NPR Music - New Music Friday: The best albums out March 6
Episode Date: March 6, 2026Flying Lotus. waterbaby. The groovy affirmations of Joshua Idehen. NPR Music's Stephen Thompson chats with Nate Chinen from WRTI in Philadelphia about their favorite albums out Friday, March 6. Plus..., a handful of NPR Music writers and critics offer personal picks in our lightning round.The Starting 5(00:00) Introduction & Harry Styles, 'Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally.'(03:18) Flying Lotus, 'BIG MAMA' EP(08:34) waterbaby, 'Memory Be a Blade'(15:20) Shabaka, 'Of The Earth'(20:51) Joshua Idehen, 'I know you're hurting, everyone is hurting, everyone is trying, you have got to try'(27:09) The Scythe, 'Strictly 4 The Scythe'(31:37) The Lightning Round- Cece Coakley, 'Pleasant Attack' EP- Terrace Martin, 'Purpose'- Various Artists, 'HELP(2)' - Alice Sara Ott, 'Jóhann Jóhannsson: Piano Works'- Macha & Bedhead, 'Macha Loved Bedhead'Sample the albums via our New Music Friday playlist and see our Long List of notable releases on NPR.org.Credits:Host: Stephen ThompsonGuest: Nate Chinen, WRTIAudio Producer: Noah CaldwellDigital Producer: Dora LeviteEditors: Otis Hart, Elle MannionExecutive Producer: Suraya MohamedSpecial thanks to Ann Powers, Tom Huizenga and Lars GotrichSee 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 from NPR Music. It's New Music Friday. I'm your host, Stephen Thompson,
and I'm here with my friend and colleague Nate Chenen of WRTI in Philly. Hey, Nate.
What's up, Stephen?
So first up, the music you're hearing, the biggest album release of the week, as far as public
reach and interest is concerned, is by Harry Stiles. His new album is the follow-up to Harry's
House, which won album of the year at the Grammys a few years ago. This one is more focused on
kind of electro-pop and dance music.
The first single Aperture debuted at number one.
We'll be hearing about this record for many months to come.
It's called Kiss All the Time, Disco Occasionally.
Nate Chen.
I know you're predominantly a jazz guy,
but I also know you to have an extremely broad musical palette.
What are your thoughts on Harry Styles?
I enjoy Harry Styles.
I admire Harry Styles.
I don't love his music, typically.
He strikes me as like a genius person.
I think he's a really, really good pop star.
And I've interviewed a trombonist named Kalea Vandevar,
who was on his last stadium tour.
And she talked about what a terrific sort of team leader he is
and how much trust he puts in his band members.
And so, like, I have just generally positive feelings about him as a person.
I'm like, I'm glad he's out there doing his thing.
But I got to say, his music just never quite, it never thrills me.
Like, I always feel like satisfied, but not inspired.
Although, you know, it's cool that he's veering into this electro pop dance floor direction.
And I think that the idea of uplift and abandon, like, we could all use some of that right now.
It goes without saying we did not have advanced copies of this record prior to this conversation.
We're going to have a full episode of Pop.
Culture Happy Hour that I'll be hosting next week talking about this record more in depth.
You know, my interactions with Harry Stiles, I interviewed him.
You can go on YouTube and find me interviewing him in front of the tiny desk about our shared
love of the Green Bay Packers.
I remember this interview.
Harry Stiles has a Green Bay Packers tattoo on his arm, and I needed to know more.
And, you know, it's interesting that you kind of say that thing about him being a great team
leader because he was an extraordinarily warm and kind and compelling person to be around. And I find
myself rooting for him, even though I think intermittent, I find his music kind of intermittently inspired.
And I, you know, I love several of the songs, kind of from each of his last couple of records.
And I'm very interested to hear what he does with this one, because I think there's, there's
potential for it to go in some interesting places. And I appreciate, kind of as you alluded to, his
willingness to stretch his sound. But let's kick the show off for real with the first record we're
going to talk about in depth that we have heard in its entirety. It's a new EP by Flying Lotus.
It's called Big Mama. So Stephen, you said we've heard this one in its entirety. You can hear this
one in its entirety while doing the dishes and still have dishes left to do when it ends. What is it,
like 13 minutes? 13 minutes. 13 minutes.
13 minutes.
And yet the metabolism of it is so speedy that it feels like an epic, you know?
And this is in keeping with Flying Lotus and his aesthetic.
His birth name is Stephen Ellison.
