Music Reviews
Roger Waters’ Is This the Life We Really Want?: An angry, depressed protest against war and nationalism
By Kevin Reed, 9 June 2017
In 12 tracks and 55 minutes, Waters paints a picture of a desperate world and he issues an angry protest—if also a disheartened outburst—against the things that make it so.
The case of punk duo PWR BTTM: The erosion of democratic rights in pop culture
By Norisa Diaz, 5 June 2017
The New York-based band has been banished from the music industry following social media allegations of sexual assault, undermining the long-standing legal principle that the accused is presumed “innocent until proven guilty.”
Singer-musician Chris Cornell (1964-2017) dies at 52
By Adam Soroka, 22 May 2017
Cornell (born July 20, 1964 in Seattle, Washington) will be best remembered as the lead vocalist of the Seattle metal band Soundgarden. His vocals combined an R&B; sensibility with a dynamic, multi-octave range.
Musician-singer Valerie June’s The Order Of Time: A warm album, but …
By Matthew Brennan, 18 May 2017
The album is June’s first proper release since the 2013 album Pushing Against a Stone, which made her a nationally known artist in the US.
On the Freedom Highway with Rhiannon Giddens
By Hiram Lee, 15 April 2017
Folk singer Rhiannon Giddens’ latest album will almost certainly be counted among the best of this year.
Rock ’n’ roll great Chuck Berry dead at 90
By Hiram Lee, 23 March 2017
It would be difficult to overstate Berry’s influence on American popular music in the second half of the 20th century. Perhaps more than any other artist in the genre, he defined the sound of rock ’n’ roll.
Why is the Flaming Lips’ Oczy Mlody so disappointing?
By Hiram Lee, 27 February 2017
Indie rock veterans The Flaming Lips have returned with a new album of mostly detached psychedelia.
Daniel Barenboim conducts the Bruckner symphony cycle in New York
By Fred Mazelis, 20 February 2017
A late 19th century composer who has some detractors gets his big moment at Carnegie Hall.
Columnist Myles E. Johnson on Beyoncé at the Grammys
The New York Times opens its pages to frenzied racialism
By David Walsh, 16 February 2017
The February 14 op-ed piece in the Times by Myles E. Johnson (“What Beyoncé Won Was Bigger Than a Grammy”) is an especially repugnant example of racialism.
Recording artists voice opposition to the White House at 2017 Grammy Awards
By Nick Barrickman, 15 February 2017
Numerous Grammy Award-winning music artists took to the stage on Sunday’s awards ceremony to criticize the new US administration.
Composer David Axelrod dies at age 85
By Nick Barrickman, 15 February 2017
Axelrod crafted and inspired some of the more haunting, cinematic and versatile popular American music during the second half of the 20th century.
Rap artist Yasiin Bey’s “final” performance at Washington, D.C.’s Kennedy Center
By Nick Barrickman, 7 January 2017
Bey’s humane and charismatic personality was on display at his Washington, D.C. performances; with the artist rapping, crooning, drumming and at times breaking into dance on stage.
Popular music in 2016
By Hiram Lee and Matthew Brennan, 31 December 2016
Much of the pop music released in North America this past year was uninspired and superficial. Some was merely empty-headed and crude.
Greg Lake, pioneer of progressive rock music, dies at 69
By Kevin Reed, 17 December 2016
Greg Lake was a founder, along with schoolmate Robert Fripp, of the British band King Crimson in 1968 and later the 1970s’ supergroup Emerson, Lake and Palmer.
Silent Night: A moving contemporary opera on the 1914 Christmas truce
By Fred Mazelis, 29 November 2016
The opera has received almost a dozen productions since its premiere five years ago.
Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) dies at 82
By Hiram Lee, 23 November 2016
Canadian singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen, famed for songs such as “Suzanne,” “The Stranger Song,” “So Long, Marianne,” “Hey, That’s No Way to Say Goodbye,” “Famous Blue Raincoat” and “Bird on the Wire,” died November 7 at the age of 82.
Musicians speak out at concert to support Pittsburgh Symphony strike
By Evan Winters, 26 October 2016
Members of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, together with other musicians and PSO students, played to hundreds of people in person and thousands more online.
Young Euro Classic: International music festival in shadow of European Union crisis
By Verena Nees, 19 September 2016
The summer music festival was held in Berlin for the seventeenth time and attracted an audience of 26,000 to the Berlin concert hall at the Gendarmenmarkt.
