▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
Jorja Smith, ‘What’s Done Is Done’
What could have been a sullen, bitter good-riddance song — and still is with lyrics like “Was it always just words or was it always just her?” — is downright festive instead. Jorja Smith sings the accusations of “What’s Done Is Done” over pizzicato strings, a brisk beat and backup vocals that might as well be taunting, “nyah-nyah.” She’s dancing her way out the door.
▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
Drake, ‘Road Trips’
Drake tries to shrug off a separation that might well be a breakup in “Road Trips.” Backed by blipping, ticking synth-pop, he admits that “Destiny is telling you to go,” but his goodbye isn’t exactly gracious; he hints that she’s selfish and money-grubbing, and he gripes, “Why is the solution always running away?” He adds, “I’m supposed to be the one whose heart is made of ice,” putting self-pity first.
▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
Genesis Owusu, ‘Stampede’
“Time to start a riot,” Genesis Owusu declares in “Stampede.” Born in Ghana and based in Australia, Owusu is a rapper and singer whose political messages have grown increasingly blunt on his third album, “Redstar Wu & the Worldwide Scourge.” Galloping electro-pop, topped by electric guitar, makes Owusu a cheerful class warrior as he raps lines like “Giving my reply with a bat / Find a oligarch, get him taxed.”
▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
KatzPascale, ‘Hold Me (Slowly)’
KatzPascale, the duo of Sammi Katzmann on saxophone and Jenna Pascale on cello and vocals, uses loops, multitracking and effects to construct a sonic haven in “Hold Me (Slowly)” from a coming EP, “Elegy.” Elaborate counterpoint ripples around Pascale’s breathy vocal harmonies as she sings about falling into sensuality.
▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
What’s New in Jazz
Davíd Sanchez, ‘Benkos y Los Cimarrones’
Davíd Sanchez, a saxophonist from Puerto Rico, found historic inspiration on a visit to San Basilio de Palenque, Colombia, a region founded in the early 1600s by “cimarrones” — runaway Afro-Colombian slaves — who were led by Benkos Bioho. In the local music he heard connections to the Puerto Rican bomba beat, a diasporic kinship. Fierce percussion drives “Benkos y Los Cimarrones,” which opens with sprinting saxophone and drums and leads into a deliberative melody and expansive solos, soon meshed with unstoppable Afro-Caribbean percussion.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.nytimes.com ’