He is a producer and electronics artist who comes from a lineage.
His aunt was Alice Coltrane.
And he's very much tuned into this kind of like astral,
exploration sonically.
But he's always been really attuned to sort of glitchy, electronic, atmospheric vibe.
He's also very interested in video games and anime and, you know, all of that is in this release.
There is an 8-bit vibe that comes through in some of these tracks.
There's a track called Antelope on Aguirre.
And it feels like 8-bit video game music.
There's a song called Pink Dream, and it gives you that feeling of like leveling up in Mario Brothers.
Totally.
Listening to that track, it feels like you are battling Bowser.
But this record, as you said, Nate, it's kind of a pocket epic.
It really takes you on a journey, and I loved reading Flying Lotus kind of talking about what he wanted to accomplish with this record.
And he said, you know, and I quote, I wanted it to feel like.
being shot out of a cannon, just explosive, unpredictable energy, like a machine that had just
lost its mind.
Yeah, totally.
You know, it's also worth noting that Flying Lotus founded Brain Feeder Records, which has been
a really important and influential, you know, boutique label of this century and, you know, put out
music by Thundercat and Comasi Washington and many others.
But Flying Lotus himself has primarily been recorded.
for warp. And so this actually, I don't know why, but this marks the first full Flying Lotus
release on his own label imprint, which also feels kind of significant. This is like a soup to nuts
flying lotus brain feeder product. Absolutely. And I appreciate Nate the way, even within the
structure of this EP, it's seven songs, it's like 13 minutes, but it still has a way of ebbing and
flowing. It still takes breaks. It still takes you on sonic detours. The track Horse Nuk
opens on this kind of mysterious haunting note like it's like it's a score of a science fiction
movie before obviously, you know, eventually over the course of the song, it explodes into
kind of skittish electro maximalism. But I appreciated that this piece still took time to breathe. And so
really in 13 minutes, it takes you on
what feels like a movie length journey.
I would be curious to see as an experiment.
You know, sometimes people take a song
and they slow it down.
You know, and you create like the...
Justin Bieber's baby slowed down 800 times
and it sounds like Sigeroose.
Totally.
I wonder what that would be like with this EP
because, you know, as you say,
there's a lot that happens.
Like, if you were to run this at half speed or slower, like, you know, it would still have a lot of kinetic energy.
And I wonder what it would feel like.
I might have to try that sometime.
Try it. Do it. Send it to me.
All right, that is Flying Lotus.
His new EP is called Big Mama.
Next up, the artist Water Baby has a new album called Memory Be a Blade.
So Water Baby is a Swedish pop and art.
R&B singer, who kind of works in that space of like genre-blending progressive R&B, think people
like Dijon and Omar Apollo, definitely influenced by people like Bonne Verre, you know, artists who kind of
take their music, deconstruct it a little bit, warp it a little bit, and present it back to you
in these strange and haunting and hypnotic ways. There's kind of a bedroom pop vibe to a bunch of
the tracks on this record, but really what I felt myself doing was like retreating under headphones
with it, because there's real intimacy to it the closer you listen. Yeah, I totally agree. You know,
the close listening reveals the extreme attention to detail in the recording of this material.
You know, there are also some really intentional flourishes. You know, there's more than one track on
this album where you hear the introductory throat clearing before the singing begins.
You know, she's kind of like, and then she gets into her singing.
It's like, why would you include that?
I love that.
It's a kind of like verite.
Yeah, it's this idea of like, we are figuring this out together, you know?
Like, you're here for the rough draft, right?
And that's very much sort of the message of these songs and of this delivery.
The combination of sounding off the cuff, but.
being extremely intentional and deliberate in the musical decisions that you're making
gives it this feel that you are just in the palm of her hand.
And you take like the title track of this record, Memory Be a Blade,
and it's got these string flourishes.
It's got these touches that are really beautiful that really kind of hook that song
kind of under your skin.
But it really still, it's also enshrouding her.
It's creating a little bit of a sense of mystery where you're like,
what is she saying? What is she saying? You're kind of leaning in closer and closer as the song goes on.
And I think that she's really good at hiding the work, right, that goes into it, where it feels off the cuff, even though it so clearly isn't.
You know, she's also good at hiding the words. I have to say that part of me leaning in is trying to figure out what she's singing.
It's a little bit off-putting to me, to be honest, because she's a singer-songwriter. And I want to
want to, you know, that sort of affect of intimacy makes me want to get inside these lyrics.
