talking about Silk Sonic.
I will say I'm someone who, like, unironically loves the song Uptown Funk.
I love it.
I don't know if I'm someone who would identify as a Bruno Mars fan, which is fine, I think,
with an artist like Bruno Mars, because it's sometimes just about the feeling and, like,
the pop single, even with this song, it's music that's for, like, walking down the street
on a sunny day when you're in a really good mood.
Also, instant party.
I mean, it is all the feeling with Bruno Mars.
I love Bruno Mars just because I always feel better whenever I put any of his stuff on.
Yes.
And I think, to your point, with this album, expect retro, expect nostalgia, expect deep grooves.
he's also so fun to watch.
Did you catch his Grammy performance?
I didn't.
Oh, so he actually didn't end up dancing as much during that set as I was hoping he would.
Like, I've got the kids in the room.
I'm like, watch this, watch this.
It's going to be amazing.
And he didn't move around quite as much as I was hoping he would,
but he's such an incredible dancer.
I'd love to get him at the tiny desk.
Oh, yeah.
I'd love to see the moves you could pull back there.
So the album from Bruno Mars is called The Romantic.
It's out now in February 27th.
Let's get to another super anticipated album out now that we were able to hear ahead of its release.
It's Mitzki's, nothing's about to happen to me.
This is the first single from it.
Where's my phone?
First of all, it's her first album since 2023.
The album in 2023 was called The Land is In hospitable and so are we.
And she had this orchestra in there and it comes back for this record.
I mean, I love Mitzki.
I think that this album really is interesting.
that it marries this orchestral sound she's been working on with a more rock,
Raj band sound that she originally went into the album intending to focus on,
and then she said the songs kind of called to her and asked for the orchestra to come back.
Side note, I just went to New York to interview Mitzky on Friday about this record.
So I have some insight on it, and I'm just really excited to see what people's reaction is to this.
Well, I think it's another really big swing of a record for her.
I mean, you hear it not just across the album,
but even like in a single song,
like you take the opening song in a lake,
for so much of this song,
it has this almost like Laurel Canyon kind of folk vibe to it.
Like you could,
I kept picturing her playing it on an auto harp,
you know, like sitting under a tree or something.
But in a lake you can back stroke forever,
the sky before you, the dark right behind.
But then it takes this sort of,
show tune Broadway turn in the back third of the song.
The strings come in, horns come in.
For a few beats, it becomes more conceptual.
There's this ambient street sounds and horns honking.
And then finally, at the end,
it just takes this huge big turn into an anthemic rock song.
Incredible.
She also was really influenced by a book called We Have Always Lived in the Castle
by Shirley Jackson.
and a lot of the songs follow a narrative from this character's perspective.
There's a lot of tension between the outside world's expectations and your own interior life,
which I think is really interesting when you're somebody like Miski,
who has a very active fan base, who has set up some pretty strong boundaries around her own personal life
when it comes to those fans and public interest into it.
So it opens up a lot of interesting questions that she's sort of exploring on the record.
Yeah, it feels like a lot of the album has to do with isolation, not necessarily loneliness, but being alone, if that makes sense.
You know, like how you make sense of the world and how you fit in it, you know, when so much of your time is just spent inside your own head.
Like, there's a song called The White Cat.
Yes.
And it's kind of like a trippy take on PJ Harvey, particularly about halfway through.
kind of crossed with surf rock or something.
Sure, yeah.
But I think the song was inspired by Shirley Jackson's
The Haunting of Hill House in this passage
where she talks about a white cat sitting on the steps of the house.
And the narrator in the story says,
I could live there all alone.
No one would ever find me.
When we're talking about that sort of tension
between outside expectations and your own interior life
and sort of the isolation of that,
there's another layer there.
and it's one that we talked about when I spoke to her
and that is the expectations around being a woman
and how women are supposed to behave
and one of the songs that gets into that
is the song Dead Women
where Mitzki sings about people wanting a woman to die basically
so that they can control their story
they can take through their life, find their details
and take over a woman's narrative
which I think is an interesting thing to explore
as a woman and also especially as a famous woman.
New album from Mitzki
is called Nothing's About to Happen to Me
out now on February 27th.
Let's go next to the band Gorillas.
Damon Albarn, Jamie Hewlett,
they're back with an epic new album
called The Mountain.
This is a song called The Manifesto.
I know what's going to pass tomorrow.
When I tend to the light that you call me chama
my future me reclama.
Dice the door and I'm
free.
Deja the pasto and me fix it in the simple.
