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    Sabrina Carpenter Flirts With Country, and 12 More New Songs

    Hear Dolly Parton duet with the young star and tracks from Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco, plus Drake and PartyNextDoor.Every Friday, pop critics for The New York Times weigh in on the week’s most notable new tracks. Listen to the Playlist on Spotify here (or find our profile: nytimes) and at Apple Music here, and sign up for The Amplifier, a twice-weekly guide to new and old songs.Sabrina Carpenter featuring Dolly Parton, ‘Please Please Please’Sabrina Carpenter teases out the latent country elements of her slick synth-pop smash “Please Please Please” on this rework from the new deluxe edition of her Grammy-winning album “Short n’ Sweet.” Lightly brushed percussion replaces the original’s insistent, syncopated smacks, while fiddle embellishments take the place of electric guitar licks. But what’s most interesting about this version is how little needs to be changed to make “Please Please Please” work as a convincing country tune — although it certainly helps to have none other than Dolly Parton providing high harmony. “I beg you, don’t embarrass me like the others,” Carpenter and Parton sing together on a cleaned-up rewrite of the chorus’s most irreverent line. Which is to say that although Parton is willing to meet the young star on Carpenter’s turf, she still has decorous boundaries. LINDSAY ZOLADZSelena Gomez and Benny Blanco, ‘Scared of Loving You’Billie Eilish’s brother, Finneas, is behind the scenes as collaborating songwriter and producer on the quietly imploring “Scared of Loving You.” It’s a folky ballad, with a glockenspiel tinkling behind an acoustic guitar and piano, as Selena Gomez sings — just above a whisper — about an obsessive infatuation. “How could they love you as much as I do?,” she sings, along with a worrisome line: “Don’t let ‘em send me back.” Is this a romance or a stalking situation? JON PARELESPartyNextDoor and Drake, ‘Somebody Loves Me’It’s unlikely that many people were clamoring for a Valentine from Drake this year, but he’s offering one up just the same: “Some Sexy Songs 4 U,” a 21-track collaborative album with longtime Canadian collaborator PartyNextDoor. These 74 minutes are heavy on amorphous braying, broken up by several interesting genre experiments: Drake and Party fully embrace traditional Mexican sounds on “Meet Your Padre,” which features the young urban sierreño star Chino Pacas; and they’re joined by the R&B singer Yebba on “Die Trying,” a bouncy, acoustic-guitar-driven pop number. The single “Somebody Loves Me” isn’t exactly a standout, but it’s representative of much of the album’s mid-tempo, melancholic sound. “Who’s out there for me?” Drake croons through auto-tune; the question echoes unanswered in the song’s cold, nocturnal atmosphere. ZOLADZObongjayar, ‘Not in Surrender’The Nigerian-born, England-based songwriter Obongjayar celebrates a deep connection in “Not in Surrender,” declaring, “I only want this, this hallelujah / For the rest of my life.” He starts out singing over a brisk bass riff and snappy drums, and Karma Kid’s production keeps adding layers of percussion and guitars to stoke a mounting euphoria. PARELESAlessia Cara, ‘Dead Man’The resentment keeps increasing in “Dead Man,” an I’ve-had-enough song from Alessia Cara’s new album, “Love & Hyperbole.” As it does, the music grows more retro, moving through boom-bap drums to piano-pounding neo-soul, all the way to a brassy big-band arrangement that gives her annoyance some muscular swing. PARELESWe are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

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    Alice Coltrane’s Explosive Carnegie Hall Concert, and 7 More New Songs

    Hear tracks by St. Vincent, Ani DiFranco, Camila Cabello and others.Every Friday, pop critics for The New York Times weigh in on the week’s most notable new tracks. Listen to the Playlist on Spotify here (or find our profile: nytimes) and at Apple Music here, and sign up for The Amplifier, a twice-weekly guide to new and old songs.Alice Coltrane, ‘Journey in Satchidananda’Alice Coltrane’s concert at Carnegie Hall, recorded in 1971 but only released in full this month, gathered force like a typhoon, and is well worth experiencing as a whole. Its serene opening was “Journey in Satchidananda,” a modal meditation with the flute and saxophones of Pharoah Sanders and Archie Shepp enfolded in her cascading harp arpeggios. Later in the concert, she switched to piano and led her group — which also included two drummers and two bassists — in a squall of free jazz that “Journey in Satchidananda” doesn’t begin to foreshadow. JON PARELESAni DiFranco, ‘The Thing at Hand’Ani DiFranco’s next album, due in May, was produced by BJ Burton, who has come up with studio abstractions for Bon Iver and Low. Two songs released in advance, “The Thing at Hand” and “New Bible,” are starkly unadorned musical close-ups. In “The Thing at Hand,” DiFranco embraces living completely in the moment, beyond identity or premeditation. The melody is bluesy; the minimal accompaniment is from frayed-edged keyboards, distant bell tones and near the end, when DiFranco insists, “I defy being defined,” just a raw, barely tuned guitar, proclaiming a bare-bones intimacy. PARELESWe are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

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    Ani DiFranco Learned (and Cried) a Lot During Her First Year in N.Y.C.