And when I read a little more about her process, some of the lyrics on this album were basically
freestyle, you know, like she was sort of getting hung up on the pressure of trying to craft
songs. And so she kind of, you know, surrendered to the process of, you know, just feeling the vibe
and the groove and singing whatever came to mind.
And so, you know, in a certain way, even though she's a singer-songwriter,
some of these songs don't feel as songwriter crafted to me as they are like,
vibed into being.
That is Water Baby.
Her new album is called Memory Be a Blade.
We've got more records we're going to talk about in depth out today.
March 6th, but first, let's take a quick break.
From NPR Music, it's New Music Friday.
I'm Stephen Thompson here with my pal Nate Chenen of WRTI in Philly.
Before we move on to our next record, Nate, I wanted to ask you, how are things going at WRTI?
Oh, we are just humming over here.
There's so much happening on the scene.
You know, as you know, we are a classical music station as well as a jazz station,
and so we cover both domains, and Philadelphia is just popping.
at the moment.
Yeah.
Among other things, the city is gearing up for America's 250th anniversary.
Oh, yeah.
I've heard a little something about that.
Philly is the cradle of liberty.
And there's a lot of events coming up.
And here at the station, we decided to pay tribute to that with an editorial series that I'm organizing called Let Freedom Ring.
And it's a series of stories from, you know, music history that are,
profoundly American and distinctly Philadelphian. And so our most recent story, I actually assigned
a piece to Sunrah's biographer, John Swed. His biography of Sunrah came out almost 30 years ago,
and so I asked him to sort of reflect anew on the Sunrah legacy. So these are the kinds of
stories we're telling. It's been really, really fun to dig in and think about, you know,
things that are familiar that could be seen in a new light or stories that may not.
be familiar to folks.
Gives us a good excuse to just dig in.
Yeah, that's wonderful.
All right, let's move on to Shabaka.
Shabaka's new album is called Of the Earth.
Shabaka, now a mononym, is Shabaka Hutchings from The Comet is coming and Sons of Komet.
A very, very adventurous jazz musician who works across many different instruments, many
different forms, jazz music that sprawls into dance music that can sprawl into ambience, that can
sprawl in so many different creative directions, and is an extremely prolific collaborator.
You hear Shabaka Hutchings pop up all over the place, including on the record we're going to
talk about next. This record is his first for his own label, Shabaka Records, and it's entirely him.
He's exploring beats and electronics and flute and he's rapping.
He's doing everything himself and crafting a record that moves in so many different directions so seamlessly.
Yeah, this is an artist who is perpetually on a journey.
Shavaka is a killer tenor saxophonist, and that's how a lot of people got to know him through Sons of Kemet and the Comet.
coming and his own band, Shabaka and the Ancestors.
But several years ago, he declared that he was hanging up the saxophone and focusing on flute
and specifically on Shakuhachi, which is the Japanese bamboo flute that has a very
fearsomely difficult technical path to mastery.
And Shabaka really decided to devote himself to that practice.
You know, traveling to Japan, I believe he even carved his...
own shakuhachi out of bamboo stalks.
I mean, it's, you know, this is someone who really is about the craft.
And for Shabaka, who, you know, he has family history in Barbados.
He's always been interested in the Afro-Caribbean diaspora.
Carnival rhythm is always, like, really important to him.
And there are moments on this album where he brings back in that feeling of, like,
folkloric, communal, sort of dance-oriented rhythm, right?
So on a track like dance in praise, you hear that, it's simultaneously spiritual and inward seeking,
but also, like, you know, it makes your body move.
Let's mention, I mean, a future untold, which kind of opens the record,
it's kind of in that dreamy, ambient jazz mode, right?
Like, there's this quality of, like, you're almost listening to ambient music as much as jazz.
But obviously, you know, we've already heard an excerpt from Dance and Praise,
which is a much more kind of full-bodied sound.
But he's also, there's a track called Go Astray,
which is this kind of sinister, haunting, kind of morphing song,
and it's showcasing his rap style, you know,
which is kind of low and dense and almost,
there's almost a burbling quality to his voice
and the way he incorporates his voice in the song.
And just sampling those three songs gives you such a sense of the extreme breadth of this record.
They come to see, justify the feeling claim is their basic need, the right to enslave.
I stay blind to the sharks that reside in the heart.
We should say, too, that there's a lot of electronic texture and tonality on this album.
He's become a really adept electronics producer.
