25 songs that matter now.
Our annual Music Issue is here: nyti.ms/2xxFEsu
The songs that follow range from the mindbogglingly popular to the fairly obscure nyti.ms/2xxFEsu
But almost all these 25 songs have something common: the willingness to simply be what they are, and to let things fall where they may nyti.ms/2xxFEsu
.@billieeilish has resuscitated the macabre and the melancholy, mostly absent from the charts since the ’90s: nyti.ms/2TMjE5U
#HotGirlSummer started out as a tweet that morphed into a meme that became a chart-topping track that catapulted Megan @theestallion into a national spotlight nyti.ms/38LWUXU
“Old Town Road” by @LilNasX — is there any getting over this song? Isn’t there some new town road we should be strolling down? Here we are, still stretching this thing to infinity, @Wesley_Morris writes nyti.ms/2w2VKt
On “Earfquake,” @tylerthecreator ditches the safety of youthful disaffection to seek love and some version of earnestness — but, surprise, it hurts nyti.ms/3cUFrQn
.@Harry_Styles managed to repurpose the past to become a new kind of star. “Adore You” lets him show off the full, androgynous range of his voice nyti.ms/2TYy8hQ
The movie version of “Jellicle Songs for Jellicle Cats” happily spays and neuters everything that made the musical work, @jamiekeiles writes nyti.ms/2IIzbwZ
On “Goat Head,” Brittany Howard guides her love-soaked voice through the varying registers of the blues — and a grim bit of family history nyti.ms/2w0rsYy
Romeo Santos, the bachata superstar from the Bronx, is an old school balladeer, whose old-fashioned passions are displayed to great effect on “El Beso Que No Le Di” nyti.ms/2vPnMc9
In “The Man,” Taylor Swift channels her sly braggadocio into a broader protest against the sexism and skepticism that all women face nyti.ms/38MbcYy
“Dangote” by Burna Boy (arguably the biggest star in Afrobeats) is a dispatch from a pitiless world in which the refrain — a billionaire’s surname — is both a striver’s mantra and a yelp of despair nyti.ms/2wQiqgK
The opening riff of “953” is a brazen statement of purpose for black midi’s 2019 debut album, “Schlagenheim” nyti.ms/38Mr7WA
Denzel Curry is one of the inventors of woozy-sounding SoundCloud rap, but “Ricky” is a brisk, unfussy, and powerfully thrilling nyti.ms/2IDkQCb
Normani’s “Motivation” is a sunny early-aughts reverie, breaking through the haze of contemporary pop radio nyti.ms/3aMDDH6
Lana Del Rey’s “Doin’ Time” was a breezy seasonal anthem. It’s also a portrait of male discontent, an incel revenge ballad — on a level only Del Rey could get away with nyti.ms/2IMpZYp
With Red Hearse, the star producer @jackantonoff is only making music with friends — just like he does with stars like Lana Del Rey, Taylor Swift and St. Vincent nyti.ms/2W8xjpe
Lizzo’s “Truth Hurts” is a deeply cute bop, but also a taunt, glowing with the fury of the big black women in pop’s past — shining where figures like Martha Wash never got to nyti.ms/2TZmH9z
Richard Dawson’s songs are full of visceral, emotional gut punches. With “Jogging” he pulls off a fascinating one — and writes about the present day like few others can nyti.ms/2w0zErM
Kanye West is part of a long line of secular artists to take up the gospel. On “Follow God,” he’s by turns a proselytizer and a penitent nyti.ms/3aMFEmH
“I’m familiar with a certain type of hierarchy of cool. I know it. The artistic part of me just doesn’t buy it anymore” — Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig (@arzE) talks about the influence of jam bands on “Harmony Hall” nyti.ms/33ejyqH
“stupid horse,” from the manic duo 100 gecs, is pop intensified, a 220-volt current coursing through our 110-volt brains nyti.ms/2vS4Byt
With its slow guitar lick and slurry production, Summer Walker’s “Playing Games” is a late-night outpouring of bottled-up grievances nyti.ms/2Q61RnO
On “Redesigning Women,” the debut single from the Highwomen, you hear four women’s voices. Amanda Shires decided to assemble an all-female country supergroup when her daughter told her she wanted to be a musician nyti.ms/2IHS6YQ
If you need to move, to sweat, to swing into a dark place filled with other people and let out a wail, but have no time to sneak off to a club or a bar — listen to “10%” by Kaytranada nyti.ms/2THHsrk
“The Center Won’t Hold” is the perfect encapsulation of Sleater-Kinney at its best — and an act of creative destruction that cost them a member nyti.ms/2QbMaeR
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“They’re struggling. They’re sad. They’re overwhelmed. They’re hurting. They’re not learning. And they’ve almost given up...”
A group of high school students trying desperately to make it through an isolated year shared their stories with @susandominus. nyti.ms/3hog7Ha
At the start of sophomore year, Sarah knew that she was not in the right frame of mind to start learning.
School hadn’t even started, and she already felt totally, utterly lost. nyti.ms/3hog7Ha
Charles, who had been struggling with feelings of failure, started sleeping more. His heart would start pounding, and he would feel overwhelmed with a sense of impending crisis: It was all over, and there was nothing he could do about it. It was too late. nyti.ms/3hog7Ha
Since the end of the 1918 flu pandemic, an astonishing thing has happened: the average human life span has doubled.
How did this great doubling happen?
In our special issue on life expectancy, @stevenbjohnson explains what it took.
COVER STORY: Voter fraud is largely nonexistent in America.
But our five-month investigation uncovers how the false claim is being used by Republicans to disenfranchise Americans before the 2020 election. nyti.ms/3cHYMEH
After reviewing thousands of pages of court records, and interviews with more than 100 people, @jimrutenberg discovered an extensive effort to gain partisan advantage by aggressively promoting the false claim that voter fraud is a pervasive problem nyti.ms/3cHYMEH
The pandemic is giving President Trump an opportunity to do what no other president has done before him: use the full force of the federal government to attack the democratic process and suppress the votes of American citizens, @jimrutenberg reports. nyti.ms/3cHYMEH
Wildfires, hurricanes, extreme heat, rising seas.
The climate crisis is already here in America.
It will change how — and where — we live.
Where will millions of us go? nyti.ms/3mnhJ3R
This is the second part of our series on climate migration in partnership with @propublica, with support from the @pulitzercenter. Read Part One here: nyti.ms/2FFA3Ek
For two years, @AbrahmL has been reporting on how climate change will force people across the world to migrate. This story, on climate displacement in America, was finished as wildfires raged only miles from his own family’s house in California. nyti.ms/33BAYye
Food insecurity today doesn’t always look like extreme hunger.
It looks like fast food at the end of the month when food stamps run out.
Rural “food deserts,” where few food banks reach.
Its legacy is diabetes and high blood pressure. nyti.ms/2GugxLL
The photographer Brenda Ann Kenneally traveled more than 3,600 miles and visited more than 50 families to see what hunger looks like in America today nyti.ms/34XEd5j