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    Nathalie Joachim shares a live performance video of “Kouti yo,” a track from her 2024 album, Ki moun ou ye. Made at The Juilliard School, the video is created and conceived by Joachim (a Juilliard Arnhold Creative Associate) and directed and choreographed by Chanel DaSilva, and features Joachim on voice, flute, and electronics, Emily Duncan on flute, Raphael Zimmerman on clarinet, Megan Hurley on french horn, Valerie Kim on violin, Cameren Anti Williams on viola, and Sean Edwards on percussion.


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    As part of the year-long celebration of Nonesuch Records' 60th anniversary, Timo Andres joins the Nonesuch Selects video series, in which artists stop by the Nonesuch office, pick some of their favorite albums from the music library, and share a few words on their choices. Andres stops by and chooses music by Emmylou Harris, Dawn Upshaw, John Adams, Richard Goode, and Robin Holcomb.


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    The Black Keys share a lyric video for their version of William Bell's “I Forgot To Be Your Lover,” from their 2024 album, Ohio Players. The track features the band’s good friends Tommy Brenneck and Kelly Finnigan.


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    As part of the year-long celebration of Nonesuch Records' 60th anniversary, Mary Halvorson inaugurates the Nonesuch Selects video series, in which artists stop by the Nonesuch office, pick some of their favorite albums from the music library, and share a few words on their choices. Halvorson kicks things off with music by Laurie Anderson, Tyondai Braxton, Jeff Parker, Caroline Shaw & Attacca Quartet, and Kronos Quartet.


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    Hurray for the Riff Raff (aka Alynda Segarra) shares a lyric video for “Snake Plant (The Past Is Still Alive),” from their 2024 album, The Past Is Still Alive. A memory box presented in the form of a sweeping song, Alynda Segarra revisits formative moments and childhood trips with family, as well as the community, grief, and passion they discovered when they decided to leave it all behind and never stop running. Peeing in the bushes while they wait to hop a freight train, lighting campfires on superfund sites, making moonlit love on an island of trash, shoplifting for food, and playing music with a barrel of freaks – their itinerant adventures serve as a reminder that there are always other ways to live, underlined by an urgent demand: “TEST YOUR DRUGS, REMEMBER NARCAN. There’s a war on the people, what don’t you understand?” Video directed and edited by Jeff Perlman.


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    Hurray for the Riff Raff (aka Alynda Segarra) shares the video for “Colossus of Roads,” from their 2024 album, The Past Is Still Alive. On the track, written in one tearful sitting during the aftermath of the Club Q shooting, they share a love song for the queer, the vulnerable and the dispossessed. As Segarra calls to idols like poet Eileen Myles and boxcar artist buZ blurr, the song offers a tribute to outsider culture, and the collective fight to survive and thrive despite violence. “I’ve only had this experience a couple of times, where a song falls on me—it’s all there, and I don’t do anything,” Segarra says. “Writing ‘Colossus of Roads’ felt like creating a space where all us outsiders can be safe together. That doesn’t exist, but it exists in our minds, and it exists in this song—this one is sacred to me.” Video directed and edited by Jeff Perlman.


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    The Staves share a lyric video for “I Don't Say It But I Feel It” from their 2024 album, All Now. “This was the first song we recorded for the album, and we had just written it so there’s a freshness and an immediacy to it for us,” The Staves’ Jessica and Camilla Staveley-Taylor say. “The song is about passing surges of emotions and memories that often don't get expressed or articulated. It’s exploring that state of stillness on the outside but with a flurry of things happening below the surface and how, often, we don’t let on what we’re really feeling most of the time or how much we’re feeling it. Even the question ‘how are you?’ can prove difficult to find the answer to ... The song came from a train ride down to Brighton with friends with the scenery whizzing by—the transient flashes as things come in and out of focus. The song is built around this two-chord pattern that kind of chugs along and motors through, picking out these jolts of feeling or memory that rush by.”


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    The video for The Black Keys' “Beautiful People (Stay High)” from their 2024 album, Ohio Players, showcases beautiful people across the world, bringing high-energy dancing to match the track’s feel-good sentiment. The single introduces the collaborative nature that sets the band’s new record apart from their previous releases. Written by The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney with longtime friends Dan “The Automator” Nakamura and Beck, the track is one of several songs on the album that feature collaborations between the band and various additional friends and colleagues, including Noel Gallagher, Greg Kurstin, and others. Video directed by Chris Saunders.


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    The video for the title track to Nathalie Joachim's 2024 album, Ki moun ou ye, was shot in Haiti and directed by Gessica Généus. Across the record’s ten intimate, original songs, Joachim ponders its title’s question: “Who are you?” Inspired by the remote Caribbean farmland that her family continues to call home after seven generations, Ki moun ou ye travels deeper into the Haitian heritage introduced on Joachim’s Grammy-nominated 2019 New Amsterdam release, Fanm d’Ayiti. Joachim says of the album and song title, “Creole as a language almost always has a primary, literal meaning of what’s being said plus a secondary layer of understanding, and sometimes even a tertiary level. ‘Ki moun ou ye’ can be very simply asking, ‘Who are you?’ But it also means, ‘Whose people are you?’ And it can also mean, ‘Which person are you.’” She continues, “For me, it led to, ‘Who am I actually?’ Not just on a performative level, but also as a Black person in spaces where I constantly have to code-switch. It’s a deep question. It isn’t casual.”


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