He's not dabbling.
at this point.
No.
Like, he really knows what he's doing and is able to meld the organic quality of the flutes
and woodwinds with the synthetic sound of these, you know, synthesizers and, you know,
other electronics.
And so, you know, it feels like a really well metabolized hole to me.
That is Shabaka.
His new album is called Of the Earth.
Next up, Joshua Ida Hen has a new record.
It's called I Know You're Hurting.
everyone is hurting, everyone is trying, you have got to try.
up in the spoken word universe. He's a peer and friend of the artist Scrupius Pip, if you've ever heard,
his kind of melding of spoken word and electronic music. I should note, we just talked about
Shabaka Hutchings in the previous segment, and Shabaka has collaborated extensively with
Joshua Idaen. He actually turns up as a guest on this record. Joshua Idahan, you know,
is maybe best known for kind of a viral song that is on this record.
called Mum Does the Washing, which is built out of a Twitter thread
kind of boiling many different political parties and belief systems
down to a metaphor about who does the laundry.
It's so good.
It's so good and so interesting and so like boiling very complex ideas
down to bullet points, but in a way where you're just hanging on his every word.
And it is such a striking track.
Religion.
Your mom does the washing.
You thank God.
Atheism.
Your mom does the washing.
You make a 12-part YouTube video
demanding peer reviewed evidence that she did.
In fact, do the washing.
Zionism.
You shoved your mom into the washing machine
and the spinning made her dizzy.
And that dizziness made her vomit.
And you point to that vomit and call it anti-Semitism.
Americanism.
Your mom does the washing.
It's in the Constitution.
You know, this is a dance music album.
It's funny.
I feel like we mentioned Harry Styles at the top of the show,
and there's this intimation that Harry Styles is looking to encourage transcendence on the dance floor.
And if he can do even a little bit of what Joshua Idahan does on this album,
I think it'll be a success.
Because that is what this album does.
You know, there's a lot of, like, techno and house rhythm here.
It is most of the time a dance song.
floor record, but on top
of those beats, he is
articulating some really,
really thoughtful and
pointed encouragement, sort of exhortations.
You know, this is like
an album that feels kind of
post therapy.
Oh, yeah.
In a really, like, earnest way.
I suspect it as literally
post therapy. Yeah, yeah.
And I say to myself,
hey, don't let it get you
down.
Where life gets too loud.
I do want my mind's underprong.
And my feelings form of crowd.
I'll say, hey, let it get you down.
I do want to call out his creative partner, Ludwig Parment,
who crafted a lot of the instrumental beds that he's working with here.
That this is definitely a pairing of a pretty sophisticated producer with a wordsmith, right?
And I think they come together really, really well.
I think Joshua Edahan's story is really compelling.
and kind of inspiring. He, you know, kind of wrote a lot of his poetry or has written a lot of
his poetry from a dark place, went through a really difficult stretch in his life, and kind of came out
of it on the other side, to the extent that we can come out of that kind of thing fully on the other
side, wanting to pair his poetry with uplifting dance music and kind of use his voice to
inspire a little bit more. I know that sounds kind of corny, but it really comes through here in these
songs about finding connection and community.
Brother, we have to find a way to get on top all hurting.
I mean, one of the most potent examples for me is brother.
He's addressing the listener, you know, in the second person, right?
He's kind of like saying, you know, you've done some things that you're not proud of.
You've been through some things that have hurt you.
But the refrain is, you are loved, you are valued, you belong, the winds
behind you are still strong.
And, you know, those are very simple affirmations, but in the context of the, you know,
the sonic tapestry of the track and then also everything that he has said leading up to it,
every time I hear it, it kind of brings a catch to my throat, you know, it's like,
man, this is like, this is really powerful stuff.
And I'm sure that, you know, there's someone out there who will hear it and be changed.
in a certain way.
Maybe you have said some unfortunate things to yourself, huh?
Some cruel and unfortunate, cruel and unfortunate things.
Like it's too late, your heart isn't in the right place.
Nobody want to see your face, but I have been there, brother, and that is far from the case.
That is Joshua Edahan.
His new album is called, I know you're hurting, everyone is hurting, everyone is trying, you have
got to try. We've got one more record we're going to talk about in-depth, as well as a lightning
round of some of the other best albums out today, March 6th. But first, let's take a quick break.
From NPR Music, it's New Music Friday. I'm Stephen Thompson here with Nate Chenen of WRTI in Philadelphia.
