Soundcheck show

Soundcheck

Summary: WNYC, New York Public Radio, brings you Soundcheck, the arts and culture program hosted by John Schaefer, who engages guests and listeners in lively, inquisitive conversations with established and rising figures in New York City's creative arts scene. Guests come from all disciplines, including pop, indie rock, jazz, urban, world and classical music, technology, cultural affairs, TV and film. Recent episodes have included features on Michael Jackson,Crosby Stills & Nash, the Assad Brothers, Rackett, The Replacements, and James Brown.

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Podcasts:

 Louisiana Legend Aaron Neville Sings Some Prayers (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 23:56

New Orleans has produced plenty of remarkable singers, but few of those native sons and daughters sing quite like the legendary Aaron Neville. He joined us in 2010 to talk about one of his first loves – gospel music - and his album I Know I’ve Been Changed. That release marked 50 years of recording for him and featured fellow New Orleans heavyweight, the late Allen Toussaint; the material is familiar old songs and spirituals, infused with New Orleans family ties, country, folk, blues, and even some of the rhythms of the Mardi Gras Indians. Accompanying himself on our piano, Neville sings these prayers live in The Greene Space, enlisting the audience as percussionists on one of the tunes, (From the Archives, 2010.)  Set list: "I Am a Pilgrim," "Meetin' At The Building," "Oh Freedom"

 Randy Newman Songbook, In-Studio (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 32:47

Singer-songwriter Randy Newman's 50-plus year career has been filled with lyrical commentating on America’s brightest—and bleakest—moments. In 2011, he had just released the second volume of “The Randy Newman Songbook.” Randy joined us live in the studio to talk about chronicling his life's work on the three-volume retrospective, which features stripped-down piano and vocal arrangements of songs spanning the decades. He plays in-studio. (From the Archives, 2011.) “Baltimore” - Randy Newman (The Randy Newman Songbook, Vol. II) LIVE PERFORMANCE: “Dixie Flyer” - Randy Newman (The Randy Newman Songbook, Vol. II) “Sail Away” - Randy Newman (Sail Away) “We Belong Together” - Randy Newman (Toy Story 3 Original Soundtrack) LIVE PERFORMANCE: “Louisiana 1927” - Randy Newman (Good Old Boys) “Short People” - Randy Newman (Little Criminals) “I Love L.A.” - Randy Newman (Trouble in Paradise) LIVE PERFORMANCE: “Same Girl” - Randy Newman (The Randy Newman Songbook, Vol. II) “Losing You” - Randy Newman (The Randy Newman Songbook, Vol. II)

 Instrumental Fingerstyle Guitar by Ben Harper | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 28:57

Ben Harper is a three-time Grammy winner, a singer/songwriter/producer and multi-instrumentalist who’s played in a wide variety of styles and with a Who’s Who of famous musical colleagues. But his upcoming album, Winter Is For Lovers is just Harper and a single lap steel guitar, inspired by the so-called American Primitive style of the late John Fahey and Leo Kottke. In interviews, Harper has declared himself a big fan of flamenco, classical, Hawaiian and blues guitar, and there might be some of those styles in there as well. Ben Harper joins us from home to play these instrumentals on his Monteleone lap steel guitar. Set list: "London," "Joshua Tree," "Inland Empire"

 Adele, In-Studio (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:41

Back in 2008, the English singer-songwriter Adele turned heads with her hit “Chasing Pavements" from an album called 19. Then in 2011, she released what would become a juggernaut of a record, called 21. Adele joined us to talk about it just about a week before it came out, and gave us a sneak preview with a live performance of her huge hit, "Rolling in the Deep." (From the Archives, 2011.)

 Monte Raises Environmental Awareness Via Lush Electronic and Natural Music | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 33:24

Monte is the project of Simón Mejía of Bomba Estéreo, whose new record Mirla is a meeting of electronic dance, ambient music, and environmental sounds. Mejía describes how he was inspired by the traditional folk music of Colombia, and Indigenous music from all over the Americas, which is largely based on bird sounds and natural sounds. So, Mejía got a really good microphone to put on his phone, and that every time he went on a trip in Colombia, to the jungles of the Amazon or along the Magdalena River, he would take recordings of the environment (Sounds and Colours.) On, Mirla, Mejía’s approach to his art of using these environmental sounds to help people reconnect with nature is an indirect, yet thoughtful one. By centering less on speaking or writing songs about fighting against deforestation and mining, and concentrating his music on the sounds of birds, waves, or the deep Amazon jungle, he hopes to bring an awareness to climate issues. Monte (Simón Mejía) performs a set of these songs, remotely from his location of Bogota, Colombia. Set list: "Mirla," "Sol," "Jungla" This is "Sol": Here is the full set:

 Simone Dinnerstein: Playing Bach's 'Inventions And Sinfonias' (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 24:01

Simone Dinnerstein avoided the child prodigy route in her career – taking her time to mature and avoiding the "competition circuit" - catching the ears of many by playing the works of J.S. Bach, including The Goldberg Variations. The Brooklyn-based concert pianist returns to the studio to perform selected Bach compositions, specifically the Inventions and Sinfonias. Those pieces were originally written in 1723 as a musical guide for keyboard players and remain part of the core repertoire for students, amateurs, and professional musicians. Dinnerstein says the first Bach pieces she ever heard were the Inventions and has had a connection to this music ever since. Recorded at the Academy of Arts and Letters in New York with Grammy-winning producer Adam Abeshouse, Dinnerstein not only demonstrates her stunning music prowess, but highlights why these small masterpieces have endured for so long. (From the archives, 2014.)

