Wu Han, piano; "Russian Recital" (ArtistLed)
Pianist Wu Han wears many hats: co-artistic director of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the head of her own record label, ArtistLed, and of course, busy concert soloist. On the cover of her new album, it’s a big woolly Russian hat that she’s wearing. The album is called "Russian Recital" and it features piano works by Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff and Scriabin. Picked by Brian Wise
Lo Cor de la Plana, "Tant Deman" (Buda Musique)
Lo Cor de La Plana is comprised of six male singers, four of whom also play hand drums, tambourines, and their own bodies. They are based in Marseille, but even if you speak French you can’t understand what they say: They sing in a disappearing language called Occitan. And their repertoire is music that used to be confined to churches. But when you hear the call and response, the African drums, the solo voices, it sounds anything BUT church music.Picked by Gisele Regatao
Jeffrey Lewis, "12 Crass Songs" (Rough Trade)
Cover albums can be, well, a little hit or miss. But when they’re good, cover albums make us re-think an artist we thought we had pegged down a long time ago. On his latest album, anti-folk singer Jeffrey Lewis gives us a fresh take on Crass, the anarchist, so-called “peace punk” band of the 1970s and ‘80s. Lewis detaches Crass from its D.I.Y. punk bluster and nestles the band’s social-message heavy in beautiful acoustic arrangements. And you know what? It sounds punk as, well, you know. Picked by Joel Meyer
Scroobius Pip, "The Beat That My Heart Skipped"
Crass is actually one of the bands name-checked in the video "Thou Shalt Always Kill," which was an underground hit last year for the bearded London rapper named Scroobius Pip. So far, Scroobius Pip doesn’t have a CD, so our final pick this week will simply be his MySpace page. On it, you’ll find "Thou Shalt Always Kill," a delicious satire on pop culture. And with beatmaster Dan Le Sac, Scroobius Pip also offers a Letter from God to Man in which the deity expresses pride in and regret for his favorite creation. Picked by John Schaefer
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