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In The Groove: A dedication to long time listener + best dog Banana, cathartic release with Rage Against The Machine

Crashing back into the work week with some throwbacks including music from Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, George Harrison, the Replacements and more, plus new music from Kazdoura and IDLES. We also find some cathartic release through musical therapy with selections from Nouvelle Vague covering the Clash and Rage Against The Machine covering Bruce Springsteen. And we say farewell to long time listener Banana, who was the best dog ever, with Sister Nancy’s “Ain’t No Stopping Nancy.”

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for January 26, 2026

  • “Hurricane” – Bob Dylan
  • “All Along The Watchtower” – Jimi Hendrix
  • “Wah-Wah” – George Harrison
  • “Bastards of Young” – The Replacements
  • “Be Above It” – Tame Impala
  • “Fuzz Jam (Harvey Sutherland X-Tra Fuzz Remix)” – Lazy Eyes
  • “Canopy” – Charlotte Day Wilson
  • “Parabéns (feat. Marcos Valle) [Quarantine Sessions]” – Tom Misch
  • “Ain’t No Stopping Nancy” – Sister Nancy (dedicated to Banana)
  • “Police & Thieves” – The Clash
  • “Cold Little Heart” – Michael Kiwanuka
  • “Walking In The Dark” – Stefano Torossi
  • “Flight Time” – Donald Byrd
  • “Comin Home Baby” – Mel Torme
  • “Woodward Avenue” – Yusef Lateef
  • “Khayal” – Kazdoura
  • “cosa rara (feat. David Sylvian)” – Lucrecia Dalt
  • “P7 Blues” – SOYUZ
  • “Plasty” – LL Burns
  • “Sun Goddess (feat. Special Guest Soloist Ramsey Lewis)” – Earth Wind & Fire
  • “GOOD LUCK” – KAYTRANADA
  • “Another Baby!” – Dijon
  • “DAISIES” – Justin Bieber
  • “Are You Looking Up” – Mk.gee
  • “777-9311” – The Time
  • “Hit My Head All Day” – Dry Cleaning
  • “Repetitioner” – THUS LOVE
  • “Leave Your Life (Lonely Hearts Mix)” – Alex Kassian
  • “Guns of Brixton (feat. Camille)” – Nouvelle Vague
  • “Rabbit Run (Interpol Remix)” – IDLES
  • “The Ghost of Tom Joad” – Rage Against The Machine

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post In The Groove: A dedication to long time listener + best dog Banana, cathartic release with Rage Against The Machine appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Visions: New music, classics, an local piano concert series and more

This week on Visions, I decide to take us all over the musical map. I celebrate classics and brand new music.

You hear from Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, Bobby Hutcherson, Buddy Rich, Nancy Wilson & Cannonball Adderley, and Antônio Carlos Jobim & Frank Sinatra. There’s also a 50th album anniversary from Earl Klugh and Alice Coltrane.

I also play new music from Joel Ross, Tomeka Reid, Craig Taborn, Melissa Aldana, and Walter Smith III, recent releases from Joshua Redman and Sessa, and a new release I’m really excited about by Flea.

Finally, I play a track by Detroit’s Ian Fink to promote a brand new concert series starting here in Detroit. You can hear Ian this Sunday, Feb. 1 at 2:00 p.m., at Fort Street Presbyterian Church.

The series was started by Detroit composer, pianist, and bandleader, Michael Malis and features five of Detroit and southeast Michigan’s most exciting pianists: Ian Fink, Andy Milne, Lisa Sung, Alvin Waddles, and Brendon Davis. Learn more here.

Check out the playlist below and listen to the episode on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Visions Playlist for Jan. 26, 2026

  • “Vonetta” – Earl Klugh*
  • “Be Patient” – Joel Ross
  • “Pensativa” – Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers
  • “Oo long! (feat. Jason Roebke, Mary Halvorson & Tomas Fujiwara)” – Tomeka Reid
  • “Before the Lights Go On” – Marcello Melis
  • “Montara” – Bobby Hutcherson
  • “After Minneapolis (face toward mo[u]rning) [feat. Gabrielle Cavassa]” – Joshua Redman
  • “I Love Music” – Ian Fink*
  • “Nutville” – Buddy Rich
  • “My Ideal” – Walter Smith III
  • “La Sentencia” – Melissa Aldana
  • “Dindi” – Frank Sinatra & Antônio Carlos Jobim
  • “Bicho Lento” – Sessa
  • “When Kabuya Dances” – Craig Taborn, Tomeka Reid & Ches Smith
  • “Blue Nile” – Alice Coltrane*
  • “Never Will I Marry” – Cannonball Adderley & Nancy Wilson
  • “Traffic Lights (feat. Thom Yorke)” – Flea
  • “Blues Again” – Mulgrew Miller

* Indicates Detroit artists

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Visions: New music, classics, an local piano concert series and more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

In The Groove: Arctic Monkeys release new music for a good cause

A whole bunch of throwbacks from Sandra Wright, Harry Nilsson, Jan Hammer Group, Irma Thomas and more. Plus new music from Arctic Monkeys—the band’s first new release in four years which appears on a new benefit compilation for War ChildJill Scott and Flea.

Spoon will be in town on June 26 at the Fillmore Detroit, co-headlining with the Beths out of New Zealand, so we will go heavy on their back catalog. Check it out!

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for January 22, 2026

  • “Everything Hits At Once” – Spoon
  • “Opening Night” – Arctic Monkeys & War Child Records
  • “Inside and Out” – Feist
  • “Midnight Affair” – Sandra Wright
  • “Beautiful People” – Jill Scott
  • “Traffic Lights (feat. Thom Yorke)” – Flea
  • “The Fool” – Brigid Dawson and The Mothers Network
  • “Anemone” – The Brian Jonestown Massacre
  • “Otis” – The Durutti Column
  • “I Go (DJ Koze Remix)” – Peggy Gou
  • “Operator (DJ Koze’s Disco Edit)” – Låpsley
  • “Wi Ing Wi Ing” – HYUKOH
  • “Paper Tiger” – Spoon
  • “Early In The Morning” – Harry Nilsson
  • “Don’t You Know” – Jan Hammer Group
  • “Sexy Boy (Vegyn Version)” – AIR
  • “Making Planets (featuring Mr. Lif)” – Edan
  • “Time Outt (Segue)” – Edan
  • “Black Power” – Peace
  • “I’m So Green” – Can
  • “Planted A Thought” – Arthur Russell
  • “Wild Horses” – Leon Russell
  • “On a Clear Day You Can See Forever” – The Peddlers
  • “Forge Your Own Chains” – D.R. HOOKER
  • “Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)” – Irma Thomas
  • “Day Dreaming” – Aretha Franklin
  • “This Is How We Walk On the Moon” – Arthur Russell
  • “If I Had a Tail” – Queens of the Stone Age
  • “Hand of Doom” – Black Sabbath
  • “Baby” – Donnie & Joe Emerson
  • “Maps” – Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post In The Groove: Arctic Monkeys release new music for a good cause appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Acoustic Café: A look at albums and artists celebrating ‘BIG O’ birthdays this year