So this album to be in the
So this album sort of had to start a few years back when Jamie Hewlett was,
had to go to India because his mother-in-law had a stroke.
And he spent a bunch of time there.
And he really fell in love with India.
and said, okay, I want Damon to come back with me.
So they went out, and right before they went back,
David Alberts' dad died.
And then Hewlett's own dad 10 days later.
Like, it was a bunch of deaths sort of surrounded
the beginning of this album along with this trip to India.
And you can hear both of those things really loud and clear on this record.
They have said that the mountain is a metaphor for the journey of life.
It is about life.
It is about death.
And it has a lot of those sort of Indian music.
inspiration. It's kind of like the Gorilla's White album a little bit.
Yeah, it's very epic, sprawling, a very global sound. And as you say, because of the loss
leading up to them making this album, you hear them sort of seeking higher truths and meaning
in the wake of all of that loss. There's a song called The Hardest Thing. And you hear
Albarn repeat this line, the hardest thing is to say goodbye to someone you love. He repeats it over
and hover.
So, like, there is all this loss, all of this searching.
But I wouldn't call it a super moody album.
No.
Or like a sad album.
It's more like wondrous.
Yeah.
And also like kind of like a sense that they're just in awe, like kind of marveling at
being here.
Yeah.
Yeah, it kind of feels life-affirming.
Yeah.
More than like morbid or anything like that.
And there, I mean, there are lots of guests on guerrilla's albums, but the list of guests
on this one is truly extensive.
You have Anusha Shankar, who's Ravi Shankar's daughter.
You hear her playing right away the sitar.
Black Thought, Johnny Marr, Sparks, Markey Smith of the fall.
There are Argentinian EDM artists, American rappers.
There's a U.S. Youth Poet Laureate on here, and which is fitting for an album that really is a meditation on life and death, there are a bunch of posthumous features, too, which is really interesting. Bobby Womack, Tony Allen, the Detroit rapper Proof, they are all on the record.
And very often I think that these songs kind of assume the identity of the artists who are featured on them.
It's like they're not just in service to guerrillas, if that makes sense.
Like, their fingerprints are all over these songs.
Totally.
My note said, they really let their guests be their guests.
Yeah.
You know, the song The God of Lying features Joe Talbot from idols.
And it does feel spooky.
It kind of feels like a cartoon haunted house,
which is a fun angle to take on a record that's about death.
And, you know, when I was listening to it,
I was like, I will add this to my Halloween season playlist for next year in advance.
So the new album from Gorillas,
it's called The Mountain Out Now on Jules.
February 27th. We've got to take a quick break here, but we will have more for you right after
this, including new ones from the band's Heavenly, Vox Trot, and a few others we're excited about.
I'm Robin Hilton. It's New Music Friday. Raina Duras of WXPN is here. We're talking about the best
albums out on February 27th. Raina, what do you got cooking up at WXPN and World Cafe that you can
tell us about? Well, we've got Kate LeBahn on the show today, today on Friday, and I was just in
New York doing an interview in session with Mitzki, so you can look for that in a couple of weeks.
We have an upcoming session with Big Thief as well.
And we're just, you know, we're gearing up for spring at Rural Cafe and at WXPN.
So there's lots of stuff coming that I am not allowed to tell anybody about yet.
Those are all some heavy hitters in our world.
Jay LaBahn, Mitzke, good stuff.
Well, let's get to some more albums that are out today, starting with this very jangly pop
band called Heavenly.
They're based out of Britain.
Their new album out now is called Highway to Heavenly.
This is a song called Portland Town.
So, Raina, I have to admit, I'm a little late to this one.
And when I say I'm a little late, I mean like around 35 or 40 years, not the first time there's been a band that everyone loves that I've never heard of.
But this is a band, like, I thought they were totally new.
I'd never heard of them.
and they've been at this for a very long time.
Robin, I'm so glad you said that
because when I listened to this album before reading anything,
I was like, wow, these guys are really doing a great job
of sounding like an 80s or 90s tweet pop band from the UK.
Right.
And what do you know?
They basically invented it.
Yeah, yeah.
Patient zero.
They started like nearly 40 years ago.
And it's been incredibly, it's been 30 years since they put an album out.
The last one was in 1996.
It was called Operation Heavenly.
Which, like, this is a thing they do.
They put the band's name and all their album titles.
Like, they had one called The Decline and Fall of Heavenly and Heavenly and
Heavenly versus Satan.
And now we've got this one highway to Heavenly.
