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Get the feds off our public airwaves!
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Washington, DCDownload new songs by Neko Case, Valerie June, Adultrock, Jason Isbell and many more, handpicked by public radio's top DJs.Source Heavy Rotation: 10 Songs Public Radio Can't Stop Playing
Download songs by Neko Case, ADULTROCK, Valerie June and many more.
July 08, 2013 7:00 AM 3 min 30 sec Download Valerie June's "Workin' Woman Blues" in this month's edition of
Heavy Rotation.
Courtesy of the artist Another month, another great mix of new music chosen by public radio's top DJs. Download an explosive new track from Neko Case, discover the Shabazz Palaces-approved Seattle rapper Porter Ray and get to know Valerie June, one of public radio's frontrunners for Best New Artist of 2013. Grab all 10 of our picks below, as chosen by the following contributors:
- Chris Campbell, DJ at WDET's ALPHA channel in Detroit
- Lars Gotrich, producer and host of Viking's Choice at NPR Music
- Anne Litt, DJ at KCRW in Los Angeles
- Larry Mizell Jr., DJ at KEXP in Seattle
- Dave P., host of Making Time RADio at WXPN in Philadelphia
- Jewel Parker, host of Strictly Hip-Hop on WEAA in Baltimore
- Jeremy Petersen, DJ at opbmusic in Portland
- Fiona Ritchie, host of NPR's Thistle & Shamrock
- Kim Ruehl, writer for FolkAlley.com
- Gwen Thompkins, host of Music Inside Out at WWNO in New Orleans
Heavy Rotation: July 2013
- Album: The Worse Things Get, The Harder I Fight, The Harder I Fight, The More I Love You
In a way, we were predisposed to love 's new song, "Man." Her upcoming
The Worse Things Get, The Harder I Fight, The Harder I Fight, The More I Love You was recorded, in part, in Portland with producer , and the song features 's guitar work. She's also headlining our city's Music Fest NW in September. Local biases aside, we're just huge fans of the singer, who comes out swinging in "Man" with a driving beat and a declaration — "I'm a man / That's what you raised me to be" — that's especially interesting after the "Man man man man man man-eater" refrain of her last record's "People Got a Lotta Nerve." Lyrically provocative — wait for that radio-unfriendly final verse — it's catchy enough to hook even the manliest among us.
--Jeremy Petersen, - Album: In a World of Mallets
There's an endearing sweetness to "Ballet Class," by the Jason Marsalis Vibes Quartet. The song appears on the album
In a World of Mallets, and its ethereal quality conjures bunheaded ballerinas crossing a parquet floor. But midway through, the quartet really swings. I asked Marsalis what makes "Ballet Class" so damned pleasing and he replied, "The melody is based on a C major scale, the hardest to play on vibes, and the rhythm comes from the bolero used in classical music. As for when we solo, we can bring in whatever kind of music we want — samba, rock, hip-hop, blues, flamenco, anything — and it will work." Marsalis wrote the album's liner notes and dedicates "Ballet Class" to "all genres of music." Now, that's on pointe.
--Gwen Thompkins, - Album: Pushin' Against a Stone
When I heard "Workin' Woman Blues," I knew Valerie June was completely different, and that's rare these days. The first time I played her music on air, the positive response from listeners was overwhelming — I haven't had that much response to an artist or song in a long time. June's sound is influenced by R&B, Appalachia, gospel and blues and anchored by excellent songwriting. A Tennessee native, she makes music that oozes the Mississippi River as much as it does and Stax records. June has help from a lot of special friends on the forthcoming
Pushin' Against a Stone: Kevin Augunas and Dan Auerbach from produced tracks, while and Richard Swift make appearances. But my favorite song, "Workin' Woman Blues," was produced by bassist Peter Sabak. I see little reason for the blues in Valerie June's future, as she's already my leading contender for Best New Artist of the year.
--Anne Litt, - Album: In The Shade (Single)
(101.9 FM, an NPR affiliate in Detroit), in collaboration with , Studio Feed and Paxahau, recently launched , a 24/7 interactive music streaming service that plays electronic and progressive soul music. The channel has been seen as a game-changer in Detroit, due to its eclectic playlist and widescreen sensibilities, perfectly exemplified by songs such as "In the Shade" by Irish DJ Gavin Elstead — otherwise known as ADULTROCK. "In the Shade" features chillwave and downtempo-style sounds as it hearkens back to some of the lush, funky and orchestral influences of 1980s producers like Trevor Horn, but with a laid-back, contemporary spin. The track is a groovy, dreamy, soulful, head-notic experience that's cinematic in nature, but is still performed with finger-popping elan. This joint deservedly gets spun frequently on both the Progressive Underground and ALPHA channel.