On this week’s episode of Acoustic Café, we’ll hear music from albums and artists having “Big O” birthdays this year, including classic albums from Stevie and Joni (both turning 50), Corrine Bailey Rae’s debut at 20, and lots of artists with big birthdays, from Zach Bryan at 3-0 to Buddy Guy turning 9-0!

Also this week, in-studio performances from Lou Barlow and Ben Folds (both 60), Peter Wolf and Loudon Wainwright III (both 80) and more.

See the playlist below and listen to the episodes on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Acoustic Café Playlist for January 25, 2026

  • “Million Dollar Intro” – Ani DiFranco
  • “Shine” – Dolly Parton
  • “I Need You” – Jon Batiste (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Snow” – Zach Bryan
  • “Coyote” – Joni Mitchell
  • “Stockings” – Suzanne Vega (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Hasten Down The Wind” – Warren Zevon
  • “Weary” – Solange
  • “Soul Meets Body” – Death Cab For Cutie (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Have A Talk With God” – Stevie Wonder
  • “Not A Fan” – Ben Folds (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Holding Back The Year” – Lou Barlow (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “For No One” – The Beatles
  • “Put Your Records On” – Corrine Bailey Rae
  • “Give It To Me” – Peter Wolf (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Sunny Came Home” – Shawn Colvin
  • “Guitar Town” – Steve Earle
  • “Dilate” – Ani Difranco
  • “Shankill Butchers” – The Decemberists
  • “Greetings To The New Brunette” – Billy Bragg (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “I Love The Life I Live” – Buddy Guy
  • “Cuyahoga” – R.E.M.
  • “Whenever” – Beth Orton
  • “Tuesday (Unerthd Version)” – Toro y Moi
  • “My Moon My Man” – Feist (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “I’m Still In Love With You” – Al Green
  • “Tear Stained Eye” – Son Volt (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “One Man Guy” – Loudon Wainwright III (Acoustic Cafe performance)

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Acoustic Café: A look at albums and artists celebrating ‘BIG O’ birthdays this year appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: A sneak peek at Detroiter Nick Piunti’s new album, a Bowie classic turns 50 and more

This week on Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music a new album coming next month from Nick Piunti, Detroit rocker and restaurateur. Plus Lucinda Williams’ new album, a prescient 2014 track from YUSUF/Cat Stevens and more.

Also, we celebrate 50 years of David Bowie’s “Station To Station” album at 50, and 70 years of Verve Records!

See the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music Playlist for January 24, 2026

HOUR ONE:

  • “To Love Somebody” – Al Green
  • “Let’s Take Our Time” – Aaron Fraser & Durand Jones & The Indications
  • “Ain’t That A Trip” – The James Hunter 6 ft. Van Morrison
  • “Dead End – Snail Mail
  • “I Am America” – Jeff Daniels & Thornetta Davis
  • “Manic Monday” – Prince
  • “Taste On My Lips” – Ya Tseen (w/Portugal. The Man and Meshell Ndegeocello)
  • “Pride II” – Meshell Ndegeocello
  • “Tanana” – Portugal. The Man
  • “WAP” – The Claypool Lennon Delirium (coming to Meadowbrook 5/31)
  • “Against The Dying Of The Light” – Jose Gonzalez
  • “Get Back” – Samm Henshaw
  • “You get the Feeling” – Squeeze
  • “Hourglass” – Squeeze
HOUR TWO:
  • “Fall Moon” – St. Paul & The Broken Bones (coming to St. Andrews 4/29)
  • “Site Unseen” – Courtney Barnett (coming to The Majestic 5/21)
  • “Hold Tight” – Rozzi
  • “Who’s That” – Brother Wallace
  • “Big In Madrid” – Nick Piunti
  • “Golden Years” – David Bowie
  • “Blueberry Hill” – Louie Armstrong
  • “Glory” – Dames Brown ft. Waajeed
  • “I Was Raised In Babylon” – YUSUF/Cat Stevens
  • “Freedom Speaks” – Lucinda Williams
  • “Let’s Do It” – Ella Fitzgerald
  • “Day By Day” – Samara Joy

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: A sneak peek at Detroiter Nick Piunti’s new album, a Bowie classic turns 50 and more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

The Progressive Underground: Solomon Fox goes from bedroom studio to soul vanguard

On today’s 5-on-5 we dig into the world of Solomon Fox, a North Carolina-born singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer who has quietly become one of the defining architects of the new soul wave.

Before he ever stepped to the mic as a solo artist, Fox was helping to shape the sound of others, co-creating the gospel-infused anthem “Stand Up” for the film Harriet and earning Grammy, Oscar, and Golden Globe nominations as a producer in the process.

His story runs straight through Durham, North Carolina, where he cut his teeth in the hip hop and R&B collective Young Bull, touring and helping revive a local scene while still in high school. From there he went to Harvard, studying Religion and Music under heavyweights like Cornel West, Vijay Iyer, and Esperanza Spalding.

That mix of church-bred harmony, producer discipline, and intellectual rigor would show up in his own records, where left-of-center soul arrangements, intimate vocals, and off-kilter lyrics sit comfortably next to funk-leaning grooves. Tonight, we trace that journey in five songs.

5 Essential Tracks by Solomon Fox

1: “Body’s An Ocean” (2021) 

Critics noted how Solomon leaned on stacked gospel harmonies, sparse keys and guitar, and heavy, unhurried bass lines that left plenty of space for his voice to sit front and center.