You know, I lived in Athens, Georgia back in the 90s, and this is a very Athens, Georgia
band to me, like circa 1993, a little quirky, very homemade, you know, very scruffy, a little trippies.
There's some spoken word guitar rock, like on this song, Portland Town, that it almost has like
a B-52's vibe, which is one of the more popular Athens, Georgia bands.
Sure.
But I love the vibe.
And also, I mean, you picked a great track to start with.
I mean, Portland Town.
I feel like maybe in 2026, we're not all talking about how weird Portland is as much as we were.
But they sing about it.
They imagine a place for misfits and weirdos and outcasts, not unlike Portland's reputation.
So, yeah, it really fits into that kind of DIY underground-twee world.
They did say, you know, their last album, like you said, was in 1996.
Right before they put that out, their band member, Matthew Fletcher, took his own life.
And then after that, they said they were going to retire the band name.
So this really is kind of a big deal that they're back.
And I think they just premiered some songs at a show in 2023.
And that's all we've really heard from them since then.
So it's interesting, I think, having a band from the 90s, like there's a Tweed band from then come back now in 2026.
because they came up in the 90s,
and when they did, they really made a choice
not to present themselves as super masculine
or super feminine.
Because the 90s was really gendered.
And now, in 2026,
there are all these conversations
around toxic masculinity
and the idea of trad wives,
and they're coming back doing this again,
and it kind of feels like a magnified version
of what they were initially opposed to.
You can hear that in the lyrics of the song,
scene stealing. It's addressed at a guy who's like famous,
who has a big ego and whose reputation gets deservedly ruined
after he's sexually assaulted woman.
I mean, these are really heavy topics.
And at the same time, they wrap it in this like glittering, as you say,
Tweed Pop that if you're just listening to it, it sounds so light and airy and fun.
There's momentum to it. You take a song like Press Return.
The energy in it is so good.
There's this quirky little Farfisa organ or something kind of behind the guitars.
Super hooky, super catchy.
And then there's a song like, excuse me.
When I listened to it, I was like, well, it just kind of put this big goofy smile on my face.
And when I first listened to it, I thought, you know, oh, they're really capturing what it's like to be young and in love.
But the more I listen to it, I realize, no, they're older now.
and they're remembering somebody from their past.
And it's like they see someone on the street that reminds them of that person.
And then the song ends with the line.
We never realized that what we had would be the best we got.
And now it's gone.
Yeah.
So there's this, yeah, just this threat of melancholy that runs through these.
Well, the album again from Heavenly is called Highway to Heavenly.
Out now on February 27th.
Next up is a new one from a band called Voxtraw.
And this is an Austin band that, like Heavenly, is back after a really, really long break.
They released their debut album in 2007.
It was a self-titled album.
And now, nearly 20 years later, they've got a follow-up.
Their sophomore full-length, nearly two decades later.
It's called Dreamers in Exile.
And this is the title cut.
Okay, so, Robin, when I was younger, when Voxtrot was first kind of out,
I used to play their song, The Start of Something.
so often and so loud in my room that my sister now hates it,
and she will get legitimately angry if I play it.
Even now, she'll get mad and she'll leave the room.
I still love it.
I was excited to see these guys are back.
They kind of came back in 2022 after more than a decade of being broken up.
This is only their second full-length album.
It's incredible.
Everything else was EPs and compilations and live stuff.
This sounds like an album that's been encased in Amber,
like an unearthed by scientists who are now studying it to try to understand.
like what music used to sound like, but it's not like the sound of early, the early 2000s
when they were first making music. It's very 80s indie rock. This is like college rock. You
wouldn't necessarily hear this on top 40, but the kind of band where like you and a few of your
friends were lucky enough to find out about them and you're keeping them to yourselves, no one else
is really listening to them. I did go back and listen to their first album because it had been
so long. And in some ways, it sounds like they just picked up where they left off, but it
But thematically, I'm not so sure this is an album that they could have made before now.
One reason I feel like this had to have been made now is because of frontman Ramesh Shrivostovah
is singing about a lot of personal stuff, this accumulated life experience.
There's a whole bunch of different places where he does that.
One of the songs is Fighting Back, where he sings about, after the band broke up,
He worked as a career during Grammy and Oscar season,
delivering couture from boutiques to mansions and hotel rooms,
which I don't know.
Like your band breaks up,
you have like this relative success,
it breaks up,
and then you're delivering clothes to people winning awards.
That is a really maybe painful,
but interesting experience.
And the song itself has this driving beat
that feels like it could be the soundtrack to a training montage.
