 
    	
    	    	Stooges On Screen: Iggy Pop And Jim Jarmusch On The New Film ‘Gimme Danger’
The two men join NPR’s Scott Simon to talk about Jarmusch’s new documentary on the band — and why its pioneering work has staying power.

 
    	
    	    	The two men join NPR’s Scott Simon to talk about Jarmusch’s new documentary on the band — and why its pioneering work has staying power.
 
    	
    	    	February 24, 1928 About 12:30 a.m., we visited this place and found approximately 5,000 people, colored and white, men attired…
 
    	
    	    	“I think most videos from the ’80s are pretty cheesy, to be honest,” Astley says. He speaks with NPR’s Michel Martin about his career, his new album — and yes, rickrolling.
 
    	
    	    	The British rapper remains both successful and controversial, but she tells NPR’s David Greene she’s just trying to widen the conversation.
 
    	
    	    	Our new video documentary series on the creative process kicks off with the Grammy-winning soul singer. Watch him break down the origins of “Come Through And Chill” and “Adorn” with host Jason King.
!["I would imagine that [Morrissey] had just thrown some gladioli — gladioli was his favorite, favorite, favorite, flower of all time. I'm sure he had just done that. This is an early picture, one of my first pictures, probably from California '85, and I was really quite shy — you can see that I'm really quite behind the monitor. I like the photo because it shows the dynamic between Morrissey — the energy that he's giving to the crowd, and then Johnny [Marr] just being so super-cool."](../../wp-content/uploads/2016/06/TheSmiths_p082-083-435x247.jpg) 
    	
    	    	It was 1985. Nalinee Darmrong was 17, and she had just graduated high school. Friends took her to see the legendary English rock band The Smiths at D.C.’s Warner Theatre — and the show literally changed her life.
 
    	
    	    	Sean Gray sees barriers many people do not. Born with cerebral palsy, the Maryland native has been using a walker since he was…
 
    	
    	    	On U Street in 2016, it’s easy to stumble across vestiges of the corridor’s African-American history. But that history is…
![Abdu Ali: "[My music is] still very much black music and for my people."](../../wp-content/uploads/2016/04/abdu-ali-Cristobal-Guerra-Naranjo-435x247.jpg) 
    	
    	    	When the drums pound in Abdu Ali’s music, they travel straight to the head. “I blatantly confront racism and white…
 
    	
    	    	“I saw who he was, and there was a mystery about him even then,” says Husney, who managed Prince at the very beginning of his career. The iconic musician died Thursday at 57.
 
    	
    	    	Tarica June wrote “But Anyway” in response to quickening change in District. What she didn’t expect was the wave of positive feedback — especially from other gentrifying cities across the country.
 
    	
    	    	The “Okie from Muskogee” talks life, music and songwriting in this 2003 interview. Haggard died Wednesday morning.
 
    	
    	    	Any dead-serious subculture becomes ripe for satire at some point, and if the success of The Hard Times is any…
 
    	
    	    	Ask some music fans about D.C. concert audiences, and they’ll say our crowds suffer from paralysis of the feet. But as I reported recently in my story…
 
    	
    	    	This year marks Ben Ratliff’s 20th as a music critic at the New York Times. He is probably best known…
![Producer and author Ian Brennan: "How many pop records can you find in the [performers' native] language? It's almost always zero."](../../wp-content/uploads/2016/02/ian-brennan-435x247.jpg) 
    	
    	    	Ian Brennan is a Grammy-winning record producer who hears music die every day. With 30 years in the music business,…
 
    	
    	    	The Virginia Beach denizen spoke about the reverse troll he laid on Def Jam, what it’s like to go back and forth with Puffy, the fallacies of textbooks and the perils of ignoring the youth.
 
    	
    	    	The singer’s career has been a story in numbers, and not just the ones in her album titles. She discusses motherhood, stage fright, the Spice Girls and more in an extended chat with Ari Shapiro.
 
    	
    	    	The woman behind “You’re So Vain” has stories for days about love and music. On the occasion of a new memoir, she joins NPR’s Scott Simon to unfold a few of them.
 
    	
    	    	“I’m telling the fans what I’m trying to tell myself because nobody was telling me at the time,” says the rapper, who hails from Maryland.