2: “Dreamcatcher” (2021)

Staying with the same album, we move to another cut that shows how he threads dreams, memory, and melody together. Across that project, Fox drew on R&B, soul, and gospel to build a slick, lovesick collection of coming-of-age musical snapshots that effortlessly glide into one another, showing an artist with a high ceiling of potential. That blueprint would carry forward as he moved from Bandcamp and word-of-mouth circles into a wider digital spotlight. 

3: “Weird” (2024) 

By 2024, his sound had jumped from local outlets to global timelines, thanks in part to a single that lived on Instagram and TikTok as much as in playlists. Along with its companion single “You Don’t Cook,” “Weird” racked up millions of views across Instagram and TikTok, putting his off-center R&B on the radar of listeners and legends alike, including Queen Latifah, Ty Dolla Sign, and T-Pain, who lauded his work.

This would set the table for his latest work, the 13-track fully self-produced album “Sweettooth.”

4: “Fallin’ Back (feat. Amaria)” (2025)

“Sweettooth” is a a five-year diary about one relationship and all the back and forth that came from it. One of the clearest windows into that story is a duet that unfolds like a 2 a.m. confession, written and produced in his bedroom and built around a hypnotic beatscape and dreamy chord structure. Solomon trades verses with songstress Amaria on a track that he pares down to warm synth washes, a relaxed groove, and two voices orbiting the same bad habit.

Compared to the boundary-pushing work he has done for artists like Smino and Thundercat, “Fallin’ Back” was less about him flexing his producer toolkit and more about letting vulnerability sit in the foreground. From there, Sweettooth opens out into a full emotional map: gut-punch breakups, sugar-rush infatuations, and the slow recognition that some connections are beautiful precisely because they cannot last.

5: “Blind Date Town” (2025)

Another cut that demonstrates Fox’s understanding of the music and cultural lineage of modern soul is “Blind Date Town.” It merges influences ranging from gospel choirs to D’Angelo to the contemporary soul renaissance. The result is music that feels familiar enough to hold you, and strange enough to keep you listening.

If you dig artists who embody the spirit of new-school soul and future-funk, keep listening to The Progressive Underground every Saturday evening at 6 p.m. on WDET 101.9 FM and wdet.org. For The Progressive Underground, my name is Chris Campbell. See you next time.

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post The Progressive Underground: Solomon Fox goes from bedroom studio to soul vanguard appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Visions: Martin Luther King Jr. Day

This episode of Visions celebrates Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with a collection of liberation music: sounds of grief, struggle, freedom, loss, and joy.

I chose a couple tracks off of Max Roach’s “Freedom Now Suite” to anchor the episode. I also played Terri Lyne Carrington’s rendition of Roach’s suite, “We Insist 2025!” I play music from John Coltrane, Blue Mitchell, Cecil Payne, Nina Simone, Harold McKinney, Irreversible Entanglements, and many more.

I also promote a show coming to the Detroit Institute of Arts Diego Rivera Court this Friday, Jan. 23: George Lewis and the 45th Anniversary of the Creative Arts Collective with PUBLIQuartet. Check out information about the show and purchase tickets here.

Check out the playlist below and listen to the episode on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Visions Playlist for Jan. 19, 2026

  • “Soldiers (I Have a Dream)” – Christian McBride
  • “Tears For Johannesburg” – Max Roach
  • “Mannenberg Revisited” – Abdullah Ibrahim
  • “Tears For Johannesburg (feat. Julian Preister, Weedie Braimah, Milena Casado, Morgan Guerin & Matthew Stevens)” – Terri Lyne Carrington & Christie Dashiell
  • “March On Selma” – Blue Mitchell
  • “Freedom Jazz Dance” – Harold McKinney*
  • “Someday I’ll Find You” – Sonny Rollins
  • “Martin Was a Man, A Real Man” – Oliver Nelson
  • “Freedom Day” – Max Roach
  • “Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues (Arr. by PUBLIQuartet for String Quartet)” – PUBLIQuartet
  • “Ghost Dancers” – A. Spencer Barefield*
  • “Martin Luther King, Jr. I Know Love” – Cecil Payne
  • “Why? (The King of Love Is Dead)” – Nina Simone
  • “Fireworks” – Irreversible Entanglements
  • “Alabama (Live At Birdland Jazzclub, New York City, NY, 10/18/1963)” – John Coltrane
  • “I Have a Dream” – Herbie Hancock
* indicates Detroit artists

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Visions: Martin Luther King Jr. Day appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Big Sonic Heaven: New music by Deary, Kate de Rosset, a tribute to David Lynch + more

Tonight, Big Sonic Heaven featured some great brand-new tracks. We heard “Seabird,” the first single from Deary’s upcoming debut album, “Birding.” They’re a three-piece dreampop band from London, signed to Simon Raymond’s label, Bella Union.  

Cigarettes for Breakfast is the project of Matt Whiteford. “The Color Wheel” EP is out in March, and we heard “Melting.”

Plus, “In the New” from singer-songwriter Kate de Rosset. She’s from North Carolina and has a brand-new album called “It Will Burn,” which was released earlier this month. 

In honor of filmmaker and artist David Lynch, who passed away a year ago last week, we heard “Falling,” by Julee Cruise, the Twin Peaks theme song. Lynch co-wrote the song with Cruise.

Checkout the playlist below and listen to the replay, available for the next two weeks.

  • “Pink Orange Red” – Cocteau Twins
  • “Lonely Town” – Steve Queralt (feat Emma Anderson)
  • “Sacred Echoes (Part Two)” – The Church
  • “All in my Mind” – Love and Rockets
  • “Seabird” – Deary
  • “Sleep Well Tonight” – Gene
  • “Stranglehold” – The Churchhill Garden
  • “Prayers for Rain” – The Cure
  • “Waldorf Theft Song” – Au Revoir Borealis
  • “Swordsman” – Night Tapes
  • “A Girl Like You” – The Wolfgang Press
  • “Dreams Never End” – New Order
  • “After the Rain” – Orange Peels
  • “Nirvana” – Glazyhaze
  • “Half a Person” – The Smiths
  • “You and Your Sister” – This Mortal Coil
  • “For a While” – Fenne Lily
  • “Sanvean/Tristan” – Dead Can Dance
  • “Dead Sound” – The Raveonettes
  • “Taste” – Ride
  • “Melting” – Cigarettes for Breakfast
  • “Vertigo” – Miki Berenyi Trio
  • “Gabriel” – Lamb
  • “In the New” – Kate de Rosset
  • “If Only” – Nothing
  • “Adorations” – Killing Joke
  • “Little Galaxy” – Silk Daisys
  • “A New Goodbye” – Nation of Language
  • “Such a Shame” – Talk Talk
  • “The Slab” – Slowdive
  • “Slowdive” – Siouxsie and the Banshees
  • “Falling” – Julee Cruise
  • “Untitled 1” – Sigur Rós

 

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Big Sonic Heaven: New music by Deary, Kate de Rosset, a tribute to David Lynch + more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Acoustic Café: Rhett Miller plays new solo songs and some Old 97s classics, plus archives from Loudon Wainwright III, Tori Amos and more

On this week’s episode of Acoustic Café, our in-studio guest is Rhett Miller of Old 97s. Rhett’s music has been a part of Acoustic Cafe for over 30 years, from both the band and his solo work. His tenth solo record is “A Lifetime Of Riding By Night.”