Toots Thielemans: 1922-2016
“That little space between a smile and a tear”
By James Brewer, 25 August 2016
The Belgian-born multi-instrumental jazz musician became widely known for his virtuosic harmonica playing.
Musician-singer M.I.A dropped from Afropunk festival for criticizing Black Lives Matter
By David Walsh and Zac Corrigan, 18 July 2016
M.I.A. has every right to criticize Beyoncé and Kendrick Lamar, who travel in privileged circles around the Obamas and other leading Democratic Party figures.
A tribute to German Sinto musician Häns’che Weiss
By Bernd Reinhardt, 16 July 2016
In addition to a remarkable command of his instrument, guitarist Häns’che Weiss was distinguished by his thrilling musicality.
Bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley dead at 89
By Hiram Lee, 6 July 2016
Ralph Stanley led one of the most remarkable groups in Bluegrass music and was among the genre’s greatest banjo players and singers.
Anohni speaks on war, inequality and Obama
By George Marlowe, 6 June 2016
The World Socialist Web Site spoke to Anohni about her new album.
Anohni’s Hopelessness: A protest against war, drone bombings and more
“If I killed your mother with a drone bomb, how would you feel?”—Crisis
By Zac Corrigan, 6 June 2016
Anohni is the British-born, American transgender singer formerly known as Antony Hegarty who released five albums under the name Antony and the Johnsons.
Prince (1958-2016)
By Hiram Lee, 27 April 2016
While music icon Prince, who died April 21 at the age of 57, was among the more electrifying performers of his generation, his work could be terribly uneven.
A concert of relative rarities by American composer Aaron Copland
By Fred Mazelis, 23 April 2016
Copland’s jazz-influenced Piano Concerto deserves a higher profile in the orchestral repertoire.
The Hope Six Demolition Project: PJ Harvey takes on war and global poverty
By Matthew MacEgan, 22 April 2016
Harvey’s new album is the product of the artist’s investigation into the poverty and devastation being inflicted on different parts of the globe.
Born to Be Blue and Miles Ahead: Why so much fiction when life is fascinating enough?
By John Andrews, 7 April 2016
Films based on the lives and personas of post-World War II jazz musicians Chet Baker and Miles Davis have been released recently.
Rapper Phife Dawg from A Tribe Called Quest dead at 45
By Hiram Lee, 29 March 2016
The members of A Tribe Called Quest were more relatable than the superstar rappers who came before them and more sensitive and intelligent than the lyricists of then-emerging gangster rap.
Ten years since the death of hip hop artist James “J Dilla” Yancey
By Nick Barrickman, 21 March 2016
A talented musician, Yancey is considered by many to have been among the greatest of all hip hop producers.
Beatles producer George Martin dies at 90
By Hiram Lee, 15 March 2016
Legendary music producer George Martin, who supervised almost all of the Beatles’ recordings, died on March 8.
Jazz album: Crisis by Amir ElSaffar and the Two Rivers Ensemble
By Jeff Lusanne, 22 January 2016
An album fusing Western jazz traditions and traditional Arab music preserves an endangered Iraqi art form and creates a new sound.
The year in popular music
30 December 2015
World Socialist Web Site music writers pick their favorite recordings of 2015.
An interview with performer, educator and archivist of the Great American Songbook, Michael Feinstein
By Barry Grey, 23 December 2015
“I feel that this body of work is timeless, because it has a level of craft, inspiration and quality that transcends the era in which it was created.”
Red Pill’s Look What This World Did To Us: The “everyman mentality,” its strengths and weaknesses
By Nick Barrickman, 20 November 2015
Look What This World Did To Us (April 2015, Mello Music Group) is the third full-length studio album from Detroit-area rapper/producer Red Pill (born Chris Orrick, 1987).
Mose Allison—American Legend: Mose’s live music finally leaves the room
By James Brewer, 18 November 2015
Recorded at a series of shows in Northern California in 2006, this live CD epitomizes Allison at his best.
New Orleans songwriter, musician Allen Toussaint dead at 77
By Hiram Lee, 12 November 2015
On tour at the time of his death, Toussaint suffered a heart attack following a performance at the Teatro Lara in Madrid, Spain.
Kamasi Washington’s The Epic: A bold statement in jazz
By Jeff Lusanne, 17 September 2015
The Epic is a striking new work in jazz that successfully incorporates many influences into a unique new big band sound, and provides an engaging concert experience.
Woman: The confessions of R&B singer Jill Scott
By Hiram Lee, 9 September 2015
The latest album from the neo-soul singer is an interesting but uneven effort.
