NPR Music - New Music Friday: The best albums you missed from December

Episode Date: January 3, 2025

There's been some great music released since the last New Music Friday episode in late November. So, on this slow January release day, NPR Music's Stephen Thompson and WRTI's Nate Chinen catch you up ...on the best albums we heard in December in between "All I Want For Christmas Is You" and "Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer."Featured Albums:• ROSÉ, 'rosie'• Lauren Mayberry, 'Vicious Creature'• Brad Mehldau, Mark Turner & Peter Bernstein, 'Solid Jackson'• The Innocence Mission, 'Midwinter Swimmers' • SAULT, 'Acts of Faith'Visit npr.org/music to see the long list of albums you might have missed in December, and stream our New Music Friday playlist.CREDITS:Host: Stephen Thompson, NPR MusicGuest: Nate Chinen, WRTIProducer: Simon RentnerEditor: Otis HartExecutive Producer: Suraya MohamedVice President, Music and Visuals: Keith JenkinsSee 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)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Happy Friday, everyone. It's New Music Friday from NPR Music. I'm Stephen Thompson. Joining me is Nate Chenen from the wonderful public radio station, WRTI, in Philly. Hey, Stephen. Happy New Year. Happy New Year to you, too. What are we listening to? This is a terrific track by Salt, getting us into the groove with the 2025 vibe. Wonderful. Well, we're going to get to Salt a little bit later in this episode. We've got a terrific show for you today. Before we begin, I want to give a quick update. on kind of how we're going to handle New Music Friday going forward.
Starting point is 00:00:34 We're going to invite a guest from NPR's network of public radio stations across the country to join me in kind of a quick rundown of the week's best new albums. I love this idea. You know, the people working across public radio really do have their ear to the ground. They know what's happening. And, yeah, big ears. It's going to be great to welcome them in. Yeah, and we're going to sample as much new music as possible to kind of soundtrack your day
Starting point is 00:01:01 and get you into the weekend. You can find streaming links to every album we talk about in the notes section for this episode in your podcast app. So I want to acknowledge that the number one album in the country right now came out on December 20th, or at least part of it did. Cizza put out a deluxe edition of her 22 album SOS. It's called SOS Deluxe Lana, and that deluxe edition with 15 new tracks is what just hit number one on the Billboard Albums chart. Now, it turns out that that Deluxe edition is apparently still being expanded. Siza has posted on social media that more tracks are dropping in the next few days, so we're going to table it for discussion right now.
Starting point is 00:01:41 But I wanted to acknowledge the existence of SOS Deluxe, Lana, and to briefly revel in the fact that we're about to get still more new Siza songs. So instead we're going to kick off with one of the big commercial stories of late 2024. It's a new album by the artist Rose. She's a member of Black Pink, a K-pop superstar. She put out an album called Rosie in early December. Let's hear a little bit of the single, which is called Apate.
Starting point is 00:02:06 Game start! A patte, apat, apat, apat, apat, apat, uh-huh, uh-huh. A-pate-a-pott-a-pott-a-pott-a-a-a-a-a-ha-h. Kissy face, kissy face sent to your phone, but I'm trying to kiss your lips for real. Red hearts, red hearts. what I'm on, yeah, come get me something I can feel. Oh, oh, oh. Me at the...
Starting point is 00:02:46 Okay, Stephen, so I have to ask, are you a fan of Cherry Coke Zero? You know, I quit Diet Coke late last year. I'm constantly falling on and off the soda wagon. Yeah. But I'm blessedly currently caffeine-free. Oh, wow. Respect. I just have to say, that's what this track makes me feel.
Starting point is 00:03:08 is the sort of unnatural but like undeniably pleasing, like not quite cloying, but definitely sweet, fizzy, but no calories. These chemicals are delicious. Yes. This is Rose with Bruno Mars. Yeah. You know, one of the most consistent and reliable hitmakers of the last,
Starting point is 00:03:32 God knows how many years. And I love the way this track is relentlessly catching. but also a little weird. Are you ready? Because I'm coming to get you. So it has the Bruno like magic dust, right? Like for sure.
