Seduced by the Sound: The Weeknd + Daft Punk
“I Feel it Coming” might be the slowest burning jam to hit the charts in ages, in which the Weeknd enlists the robotic hum of Daft Punk to help craft a perfectly calibrated climate of desire.
Dreaming Of A White Christmas
White Christmas holds the Guinness World Record for most singles sold and has been covered over 500 times. We use our scientific formula for holiday hit success to break down what makes this song so timeless.
Playing it Cool: How Tove Lo Aims High
On the surface, Tove Lo’s new hit “Cool Girl” boasts a snappy, earworm chorus and an empowering message of self-reliance. Beneath its chill exterior, though, Lo’s song burns with a passion bordering on rage, and sinister sonic undertones suggest an unreliable narrator who doesn’t always mean what she says.
Made In America: Toby Keith & Jay-Z
Toby Keith’s country smash and Jay Z, Kanye West and Frank Ocean’s soulful hip hop anthem have little in common except a firm conviction that each song knows what it really means to be American.
How to Listen to Music in 4 Easy Steps
50 episodes in, hosts Charlie and Nate take a step back to think about how they listen to music and try to define what might be called The Switched on Method™.
Good Artists Borrow, Great Artists Steal
Host Charlie spent the last two weeks listening to every song on the Billboard Hot 100. What did he discover? That the sonic similarities of most chart-toppers sound closer than ever.
The Most Popular Song In The World
The Nokia ringtone used to be heard more than a billion times per day, making it one of the most popular songs in the world. We zoom in on one of these annoying melodies to see if there’s not some hidden musical craft present in the ubiquitous bleeps and bloops that envelop us.
Lady Gaga Is A Perfect Illusion
On first listen, Lady Gaga’s songs may sound like just another catchy pop tune and this is intentional. Gaga lures us close with the sound of pop fame and then hooks us and reels us into into her dungeon of monstrous sounds.
How Beyoncé to The Beatles Modulate Your Emotions
From Beyoncé to Johnny Cash, savvy pop songwriters know a well-placed harmonic modulation can leave listeners reeling. But what is this mysterious musical trick, and how does it work?
Pop Drops and Chipmunk Soul
As dance music takes over the charts and new software grants vocal manipulation at the click of a button, this uncanny production technique has become nearly ubiquitous. But is this ultramodern sound really that new?
The Gideon and Hubcap Show
With Charlie away, host Nate, aka “Hubcap,” takes us on a home-show tour of the Scottish Highlands with his traveling minstrel act, The Gideon and Hubcap Show. It’s an entirely different kind of summer music spectacle.
Breaking Down The House
The fingerprints of house music are all over mainstream pop, but much of its sound has been whitewashed. That ubiquitous four-to-the-floor kick and synth bass sound draws from Chicago’s queer, black and latinx warehouse club culture.
Around The World With Drake
How do you create a hit that both breaks sound barriers and chart records? Drake has done this with a unique mix of international music from Africa, the Caribbean, the U.K. and Canada.
When Good Music Happens To Bad People
We have more information about pop stars lives than ever before, but this transparency is not always uplifting for music lovers. As listeners, this undoubtedly colors the way we hear our old favorite songs.
Justin Timberlake Goes Medieval
Summer heat is upon us and so are the jams. Our ears are hooked on Justin Timberlake’s “Can’t Stop The Feeling!” What you may not know is that this song leans on the success of mononymous giants: Pharrell, Michael and Handel.
All About Those Baseline Assumptions About Femini$m in Pop
With Meghan Trainor’s new singles “No” and “Me Too” ubiquitous on the radio dial, a larger discussion about the uneasy relationship between social movements and selling records takes a feminist bent.
Jonas vs. Jonas: Or How We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love a Boy Band
A battle between brothers is playing out on the pop charts, a sibling rivalry the likes of which the music industry hasn’t seen since 1987, when Michael and Janet Jackson’s 1987 “Bad” and “Let’s Wait Awhile” jockeyed for peak position on the Hot 100.
Purple Lemonade: Prince & Beyoncé
On the same week we lost Prince, the world was gifted Beyoncé’s Lemonade. Both artists contain multitudes of musical traditions, collaborators and themes that weave throughout their song.
Pablo And The Wolves
The Life Of Pablo is Kanye West’s latest album. Despite its lack of hits, it has been at the fulcrum of pop music for months. With its gradual online release and its changing track lists, this shapeshifting album is difficult to grasp.
The Populist Pop of Twenty One Pilots
Out of nowhere, Twenty One Pilots has rocketed to the top of the charts with their surprise hit “Stressed Out.” Charlie and Nate pull this millennial anthem apart to discover a deep political resonance, the kind that rarely hits the Hot 100.