We recorded our session with Rhett live at The Leon Loft in Ann Arbor.

Also this week, another SongWriter Podcast preview, and in-studio archives from Loudon Wainwright III, Tori Amos in 1996 and more.

See the playlist below and listen to the episodes on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Acoustic Café Playlist for January 18, 2026

  • “Million Dollar Intro” – Ani DiFranco
  • “The Thread” – Whitney
  • “Shadows” – Bahamas
  • “Godspeed” – Mavis Staples
  • “White Ferrari” – Frank Ocean
  • “Now It’s Now Again” – The Flatlanders (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Pegasus (acoustic)” – Arlo Parks
  • “Come As You Are” – Rhett Miller (in-studio guest)
  • “All Over Again” – Rhett Miller (in-studio guest)
  • “In Your Ocean” – Iron & Wine
  • “Music Always” – AV & The Inner City
  • “I Know (A Little)” – Jacob Collier
  • “Abbey Road” – Tori Amos (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Mr. Ambivalent” – Loudon Wainwright III (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Ordinary As Air” – Jamila Woods (SongWriter Podcast)
  • “Against The Dying Of The Light” – Jose Gonzalez
  • “Anniversary” – Brandi Carlile
  • “Heavy Foot” – Mon Rovia
  • “In Tall Buildings” – Cole Quest
  • “Self-Made Man” – Rachel Baiman (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Run It Back” – Madison McFerrin
  • “Wild Rose” – Ocie Elliott
  • “Barrier Reef” – Rhett Miller (in-studio guest)
  • “Question” – Rhett Miller (in-studio guest)
  • “Where The Road Goes” – Rhett Miller (in-studio guest)

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Acoustic Café: Rhett Miller plays new solo songs and some Old 97s classics, plus archives from Loudon Wainwright III, Tori Amos and more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

The Progressive Underground: Martin Luther King Jr. tribute

Each year, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is remembered through a narrow lens. A quote. A speech. A dream, often stripped of the urgency, conflict, and radical clarity that defined his final years. This MLK Weekend edition of The Progressive Underground resists that flattening. Instead, the playlist traces King’s full moral and political arc, from spiritual grounding and collective grief to economic justice, cultural resistance, and the unfinished work he left behind.

Martin Luther King Jr. was not only a civil rights icon. He was a strategist under surveillance, a critic of capitalism and militarism, and a leader willing to lose popularity in order to tell the truth. The music selected here reflects that complexity.

Across six carefully sequenced and curated sets, this special moves through gospel-rooted endurance, protest music that forced America to confront itself, songs that examine dignity and self-worth, and contemporary voices carrying King’s questions forward. From Mahalia Jackson, Nina Simone, and Curtis Mayfield to Kendrick Lamar, D’Angelo, and Kamasi Washington, the playlist treats music as historical witness and moral record. It also honors Detroit’s role in shaping King’s legacy, particularly through Stevie Wonder’s campaign to make Dr. King’s birthday a national holiday.

This is not a nostalgia set. It’s a listening experience designed to engage King as he actually lived and evolved, challenging, demanding, and unfinished. 

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

1st Hour

  • “Let the Sunshine In”–Jimetta Rose & The Voices of Creation
  • “Why? (The King of Love Is Dead)”–Nina Simone
  • “People Get Ready”–Curtis Mayfield
  • “Wholy Holy”–Marvin Gaye
  • “Someday We’ll All Be Free”–Donny Hathaway
  • “A Change Is Gonna Come”–Sam Cooke
  • “Strange Fruit”–Billie Holiday
  • “Winter in America”–Gil Scott Heron
  • “A Dream”–Common feat. Will.i.am
  • “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”–Gil Scott Heron
  • “In the Name of Love”–U2
  • “Compared to What”–Roberta Flack
  • “Respect Yourself”–Staple Singers
  • “Thinkin’ About Your Body”–Bobby McFerrin
  • “Happy Birthday”–Stevie Wonder

2nd Hour

  • “Alright”–Kendrick Lamar
  • “The Charade”–D’Angelo
  • “The People”–Common
  • “6 Summers”–Anderson Paak
  • “We The People”–A Tribe Called Quest
  • “Everybody Loves the Sunshine”–Roy Ayers
  • “I Am the Black Gold of the Sun”–Rotary Connection
  • “Think of You”–Terrace Martin
  • “Better Than I Imagined”–Robert Glasper
  • “Faith, Courage & Wisdom”–Indie.Arie
  • “Expansions”–Lonnie Liston Smith
  • “Journey in Satchidananda”–Alice Coltrane
  • “Truth”–Kamasi Washington
  • “The Creator Has a Master Plan”–Pharoah Sanders
  • “You Take Me Higher”–Fertile Ground

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post The Progressive Underground: Martin Luther King Jr. tribute appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: A happy 80th birthday to Dolly, a fond farewell to Bobby, new Arlo Parks and more

This week on Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music the happiest of birthday wishes to Dolly Parton who turns 80 on Monday, plus the late Bobby Weir in various musical arrangements, new music from waterbaby, Mitski, Arlo Parks and more.