Starting point is 00:03:55 But, you know, the chorus and the title, I mean, it's a reference to a Korean drinking game. And so it's like coming out of a specific cultural context. And yet it's completely like universal. I mean, I think it's kind of irresistible. What do you think of the rest of this record? Because I think a lot of people who've heard her, maybe they've heard some of Black Pink, maybe they've heard this particular single, which has been a radio hit. But the rest of the record is geared a little bit more toward Taylor Swift is a pretty clear influence going on here. What else are you hearing? I think that her execution is pretty flawless. She's like hitting all of her marks. She's got a good voice. You know,
Starting point is 00:04:43 Like, all of those things are, like, the boxes are checked. But I still feel throughout this album, like, I don't really know, like, where her center is. Like, you mentioned Taylor Swift. I mean, on a track, like, two years. It's like a pastiche. It is straight up Taylor Swift. cosplay here, you know? I think Taylor Swift cosplay
Starting point is 00:05:16 is exactly what's happening here, but I also think there are other songs besides Apate that are in some ways splitting the difference, right? You have some of those influences of like major pop singer-songwriters like Taylor Swift,
Starting point is 00:05:33 but kind of crossed with the more robust pop feel of Apate or Rose's work in Black Pink. I was thinking of a song called drinks or coffee, which is kind of splitting the difference between those two sounds. All right, so that's Rosie. It's the new album by Rose A from Black Pink.
Starting point is 00:06:07 That came out December 6th and is definitely a record we're going to be hearing more of throughout 2025. Next up is a new album by Lauren Mayberry. Lauren Mayberry is the singer from churches. She's got a new solo record called Vicious Creature and this is Crocodile to you. So I'm a huge Churches fan. Churches just makes some of the best synth-pop music you're going to hear in this century. Every Church's record has some banger on it that I wind up playing for years. And Lauren Mayberry is this wonderful presence at the center of it.
Starting point is 00:07:12 She's kind of this effervescent but also acerbic presence in that band. and it's really interesting listening to her solo record. You can tell listening to these songs why she felt a need to perform these separately from Churches. Because Churches has a very distinct and pretty consistent kind of hard-driving synth-pop sound. And this record is trying a lot of different things. You're also hearing kind of punkier, spikier rock songs
Starting point is 00:07:50 like Sorry, et cetera. you get kind of different angles on what she's trying to do. There's a track on this record called Change Shapes. And the title of that song sounds like a mission statement for what's going on in this record. She's constantly changing shapes. I'm so glad that you mentioned that song because it plays on this idea.
Starting point is 00:08:44 Like on the one hand, right, it's like, oh, I'll be anything you want me to be, right? But she twists it. She's like, I change shapes till I get what I want from you, you know? And I feel like there's a, there's a position she takes throughout this album where she's kind of like always one step ahead. And she's very kind of rye and like sardonic. Sonically, it pairs for me with, and I don't know, Stephen, tell me if I'm wrong. I'm getting a strong like 90s alternative vibe, like late 90s alternative.
