We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode New Music Friday: The best albums out Jan. 31

New Music Friday: The best albums out Jan. 31

2025/1/31
logo of podcast All Songs Considered

All Songs Considered

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
J
John Morrison
S
Stephen Thompson
Topics
Stephen Thompson: 我主要想谈论的是Cymande乐队的新专辑《Renascence》。这是一张时长很长的专辑,融合了放克、灵魂乐、雷鬼、非洲音乐、卡利普索和爵士乐等多种音乐风格。它是一张超级丰盛的专辑,如果你喜欢Parliament Funkadelic那种音乐,这张专辑也会让你满意。此外,它还融合了一些现代音乐元素,比如邀请Celeste参与了歌曲《Only One Way》的演唱。这张专辑展现了Cymande乐队对各种音乐风格的娴熟运用,即使在几十年后,他们仍然能够将这些风格元素巧妙地融合在一起,并赋予它们现代的诠释。 Ambrose Akinmusire的新专辑《Honey from a Winter Stone》是一张更宏大的作品,它融合了爵士乐、人声即兴和说唱等多种元素。专辑中包含一首名为《Muffled Screams》的15分钟长歌,讲述了Ambrose Akinmusire的濒死体验。整张专辑在平静的爵士乐基础上,融合了说唱和 spoken word 元素,创造出一种独特的情感体验。它是一张深度反思的专辑,每首歌曲都具有独特的结构和情感变化,带给听众一次完整的情感旅程。 Lily Hiatt的新专辑《Forever》将摇滚元素融入美国民谣音乐,并探讨了人性的主题。这张专辑只有九首歌,时长29分钟,但每首歌都非常精彩。歌曲《Quickie Mart》以便利店为主题,既展现了公路生活,又浪漫化了简单快乐。 Pink Siifu的新专辑《BLACK!ANTIQUE》融合了地下嘻哈、灵魂乐、爵士乐和陷阱音乐等多种风格,是一张实验性很强的专辑。它具有很强的灵魂和精神性,Pink Siifu在其中展现了他精湛的说唱技巧和极具创造力的音乐才华。整张专辑时长78分钟,包含19首歌曲,是一次充满挑战和实验性的音乐体验。 Damon Locks的新专辑《List of Demands》融合了多种音乐元素,并具有实验性和即兴的特点。它融合了采样、说唱和 spoken word 等元素,营造出一种不安和革命的氛围。整张专辑感觉像是在一个陌生的空间中,歌词具有锋利感和警示意义。 John Morrison: 我主持的WXPN电台节目《Culture Cipher Radio》涵盖了从当代说唱到70、80、90年代的嘻哈音乐,以及自由爵士乐、迷幻摇滚和雷鬼音乐等多种风格。 Pink Siifu是一位极具创造力的说唱歌手,他的音乐融合了多种风格,并具有很强的实验性。他的歌曲《Sleep at the Wheel》展现了他独特的双倍时间流说唱技巧。他的音乐作品数量众多,风格多样,是一名极具实验精神的音乐人。 Damon Locks的新专辑《List of Demands》是一张令人印象深刻的专辑,融合了多种音乐风格和元素。它具有实验性和不确定性,融合了采样和说唱等元素,营造出一种不安的氛围。歌曲《Click》具有极简的循环,感觉像是一个另类的Rock Marciano版本。整张专辑是一次充满实验性和挑战性的音乐体验。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Support for NPR and the following message come from our sponsor, Whole Foods Market. Find great everyday prices on responsibly farmed salmon, no antibiotics ever chicken breasts, organic strawberries, and more at Whole Foods Market.

This message comes from Instacart. Explaining football to the friend who's just there for the nachos? Hard. Tailgating from home like a pro with snacks and drinks everyone will love? An easy win. And with Instacart helping deliver the Snacktime MVPs to your door, you're ready for the game in as fast as 30 minutes, so you never miss a play or your seat on the couch. Shop Game Day Faves on Instacart and enjoy $0 delivery fees on your first three grocery orders. Offer valid for a limited time. Other fees and terms apply.