 Redemptive Journeys In Anjimile's Buoyant Indie-Pop | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 31:34

Anjimile wrote their new album, Giver Taker, after a battle with addiction and while they were establishing their identity as a non-binary trans person. Their tales of love, identity, and family unfold in a surprising mix of folk, African pop, and Western pop sounds. They play live from their home in Boston. 

 Suzanne Vega: A Vivid and Vibrant New York Songwriter | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 33:32

Millions know Suzanne Vega’s hits, like “Luka” and “Tom’s Diner.” Since her debut album in 1985, she has been one of America’s leading songwriters; but her new album recorded last year at the Café Carlyle, An Evening of New York Songs and Stories, shows that she is even more specifically one of the great New York City songwriters. For this podcast, she recounts her experiences with days-long parties, describes how Lou Reed threw doors open for her lyrically as a songwriter when she was a student, and clarifies that while she might have been influenced by him, they both occupied different corners of the same city. Suzanne Vega plays some of these New York songs live at home and discusses her long career. 

 Psychedelic Dance Music by Electro-Cumbia Bomba Estéreo (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 27:56

Columbian band Bomba Estéreo explores their South American roots, mixing up cumbia, vallenato, & champeta with club & dub dance beats on their latest, "Ayo." Bomba Estéreo joins us in-studio in this 2017 session from the archives.

 Celestial and Lush Songs of Hope and Mourning by Owen Pallett | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 39:11

Singer, violinist, songwriter, composer, and arranger extraordinaire Owen Pallett has recently released a new album, Island, full of some of their most ambitious music yet. And that's saying something. (Pallett says that "there are more parts than a Ligeti score.") Pallett is known both for their own music: several albums of songs, the film score for Her, and work for the Barbican and Bang on a Can; and their orchestrating work - which runs the gamut from folk, to punk, to R & B, to orchestral pop, and many off-kilter and fantastical tangents in between - with Arcade Fire, Frank Ocean, Fucked Up, Caribou, Taylor Swift, The Mountain Goats, Grizzly Bear, Linkin Park, and many others. For this remote edition of the podcast, Pallett and their instruments and looping station play songs that span their career.  Set list: "Paragon of Order," "I Am Not Afraid," "This Is The Dream Of Win And Regine" "Paragon of Order": "I Am Not Afraid":"This Is The Dream Of Win And Regine":

 CocoRosie: A Savory, if Slanted, Sonic Stew (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 35:30

Since releasing their first album together in 2004, the band CocoRosie has beaten its own path through a thicket of musical styles. You’ll hear elements of indie rock, freak folk, electronic music, and hip hop, but CocoRosie are not bound by any of those genres. The two American sisters who make up the band, Bianca and Sierra Casady, have brought their band, which includes a table full of toys to play songs from their album Heartache City, in-studio. 

 Songs of Love and Protest by Gregory Porter (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 24:14

In 2010, jazz singer Gregory Porter made a big splash with his first outing, Water, billed as “an album of love and protest.”  Porter, a New York-based Californian who spent long years in musical theatre, was nominated for a Grammy in the Best Vocal Jazz Album category for the record. Gregory Porter talks about his love of Nat King Cole, and about the Detroit riots in 1967, the Algiers Motel shootings, and the riots after MLK's assassination in 1968. He plays "1960 What?," a song that addresses injustice as it links to a history of protest music in soul and jazz, in-studio, along with one of the love songs from the record, "Skylark."

 Richard Thompson: 'Still' Breathing Life Into Folk (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 29:06

By the age of 21, Richard Thompson had already helped to define the sound of 60s folk-rock with his band Fairport Convention. He emerged as a leading songwriter of his generation in a series of albums with his then-wife, Linda Thompson, culminating in one of the most harrowing breakup albums ever made, Shoot Out The Lights in 1982. Since then, he’s had a notable solo career, both for his own songwriting and for his eccentric and eclectic side-projects, like the brilliant 1000 Years of Popular Music. He’s worked with an array of artists, from David Byrne to film maker Werner Herzog. For his 2015 album Still, Thompson joined forces with Jeff Tweedy of Wilco. He plays some of these songs from Still, in-studio in this podcast from our archives.  Setlist "Beatnik Walking" "All Buttoned Up" "Josephine"

 Carrie Rodriguez's Chicana Americana (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 33:10

From the 1940s to the 1960s, Eva Garza’s voice could be heard singing Mexican rancheras throughout Latin America. Though her story and music is largely forgotten today, her genes live on: Garza's great-niece is the Texas singer-songwriter Carrie Rodriguez. In 2016, she released Lola, a bi-lingual record that combines her own Americana sound with the echoes of her family’s musical heritage, courtesy of a crack band led by Luke Jacobs that includes guest guitar polymaths Bill Frisell and David Pulkingham, bassist Viktor Krauss, and others. Carrie Rodriguez plays music from Lola, in-studio.  

 Thundercat: Soulful Space-Age Bass (From the Archives) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 32:00

Thundercat is Stephen Bruner - an electric bassist and vocalist who racked up some serious cred through his session work and touring with Erykah Badu and Snoop Dogg. Since that time, he's parlayed that success into his own solo career; after impressing Flying Lotus while playing on his 2010 album Cosmogramma, the esteemed producer ended up working on the entirety on Thundercat's 2011 debut, The Golden Age of Apocalypse.  Fast-forward to spring of 2020, when Thundercat released It Is What It Is, another meditation on personal loss, just like that of his 2013 album called Apocalypse. We revisit that 2013 session for this podcast from the archives.  Set List:  "Tron Song" "Evangelion"  "Heartbreaks and Setbacks"

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