Before we get to our lightning round of some of our other favorite records out today, March 6th,
we wanted to talk about one more record. It's by The Sithe. It's called Strictly for the Sive.
So the Sive is a hip-hop collective, led by Denzel Curry.
You know, kind of works as its ringleader.
Lots of kind of group raps.
The other artists incorporated are ASAP Ferg, B.K. Therula, Tia Corin, Kinyata.
And you get just this big melding of voices and styles, kind of cross-generational.
The number of voices that kind of pop up help give this.
record loads and loads and loads of energy.
Stephen, I just got to say, the South still got something to say.
It sure does.
Man, this is a statement, this album.
It has, as you said, like, squad energy.
Absolutely.
It has a feeling of critical mass.
You see on this album, like, a whole lot of variations in flow, in style, and, you know,
a few different versions of, like, what,
I see as its core message, which is maybe like a response to market conditions.
You know, I think about the lead single, Lit Effect.
And it's like taking aim at influencers and, you know, like the rappers who are making a big
show on social media.
And it's kind of a timeless hip-hop obsession.
But like, what is realness in this moment?
One thing.
One thing I'm gonna pack it back like an elephant.
Nika ain't got no motion.
Nicarlevant.
I can't hang on nigger.
I'm too lit for that.
One thing I really like about lit effect.
I'm glad you mentioned that song is that it showcases BK.K. the Rula,
foregrounds women.
And you know, BK. The Rula and Tia Corinne both pop up and really have like very, very, very strong features on this record.
Sometimes these kind of collective hip-hop records,
pop records will kind of bring together eight different dudes.
And you can kind of, you know, get a sense of where, like, a certain amount of individuality
gets lost.
And I don't think the individuality gets lost here, in part because they're foregrounding
women and women who are exceptionally talented.
Yeah.
And the narratives also, you know, follow that identity.
You know, I think of a track like Hoopty, which is just like, it's so exuberant and in your
face and also grounded in a real specific.
sophisticity of experience, you know?
All of this feels very natural, you know.
Like nobody is straining to, like, make sure that everybody gets a taste, you know?
It's really like, no, no, we all came, like, ready to go.
And I got to say, I went to bed last night with the song, You Ain't Got a Lie, just bored
its way into my skull, and I could not shake that hook.
These choruses dig in with a persistence.
Yeah.
That is, it is hard to shake.
That is The Sithe.
Their new album is called Strictly for the Sithe.
Now, Nate, you know as well as I do.
We could not get to every terrific record out today, March 6th.
So we are going to welcome in a few of our friends and colleagues,
each of whom is going to bring one record out today, March 6th, that they want to recommend.
I'm actually going to kick us off.
Terrific recommendation from my treasured.
colleague and fellow Wisconsinite El Manion. She tipped me off to a singer-songwriter named
Cecey Coakley, who's got a new EP out today, March 6th. If you want, kind of a pat comparison,
I get Phoebe Bridgers vibes, Waxahatchy vibes. All the moodiness and gentle twang those names
suggest. There's such a distinctive voice here, such a strong sense of phrasing and drama,
and so much all-around potential for great things. I can't wait to hear more. C.C. Cochley's new EP is
called Pleasant Attack.
So this came up in the process of getting ready for this episode.
It's, I feel like it's a sneak attack, but it's a new album by the alto saxophonist and producer
Terris Martin.
Many people know him for his work with Kendrick Lamar.
But Terrace has a new album out called Purpose, and it features his signature production with a
handful of really special guests, including the trumpeter Keon Harrow.
and the vocalist Taylor McFerrin.
It kind of gives us what Terrace does best,
which is, you know, balancing really active drums
with just this very, very cool vibe.
These tracks feel a little bit like miniatures,
but they, you know, they definitely, like, bring you to a place.
And it's a really, another really cool melding
of contemporary R&B, hip-hop, and jazz
from one of the masters of that melding.
That's Terris Martin, and the album is titled Purpose.
So we're going to welcome onto the show.
Dear friend and colleague, Ann Powers, welcome, Ann.
Hello, guys. How are you doing?
Hey, Ann.
I'm so happy to be here and talk about a really extraordinary album.
It's a compilation.
Now, we know that compilations can be kind of random sometimes,
but sometimes they co-hear and they become remarkable.
And that's the case with Help 2, which is a sequel to the 1995 compilation, Help.
That 1995 compilation made history raising more than $1.5 million for children living in war-stricken areas.