A quick note before the show, this podcast contains explicit language. Happy Friday, everyone, from NPR Music. It's New Music Friday. I'm Stephen Thompson, here with John Morrison from WXPN. Hey, John. Hey, what's up, Stephen? Long time, no see. Hi.

Yeah, it's good to see you too. And I should congratulate you, WXPN, based in Philly. I know you to be a Philadelphia Eagles fan going to the Super Bowl against the dreaded Kansas City Chiefs on a couple Sundays from now. Are you excited? Yeah, I'm super excited.

Last night, you know, a bunch of us was all out on Broad Street, wilding out. It was crazy. I was still bitter from you vanquishing my Green Bay Packers. Yeah. Easy work. Yeah.

Just a light tune-up. Let's just run through a path of no resistance. So we've got a bunch of new records we want to talk about this week. We're going to get to some really interesting stuff by bands like Simonde. We've got a new record from Ambrose, Akemuseri, a whole bunch of great stuff. But first up, we wanted to acknowledge a record that we haven't heard that is dropping the day this episode drops.

The Weeknd has a new record called Hurry Up Tomorrow. It's his sixth album. It's a double album and kind of the completion of this trilogy of records that he's been putting out, starting with After Hours in 2020, which was this colossal hit, and then Dawn FM in 2022, which is kind of this interesting, dreamy synth pop record. Hurry Up Tomorrow is an epic. He's already dropped a few tracks from it. ♪ In this fire ♪

you

You know, looking at the few singles that have come out from this record so far, I've gotten Dancing in the Flames stuck in my head a few times since it dropped. So I'm going to be intrigued. I mean, the fact that it's a double record, the fact that he is such a deeply reliable hitmaker, he really is one of the biggest hitmakers of the 21st century. I'm always curious to see where, you know, where people like that are going to go next. And he certainly suggested that this record is kind of the culmination of a project that he's been working on for a long time. ♪

I surrender at your feet Baby, put it all on me Every time I try to bring you away You're grabbing your monies I surrender at your feet Baby, put it all on me When you tell me I'm all alone When you tell me I'm all alone I kind of want to kick us off with one of the records that we do have and wanted to talk about. The group Simande has a new record called Renaissance. We will carry the world

"Renaissance" is the brand new album from Cimande, the great British Caribbean funk band who in the 70s made a handful of records that were broadly influential to the first generation of hip hop DJs in New York, also here in Philly.

Super excited to see what they've been up to. This is their first record in a while. So I'm jazzed to see where they're going and how the new sound relates to those old records that all of us hip-hop DJs know. Every new beginning from a bitter end Carries the message that creation sends Songs are free from a world away

You'll find him in the music cold train clear

I think it's wonderful to kind of have this group back and to have people kind of explore the music of an artist that was kind of a Rosetta Stone in a lot of ways. You know, Samandeh tracks were sampled by everyone from Grandmaster Flash and Kool Herc to groups like De La Soul and the Fugees. ♪

Then, you know, they broke up in 1974 and put out a record 41 years later called A Simple Act of Faith, which is not even on streaming services at this point. ♪

This record really gives you kind of a super-sized dose of what this group is all about, which is just this fusion of funk and soul and reggae and African music, calypso, jazz, you know, all these sounds kind of swirling together on this record that, you know, they're coming back after a long absence and they are super serving you.

This is 10 tracks. The shortest song on this record is eight minutes long. It is a 104-minute album that really gives you a chance to kind of sense what this group is all about. If you're kind of looking for something to scratch, like that Parliament Funkadelic itch, it does a little bit of that. We'll say that life's just a game

But it also kind of brings in some contemporary sounds. It brings in Celeste to do a guest vocal on the track Only One Way. There you go again, reaching for someone.

you're getting some a mix of kind of the modern and the classic here yeah I love that uh that idea of this new record being a kind of a sample serving of what Cimande is so you have you know this this root in