See the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music Playlist for January 17, 2026

HOUR ONE:

  • “2Sided” – Arlo Parks
  • “Holding On” – Disclosure w/Gregory Porter
  • “You’ve Got What It Takes” – Ledisi w/Gregory Porter
  • “For Real” – 
    Eric Hirshberg & Aloe Blacc
  • “A Hazy Shade Of Winter” – The Accidentals
  • “I Can’t Make You Love Me” – Prince
  • “Feels Alright” – Spoon
  • “Sugar Magnolia” – Grateful Dead
  • “The Algorithm Song” – Jon Spear
  • “Memory Be A Blade” – waterbaby
  • “The Flood” – Ye Vagabons
  • “When Love Comes To Town” – Slash, Shemekia Copeland, Myles Kennedy, Joe Bonamassa
HOUR TWO:
  • “Seven Bridges Road” – Dolly Parton
  • “Wildfowers” – Trio
  • “World On Fire” – Dolly Parton
  • “Jolene” – Beyonce
  • “Smoky Mountain DNA” – Dolly Parton & Family
  • “9 To 5” – Allison Krauss
  • “Only A River” – Bob Weir
  • “Walkin’ Blues” – Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman
  • “Where’s My Phone” – Mitsky
  • “Deeper” – Disclosure w/Leon Thomas
  • “Heart Inside My Head” – Nick Puinti
  • “Hell In A Bucket” – Grateful Dead

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: A happy 80th birthday to Dolly, a fond farewell to Bobby, new Arlo Parks and more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

The Progressive Underground: The Mystique of Helen Folasade Adu and the band Sade

Today marks the 67th birthday of Sade Adu, the voice and frontwoman of Sade, and we are marking it by honoring the full body of work behind her name. While her presence is unmistakable, Sade has always been a band first. A collective built on shared restraint, patience, and long-term vision. What you hear is not just a singer out front, but a unified musical philosophy carried by bass, keys, guitar, rhythm, and silence working together.

Sade Adu’s mystique has never come from disappearance or distance. It comes from musical discipline; knowing when to sing, knowing when not to. That discipline only works because the band around her is equally committed to economy and control.

This is why today’s dive is not a 5-on-5. It is a 6-on-6. Six b-sides and deep cuts that reveal how the band shaped an identity by resisting excess, trusting space, and letting atmosphere do the heavy lifting.

6 Essential Tracks by Sade

1. “Cherry Pie” (Diamond Life , 1984)

Before Sade Adu became shorthand for late-night radio and adult elegance, Sade the band entered the early 1980s British music landscape as a quiet counterforce.

“Diamond Life” arrived during an era of stylistic maximalism, and the group responded with precision. This first cut sets the blueprint. Paul Denman’s bass stays measured. Andrew Hale’s keys leave room to breathe. Stuart Matthewman builds a restrained framework, and Sade Adu sings with observation rather than accusation.

Clarity over spectacle.

2. “War of the Hearts” (Promise, 1985)

If “Diamond Life” was arrival, their sophomore 1985 album release “Promise” was confirmation. The band deepened its commitment to mood as method and authenticated it with a rhythmic musicality that added a layer of sonic sheen to their jazzy and ethereal sound.

Recorded largely at Power Plant Studios in London and produced by the band themselves, “Promise” signaled Sade’s early insistence on creative control and cohesion, privileging atmosphere and emotional tension over radio immediacy. This is where Sade separated themselves from their peers with tracks that presented a complex urgency set amidst love as conflict.

3. “Keep Looking” (Stronger Than Pride, 1988)

By the late 1980s, success was no longer the question. Longevity was. Their next album “Stronger Than Pride” marked a deliberate shift in Sade’s trajectory.

Released in 1988 and largely recorded at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas, the album resisted the polish and immediacy that had driven the success of “Diamond Life” and “Promise.” The band leaned into more of an exotic sound built more for mood than momentum. It was their most inward-looking record to that point and a clear statement that Sade was uninterested in chasing radio comfort.

This next track sits squarely at the center of that evolution. The lyrics acknowledge uncertainty as a constant rather than a problem to be solved. Musically, Paul Denman’s bass anchors the track, while Andrew Hale’s keys remain submerged and atmospheric.

4. “Like a Tattoo” (Love Deluxe, 1992)

When the band released “Love Deluxe” in 1992, they had fully stepped outside the prevailing direction of contemporary R&B. As the genre leaned toward New Jack Swing and hip-hop-driven production, Sade slowed everything down, thinning their arrangements and widening their thematic scope. Love Deluxe became their most critically revered album and eventually sold more than four million copies worldwide, distinguished by its restraint, emotional weight, and refusal to chase trends.

This next cut sits at the center of that evolution. Influenced by stories Sade Adu encountered from people shaped by war and displacement, the band shifted toward narrative distance and acoustic minimalism. This song unfolds as testimony rather than performance, with sparse instrumentation and no emotional cueing. Sade does not resolve or dramatize the story. She bears witness, trusting the listener to carry the meaning. In that restraint, the band reached a new level of artistic authority. 

5. “Skin” (Soldier of Love, 2010)

The group would release a commercially well-received album “Lovers Rock” in 2000 and would then step away at the height of their influence. Sade Adu would withdraw from public life to focus on family, and the band overall resisted industry pressure to produce quickly, resulting in a full decade without a studio release.

When they returned in 2010 with “Soldier of Love,” the absence gave the music added gravity. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and reaffirmed the band’s authority. This track reflects that passage of time, confronting desire, regret, and emotional exposure with uncommon directness. Its restrained production places the focus squarely on Sade Adu’s vocal, shaped by experience rather than nostalgia.

6. “Should I Love You” (Unreleased)

To understand Sade fully, you have to look not only at what they released, but at what they chose to hold back. From the beginning, the band operated with collective discipline, treating restraint as part of the art itself. Songs were not issued simply because they were finished. They were released only when they aligned with the band’s emotional economy and long-term vision. That approach is why Sade’s catalog feels curated rather than accumulated, and why absence became a form of authorship rather than retreat.

We’ll end with a song from the early “Diamond Life” era, recorded while the band was still defining its identity and standards. Even at that stage, the song reveals a principle that would carry through their entire career. Love is not assumed. It is questioned.

And there you have it, six songs, six eras and one quiet revolution, on the birthday of Helen Folosade Adu, the lead singer of the band Sade.

If you dig artists who treat soul music as a discipline rather than a trend, who understand restraint as power and atmosphere as language, you are listening to the right place. Keep it locked to The Progressive Underground every Saturday evening at 6 p.m. on WDET 101.9 FM and anytime at wdet.org.

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More from The Progressive Underground

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Entry Points hopes to give juvenile lifer artists a place to flourish after release

A Hamtramck-based artist residency program has received a $175,000 innovation award for three years.