Like Bosnia, it also won a special Brit Award.
It featured people like Radiohead, Paul McCartney, Noel Gallagher.
This one kind of recreates the circumstance of the 1995 version, the super producer, James,
Ford brought a ton of musicians into Abbey Road Studios in London for a week to collaborate with
each other. And the artists include this, just get ready for a crazy list. Arctic Monkeys with
their first single since 2022, Arrozov Tab, Cameron Winter with a new song, Damon Alburn, Depeche Mode,
Green Chatton, Defontanes, D.C., the whole band, K Tempest, just a ton of artists.
Olivia Rodrigo does a beautiful version of Magnetic Fields Book of Love.
That's one of my favorite tracks on the record.
Beba Doobie covers Elliot Smith.
This compilation just has so much to offer,
and I just really encourage you to listen to it.
Don't avoid it because you think,
ah, it's just a, you know, random collection of songs.
It's a really special record.
It's called Help 2.
The Book of Love has music in it.
In fact, that's where music comes from.
Some of it is just transentental.
Some of it is just free.
Wonderful. Thank you, Anne Powers.
Let's bring in Tom Hisinga, dear friend of the show.
It's taught me more about classical music than I ever thought I was capable of knowing.
What do you got for us, Tom?
Hey, folks, I've got some music to lower your blood pressure, Stephen.
God bless.
Very chilled out sounds by the late Icelandic composer.
are Johann Johansson recorded by pianist Alice Sarah Ott, who by the way played a brilliant
tiny desk a couple of years ago. You should check it out if you have it. I kind of feel like
Johansson's music is the gift that keeps on giving. You know, since his unexpected death back in
2018, he was only 48. Albums keep popping up of his music. And this one reimagined some of his
best love pieces, including some of his film scores, as just solo piano works. Alisera
I'd even travel to Iceland to record the music with folks that knew Johansen to get like a better vibe.
And she plays it all on this upright piano, which kind of makes sense because she's laying the music bare, as it were, reducing it to just solo piano.
And I think it adds to the inward-looking feel and intimacy of Johansson's music.
So let's listen to this piece, typically bittersweet.
It's from the film score to The Theory of Everything, which you might remember starred Eddie Redmayne as the physicist Stephen.
Hawking. That's the
Theory of Everything, played by
Alice Sarah Ott from a new
record of music of Johann
Johansson reduced to just
solo piano music. It's really great.
All right, thank you, Tom Heisinga. Let's
bring on dear friend, boy, if Tom
has taught me so much about classical
music, Lars Gottrich has taught me so
much about music just
beyond my wheelhouse and has
really helped expand my
musical palette and gotten me into some of
my all-time favorite artists.
So glad to have you on the show.
Lars, what do you got for us?
So, Stephen, imagine it's the end of the 90s.
Lent Biscuit is the biggest thing on radio.
Unfortunately, there is anxiety around the Y2K bug.
And Shares Believe is one of the biggest songs in the world.
And believe it or not, all these things collapse into one record called Macha Loved Bedhead.
Oh, yeah.
Which is getting a nice...
Street issue after 26 years after being woefully out of print. This was a collaboration between two
indie rock bands in the 90s, Bedhead from Dallas, Texas. One of my favorites. Yeah, they've been
kind of called the quintessential indie rock band, which is hard for me to argue with. And then
match a more experimental indie rock band from Athens, Georgia, that would include elements of like
post-punk and Crout Rock and some Gamelon.
instruments into the mix. So this record's got a little bit at everything. It's, it's moody,
it's anxious, as was the mood at the time. That's the record, Macha loved Bedhead by the band's
bedhead and Macha. And that is our show for this week. Thank you to Lars Gottrich, Ann Powers, and Tom
Heisinga for joining us for this week's Lightning Round. Thank you, Stephen. Thank you. Thanks so much for
having us. And thank you, Nate Chen N, for taking time out of your week at WRTI and Philly.
Always a pleasure. Thanks for having me.
If you enjoyed this week's show, we always appreciate a positive review on Apple or Spotify or whatever app you're listening to right now.
This episode was produced by Noah Caldwell and El Manion and edited by Otis Hart.
Our production assistant is Dora Levitt.
The executive producer of NPR Music is Soraya Mohamed.
We'll be back next week to discuss new music with Amelia Mason from WBUR in Boston.
Until then, take a moment to be well.
store up some rest for the hour we're losing this weekend and treat yourself to lots of great music.