Calypso, as you mentioned, you know, the funk is there. What the, that kind of driving funky energy that attracted that first wave of hip hop DJs that really embraced this band. So you have them decades removed from their prime quote unquote. Right. But they still have that,

a mastery of all of these different genres and these different colors that they can play with. Only the victims take the blame While you hide your face

It's amazing. I love when elder musicians come back and get back on the scene and release a new body of work. So it's interesting to see how they still play around with all of those styles and genre building blocks that they were known for, but just in a contemporary context. Want to be a face in a crowd of faces

It's the new album from Simande, out today. Next up, an album called Honey from a Winter Stone by the wonderful, incredibly inventive jazz musician Ambrose Akinmusseri.

So Honey from Winterstone is the follow-up to Ambrose Akhenmouseri's 2023 album Owl Song, which is a much quieter kind of instrumental reflective record. This album goes bigger and kind of tries to weave in a lot more than just jazz instrumentals.

So this record he brings in a vocalist named Kokai who does kind of vocal improvisation. ♪ Getting closer to me ♪ ♪ I'm stuck between dreams ♪ ♪ Feeling like the sheets has got me all closed in ♪ ♪ Not necessarily like floating by ♪ ♪ I feel the warmth of light on me ♪ ♪ I'm stuck between dreams and reality ♪

No control of my body, but I feel right. Yellow light embraces me. I'm falling deep in. We just heard a little bit of the song Muffled Screams, which opens this record. It's this 15-minute epic. And the words are about a near-death experience that Ambrose Akinmusere had. And he told the story to Kokai, and Kokai improvised words around it.

So you have a mixture on this record throughout of this beautiful, reflective, trumpet-forward jazz, but also with the energy of hip-hop and spoken word to kind of flesh these pieces out. And often within an individual song, he manages to fit in a lot of these ideas.

creating that bridge or that union, uh, between hip hop and jazz is, is not an easy undertaking. No, you know, without sampling, right. Uh,

sometimes it can be very cheesy historically it's been very cheesy to there's been there's been some exceptions to that but that's a thousand percent and the dollar bins of history are littered with you know quote-unquote acid jazz bands that tried to do that and fail this is something completely different uh this record honey from a winter stone um

has so much uh emotional depth you know you mentioned the tune muffled screams which to me uh kind of felt a lot like uh in a silent way you know the piece that uh joe zawinul wrote that miles davis uh of course made famous uh so it has you know a lot of moments where uh

There's this kind of calm reflectiveness to the music, but then, you know, there's also moments of dissonance that kind of tug at your attention and break up that calm feeling. It introduces a little bit of unease to the music. Compositionally, this record was really impressive to me in the way that it kind of took you on an emotional ride and pulled you through

these different kind of states of feeling.

Ambrose Akimbusri calls this record a self-portrait, and I think that

to me really said a lot about what's going on here. It's not just a matter of I put together a bunch of tracks and they're capturing the latest of what's on my mind. It's really a deeply reflective record and a record where each individual song does not stay the same from start to finish.

This is not a background record. Some of these pieces will have long, reflective instrumental segments and then kind of take a hairpin turn where all of a sudden Kokai jumps in and like, like puts words to it. Yeah.

You know, this record closes with a 29-minute epic called, you know, Skinfolks, and that's punctuated like S- slash Kinfolks. It's 29 minutes long, and it's like an album unto itself. ♪

There were so many moments on this record where it felt like the music was really commanding my attention, but not in like

a showy or dramatic way. These moments that introduced maybe a little bit of dissonance or, you know, some other element that subverted what had happened before it that made me kind of think, like, made my ear stand up. With a single tear, man, I cried like this hell in glory. Y'all get it, y'all know the story because we all fall apart.

Highly, highly recommended. That's Honey from a Winter Stone, the new record from Ambrose Akin Museri. We've got some more records we're going to get to, but first, let's take a quick break. This message comes from A24 with The Brutalist, nominated for 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Starring Adrian Brody, Guy Pearce, and Felicity Jones. Directed by Brady Corbett. The Brutalist, now playing in IMAX and in theaters everywhere.

