From big-ticket albums by Taylor and Gaga, to a revival of the stomp-clap revival – 2025 had it all, for better and for worse. Now that the year has come to a close, it's time to take a look back at the past twelve months: what happened in the zeitgeist, what we loved listening to, and what we missed here on the show. Reanna, Charlie, and Nate talk about it all, including a look back at our predictions from January to check off boxes for Switched On Pop bingo.
Songs discussed:
Taylor Swift – The Fate of Ophelia
Alex Warren – Ordinary
HUNTR/X – Golden
Morgan Wallen – I'm The Problem
Bruno Mars, Lady Gaga – Die With A Smile
Bruno Mars – 24K Magic
ROSÉ, Bruno Mars – APT.
Olivia Dean – Man I Need
Ravyn Lenae – Love Me Not
Justin Bieber, Dijon – DEVOTION
Bon Iver, Dijon, Flock of Dimes – Day One
Dijon – Baby!
Dijon – Yamaha
CA7RIEL – SHIPEA2
Paco Amoroso – Viuda Negra
CA7RIEL & Paco Amoroso – EL ÚNICO - Live at NPR MUSIC's Tiny Desk
CA7RIEL & Paco Amoroso – EL DÍA DEL AMIGO
CA7RIEL & Paco Amoroso – #TETAS
Breaking Rust – Walk My Walk
Jack Black – Steve's Lava Chicken
Saja Boys – Soda Pop
Snocaps – Coast
Miley Cyrus – Something Beautiful
Bad Bunny – DtMF
MOLIY, Shenseea, Silent Addy, Skillibeng – Shake It To The Max (FLY) - Remix
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47:27
Why pop songwriters break the rules (ft. Amy Allen)
Grammy-winning songwriter Amy Allen joins NYU Steinhardt students live to trace her path from early pitch songs to co-writing some of the decade's defining hits. She explains why Halsey's "Without Me" needed an extended chorus but no pre-made chord loops, how Harry Styles' "Matilda" required character-driven writing for emotional safety, and what made the hypnotic groove of Tate McRae's "Greedy" demand a rare third verse. Allen also unpacks the spoken hook in Rosé and Bruno Mars' "APT" and the three-step key change powering Sabrina Carpenter's recent work. The result is a masterclass in why songs work—and why the rules worth breaking are the ones you've already learned.
SONGS DISCUSSED
Halsey "Without Me"
Harry Styles "Adore You"
Harry Styles "Matilda"
Tate McRae "greedy"
Rosé and Bruno Mars "ATA"
Sabrina Carpenter "Please, please, please"
Selena Gomez "Back to You"
Justin Timberlake "Cry Me A River" (Interpolated in "Without Me")
Olivia Rodrigo "Driver's License"
Sabrina Carpenter "Espresso"
Sabrina Carpenter Short and Sweet (Album)
Sabrina Carpenter Man's Best Friend (Album)
Beyoncé "Love on Top"
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How Sombr’s bedroom recordings became his biggest hits
Sombr went from crafting raw, reverb soaked songs alone in his Lower East Side bedroom to finding his life shifting in ways he never could have predicted across 2024 and 2025. His biggest tracks kept their imperfections even as world class players at Sound City added new layers, and a disco groove he began as a late night joke transformed into a breakout moment that changed his career’s trajectory. He explains how he writes, why distortion carries emotional weight for him, how he navigates the pull between bedroom recordings and studio polish, and what it felt like to watch childhood dreams come true on national stages. The result is a portrait of an artist whose rise has been so quick and so unlikely that even Sombr is still piecing together how it all happened.
Watch the interview on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Switched-On-Pop
Songs Discussed
Sombr “12 to 12”
Sombr “Back to Friends”
Sombr “Undressed”
Lizzo “About Damn Time”
Chic “Good Times”
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"It’s a Hail Mary every time" (ft. Marc Rebillet)
When it comes to improvisational loop jams, few have gone as viral as Marc Rebillet. From his 2020 lockdown-era video “How to Funk in Two Minutes,” which features him wearing nothing but a bathrobe, to unsuspecting New York street corners, and eventually the Coachella main stage, Rebillet has come to be known as “loop daddy” for his gifted ability to harness spontaneous funk.
On this episode of Switched On Pop, Charlie interviews Marc about his process, inspiration, and pandemic success, witnessing his flow state firsthand as he graces us with some live improvisation.
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Quitting Spotify (ft. Deerhoof)
In June 2025, indie veterans Deerhoof scrubbed their entire catalog from the world’s dominant streaming platform. The catalyst wasn't low royalties, but Spotify co-founder Daniel Ek’s investment in AI military technology through his investment firm Prima Materia. Greg Saunier and Satomi Matsuzaki explain why they are prioritizing their ethics over exposure. They argue that the "convenience" of streaming traps us in harmful systems. They’d prefer listeners explore alternative paths to hear their music. That’s why the band premiered their latest single on Craigslist. And it’s they half jokingly say they "would rather our fans steal our music than stream our music at this point."
SONGS DISCUSSED
Deerhoof: Immigrant Song, Scarcity is Manufactured, Life is Suffering, Return of the Return of the Fire Trick Star
MORE
Get Zach Tenorio's synth extraveganza 'Field Trip'
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Flere Musik podcasts
Trendige Musik podcasts
Om Switched on Pop
Listen closer to pop music — hear how it moves us. Hosted by musicologist Nate Sloan & songwriter Charlie Harding. From Vulture and the Vox Media Podcast Network.