Detroit punk band The Armed plumb the void between society’s dreams and realities.
Luke Nelson/Sargent House
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Luke Nelson/Sargent House
It’s Friday, but for some of you, your new music wishes were granted earlier this week when pop-punk princess Hayley Williams leaked her latest album to her devoted hair salon patrons. (Don’t worry, it’s on streaming services today for the rest of you.)
This week, we crack open THE FUTURE IS HERE AND EVERYTHING NEEDS TO BE DESTROYED, the newest release from Detroit’s ever-elusive, loud and existential band, The Armed. We also reacquaint ourselves with Mal Devisa and her four-disc Palimpsesa, and get to know the soft and wandering New Days by Emily Hines.
Stephen Thompson welcomes Liz Warner from NPR Member station WDET to the show to discuss these albums and two more favorites out this week. Listen to the show beginning at 3 a.m. ET wherever you get your podcasts.
Emily Hines.
Ellie Carr/Keeled Scales
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Ellie Carr/Keeled Scales
Our hosts share the backstories and best songs from the following albums:
💿 Emily Hines, These Days (Stream)
💿 Mal Devisa, Palimpsesa (Stream)
💿 The Armed, THE FUTURE IS HERE AND EVERYTHING NEEDS TO BE DESTROYED (Stream)
💿 Caimin Gilmore, BlackGate (Stream)
💿 Susumu Yokota, Skintone Edition, Vol. 1 (box set)
New Music Friday is a feature of NPR’s All Songs Considered podcast. Hear the discussion on the NPR App, Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Buddy Guy.
Lyndon French/Silvertone/RCA
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Lyndon French/Silvertone/RCA
Five more albums we wish we had time to discuss on the podcast:
💿 Buddy Guy, Ain’t Done With The Blues
💿 Heatmiser, Mic City Sons (30th Anniversary Remaster)
💿 René Najera, Painted Life
💿 Hieroglyphic Being, The Sound Of Something Ending
💿 Spafford Campbell, Tomorrow Held
Listen to each album’s best songs on our New Music Friday playlists on Spotify and Apple, or wherever you stream music.
Y ohtrixpointnever and Jeter of the Japanese duo Peterparker69.
Courtesy of the artist
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Courtesy of the artist
For those who want to dig even deeper, here are the week’s new albums sorted by genre:
Sunny Sweeney.
Nash Nouveau/Thirty Tigers
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Nash Nouveau/Thirty Tigers
araabMUZIK.
D Productions
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D Productions
Credits