This message comes from NetSuite by Oracle, the number one cloud ERP, bringing accounting, financial management, inventory, and HR into one platform. Download the CFO's Guide to AI and Machine Learning for free at netsuite.com slash story.

This message comes from Carvana. Sell your car the convenient way. Enter your license plate or VIN. Answer a few questions and get a real offer in seconds. Go to Carvana.com today. Wait, wait, don't tell me. Fresh Air, up first. NPR News Now, Planet Money, TED Radio Hour, ThruLine, the NPR Politics Podcast, Code Switch, Embedded, Books We Love, Wildcard.

From NPR Music, this is New Music Friday. I'm Stephen Thompson here with John Morrison from WXPN. We've got a bunch more records to get to, but first, John, I wanted to talk to you about the show that you do for WXPN. It's called Culture Cipher Radio. Tell me about it. Culture Cipher Radio is a show that we do for WXPN.

Culture Cipher was the name of a column that I used to do at an alt weekly here in Philly back in the day, which is it's also a Ghostface reference for all my Wu-Tang fans. So now it's a radio show. You'll hear rap records, you know, from contemporary rap records to, you know, 70s, 80s, 90s, that sort of thing. But you'll also hear rap.

an entire side of a free jazz record. You'll hear psychedelic rock, you'll hear reggae. The tagline is hip hop and beyond. It's really a broad approach to hip hop DJ.

Nice. I highly recommend this show. There's a reason we have John Morrison on this show often. And I should note, you can find a link to Culture Cipher Radio in our episode notes. I am here to vigorously recommend that you check out this show. Next up on New Music Friday, a new record from Lily Hyatt. Lily Hyatt has a new album. It's called Forever. Forever.

So Lily Hyatt's been floating around for a few years, definitely in Americana circles. One thing that I really like about this record is that she's putting the rock back into Americana. There's some really lean, muscular sounds here, while at the same time, she's kind of exploring elements of human nature in a way that feels really consistent with what a lot of Americana artists do. And so it's got, you know, kind of a foot in each world.

Time was gonna stay in one place, but it's not over.

This is a really lean, tight, you know, nine songs in 29 minutes and kind of all killer, no filler. There's a track on this record called Quickie Mart, which is a Simpsons reference, but also just like a great road dog song that uses convenience stores as a way of not only capturing what life is like on the road, but also romanticizing places that offer simple pleasures. Cold nights,

Love's up in those hills Curiosity for a thrill Metal gray silver tears from afar Raise you up the stairs After she's done we'll Spill, spill my heart In a bag of ecumal Sweet, sweet perfume Nothing else disappears when you're in her

These songs have that universal quality where they speak to specific life experiences, but they're also just about humanity, and I think it works beautifully.

Next up, we've got a record that is a mouthful. It is by the jazz rap punk noise artist Pink Sifu. It's called Black Antique. Black Antique.

Pink Sifu is one of those artists who, with his projects, he kind of builds like a playground of sounds. And you could come in and take...

different rides or engage with different genres through his music. You know, he's done hardcore punk, jazz. I love the B Kool-Aid record that he put out a while ago that was kind of like jazzy, soulful, R&B, tinged hip hop. And this record, Black Antique,

It's not any single one thing, you know what I mean? Much like the music that he's put out over the years. You know, there's underground hip-hop sounded stuff, there's soulful stuff, there's jazz, trap. Every train that we set eventually emulated advanced mathematics to ancient architecture.

All these different genres and moods kind of colliding throughout this record. It has so much soul and spirit to it. He's one of my favorite MCs right now.

because he has the bars, but also because of the creative mind that he has and really his willingness to experiment and play around with sound. Like with the song "Sleep at the Wheel," he's kind of experimenting with this kind of loose, double-time flow. He's spitting on it. You know, there's this

a handful of songs throughout this record where he's really going in lyrically.

