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The musician, who released a new album over the summer, describes how the coronavirus pandemic changed his creative process. (article)
John Legend and Phoebe Bridgers perform live from their houses for a special episode of the New Yorker Radio Hour. (episode)
The musician, who released a new album over the summer, describes how the coronavirus pandemic changed his creative process.
A New Yorker music critic on listening to classic field recordings while stuck in quarantine.
A New Yorker music critic on listening to classic field recordings while stuck in quarantine.
The novelist Donald Antrim on the power of music.
Sanaë Lemoine’s début novel wrestles with her own familial history, and Adam Gopnik explores what the world feels like for the elderly. (article)
For a generation, Georgia has been a Republican stronghold. What changed? (article)
An author’s début novel, about a politician's secret daughter, draws on her own complex past. Plus, the organizers working toward a Democratic Georgia. (episode)
For a generation, Georgia has been a Republican stronghold. What changed?
In her début novel, about the daughter of a high-level politician, Sanaë Lemoine wrestles with her own familial history.
As the population ages, the staff writer explores what the world feels like for the elderly.
Two remarkable duos from this year’s New Yorker Festival: the comedians talk about the art of the joke, and the musicians discuss Beethoven’s cello sonatas. (article)
David Remnick talks with the writer about the chaotic post-election period, and why some Republicans decline to recognize Joe Biden as President-elect. (article)
Steve Martin and Jerry Seinfeld talk about their combined century practicing comedy. Plus, Yo-Yo Ma and Emanuel Ax play Beethoven, and Jane Mayer analyzes the G.O.P.’s post-Trump game. (episode)
David Remnick talks with the writer about the chaotic post-election period, and why some Republicans decline to recognize Joe Biden as President-elect.
The two comedians talk with the editor Susan Morrison at this year’s New Yorker Festival.
Musicians Yo-Yo Ma and Emanuel Ax explain how familiar music has taken on a new tone during the pandemic.
A historian looks to the nineteen-thirties—the last time democracy in America seemed so fraught—for insights into our moment. (article)
David Remnick talks with Susan Glasser, Evan Osnos, Jeannie Suk Gersen, and Amy Davidson Sorkin about the challenges to a peaceful transition of power. (article)