Starting point is 00:09:25 It's coming out of this like alt rock situation, but there's a little bit of like electronic element there. There's something sort of pleasingly throwback to the sonic mix of this album. She's always been so clever and so self-aware and always so careful about kind of what she does and doesn't reveal in her songs. She just strikes me as an artist who has stayed in. command of what she wants to be doing at all times. And so I'm excited to hear her explore more of her solo sound and kind of finding new, new depth in what she does. My daughters are 14 and 11, and I will say that the Lauren Mayberry record is a big hit with my 14-year-old. She's, I turned her onto it. She was like, oh, yeah, this is the stuff. They both raised, they cocked an
Starting point is 00:11:03 eyebrow at the, at the Rose record. My daughter's 20, and if it's, if it's not corn or insane female posse, she wants no part of it. Vicious creature from Lauren Mayberry. That came out December 6th. We got some more records that we're going to get to in this episode of New Music Friday, but first, let's take a quick break. It's New Music from NPR Music. I'm Stephen Thompson here with Nate Chenen, rounding up some of the best albums of late 2024,
Starting point is 00:11:35 the ones we didn't get to last year while we were too busy listening to, I don't know, rocking around the Christmas tree for the 900,000th time. Nate, why don't you kick us off with our next record? Yeah, I had to bring this one in. This is by a supergroup called MTB, and that's an acronym for the last names of its three principles. Pianist Brad Meldow, tenor saxophonist Mark Turner and guitarist Peter Bernstein. And they released an album called Solid Jackson. And it's a reunion of sorts because these guys put out an album 30 years ago.
Starting point is 00:12:18 They recorded the day after Christmas and have not as a unit been back together since, I think. So this album is titled Solid Jackson. It's after an original song by Brad Meldow. Let's hear a bit of that. I love the way the sound of this song is it's hard driving, but it's also subtle. There's flashiness and some, obviously these are incredible players, so they're able to play in these really flashy ways, but it's just so confident and balanced.
Starting point is 00:13:32 One thing that these three musicians have in common is like a really deep reverence for the solid, you know, the solid, like, you know, terra firma jazz tradition. And at the same time, a conviction around, like, living in our own time, you know, and making our own innovations. And Meldow, Turner, and Bernstein, they've all done their own things over the last 30 years. But they share this kind of sensibility, you know, and this, like, peer, I don't know, there's something about the feeling of a peer group that has kind of, like, been on the scene together. and they really articulate that on this album. It's like, I don't think you could ever recreate it. I think this is like really a lived experience sort of thing.
Starting point is 00:14:23 And I hear it on the compositions that they play that are jazz standards. This album includes songs by Wayne Shorter and Hank Mobley and Harold Land, but it's especially clear on the pieces that they wrote themselves. Here's one by Mark Turner called 1946. If you know the music of Mark Turner, you will recognize this, the sound of this track. He plays tenor saxophonist. He's the tenor saxophonist, yeah. And he has this long relationship with another guitarist named Kurt Rosenwinkel.
Starting point is 00:15:18 And there's a little bit of this like slipstream harmonic sophistication, you know, this feeling of like all this erudition, but it's carried lightly, you know? So the feeling you get is just of this, like, really, like, pleasant forward pull. You know, you just feel like you're in good hands. I should also mention that on this album, they're joined by bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Bill Stewart, two of the greatest jazz musicians of their generation, and people who have, you know, there's a whole network of relationships among these musicians. This is a really full-bodied sound, and the, the name. of the group and kind of having these three headliners implies that you're going to be hearing a jazz trio.
Starting point is 00:16:29 But you are really hearing five musicians, kind of, you know, each carrying a lot of weight here. I kind of feel like it doesn't get any better than this for this kind of modern jazz. You know, these, I think all five of these guys are among our masters today. That's Solid Jackson from the group MTV that came out November 29th. Next up, a sentimental favorite of mine, The Innocence Mission, a band I first fell in love with in college, and I'm old, has a new record out called Midwinter Swimmers. Let's, just to give people a sense of this record, let's just go right into it. Let's hear a little bit of the title track. So this is Innocence Mission's 13th record.
Starting point is 00:17:53 They started all the way back in 1989, and they're going to be. were part of this kind of gentle, indie folk revival of the late 80s and early 90s, and Innocence Mission has stayed wonderful and active ever since. Innocence Mission is based around this couple, the singer-gatarist Karen Paris and her husband Don, who plays guitar. And they're both wonderful guitarists. Their guitar sound is so, so lovely, and she's got this kind of gentle, childlike voice, but their songs are really deeply wise.