Entry Points is a program that offers housing and studio space for returning citizens who were formerly incarcerated juvenile lifers. The program began through the work of Hamtramck Free School, an alternative educational organization that facilitates creative writing and art workshops in Michigan prisons, working with juveniles who were sentenced to life without parole. 

Entry Points Artistic Director Jonathan Rajewski and Director of Transitions, Kyle Daniel-Bey, are working together to help returning citizens reintegrate into public life, including presenting their work publicly.

Rajewski says art is a way for people to express themselves. 

“We work within the prison system are artists and, you know, art has and continues to be an important conduit of self-expression. It’s a rejection of censorship. It’s an articulation of resistance. It’s an acknowledgement of, you know, the social structures that dictate our livelihoods,” he explains. 

Second chances

Daniel-Bey was a juvenile lifer after being incarcerated at 17. He was released from prison due to the Miller v. Alabama 2012 ruling by the U.S. Supreme court.

The ruling says, “No juvenile defendant may face a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, no matter how serious the crime,” according to Justia. 

Daniel-Bey says he got a second chance.

“When the Miller ruling came out in 2012, it was finally a door opening because I was never supposed to come home. And art was a way to sustain myself in prison, not only financially, but spiritually and emotionally,” Daniel-Bey shares.

Daniel-Bey says he met Jonathan in 2013 at the Macomb Correctional Facility through a creative writing workshop. He says they became friends.

I came home in 2018. Since then, we’ve continued our creative exploits through what was created,” he says. 

Supporting returning artists

Entry Points gives people an entry point back into society and a chance to make art. The first resident moved in October 2022, when a former juvenile lifer needed a place to live once he was released.

Rajewski says the artists can use the space for studio visits, visits from curators, and exhibition opportunities. 

“Our first resident was a writer and almost strictly in the literary realm. And so those relationships tend to be focused more in the literary realm,” he shares.

Daniel-Bey says former juvenile lifers often come home often without resources, family, or support. 

As an adult that goes to prison and spends 20 years and comes back out, they at least have an experiential understanding of having to have paid a bill or navigating as an adult, get a job and all those types of things. We had none of that. And so what we do is we are helping to cushion that landing,” he explains. 

Paying it forward

The grant allows at least three artists to use the space over the period of three years, allowing additional staff to be hired. Meanwhile, the program is run by volunteers.

The award is given by the JM Kaplan Fund to 10 awardees for their work in tackling social justice, environmental conservation, and heritage preservation.

Rajewski says he’s grateful for this opportunity to give back.

“This amplifies the work that we’re doing… in the free school, we are largely made up of volunteers. There are no paid employees. There really aren’t any specific kinds of leadership. It’s a sort of shared kind of democratically organized discursive project,” he exclaims. 

Daniel-Bey says that besides supporting the resident artists, the funding will support other artists.

“We also do microgrants to other artists. We have other juvenile lifers that have home support and family support, but they may not be have the material support to get their art supplies,” he explains.

Healing power

Daniel-Bey says art is a universal language that can heal people.

“Their art is trying to speak to the soul and the spirit of people and bring them into community, bring them into unity and into a more humanistic understanding of what drives not only the children that do these things, but the society that produced them,” he says.

Rajewski says the funding supports the work they’ve been doing for years.

When I met Kyle, he was never coming home, and now here we are working outside on this project together. And it is just an endlessly powerful experience to support this work together,” he says.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

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In The Groove: A proper send off for Grateful Dead legend Bob Weir

Exploring a bunch of fresh spins today with new music from Shungu, Nas & DJ Premier, Augustin Coombe, FRANK LEONE and more. Plus, a fond farewell to the legend Bob Weir with spins from his debut solo album “Ace” and Grateful Dead anthems, including a lovely 13-minute jam of “Truckin’” from a show in London in 1972.

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

In The Groove with Ryan Patrick Hooper playlist for January 13, 2025

  • “Serti Dial (feat. Navy Blue)” – Shungu
  • “Did you Hear the News (feat. Ruqqiyah)” – Shungu
  • “Beautiful People” – Jill Scott
  • “Maureen” – Sade
  • “Kaputt” – Destroyer
  • “Heaven (Nicolas Jaar Remix)” – Kasper Bjørke
  • “It’s Time” – Nas, DJ Premier, Steve Miller Band
  • “Dreamin’” – Common & Pete Rock
  • “I Am Feeling” – Augustin Coombe
  • “Spanish Joint” – D’Angelo
  • “STAY (feat. Sudan Archives)” – FRANK LEONE & Teardrop Estates
  • “Rock With You (Strings Only Version)” – Michael Jackson
  • “2close2farr” – Momoko Gill
  • “People Make The World Go Round” – Dee Dee Bridgewater
  • “Allemni Hibbak” – Kazdoura
  • “After The Rain” – Little Dragon
  • “Sleeping Lessons” – The Shins
  • “Rain Can’t Reach Us (feat. Tony Allen)” – Yannis & the Yaw
  • “Visions Of Light” – Ishmael Ensemble
  • “WHATUP”- Domi & JD Beck
  • “So Ubuji” – Makaya McCraven
  • “Illegal Hit (Edit)” – Yttling Jazz, Joshua Idehen & Saturday, Monday
  • “Rolling With A Planet (Vocal Mix)” – Ari Roze
  • “Zannik” – Khaled Al Reigh
  • “Le Grand Soleil De Dieu (Psychemagik Remix)” – Francis Bebey
  • “Don’t Do It” – The Band
  • “(I Know) I’m Losing You” – Rod Stewart
  • “Ain’t That Peculiar” – Fanny
  • “One More Saturday Night” – Bob Weir
  • “Truckin’ (Live from London)” – Grateful Dead
  • “Cassidy” – Bob Weir
  • “Dark Star” – Grateful Dead
  • “Planet Caravan (feat. David Jimenez)” – Brownout & Brown Sabbath
  • “Sonido Cósmico” – Hermanos Gutiérrez

Listen to In the Groove with host Ryan Patrick Hooper weekdays from noon-3 p.m. ET on 101.9 WDET or stream on-demand at wdet.org.

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post In The Groove: A proper send off for Grateful Dead legend Bob Weir appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

MI Local: Taking it back to 2011 + talking tarot with Carmel Liburdi

I’ve had this theory that local scenes go through waves or phases lasting about 7 years. Don’t ask me to do the math or show my work or explain the science—I’m just saying that it feels like a certain vibe solidifies amongst a current crop of highly active local musicians at a given time.

