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NPR Music 10: 2014

January 5, 2014

Frozen is the the biggest album in the country

Actress and singer Idina Menzel performs during the Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on March 2, 2014 in Los Angeles.
Kevin Winter / Getty Images
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Actress and singer Idina Menzel performs during the Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on March 2, 2014 in Los Angeles.

Led by Idina Menzel's version of "Let It Go," which wasn't even supposed to be a single (but which is now echoing through the minds of every parent of a child aged 3-13), the soundtrack to Disney's retelling of the fairy tale of "The Snow Queen" topped the Billboard album chart in early January and stayed there for 13 weeks.


January 15, 2014

The Minnesota Orchestra's lockout ends

The Minnesota Orchestra, under the direction of conductor Osmo Vänskä (center), performs at the Cuban National Theater in Havana on May 15, 2015.
Yamil Lage / AFP/Getty Images
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AFP/Getty Images
The Minnesota Orchestra, under the direction of conductor Osmo Vänskä (center), performs at the Cuban National Theater in Havana on May 15, 2015.

Due to bitter a labor dispute, the Minnesota Orchestra hadn't performed since October of 2012, but a deal (which involved the musicians taking pay cuts to resolve millions of dollars in losses) brought them back to work in early 2014.


January 26, 2014

Macklemore & Ryan Lewis sweep the hip-hop categories at the Grammys

Macklemore performs during the 56th Grammy Awards at the Staples Center on Jan. 26, 2014 in Los Angeles.
Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Macklemore performs during the 56th Grammy Awards at the Staples Center on Jan. 26, 2014 in Los Angeles.

After winning best rap song, best rap performance and best rap album (not to mention best new artist), Macklemore and Ryan Lewis ceritified their place in pop music. But yeah, Macklemore had to make it awkward with a text to Kendrick Lamar, which he then screencapped and posted to Instagram: "You got robbed. I wanted you to win. You should have. It's weird and it sucks that I robbed you."


February 2, 2014

Renée Fleming performs the national anthem at the Super Bowl

Renée Fleming sings the national anthem before the Seattle Seahawks take on the Denver Broncos during Super Bowl XLVIII at MetLife Stadium on Feb. 2, 2014 in East Rutherford, N.J.
Rob Carr / Getty Images
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Renée Fleming sings the national anthem before the Seattle Seahawks take on the Denver Broncos during Super Bowl XLVIII at MetLife Stadium on Feb. 2, 2014 in East Rutherford, N.J.

This event shouldn't be notable — an acclaimed, virtuosic singer gets her shot at a demanding solo with room to show off in front of a huge crowd who knows every word — but since this marked the very first time an opera singer was given the job of singing at the Super Bowl, we'll note it, shake our heads, and move on.


April 12, 2014

OutKast reunites at Coachella

Andre 3000 and Big Boi of OutKast perform during the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Club on April 18, 2014 in Indio, Calif.
Kevin Winter / Getty Images for Coachella
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Getty Images for Coachella
Andre 3000 and Big Boi of OutKast perform during the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Club on April 18, 2014 in Indio, Calif.

OutKast's headlining spot at Coachella was supposed to be the victorious start of the duo's 20th anniversary reunion tour, but it felt a little awkward: too many casual fans, not enough devotees. Thankfully, Big Boi and Andre 3000 ended big with three triumphant nights in their hometown of Atlanta.


June 10, 2014

The "vinyl revival" peaks with the release of Jack White's Lazaretto

As sales of compact discs withered like Shrinky Dinks in the heat of piracy, MP3 sales and then streaming services, media and certain corners of the recording industry hailed one area of commercial growth: the good old LP. Never mind that double-digit growth in a long-neglected sector still added up to less than 4 percent of units moved on CD or MP3. Vinyl presses were at capacity, prices were going up and trend pieces needed to be written.

So consider Jack White's Lazaretto the totem of a true-but-overhyped story. Not the music, which fit into White's repertoire of stark, muscular rock. Just the album's "Ultra LP" vinyl release, which featured so many gimmicks (two tracks hidden under the center labels, one of which played at 45rpm, the other at 78rpm; one song that had both an acoustic and an electric intro, depending on where you dropped the needle; a locked groove on the outside edge of side A; a hand-etched hologram that would emerge when the record spun on a turntable; more if you can believe it) that White started to seem like vinyl's own Dr. Moreau, creating implausible monsters in his Third Man workshop in Nashville. Of course, Lazaretto was the best-selling vinyl album of 2014, but that year was also a peak for the format; in 2015 vinyl's growth began to slow again. --Jacob Ganz


July 15, 2014

Maddie & Tae release "Girl in a Country Song"

Tae Dye and Maddie Marlow of Maddie & Tae rehearse for the CMT Ultimate Kickoff Party on Jan. 8, 2015 in Dallas.
Rick Diamond / Getty Images for CMT
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Getty Images for CMT
Tae Dye and Maddie Marlow of Maddie & Tae rehearse for the CMT Ultimate Kickoff Party on Jan. 8, 2015 in Dallas.