Starting point is 00:18:27 I don't know. I just, I love that they've just continued, you know, on all these different labels, kind of in all these different, kind of music marketplaces or whatever. They've just continued to churn out
Starting point is 00:18:39 this soft, gentle, smart, beautiful music for now more than 35 years. I feel like there's such a timeless character to this. You know, the production feels like so precious, but also there's a really sturdy core. And maybe that core is the relationship, you know, and the history there. It's interesting, too, there are lyrical references in some of these songs that feel kind of self-knowingly evocative.
Starting point is 00:19:28 On a song called Cloud to Cloud, there's a reference to, like, you know, flowers and guitars, like this kind of like nod in the direction of, like, hippie. like, you know, like late 60s hippie culture, but like it never goes there. And at every moment, I feel like the details are just exactly right. If you've kind of lost track of this band over the years, it's really easy to just kind of go back and dip into their discography and just because their music is so timeless. And Don and Karen Paris have both put out lovely solo records
Starting point is 00:20:32 that are worth tracking down. They've made children's music together. religious music together. All of it is just so, is just so lovely. So this one comes really, really highly recommended. It's a love, AJ. So that's Midwinter Swimmers from the group, The Innocence Mission. We are going to talk about one more album and do a lightning round, but first we're going to take a quick break. It's New Music from NPR Music. I'm Stephen Thompson, here with Nate Chenen. One more album that we were really excited to talk about, at a little bit of length before we hit our lightning round.
Starting point is 00:21:52 The group Salt has a new record called Acts of Faith that finally came out on streaming services on Christmas Day. Let's hear the song Someone to Love. It feels really appropriate that this album dropped on Christmas Day because this feels like a gift of sorts. It's such a, it's just a feel-good groove throughout this album. And this track in particular, you know, it's funky but silky. It's like, you know, relaxing, but it's not so chilled out that you, like, tune out.
Starting point is 00:23:15 Yeah, it's that kind of easy vibe where you can't see how much work goes into it. The equivalent of seeing the duck kind of still on the pond, but the little feet are paddling like crazy under the surface. Yeah, so this is Salt's 11th album since 2019. Salt has been certainly an NPR music favorite in the last five or six years. Their music is kind of bringing together elements of R&B and gospel and soul and contemporary classical music. But there's also this mystery kind of swirling around this group. They only started performing live in late 2023. They don't really do interviews.
Starting point is 00:23:54 Their albums drop at unexpected times. Like, for example, this one that dropped on Christmas Day. in late 2020, they released five albums simultaneously with no warning as a free download. You know, they're always zigging when you think they're going to zag. But then you just get the actual piece of music itself, and it just feels like it's always been there. This year, I think we were both at the ACL Music Festival. And I wondered, did you see Crumbin? Did you see their set at A.C.L.? I saw a little bit of Crumbin set, yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:47 And it's funny because they're so vibey, and yet they play. stadiums. Right, right. You know, something about this Salt Record in particular reminded me of like it hits the Crung Bin nerves, right? Like the groove that just like sits, right? It says something about the state of the world that both of
Starting point is 00:25:13 those bands have really resonated with audiences in the last few years. I think people are looking for music that transports them and calms their nerves at the same time. And I think both of those acts are people People who are really sincere about their craft, there's such an open quality to this music.
Starting point is 00:25:33 And it's just music that is clearly made with love and care and reverence. And you mentioned sort of the need for this. I think it's worth pointing out that there's a stretch on this album where there's a song titled, God will help you heal. And it leads into heal, followed by soul clean, followed by The Lesson is Over. And the post script, you are now healed. Mission accomplished. That's Acts of Faith by the group Salt.
Starting point is 00:26:16 Nate, let's hit him with a little bit of a lightning round. You want me to kick it off? We're kind of grouping these into category because we've got so much to go over. I got to start because my younger daughter asked for a Duolipa album for Christmas. Aw. After seeing her at ACL. So, Dua put out a live album called Live from Royal Albert Hall. And it's a, from what I've heard of it, it's a really fun, like, orchestral treatment of her music.