Like you get the feeling that this was all just like,
he was taking all these things and putting them inside and, you know, using it as fuel for when he would come back.
I mean, the whole album is really like this.
You know, it is so reflective, very wistful at times.
There's this sense that time is moving too fast and, like, he just can't hold on to it as much as he wants.
Like, everything is slipping away.
Like, if you listen to the opener, another fire, you know, he sings about being hungry for the kill and chasing a
another fire, but like how the body is letting you down as you grow older. It's honestly, it's not
the kind of song you could write when you're in your early 20s, I don't think.
At the same time, I do feel like this album kind of took me back there because the music itself,
it has many, many cathartic moments, especially in the hooks of the songs. I'm thinking of
a song like New World Romance, which ties into what you're saying. There's a line, it's a beautiful
world. Can I please stay in it? Life goes by in a New York minute. There are wild
roses still blooming in me, there are moments in that song where I can imagine, I can put myself
back in the like dance club that I went to in Toronto when they were first a band and I could
imagine everybody just jumping up and exploding when the hook hits.
The album again is Dreamers in Exile from Vox Trot, their first in 20 years.
We got to take another quick break here, but when we come back, we're going to talk about
the album.
I'm most excited about this week.
Raina. It's from a band from where you are, Darren Philly. We'll have that pluser lightning run right
after this. It's New Music Friday. I'm Robin Hilton here with Raina Duras, talking best new albums
out on February 27th. Next up is a new one. I have been looking forward to this since last fall when
we first heard that it was coming. It's the new album from the Philly band, Nothing. It's called A Short
History of Decay, and this is the title cut. So this is their first new album in six years. And
Raina, as I mentioned, this is one of your hometown
band, so I feel like I should
kind of let you go first here.
Well, you know, back in
2020, the frontman
Nikki Palermo thought that maybe
the band was done, but then he wanted
to bring it back, he wanted to do it
again. And there really kind of is a theme
emerging here, Robin, and some of these records
we've been talking about, about like the
passage of time, getting older.
Holding on. Maybe not being
able to do all the things you once
were able to do. Nikki Palermo,
has been open, especially around this album, about the onset of something called Essential Tremors,
which is a non-life-threatening neurological disorder.
It makes the body shake uncontrollably, both physically and verbally,
so you can imagine how difficult that would be, especially if you're trying to play music.
And that idea, it's even in the title, I mean, decay of your body,
maybe not being up for what it once was, it really stretches through the whole record.
Yeah, and they wrote about it on the closing track,
essential tremors. You know, his voice is really out in the clear. It's not buried in reverb as much as
previous records, which was very intentional. He said he wanted people to hear the tremor in his voice
on this song. He really went through it after that last record. I feel like we're lucky to have this
album because, as you said, Palermo thought, maybe the band's done now. We've taken it to its natural
conclusion. He struggled with substance abuse in the years since, you know, he said he was, there
or ER visits, relationships fell apart,
and then he developed these tremors,
but somehow he got through it all
and found this kind of clarity
that brought him back to making this album.
And, you know, I will just say straight up,
I think this is the best album nothing's ever done.
It's more nuanced.
I think it's the most honest and revealing.
It's the most complex emotionally.
And I just think musically, it's the most accomplished.
We get like glimpses of the softer side of the band.
Yeah.
Like it opens with this song called Never.
come never morning. And when it starts off, it sounds so beautiful. And so it's like this reflection
on childhood. And I thought, oh, you know, Dominic Palermo, he's like remembering moments like
hanging out on on lazy days. But then you realize, oh God, no, he's talking about growing up with an
abusive father. So much pain in it. And then it just like opens up. Yeah. The song opens up. It gets really
big and more and more heartbreaking. And he sings about getting older and how much harder life has gotten.
I'm glad you brought up that first song.
I mean, the very first lines of that song are when I was young, life was easy.
And he has said, Nikki said, that he's writing about things on this album that he's never really talked about before,
things he was scared to write about.
And so while, you know, sometimes if you aren't a really big shoegaze fan,
sometimes that wall of sound can feel oppressive,
I think that having that sort of vulnerability and that tenderness and those quieter moments
makes it more accessible
for somebody who maybe has never listened to them before.
I will say, lead single, Cannibal World,
the drums are amazing.
This song is scary.
It is fast, and it feels like woozy and weird.
So there's that side of it too.
Again, the album from Nothing,
A Short History of Decay out now on February 27th.
As I said, it's an absolutely stacked release week
with way more albums than we could ever get to on a single show.
