This Just In is two whole hours of brand new tunes every Tuesday night from 10pm to midnight so you can stay up to date with your current and future favorite artists, plus interviews with the ones about to break.
This just In Playlist 8/23/22
Black Angels – El Jardin
Spacey Jane – Lunchtime
Lyell – You (ft. Robert DeLong)
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Tippa My Tongue
Tedeschi Trucks Band – Soul Sweet Song
Julian Lennon – Lucky Ones
Lissie – Night Moves
Dirty Shirts – Detonator
Ali McGuirk – X boyfriends
Amy Ray – Joy Train
Disq – If Only
Stardust One – Gone Away
Lake Street Dive – Automatic
Early James – Harder to Blame
The Dare – Girls
Big Girl – Summer Sickness
Juliana Madrid – Pretend
Rare Americans – Moving On
Illiterate Light – Light Me Up
Sun Signature – Bluedusk
Book of the Month Club – People of the Sun
Noiseheads – Big Money
Nathaniel Rateliff- Famous Blue Raincoat (leonard cohen cover)
Just before Glenn performed her short program at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Tuesday night, which is set to Madonna's song "Like a Prayer," she received a video from the "Queen of Pop" wishing her luck in the individual competition at the Winter Games.
The rock icon and the E Street Band announced Tuesday the launch of their "Land of Hope and Dreams" American tour starting March 31 in Minneapolis, kicking off a 20-date run that blends arena rock with a message centered on democracy, freedom and what Springsteen calls the defense of the American ideal.
Three stormwater drains in the city stand to get a makeover in coming months as voting has begun for winning designs in the Charlottesville Utilities Storm Drain Art Contest.
Traditional prayers, fireworks and fairs marked the Lunar New Year on Tuesday — alongside 21st-century humanoid robots. The activities ushered in the Year of the Horse, one of 12 animals in the Chinese zodiac, succeeding the Year of the Snake.
Death and taxes may be inevitable. A big bill for your heirs is not. The rich have made an art of avoiding taxes and making sure their wealth passes down effortlessly to the next generation. But the tricks they use – to expedite payouts to heirs and avoid handing money to the government – can also work for people with far more modest estates.