Starting point is 00:26:50 And she, like, fully jumps in and embraces the format of that. I just want to say that you are raising your child right if what she wants for Christmas is purchased music. Yes. She also got a tour t-shirt. Nice. The Duelipa is one of a bunch of live records that have dropped in the last month, month and a half. Natalia Lafourcata put out live at Carnegie Hall. The National has one called Rome.
Starting point is 00:27:28 Tori Amos has one called Diving Deep Live. Interpol has live at Third Man Records. And though it's not a live record, Apex Twin has a collection called Music from the Merch Desk. It's a collection of vinyl that was sold at his live shows over the past eight years. And so now you can finally acquire it without having to actually leave the house. So Lucinda Williams put out Sing's The Beatles from Abbey Road. Angel Olson has Cosmic Waves Volume 1, which is partly a covers album and partly curated by Angel Olson. And it's funny, when we're talking about covers, do we include the Bob Dylan biopic soundtrack?
Starting point is 00:28:27 Yes, we absolutely. Absolutely do, a complete unknown. Which I have yet to see, but I've actually been hearing good things. I have seen it, and for a music biopic, I mean, I think Timothy O'Shalame really captures kind of the essence of Bob Dylan without doing one of those note-for-note kind of biopic imitation of performances. And lovely performances of the actors who play. Pete Seeger and Joan Baez. So I do, if you're interested in Dylan at all, I do recommend that movie. And the soundtrack is all those actors performing those songs, which is better than you think it's going to be. I wanted to mention a couple of ambient records. You know, we mentioned the
Starting point is 00:29:14 Innocence Mission earlier in this show. Another group that's been making beautiful music for decades is Saint Etienne. And Saint Etienne has an ambient record now called The Night. Also, Royksopp has a record with a very self-explanatory title. It's nebulous nights, parentheses, an ambient excursion into profound mysteries and true electric. Again, in the spirit of salt, if you're looking for music to kind of ease you gently into what promises to be a stressful year, you can't go wrong with either of those. Take two Roiksopps and see me in the morning. Exactly. There's also some, uh, some, um, from the sort of global pop zone.
Starting point is 00:30:07 Karin Leon has an album titled Palabra de Tos. And the K-pop group twice released an album called Strategy. Yeah, and you mentioned K-pop. I mean, there's also stray kids put out a record called Hop that became their sixth album to debut at number one on the Billboard charts. So K-pop has been creeping up. I mean, spent 2024, a bunch of different K-pop groups landed, you know, chart topper after chart topper after chart topper.
Starting point is 00:30:38 And, you know what? We might get BTS back in 2025. So we'll be hearing a lot more K-pop in the coming year. Yeah. In the world of hip-hop, there are a couple of new records worth mentioning. Smino has a new record called Maybe in Nirvana. And Rock Marciano and The Alchemist have a record together. The wonderful producer, The Alchemist.
Starting point is 00:30:58 They've got a record called The Skeleton Key. And from the sort of experimental zone, Fennez, released an album titled Mosaic, and in the sort of ambient soundtrack space, the queer soundtrack by Trent Rezner and Atticus Ross. Man, what a year of those two have had. You know, they did that Challenger's score. Oh, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:23 Which is just one of the most memorable movie scores that I've heard in a long time. So I've not checked out this queer soundtrack yet, but I'm excited. All right, well, that's going to bring us to a close. Nate, thanks so much for being here. My pleasure. Happy New Year. Happy New Year to you, too. This episode was produced by Simon Retner and edited by Otis Hart.
Starting point is 00:31:55 The executive producer of NPR Music is Soraya Mohamed, and her boss is Keith Jenkins, NPR's vice president of music and visuals. We'll be back next week with new albums from Ringo Star, Franz Ferdinand, and more, with KCRW DJ Travis Holcomb. Until then, thanks so much for listening. Be well, have a great weekend, and treat yourself to lots of great. great music.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.