So we're going to do a quick run through
of some of the other notable releases out now on February.
27th. Raina, what else are you loving this week?
I'm really loving the Buck Meek album. It's called The Mirror. It's personal, but it doesn't come off as
indulgent. He recorded it in a log cabin, but he recorded his vocals out on the porch.
And honestly, that sounds like the perfect place to listen to it. You can imagine this tender,
sensitive guy somewhere quiet, singing to you. You can be alone and really appreciate his
lovely, thoughtful, introspective lyricism.
Well, normally, we throw more albums into the mix,
ourselves here, but this week we thought we'd bring on some of the other brilliant
curators and writers and reviewers from the NPR music team to tell us what they're loving
this week, starting with editor and close personal friend of mine, Hazel Sills.
We are close personal friends. Yeah, my pick this week is the album Marathon by the artist Maria
BC. This is a very beautiful, dark album about surviving in our
world today. It's full of really interesting textures. I feel like some songs sound like
intense drone tracks, and then elsewhere, it kind of sounds like a folk album. I just found it to be
a very stunning, you know, almost meditative release. All right, Ann Powers, host of the Plus
episode for NPR Music. Hey, Anne. Hi, guys. How you doing? What do you want to flag for us this week?
Well, I want to flag the new record by Bill Callahan.
It's called My Days of 58.
You probably know of Bill Callahan.
He's been making records since the early 90s, originally under the name Smog,
and then under his own name for the past 20 years or so.
I have a confession to make.
Like, early on, I was not only not a fan of Smog, but I was, like, actively uninterested in Smog.
I found Calhans were kind of awkward and offensive, but both of us have.
grown since then, and now he has become one of my very favorite artists. And this album, My Days of
58, he is 58 years old. And it is such a beautiful and funny and deeply human reflection on this
time in his life. This record is so fun and joyful. It's shambolic. The band is the same one that
was on Bill's live album, Resuscitate, and it's just such a people record. I love it completely.
thing to call a Bill Callahan project a people record.
It's beautiful how we grow in life, isn't it?
Let's go to Sheldon Pierce.
Hey, Sheldon.
Hey, Robin.
You were just on all songs considered on Tuesday with a bunch of new jams.
But what else are you loving that's out on February 27th?
Yeah, my pick is the Gina record.
The pleasure is yours.
Gina is a new duo of the experimental Texas multi-hyphenate
live spelled liv.e and the Detroit drummer and producer kareem riggins and their new record which is a
debut is sort of like a marvel of modern hip-hop soul it's full of like translucent rmb vocals and
lush skipping drums the album is kind of futuristic and throwback all at once and like seems to
exist on a continuum of their respective reference points which are dilla the
Roots, Erica Badu, Georgia and Moldro.
But the record is in a kind of near constant state of play, and it's just light and fun.
And it's one of my favorite to the year.
And that's Gina G.E.N.A.
All right, last but not least, NPR's classical music editor, Tom Heisinga.
Hey, Tom.
Hey, Robin.
I've got some amazing orchestral music by composer Sarah Kirkland Snyder.
It's called Forward Into Light.
title track from a new record performed by the Metropolis Ensemble.
I think a lot of people probably know her best as the co-founder of the so-called indie classical
label New Amsterdam, which has released a lot of really cool records by Missy Mazoli and
Arooge Hofftab and Caroline Shaw.
Snyder herself is, I think, a little bit of a late bloomer as a composer, best known for
a song cycle called Penelope back in 2010, but her first opera just premiered in L.A.
I just saw it in New York last month.
and Forward Into Light is a piece for orchestra commissioned by the New York Philharmonic.
And it's inspired by American women suffragists, including people like Sojourner Truth and Susan B. Anthony.
But Snyder says she's not really trying to tell their story so much as what she says,
quote, to distill the emotional, psychological contours of faith, doubt, and what it means to persevere.
All right. Thanks, everybody.
Thank you.
Thanks, Robin.
Thanks.
Thank you.
That'll do it for this week's new music.
Friday, Raina Duras from World Cafe and WXPN. Thanks as always. Thank you.
All right. If you enjoy the show, be sure to leave us a glowing review on Apple or Spotify
or wherever you get your podcasts. This episode was produced by Noah Caldwell and Elmanian and
edited by Otis Hart. Our production assistant is Dora Levitt. The executive producer of
NPR music is Soraya Muhammad. Stephen Thompson will be back next week to discuss new
music with Nate Chinin from W.R.T.I. Also in Philadelphia. Until then, be well, take care,
and treat yourself to lots of great music.
