
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The past few years found her trying something new — or, rather, old. With a pair cover albums, Juliana Hatfield first tackled the song of Olivia Newton-John and the then Police — both to rave reviews. Earlier this month, the singer-songwriter released a new solo album — her 19th. Titled Blood, the LP explores the divisiveness and psychological tole the last four years have had on much of the American psyche. Limited by the pandemic, Hatfield recorded much of the audio at home, adding overdubs and mixing at a nearby studio. The result is the emotionally raw and sometimes aurally abrasive work of an artist still breaking new ground more than 30 years after making studio debut as a member of the Blake Babies.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Brian Heater4.7
6363 ratings
The past few years found her trying something new — or, rather, old. With a pair cover albums, Juliana Hatfield first tackled the song of Olivia Newton-John and the then Police — both to rave reviews. Earlier this month, the singer-songwriter released a new solo album — her 19th. Titled Blood, the LP explores the divisiveness and psychological tole the last four years have had on much of the American psyche. Limited by the pandemic, Hatfield recorded much of the audio at home, adding overdubs and mixing at a nearby studio. The result is the emotionally raw and sometimes aurally abrasive work of an artist still breaking new ground more than 30 years after making studio debut as a member of the Blake Babies.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

5,962 Listeners

659 Listeners

1,708 Listeners

93 Listeners

2,024 Listeners

105 Listeners

64 Listeners

211 Listeners

248 Listeners

9 Listeners

142 Listeners

25 Listeners

161 Listeners

41 Listeners

510 Listeners

110 Listeners

1,197 Listeners

1,027 Listeners

260 Listeners

217 Listeners

21 Listeners

27 Listeners

4,573 Listeners

0 Listeners