♪♪

There's a deep, deep experimental quality to this music. And if you look at Pink Sifu's discography, you know, you mentioned this is his, you know, fourth solo album. But his discography, if you, like, load it up and start scrolling, like, he has put out loads and loads and loads of music, EPs, album-length collaborations, mixtapes, you know, that are experimenting with all sorts of sounds. ♪

This is 19 songs in 78 minutes, and it is stressful. In what way? I'm curious. So there's a track on this record called Sacrifice, Bon Appetit, that I found so jangling that I actually had to lie down for a while. It was like triggering an actual panic. Yeah, it was like triggering an actual panic response. I'm gonna ask your place Now, cause all you ask is time Cause it's not that good

Obviously there's a specific time and a place for that kind of stuff when you want to be challenged, when you want to be kind of shaken by the collar. This record has that quality where he's so gifted. As you said, he's got the bars, he's got all, you know, he's dabbling in all these different genres.

I just have to say as an aside that as a copy editor, I find his way of styling his song titles to be deeply, deeply stressful. Just like stray apostrophes and like apostrophe exclamation point. Oh, man. That feels like old, like Tumblr. Uh-huh. You know what I mean? This is head-expanding music.

If you were in the mood to be stretched, if you were in the mood to kind of go beyond

If you are trying to mellow out or keep it together, this is maybe not the record. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪

In a world where so much music is, you know, kind of like microwaved, music that is inconsequential, it doesn't really pull you right or left anyway. This record, it feels like you've been dropped into this kind of like alien space. The lyrics really have like an edge to them. The lyrics have teeth.

This record feels like a wake-up call in a lot of ways. That's Black Antique by Pink Sifu. We've got one more record we're going to talk about in a little bit of depth. We're also going to do a lightning round of some of the other records that are out this week. But first, let's take a quick break.

This message is brought to you by NPR sponsor, Lisa, in collaboration with West Elm. Discover the new natural hybrid mattress, expertly crafted from natural latex and certified safe foams, designed with your health and the planet in mind. Visit leesa.com to learn more.

From NPR Music, it's New Music Friday. I'm Stephen Thompson here with John Morrison from WXPN. We're going to do a lightning round of some of the other records that we're really excited about this week. But first, we wanted to talk about one more album. It's by the artist Damon Lox, and it's called List of Demands. Morning birds sing when it's still dark. Too dark to attract predators. Staving off the light.

blocking the entrance holding the dawn in place

So Damon Locks has been around for ages. I knew him primarily as a member of the group Trenchmouth, which made extremely strange and inventive music decades ago. But he's worked with a ton of other projects. He's worked with Black Monument Ensemble, Rob Mazurik's Exploding Star Orchestra, a ton of different D.C. hardcore bands. He kind of started out in the D.C. scene and has moved over to Chicago and

There, you know, he's making sound collages. He works with, you know, not only music, but also poetry and spoken word. He's an educator who's worked, you know, not only with, you know, students where he's teaching them improvisation, but he's also teaching incarcerated artists. So he's just a fascinating mind. And this record really captures a lot of what he's most passionate about. ♪

Then when the deepest blue cloaks and covers, then fades to a warm purple, the air becomes sharp. Yeah, it's funny you mentioned Trenchmouth. I actually knew Damon Locks from The Eternals. And, you know, that band had a very interesting way that they would mix up like dub reggae, so-called post-rock, I don't know,

I don't know about that term. I don't like that term. Free jazz and hip-hop in a way. And listening to this record, List of Demands, and a lot of Damon Locke's contemporary music, it reminds me of that genre mashup that the Eternals were exploring back in the late 90s, early 2000s. And this record...

is on my short list so far for one of my favorite releases of 2025. I love albums that kind of feel like a sketch pad for most ideas. From day to day, the dial turns and clicks further and further towards the unknown.

A lot of this record is like a jam that somebody would lay down in their bedroom just like playing around with a sampler, you know, a tape deck, some turntables and a synthesizer. I love records like this that have that kind of loose, homemade feel. The ratios are off. The signal is hot. The needle pressed into the red.

