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The 83-year-old NEA Jazz Master turns the Tiny Desk into a place of musical worship.
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Meet the artist who received the most votes in our first-ever Fan Favorite competition.
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The Baltimore band talks about their seventh studio album, People Who Aren't There Anymore.
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"I learned how to play guitar watching Tiny Desk concerts," lead singer Karly Hartzman says. The Asheville rock band translates its noisy, country-influenced sound to a quieter setting.
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Moreno's breathtaking voice is passionate and stylistically malleable, as she glides back and forth easily between bossa nova and bluesy rock. Moreno sings three songs from her newest album, Illustrated Songs, at the NPR Music offices.
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Joshua Redman illustrates why he is one of today's best saxophonists.
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To mark Philip Glass' 87th birthday, the astute pianist Timo Andres stops by to play a contrasting pair of the composer's popular etudes.
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With an eight-piece band, the singer-songwriter brings her wry charm to the Tiny Desk.
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The San Diego-based trio made its mark at the Tiny Desk with satin vocals and vintage melodies.
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The U.K. singer-songwriter recasts four of her electro-pop songs in fresh arrangements.
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The band's unique sound, driven by its peculiar blend of trumpet, winds and strings, seems like a compelling soundtrack for an age when music genres are becoming increasingly arbitrary.
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The Virginia Beach native talks about capturing the tumult of early adulthood on TWENTY SOMETHING.