--Chris Campbell, was established as a force when his old band, Drive-By Truckers, made a name for itself years ago. Unfortunately, his rise accompanied a descent into addiction. He battled it for years before carefully turning over a new leaf — a struggle and pursuit he chronicles beautifully on his new solo album,
Southeastern. There, Isbell sheds a few layers of clothing and skin in order to bare an earnest, sober soul. Part repentance, part damn good songwriting, the disc doesn't lack high points. But "Live Oak" is where the complexity of surmounting addiction comes to a head. The opening lines alone are enough to slay: "There's a man who walks beside me and he's who I used to be / I wonder if she sees him and confuses him with me."
--Kim Ruehl, A 25-year-old rapper, Porter Ray Sullivan was once described to me by ' Ishmael Butler as "the Golden Child." A son of Seattle's Central District, Porter Ray namechecks Butler and revered Seattle MC Infinite as influences. Appropriately, "5950's" is 206 from head to toe; named for a model of New Era baseball cap, it's described as sporting Mariner teal throughout Porter's stunning debut,
BLK GLD. Here, Porter reels off the minutiae of murder, betrayal and narcotic sales with a poetic eye that recalls vintage , tempered with a numb, gray-sky detachment (and aided by a sterling verse from Nate Jack) all over shimmering piano keys, a subdued drum shuffle and quiet-storm rain effects. In this city — built on, around, and seemingly under water — it's even easier than you'd think to get washed, depending on where you're standing.
--Larry Mizell Jr., While I'm not so sure I'd want to live in the house that Quicksand built (you know, because it's made of... never mind), at least the post-hardcore bands that band inspires would know their way around a melody. Count the fellow New Yorkers in Drug Church among its disciples; the band features the outspoken Self Defense Family/End of a Year frontman Patrick Kindlon in a lighter but no less intense role. "Reading YouTube Comments" comes from the band's
Fast and the Furious actor-referencing debut,
Paul Walker, and sounds like a game of chicken with shopping carts. Feedback punctuates a classic punk start-stop rhythm before the whirlwind chorus wherein Kindlon yells, "DECLINE! DECLINE!" Start the pit; I'm getting in.
--Lars Gotrich, NPR Music Locksmith's "Stand It" drops jewels from start to finish. Over a beat by producer 9th Wonder, the rapper proves his ability to go toe-to-toe with hip-hop's heavy hitters. The song is mellow and straight to the point; it reminds me of the classic New York City hip-hop vibe from the 1990s. I recommend playing it at loud volumes in the car, on repeat.
--Jewel Parker, I've been spinning Gesaffelstein tracks on the
Making Time RADio show since he released his first EP on Turbo Recordings in 2010. Gesaffelstein is one of my most-played artists; all of his tracks are massive, and when I say "massive," I mean they are
huge in sound. But the French producer has just put out his biggest track yet, "Pursuit." It's so big that's it difficult to figure out what to play after it in a club, because nothing can hold up to its sonic density. With "Pursuit," Gesaffelstein creates a genre of electronic music that sounds as much like rock as it does dance. I'm going to spin this one all summer long.
--Dave P., - Album: The Road To Hammer Junkie
I like my rootsy music to feature players with sharp skills, singers with a bit of an edge and arrangements that surprise. When it's irresistible, that's usually because there's also some sort of subcutaneous anarchy. This is what threatens to erupt on The Chair's second album,
The Road to Hammer Junkie. The octet from Orkney, an archipelago off the north coast of Scotland, taps the deep well of traditional fiddle music for which the islands are famous, then drives it stomping into the 21st century. Five years in the making on this outing, the sound is as rugged as an Orcadian coastline, with palpable joy bubbling over in even the darker tracks. Anyone who can inject this much heart, soul and spontaneity into a studio album must be unstoppable live. No wonder the 'Chair men' are a hit on the festival circuit. As for "Knees of Fire," just try to sit still.
--Fiona Ritchie,