The macho scourge of so-called "bro country" music received a swift antidote in this No. 1 hit sung by two teenage girls who weren't going to paint on their jeans and get in the back of a truck for anyone.


September 9, 2014

U2 and Apple release Songs Of Innocence

Apple CEO Tim Cook U2's Bono present the band's album <em>Songs of Innocence </em>at an event unveiling Apple's iPhone 6.
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Getty Images
Apple CEO Tim Cook U2's Bono present the band's album Songs of Innocence at an event unveiling Apple's iPhone 6.

The stunt, explained by Bono as an attempt to reckon with the fact that the band knew it would need to do something unexpected to win the attention of a fractured marketplace, involved Apple automatically loading U2's latest album into the library of every iTunes customer for free. The Edge called the move "incredibly subversive. It's punk rock, it's really disruptive." Many others called it spam.


September 9, 2014

Apple discontinues the iPod Classic

The new iPod Classic is held at the UK launch of the product at the BBC on Sept. 5, 2007 in London.
Cate Gillon / Getty Images
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Getty Images
The new iPod Classic is held at the UK launch of the product at the BBC on Sept. 5, 2007 in London.

On music's post-2000 journey from vinyl binders to tiny touchscreens, the iPod Classic is a phantom hitchhiker: officially declared dead years ago, and yet to look at the world around us — the cords snaking from every pedestrian's pockets into their brains, the doomsday sermons on the death of the album, the candy-colored persistence of U2 — you'd swear it was all still here. There's no undoing the way Apple's pocket wonder changed the business of music and the act of listening the moment it was introduced in 2001; for better and for worse, that legacy is secure. But something did leave the earth when the last original iPod models, the ones with click wheels and spinning hard drives and zero internet connectivity, were manufactured in 2014: the idea that digital music belongs to anyone at all.

Consider the irony that the early '00s, arguably the peak of file sharing as a vehicle for music discovery, were also the golden era of the CD-R mixtape. At a moment when sharing music with strangers was suddenly a snap, sharing it with friends often remained a weekend-swallowing inconvenience — if only because, as a culture, we still agreed that sharing favorite music was an intimate act. As much as the promise of "1,000 songs in your pocket" may have hijacked attention spans and obscured the artistic labor that makes all that music possible, the embers of that intimacy still glowed in the iPod's early years.

If you doubt that, I invite you to recall the feeling of picking up a new acquaintance's iPod and scrolling through their collection — which, at least at my school, was a frequent and hallowed ritual. Think of the tingles of validation at seeing your obscure faves represented, the rush of curiosity at artists and albums unknown, the cheeky secret language of playlist titles and the grudging admission that this one college a cappella group's version of an All American Rejects song was actually pretty great. The streaming era giveth and taketh away, and its long-term effects are still too short-lived to measure. But if there is one vital experience that appears to have followed the iPod classic into the sunset, it is the feeling of exploring a personal music library: cloistered and unique, born of time and effort, whose contents tell stories about the owner's past and present. --Daoud Tyler-Ameen


September 17, 2014

Steve Coleman wins a MacArthur Grant

Saxophone master Steve Coleman takes a solo on Aug. 7, 2011 in Newport, R.I., during the Newport Jazz Festival.
Eva Hambach / AFP/Getty Images
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AFP/Getty Images
Saxophone master Steve Coleman takes a solo on Aug. 7, 2011 in Newport, R.I., during the Newport Jazz Festival.

After the prestigious "genius grant" went to a series of artists who claimed him as a mentor — drummer Dafnis Prieto, saxophonist Miguel Zenón, pianists Jason Moran and Vijay Iyer — Coleman finally joined their ranks, solidifying his place as a titan of progressive jazz. (This year, the award went to another one of his protégés, Tyshawn Sorey.)


October 29, 2011

T-Pain comes to the Tiny Desk

Those who knew T-Pain knew he could sang, but he found joy and inspiration for years using Auto-Tune. At the Tiny Desk, he went without, and suddenly the singer-songwriter's lanes opened wide, including a full tour in 2017 inspired by the performance.


December 9, 2014

J. Cole releases 2014 Forest Hills Drive

J. Cole performs at the Tequila Don Julio 1942 Party at the Diageo Liquid Cellar on Jan. 31, 2014 in New York City.
Gustavo Caballero / Getty Images for Tequila Don Julio
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Getty Images for Tequila Don Julio
J. Cole performs at the Tequila Don Julio 1942 Party at the Diageo Liquid Cellar on Jan. 31, 2014 in New York City.

Don't forget: Cole went platinum with no features.


December 15, 2014

D'Angelo releases Black Messiah

Recording artist D'Angelo performs at The Chelsea at The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas on Aug. 21, 2015.
Ethan Miller / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Recording artist D'Angelo performs at The Chelsea at The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas on Aug. 21, 2015.

Meticulously reworked over the 15 years that followed Voodoo, D'Angelo rushed out Black Messiah in the wake of several instances of police brutality against black men. But ultimately, D'Angelo's masterstroke proved that time was his sharpest instrument.

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