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  • With her gritty, emotional narratives and country-pop sound, the 22-year-old has already performed alongside a wide range of revered musicians, including Jerry Douglas, Pam Tillis and Sara Evans.
  • Charlie Faye is known for her approach to touring and performing — and in particular a cross-country project she completed in 2010. Here, she makes her first appearance on Mountain Stage.
  • In this session from 2005, the prolific songwriter performs some of his most famous works, such as "What the World Needs Now is Love" and "Close to You."
  • Positioned above a tank full of stingrays at the National Aquarium, Weilerstein used her cello to serenade sea creatures (and many pleasantly surprised visitors) with music by Johann Sebastian Bach.
  • The alt-country singer-songwriter plays old and new material, both solo and with the house band.
  • Hear a live set by the seven-time CMA Musician Of The Year, who's written many country hits.
  • In a twilight session at this year's Pickathon festival, the Swedish singer-songwriter premiered an unreleased song from his 2013 album, Buck.
  • Cash gives an extended performance that features songs from The List and The River & The Thread.
  • The Denver band's mysteriously swirling music isn't jazz or rock, classical or electronica. Instead, it's something singular, new and adventurous.
  • These days, Reverend Run and his wife, Justine, are best known for their MTV reality show, Run's House. The couple has written a book together, titled Take Back the Family: A Challenge to America's Parents. They join NPR's Tony Cox.
  • Pop diva Mariah Carey talks to Ed Gordon about her early rise to superstardom, her highly publicized emotional meltdown, and her return with a Grammy-winning album.
  • Kaing Guek Eav, the former Khmer Rouge interrogator known as Duch, was brought to court in Cambodia for a pretrial hearing. It is the first public session of the U.N.-backed tribunal probing the regime's reign of terror in the 1970s. Duch, 66, is charged with crimes against humanity.
  • Former New York advertising executive Michael Gill explains how he found happiness and a sense of self while working as a Starbucks barista. Gill is the author of How Starbucks Saved My Life: A Son of Privilege Learns to Live Like Everyone Else.
  • Fresh Air book critic Maureen Corrigan reviews Relentless Pursuit: A Year in the Trenches With Teach for America, by Donna Foote.
  • In his new book, Torture Team, international lawyer Philippe Sands argues that the Bush administration's interrogation policy constitutes a war crime.
  • From grocery stores to club floors, get ready for another Bad Bunny-filled season.
  • "Not All Diamonds and Rosé: The Inside Story of The Real Housewives from the People Who Lived It" tracks the history and impact of the 15-year-old reality TV franchise.
  • What can we learn from history about the power of schools as sites for political change?
  • Fox Sports, the sole owner of the new league, plans for games to begin in April. Previous attempts to relaunch the USFL have run into insurmountable issues.
  • Researchers are determining whether the new variant could be more transmissible than previous versions of the virus and whether our current vaccinations can protect against it.
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