Young Euro Classic: A music festival in Berlin opposing war and nationalism
By Verena Nees, 31 August 2015
The annual Young Euro Classic youth orchestra festival recently concluded with a memorable performance in the Berlin Concert Hall.
Straight Outta Compton: an uncritical picture of the rise of American “gangster rap”
By Nick Barrickman, 25 August 2015
Straight Outta Compton is a hip hop biopic focusing on the rise to prominence of the influential hip hop group N.W.A. in the late 1980s.
The Good Fight: the latest from Washington DC-based hip hop artist Oddisee
By Nick Barrickman, 21 August 2015
While avoiding many of the more overt expressions of self-absorption, many of the Oddisee’s attempts to reflect reality remain purely on an individual and superficial plane.
Amy, a documentary film about the British singer Amy Winehouse
By Joanne Laurier, 12 August 2015
Asif Kapadia’s documentary is a straightforward and compelling account of the performer’s life starting at the age of fourteen.
Chris Squire, founding member of Yes, dead at 67
By Kevin Reed, 30 July 2015
The British-born bass player, song writer and vocalist for the progressive rock band Yes, died on June 27 at his home in Phoenix, Arizona. He was 67.
What Happened, Miss Simone?: The life of African-American singer, pianist and civil rights activist Nina Simone
By Helen Hayes and Fred Mazelis, 22 July 2015
Simone did not so much move between different genres—jazz, gospel, blues and folk—as combine them into her own unique and powerful style.
Strange Fruit by Kenan Malik: A polemic against racism and identity politics
By Nancy Hanover, 29 June 2015
The WSWS is reposting a 2010 review of Strange Fruit, a book by British journalist and scientist Kenan Malik, who penned a thoughtful look on the complex biological, social and historical issues involved in the notion of race and racism.
To Pimp a Butterfly from rapper Kendrick Lamar
By Nick Barrickman, 1 June 2015
Despite the album’s billing as socially conscious “political rap” by certain critics, the focus of To Pimp ... is largely on the rapper himself and his personal experiences in the music world.
Blues musician B.B. King, 1925-2015
By James Brewer, 18 May 2015
The iconic American blues artist died May 15 at 89, after dozens of albums and decades of intensive touring.
“Cultural appropriation,” “white privilege” and the attacks on rapper Iggy Azalea
By Nick Barrickman and David Walsh, 20 February 2015
In recent months, the hip hop music industry has witnessed a controversy surrounding the commercial success of Australian-born rapper Iggy Azalea.
Singer Joe Cocker: 1944-2014
By James Brewer, 3 January 2015
The iconic British rock performer died on December 22 of lung cancer at the age of 70.
The year in music: Favorite recordings of 2014
By our reporters, 31 December 2014
World Socialist Web Site music writers pick their favorite pop and jazz recordings of 2014.
New albums from saxophonists Dayna Stephens and Walter Smith III
By Hiram Lee, 27 December 2014
The music of saxophonists Stephens and Smith reveals some of the strengths and weaknesses in contemporary jazz.
Run the Jewels 2 from rappers Killer Mike and El-P
By Nick Barrickman, 10 December 2014
Run the Jewels 2 is the second full-length studio effort from the hip hop duo Run the Jewels, consisting of rapper Killer Mike and rapper-producer El-P.
Israel Nash on the way to excellence with Rain Plans
By Eric London, 25 November 2014
The musician has broken through with his third album, which combines late-1960s rock influences with the plaintive drawl of the Southwestern country desperado.
Atlanta Symphony musicians agree to concessions after nine-week lockout
By Fred Mazelis, 13 November 2014
The latest contract follows a pattern across the US, but there is also growing anger at the corporate stranglehold on culture.
The Gold Mine by Kelsey Waldon: Life, more or less
By Dylan Lubao, 16 October 2014
Kelsey Waldon sets out to tell small-town stories in her debut album.
New Met Opera contract sets precedent for further givebacks
By Fred Mazelis, 20 August 2014
An all-night bargaining session produced a four-year deal based on “equality of sacrifice.”
Sage Francis’s Copper Gone: A critic, but frustrated
By Nick Barrickman, 6 August 2014
Francis is best known for his passionate vocal performances and thought-provoking lyrics that express understandable anger at the conditions of modern society.
The Passenger depicts the Holocaust and its aftermath in opera form
By Fred Mazelis, 25 July 2014
This “lost opera,” written in the late 1960s, deserves a permanent place in the repertoire.