And he incorporates a lot of samples, a lot of spoken word in ways that

I certainly wouldn't call it feel-good music, right? There's a swirl of unease to this record. Samples that are calling for revolution. You could take that record and just drop it on a Halloween playlist, and just this sense of unease would work perfectly, even though obviously, lyrically, it's going much deeper than the songs you would typically put on a playlist like that. The thoughts are hot.

I'm thinking in particular of the song Click. It has this real short, minimal loop that he's rocking over. It feels kind of like an alternate dimension version of what Rock Marciano does. I wouldn't be surprised if Damon Lox was listening to producer Derringer

It feels like kind of like a different version of this wave of underground hip hop stuff that's been popping over the last few years. Birds, frogs, the kingdom of spiders, all prophecy. The skyscrapers are on. I stay tuned in, but the radio only a voice in the distance. That is all but shrouded in static.

That's List of Demands. Great title. The new record from Damon Locks. Um,

We're going to close out this week's show with a lightning round of some of the other albums that we weren't able to get to but that we do think you should check out. I'm going to kick us off with the new album by Manic Street Preachers, the Welsh rock band that has been around for nearly 40 years during which time it's racked up

dozens of hits in the UK. In the US, this band has kind of been dismissed a little bit as an afterthought or a curiosity since the disappearance and apparent death of songwriter and guitarist Richie Edwards back in 1995. But the band has kept putting out strange, mercurial, deeply opinionated records in the 30 years since. Manic Street Preacher's 15th album is called Critical Thinking. Have some empathy.

Truth to power. It's your lived experience. Be your authentic self. Be fitter. Be happier. Be your truth. Showbiz from the rapper, producer, Mike. This record is so loose, feels loose, but also is kind of deceptively technical and

And the production on this record is gorgeous. I think that it is perfectly married to a really unique flow and a different approach to MCing and putting together patterns and that whole thing. I've been digging it so far. ♪

♪ My baby ♪

The Nigerian singer-songwriter King Madi, that's King with a Q, has just dropped her debut album. It's called I Am the Blueprint. As the title suggests, it's a statement of purpose, a statement of arrival. Her music is really warm and catchy and seems primed to catch on here as more and more African music by artists like Thames take root on the U.S. pop charts. I'm giving you all my love, oh baby, carry my heart,

I'm Just Sayin' is the brand new album from the renowned avant-garde jazz musician Joe McPhee. This record is a spoken word piece where McPhee talks a lot about his life,

He tells stories about friendships and talks a lot about his relationship to the music. But he's also playing this really beautiful, tender, but also kind of strange...

jazz arrangements under the sound of his voice. This is a very beautiful and important recording. - Black is all colors absorbed. In this unnatural environment, white is content to reflect the supposed absorption of black, and black is not content.

Finally, Marabou State is an electro pop group from the UK. Their songs feel like throwbacks to sleek 80s pop bands like the Blue Nile. It's actually been seven years since the last Marabou State record. The delay was due in part to one of its members, Chris Davids, having to recover from brain surgery. Marabou State's new album is called Hallucinating Love, and it's full of catchy and sophisticated bangers.

John Morrison, thank you so much for joining me. Thank you for having me, Stephen. That is our show for this week. One note of pure shamelessness. If you enjoy New Music Friday, please do us a favor. We would love it if you left us a positive review on Apple Music or Spotify or whatever app you're listening to right now. This episode was produced by Simon Rentner and edited by Otis Hart. The executive producer of NPR Music is Saraya Mohamed, and her boss is Keith Jenkins.

NPR's vice president of music and visuals. We'll be back next week to talk about the new album from Sharon Van Etten and a whole bunch of other February 7th releases with Robert Moore of Kansas City member station 90.9 The Bridge, a.k.a. John Morrison's mortal enemy in the upcoming Super Bowl. Until then, take a moment, be well, reach out to a friend, treat yourself to lots of great music. If your world's breaking, I think of yourself breaking, do that

This message comes from Capella University. With Capella's FlexPath learning format, you can set your own deadlines and learn on your schedule. A different future is closer than you think with Capella University. Learn more at capella.edu.