I don’t want to over elaborate my hackneyed outline on this, come find me and I’ll give you the full pitch for what might become a book (?) but suffice to say that 2005-2012 really felt like a bit of an era, a moment, a fantastic wave of local music and I wanted to tap into that a bit on this week’s show.

We flashed back to the year in local music, 2011, for a few reasons: Firstly, how is 2011 already 15 years ago? Secondly, with that time distance, now, it’s fascinating to listen back to what the local music scene sounded like “back then,” and interesting, too, that many of the artists I played tonight are still active today. 

We heard “No Silver” from Chris Bathgate’s “Salt Year”, “The North Side of the Road” from Timothy Monger’s “New Britton Sound,” and “In Line with the Brokenhearted,” the title track from The Blueflower’s 2011 full-length album.

We also heard some blasts from the past from groups that aren’t together or aren’t as visible, the former being Prussia, a long lost indie quirk-pop band that would please any fans of Animal Collective; and Zoos of Berlin, an absolutely sonically sumptuous art rock ensemble that still periodically releases new music even if they don’t perform live.

Along with those flashbacks, we heard brand new music from The Ethan Marc Band, from their new album, “Stay This Way,” along with a new operatic darkwave single from Crune, and a funky jam from Chirp, off their new album, “Torque.”

As often happens, I had a guest in-studio! Singer-songwriter Carmel Liburdi came by to promote three upcoming shows. One of them is tonight at the Ghostlight; Liburdi is performing at a variety show, dubbed ‘The Basement Show’, a comedic variety show blending storytellers, stand-up, and sometimes music!

Liburdi is also going to be at the Paris Bar this Thursday, Jan. 15 for a line up of live music benefiting the ambitious facilitation of the expansive and immersive House of Tarot group show happening at the Boyer-Campbell building in Detroit’s Milwaukee-Junction Neighborhood, on Jan. 31 to Feb. 1.

Liburdi contributed an art installation to last year’s inaugural House of Tarot show, and will be back again, contributing to another piece and performing live.

Carmel Liburdi
Carmel Liburdi, live in-studio during MI Local

You can hear the full rundown from Liburdi during our interview, including details of tarot’s connection to another annual art event: Imbolc, with Detroit artists of various mediums embracing an ancient Gaelic celebration welcoming the start of spring!

While in-studio, Liburdi treated WDET listeners to a live performance as well!

And, stay tuned for next week’s show, when I’ll share more details about NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert, including some flash backs to previous events produced by WDET, the Sounds Like Detroit Showcase, which is essentially our version of the “Tiny Desk” where we shine some extra spotlights, with extra brightness, upon local talent!

Check the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the player above.

  • “Independent” – The Ethan Marc Band
  • “In My Own Way” – Chirp
  • “69 Forever” – Crune
  • “Where To Begin” – Origami Phase
  • “The North Side of the Road” – Timothy Monger
  • “No Silver” – Chris Bathgate
  • “Tamarind Sound” – Zoos of Berlin
  • “In Line with the Brokenhearted” – The Blueflowers
  • “She Turns On” – Jo Serrapere
  • “Sister” – Prussia
  • “Two Moons” – Ancient Language
  • “Haze” – Android Automatic
  • “69” – Carmel Liburdi
  • “The Truman Show” – Carmel Liburdi

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post MI Local: Taking it back to 2011 + talking tarot with Carmel Liburdi appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Visions: NYC Winter Jazzfest Recap


This week on Visions, I dive into the incredible music I heard this weekend in New York City during Winter Jazzfest and beyond.

I had the privilege of hearing Kris Davis, who invited me to her show at the Jazz Gallery, Patricia Brennan, Tomas Fujiwara, Caroline Davis, who played at Birdland with Allison Miller’s Boom Tic Boom, Larry Grenadier, and Miles Okazaki.

I wanted to check out The Hemphill Stringtet, Luke Stewart’s Silt Trio, James Brandon Lewis, Lex Korten, Lakecia Benjamin, Amir ElSaffar, and Endea Owens during Winter Jazzfest but you can’t be everywhere at once! In lieu of hearing them live, I included them in this episode.

Lastly, I discovered a couple artists during my time in the city. Sasha Berliner played a set during the festival and I’m now a fan. Then I had the privilege of meeting and connecting with Dominique Eade after a set and I immediately listened to her music when I got the chance.

I wish I could transport you to the venues I went to, but hearing these artists on Visions will have to do. Happy listening!

Check out the playlist below and listen to the episode on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Visions Playlist for Jan. 12, 2026

  • “Feel Good” – Endea Owens
  • “Five Spots to Caravan” – James Brandon Lewis
  • “Zenith (feat. David Adewumi, Rico Jones, Jongkuk Kim & Taylor Eigsti)” – Sasha Berliner
  • “Mobilize” – Tomas Fujiwara
  • “Chain Gang (feat. Daniel Carter & Chad Taylor)” – Luke Stewart & Silt Remembrance Ensemble
  • “Brilliant Corners” – Miles Okazaki
  • “Bolivia” – Cedar Walton
  • “Pettiford” – Larry Grenadier
  • “Knotweed (feat. Johnathan Blake & Robert Hurst)” – Kris Davis Trio
  • “Basquiat” – Lakecia Benjamin
  • “The Blues in E Half-Flat” – Amir ElSaffar
  • “Choo Choo” – The Hemphill Stringtet
  • “Something Cool” – Dominique Eade
  • “City Flora (feat. Nicole Mitchell & Nappy Nina)” – Caroline Davis
  • “Antila” – Patricia Brennan
  • “A Sunshower Vignette” – Lex Korten

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

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Big Sonic Heaven: Spotlighting female vocalists

Big Sonic Heaven has always featured talented female vocalists, and this week was no exception. 

This episode included Olivia Lee of There’s Talk, Chrisy Hurn of Basement Revolver, Geike Arnaert of Hooverphonic, Dottie Cockram of Deary, Estonian singer-songwriter Iiris Vesik of Night Tapes, and Alessandra Stella of Nother and Moon Leap. We also heard from French vocalist Rosa Rocca-Serra, featured on Tricky’s project, “Theis Thaws.”

And let’s not forget the unmistakable voices of Karen Peris from The Innocence Mission, Harriet Wheeler from The Sundays, Björk, Elizabeth Fraser of Cocteau Twins, and Sinead O’Connor.

