What do you do when the neighbors call the cops on your backyard show? Turn the
kitchen into a sound booth, shove the dining table out of the way, and start
rolling.
Before Bartees Strange became a musician, he worked on labor and climate
movements. His new album, “Farm to Table,” focuses on the personal journey that
shapes his genre-bending sound.
Legendary Japanese composer and electronic pioneer Ryuichi Sakamoto has died at 71. Celebrate his legacy with a collection of performances and interviews at KCRW over the years.
Irish singer and activist Sinéad O’Connor has died at 56. Revisit her legacy with a 1997 Morning Becomes Eclectic appearance and more interviews with KCRW.
Celebrate Robbie Robertson with intimate performance and interviews, including a previously unreleased session featuring “Music for The Native Americans” in October 1994.
Shoegaze icons Slowdive plays cuts from ‘everything is alive’ alongside classics like “When The Sun Hits.” Plus, Neil and Nick talk life, death, and TikTok.
Women swept major category wins at the 66th Grammy Awards for the first time since 1998, but the Recording Academy still hasn’t put their #metoo issues behind them.
Following the release of her eighth studio album, All Born Screaming, St. Vincent’s Annie Clark invites for a look under the hood at the musical engines that helped inspire her self-produced “post-plague pop album.”
Punk colossi Sleater-Kinney rip through cuts from their 11th album “Little Rope” and open up about grief, vulnerability, and their enduring 30-year career.