Interesting music in 2014 so far
By our reporters, 12 July 2014
World Socialist Web Site music reviewers pick some of the more interesting albums or songs released in the first half of 2014.
The career of popular songwriter Gerry Goffin (1939-2014)
By Hiram Lee, 7 July 2014
Lyricist Gerry Goffin passed away in June at the age of 75. Together with composer Carole King, he wrote many of the better known pop hits of the 1960s.
… And Then You Shoot Your Cousin: The Roots satirize the hip hop world
By Nick Barrickman, 30 June 2014
Formed in 1987 in Philadelphia, The Roots have produced some of the more interesting and oppositional music in hip hop.
Hip hop group Wu-Tang Clan to release “secret” album to highest-paying bidder
By Nick Barrickman and David Walsh, 26 June 2014
The notion that the official hip hop world represents anything “subversive” or “oppositional” is laughable and should be put to rest, once and for all.
Classic jazz from Detroit’s Royal Garden Trio
By Hiram Lee, 16 June 2014
The Detroit-based Royal Garden Trio perform classic jazz and popular songs from the 1920s and 1930s. Their work deserves a larger audience.
Beyoncé, the new album
By Matthew Brennan, 14 June 2014
Though not a huge deviation, Beyoncé is musically a bit more experimental than her previous albums.
Satchmo at the Waldorf in New York: The life and times of jazz great Louis Armstrong
By Fred Mazelis, 12 June 2014
A one-man show in New York reveals something of the man behind the myth about an iconic figure in jazz history
Sun Kil Moon’s Benji: Life and death (mostly death) in small-town Ohio
By Zac Corrigan, 27 May 2014
The latest album from Mark Kozelek, who records as Sun Kil Moon, concerns the often tragic lives of the singer’s friends and family members.
Pharrell Williams’ Girl troubles
By Hiram Lee, 24 May 2014
Following last year’s successful collaboration with Daft Punk, producer and performer Pharrell Williams has returned with Girl, a hit album of his own.
Atmosphere’s Southsiders: New studio album by the Minneapolis hip hop group
By Nick Barrickman, 22 May 2014
The group consists of rapper Slug (Sean Daley, born 1972) and producer Ant (Anthony Davis)
“We won’t let anybody fool us”: Tune-Yards’ Nikki Nack
By Hiram Lee, 17 May 2014
Indie-pop band Tune-Yards has returned with a strong follow-up to its 2011 release Whokill.
Vibrate: How good is the best of singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright?
By Hiram Lee, 13 May 2014
American singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright has returned with a new best-of collection.
Out Among the Stars, a “new” album from Johnny Cash
By Hiram Lee, 7 May 2014
Out Among the Stars collects material recorded by country music legend Johnny Cash in the early 1980s and never before released to the public.
New York City radio drive collects 2,500 musical instruments for public school students
By Fred Mazelis, 14 April 2014
The used instruments were accumulated in a ten-day drive conducted by classical station WQXR that ended on April 7.
A concert of twentieth century masterworks by Britten, Bartók and Shostakovich
By Fred Mazelis, 11 April 2014
The program performed April 2 by the New York Philharmonic was a powerful demonstration of the heights reached by classical music in the first half of the last century.
Drive-by Truckers release new album, English Oceans
By Eric London, 10 March 2014
The Southern alternative-country group has set high standards after 18 years of making music—but they have not outdone themselves on their newest release.
American folksinger Pete Seeger dead, at 94
By David Walsh, 30 January 2014
In a career that lasted almost three quarters of a century, Seeger wrote, co-wrote or was identified with a number of the most popular folk or protest songs of the second half of the twentieth century.
Frank Wess, Chico Hamilton, Yusef Lateef: A tribute to three important jazz musicians
By D. Lencho, 8 January 2014
These great, although lesser-known figures in jazz, who died in the last few months of 2013, left a legacy of beautiful music.
An appreciation of Phil Everly and the Everly Brothers
By Hiram Lee, 7 January 2014
Singer Phil Everly, one half of the early Rock ‘n’ Roll duo The Everly Brothers, has died at the age of 74.
The year in music: Favorite recordings of 2013
By our reporters, 27 December 2013
World Socialist Web Site music writers pick their favorite pop and jazz recordings of 2013.
MIA’s new album Matangi
By Zac Corrigan, 24 December 2013
A refugee of the Sri-Lankan civil war, MIA makes pop music that shows an awareness of and sensitivity to the lives of impoverished victims of imperialism around the world.