    “The lessons that New York has for you around every corner — it was a big part of my young adulthood, this city,” said the singer-songwriter, who will make her Broadway debut in “Hadestown.”Ani DiFranco calls herself the fairy godmother of “Hadestown,” the 2019 Tony winner for best musical. Anaïs Mitchell, its composer and librettist, calls her this too, as DiFranco discovered during a recent publicity event.“I said, ‘OK, it’s settled,’” DiFranco recalled. “Certainly many more people have put in much more time and contributed hugely along the way, but I sort of helped get it from zero to one.”DiFranco had already released a couple of Mitchell’s records on her label, Righteous Babe, when, some 15 years ago, Mitchell revealed that she had a play based on Greek mythology that she wanted to turn into an album. And so they did, with DiFranco singing the part of Persephone. Now DiFranco, 53, will make her Broadway debut in that same role in February.“I couldn’t say no,” she said in a discussion that touched on the importance of the acoustic guitar, punk and “gifts of nature.” “It was too thrilling at this point in my life and career, and at my age, to try something new and be out of my comfort zone and be challenged and grow and learn. I just knew it was a deep, resounding yes.”These are edited excerpts from the conversation.1Abstract ExpressionismIn my late teens I was exposed to the genre of the painting culture known as Abstract Expressionism. It was so inspiring and validating because it was this form of visual representation which was not about meticulously reproducing reality. It was about having a canvas be a window into a moment, and you can feel the sweep of the arm and the energy behind it and the torque and the velocity and the ferocity and the emotion.2Acoustic GuitarHaving an instrument that I — over 10,000 hours and then some — became one with has been like having another limb. Sometimes when there’s nowhere else to turn and nobody, it’s there for me. Sometimes when my own voice is failing me, my guitar can say it for me.3New York CityI moved here when I was 18 or 19 from Buffalo. I cried my way through the first year for every reason that you can imagine. I had experiences that were terrifying, that were life-threatening but also just life-changing and beautiful and culturally mind-blowing. The lessons that New York has for you around every corner — it was a big part of my young adulthood, this city.4PunkYou could be a performer without being a beauty queen. You didn’t have to be a buttoned-up, coordinated, put-together, choreographed, polished, perfected thing. There was something about the punk ethos that just really allowed that in me.5JazzMusic that has improvisation at its epicenter is so profound and essential because that’s what music-making is: watching somebody figure it out and solve the problems and face the adversities that exist on any given night, and inventing a new path to go with your fellow performers.6Feminist LiteratureIn the late ’80s and early ’90s, I started reading Audre Lorde and Alice Walker and Judy Grahn and bell hooks and Adrienne Rich and Lucille Clifton. These poets and philosophers and writers seismically unlocked me to myself. I grew up in a man’s world, and I was taught everything through a man’s eyes in a man’s words. It wasn’t until I read these women that I realized, “Oh, there’s more.”7World MusicWhen I started getting legit gigs at folk and roots music festivals, they would throw you onstage with other performers. There might be a singer from Guam, some Tuvan throat singers, some African dudes with guitars and an Eastern European choir. We didn’t share a verbal language, but we could talk to each other through music and become friends in this way.8New OrleansThe first time I played Jazz Fest, I thought, “Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.” Every time I was not on tour, I would go to New Orleans, because I wanted to go where I felt inspired. Then I started renting an apartment, then I fell in love with a local, and he was my reason to stay and make a home. I’ve been there about 20 years, and the shine has not worn off one bit.9Marijuana and PsilocybinI’ve smoked a lot of pot in my day, and I know it to be a really instrumental element of my awakening. I haven’t engaged in mushrooms as much, but I feel like it is also fundamental to human evolution. Whole genres of music and artistic movements have evolved and moved forward hand in hand with these gifts of nature.10ReadingWhen I moved to New York, I was at the New School studying, and I found myself reading books and talking about them. It’s like, Oh my God, this is really important stuff. The format of a book, it’s a road deeply into another person’s mind and life, to a whole other way of being, to whole other worlds, that I don’t find paralleled in any other genre of art. More

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    Kodak Black Celebrates Clemency From Trump, and 10 More New Songs

    @media (pointer: coarse) { .at-home-nav__outerContainer { overflow-x: scroll; -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch; } } .at-home-nav__outerContainer { position: relative; display: flex; align-items: center; /* Fixes IE */ overflow-x: auto; box-shadow: -6px 0 white, 6px 0 white, 1px 3px 6px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.15); padding: 10px 1.25em 10px; transition: all 250ms; margin-bottom: 20px; -ms-overflow-style: none; /* IE 10+ */ […] More