Checkout the playlist below and listen to the replay, available for the next two weeks at WDET.org.

Big Sonic Heaven Playlist for Jan. 11, 2025

  • “Mercy Street” – Peter Gabriel
  • “Prayer Remembered” – Slowdive
  • “Until You Come Back Home” – Nother & Moon Leap
  • “Pearl” – Chapterhouse
  • “En Lögn, En Sanning (note: translates to “a lie, a truth.”)” – Kallsup
  • “Sweetness and Light” – Lush
  • “I’m so Tired” – Deserta
  • “Six Different Ways” – The Cure
  • “Louise” – Clan of Xymox
  • “The Big Shake” – The Mary Onettes
  • “Here’s Where the Story Ends” – The Sundays
  • “Golden” – There’s Talk
  • “Troy” – Sinead O’ Connor
  • “Before” – The Giraffe Told Me in My Dream
  • “Drive that Fast” – Kitchens of Distinction
  • “The Robot Girl Psychiatrist” – The False Dawns
  • “Morning Theft” – Jeff Buckley
  • “Skin” – Basement Revolver
  • “Those Eyes That Mouth” – Cocteau Twins
  • “Renaissance Affair” – Hooverphonic
  • “Helix” – Night Tapes
  • “Life is Wrong” – Longwave
  • “Swamp Thing” – The Chameleons
  • “On Your Side” – The Innocence Mission
  • “Fly to the Ceiling featuring Rosa Rocca” – Theis Thaws
  • “I’ll Fall with your Knife” – Peter Murphy
  • “Elegia” – New Order
  • “My Love” – Silk Daisys
  • “It’s Oh So Quiet” – Bjork
  • “Fairground” – Deary
  • “Become” – Beach House
  • “Hollywood Daydream” – Cigarettes for Breakfast
  • “Severance” – Dead Can Dance

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Big Sonic Heaven: Spotlighting female vocalists appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Acoustic Café: Australia’s Folk Bitch Trio in-studio, plus new Mumford & Sons, Mavis Staples and much more

On this week’s episode of Acoustic Café, we’re joined by our first guests of the new year, Folk Bitch Trio. Grace Sinclair, Jeanie Pilkington, and Heide Peverelle met in high school (during the pandemic), instantly creating the 3-piece harmony on display throughout their debut album “Now Would Be A Good Time.”

Also this week, the return of the SongWriter Podcast, and in-studio archives from Cautious Clay, Lianne La Havas, the late Raul Malo and more.

See the playlist below and listen to the episodes on-demand for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Acoustic Café Playlist for January 11, 2026

  • “Million Dollar Intro” – Ani DiFranco
  • “Prizefighter” – Mumford & Sons
  • “To Each Their Dot” – Haley Heynderickx & Max Garcia Conover
  • “Touching God” – Daniel Caesar
  • “Love You Right” – HAIM
  • “Wildfire” – Cautious Clay (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “These Days – Muireann Bradley
  • “God’s A Different Sword” – Folk Bitch Trio (in-studio guests)
  • “Mary Plays The Harp” – Folk Bitch Trio (in-studio guests)
  • “Wish You Were Here (Take 1)” – Pink Floyd
  • “Running Boy” – Mon Rovia
  • “Green Papaya” – Lianne La havas (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Keep It Moving” – Thao Nguyen (SongWriter Podcast)
  • “Kindness Be Conceived” – Thao & The Get Down Stay Down (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “You Always Win” – Raul Malo (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Zombie (acoustic)” – YUNGBLUD
  • “Plush (acoustic)” – Stone Temple Pilots
  • “Skeletree” – Madison Cunningham
  • “Long Distance Winner” – Cunningham Bird (Acoustic Cafe performance)
  • “Satisfied Mind” – Mavis Staples
  • “Sarah” – Folk Bitch Trio (in-studio guests)
  • “Cathode Ray” – Folk Bitch Trio (in-studio guests)

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

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Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: Albums coming in 2026, plus some classic Joe Jackson, new Madison McFerrin and more

This week on Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music looking ahead to new releases coming in the first few months of 2026, including Robyn’s first new album in 7 years, upcoming albums from Iron & Wine and Lucinda Williams, and brand new music this week from Mon Rovia, Father John Misty, Madison McFerrin and Common.

Also tunes from Ledisi with Gregory Porter, Prince, Joe Jackson and more.

See the playlist below and listen to the episode for two weeks after it airs using the media player above.

Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music Playlist for January 10, 2026

HOUR ONE:

  • “Field Song” – Mon Rovia
  • “The Old Law” – Father John Misty
  • “Talk To Me” – Robyn
  • “Dangerous Blues” – Luke Winslow-King
  • “Everybody Knows” – The Legal Matters
  • “Sweet Love” – Stephen Sanchez
  • “This Time For Real” – Chet Faker
  • “Hair Down” – Samm Henshaw
  • “Welcome To Burning-By-Sea” – Joe Jackson
  • “Memphis” – Joe Jackson
  • “Ready To Let You Down” – Joseph
  • “I Still Need Love 2” – The Twilite Tone (w/Madison McFerrin, Common)
HOUR TWO:
  • “Sister Golden Hair” – The Dandy Warhols
  • “In Your Ocean” – Iron & Wine
  • “Hoodoo Woman” – Tinsley
  • “They Keep Trying To Find You” – Bonnie Prince Billy
  • “Plastic Cigarette” – Zach Bryan
  • “Take Me To Graceland” – Jack Spivey
  • “Boy In The Bubble” – Paul Simon
  • “Peace Of Mind” – Wesley Joseph ft. Danny Brown
  • “drivers license” – David Byrne
  • “The 6th Of January (Yasgur’s Farm)” – Amy Grant
  • “The World’s Gone Wrong” – Lucinda Williams ft. Brittney Spencer
  • “Dead Man Walking” – The Infamous Stringdusters

Listen to Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music every Saturday from 2-4 p.m. ET on Detroit Public Radio 101.9 WDET and streaming on-demand at wdet.org

Support the shows you love.

WDET’s unique music programs are dedicated to exploring the music and culture of our region and the world. Keep the music going. Please make a gift today. Give now »

The post Rob Reinhart’s Essential Music: Albums coming in 2026, plus some classic Joe Jackson, new Madison McFerrin and more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

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