New Ocean from musician Jake Bellows
By Juan Verala Luz and Toby Reese, 19 November 2013
Jake Bellows’ debut solo project New Ocean is an artist’s attempt to understand who he is and why he writes music.
Eminem’s The Marshall Mathers LP 2: Unfortunately, a return to more of the same
By Nick Barrickman, 15 November 2013
The Marshall Mathers LP 2 is the eighth full-length studio solo album from American rap artist Eminem.
Avery County, I’m Bound to You by Barton Carroll: Coming to terms with one’s roots
By Dylan Lubao, 14 November 2013
In his latest album, folk musician Barton Carroll paints a picture of small-town Appalachia and its musical influence on him.
American musician, performer Lou Reed dead at 71
By Hiram Lee, 29 October 2013
Lou Reed, founder of the influential rock band The Velvet Underground, has died at the age of 71.
Wealth and status under fire: Lorde’s Pure Heroine
By Ed Hightower, 25 October 2013
Sixteen-year-old New Zealand pop singer Lorde places themes of social inequality front and center on her debut album Pure Heroine.
The bicentennial of Giuseppe Verdi
By Fred Mazelis, 10 October 2013
It is difficult to exaggerate the importance of this iconic figure. Opera—certainly Italian opera—cannot be spoken of without mentioning Verdi’s name.
War, fascism and the fate of music in the 20th century
By Fred Mazelis, 25 September 2013
An important new book explores the period of musical history brought to an end by fascist barbarism.
Right Thoughts, Right Words, Right Action—the new album from Franz Ferdinand
By Hiram Lee, 6 September 2013
Glasgow-based rock band Franz Ferdinand have returned with their first album in four years.
Bobby “Blue” Bland (1930-2013): An appreciation
By Hiram Lee, 27 August 2013
Rhythm and blues great Bobby “Blue” Bland, whose hits included “Cry, Cry, Cry” and “Turn on Your Lovelight,” died this summer at the age of 83.
Heaven Shall Burn’s Veto: Politicised heavy metal
By Ben Trent, 12 August 2013
The metalcore band Heaven Shall Burn, from Saalfeld in eastern Germany, released their seventh studio album in April of this year, simply entitled Veto.
Songwriter PJ Harvey releases song protesting treatment of Guantánamo Bay hunger striker
By Khara Sikhan, 10 August 2013
”Shaker Aamer” is the latest song by British singer/songwriter PJ Harvey, titled for the name of a prisoner held in Guantánamo Bay since 2002.
Kanye West’s Yeezus: Blocking out the rest of the world
By Nick Barrickman and Zac Corrigan, 19 July 2013
Yeezus is Kanye West’s sixth major label album and the artist’s fifth album to debut at number one on Billboard charts in the US.
The Ash & Clay by the Milk Carton Kids: Reflections on a country in disrepair
By Dylan Lubao, 8 July 2013
In The Ash & Clay, the Milk Carton Kids—Kenneth Pattengale and Joey Ryan—examine an America at the crossroads.
Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories
By Zac Corrigan, 8 June 2013
French duo Daft Punk—Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo (born 1974) and Thomas Bangalter (born 1975)—have returned with their first full-length album since Human After All (2005).
Ray Manzarek, a founding member of The Doors, dead at 74
By Hiram Lee, 25 May 2013
Ray Manzarek, keyboardist of the 1960s rock band The Doors, died May 20 at the age of 74.
Tyler, the Creator’s Wolf: Hiding from reality behind a mask of cynicism
By Nick Barrickman, 2 May 2013
Wolf is Tyler, The Creator’s third studio album, released on Sony Music Entertainment in April this year.
Country music legend George Jones dead at 81
By Hiram Lee, 29 April 2013
Legendary country singer George Jones died in Nashville on April 26. A remarkable performer, Jones was a significant figure in American popular music during the second half of the 20th century.
SXSW Music Festival 2013—Part 2
By Zac Corrigan, 16 April 2013
South by Southwest (SXSW) in Austin, Texas has grown from a local independent music showcase into one of the largest music festivals in the world. This is the second article on the 2013 festival.
Remembering Cleotha Staples and the Staple Singers
By Hiram Lee, 10 April 2013
Singer Cleotha Staples of the popular gospel, folk and R&B group the Staple Singers, died recently at the age of 78.
SXSW Music Festival 2013—Part 1
By Zac Corrigan, 9 April 2013
South by Southwest in Austin, Texas has grown from a local independent music showcase attracting some 700 registered attendees in 1987 into one of the largest music festivals in the world.
Follow the WSWS