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Switched on Pop

Vulture
Switched on Pop
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  • Switched on Pop

    Hrishikesh Hirway made an album “the old-fashioned way.” He nearly exploded.

    28.04.2026 | 43 min.
    Hrishikesh Hirway, host of Song Exploder, returns with his first album in fifteen years, In the Last Hour of Light, made under a premise that's almost contradictory for a podcaster built around isolated stems: session players who had never heard the songs, vocals tracked live in the room, no click track, and no overdubs. 

    The layered style that defines current pop production is itself a relatively recent development. Hirway's record  reaches back to the older live-tracking tradition that shaped the 1950s and 60s Bollywood recordings he grew up listening to in his parents' house. The album is about memory and so it’s appropriate that the music is recorded whole  in all its beautiful imperfections.

    Songs Discussed

    Hrishikesh Hirway "Things Change Even Now"

    Hrishikesh Hirway "Stray Dogs"

    Hrishikesh Hirway "The Ocean"

    Hrishikesh Hirway "Home Movies"

    Adrienne Lenker “Anything”

    Chuck Berry "Maybellene"

    The Beatles "Twist and Shout"

    James Brown "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag"

    Sidney Bechet "The Sheik of Araby"

    Les Paul & Mary Ford "How High the Moon"

    The Beach Boys "Good Vibrations"

    The Beatles “A Day In The Life”

    Queen "Bohemian Rhapsody"

    Jacob Collier "With the Love in My Heart"

    Brandi Carlile "You and Me on the Rock"

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  • Switched on Pop

    BTS is back. But K Pop is not the same.

    21.04.2026 | 48 min.
    BTS is back. The best selling K Pop group of all time has been on hiatus for four years. They haven’t released an album in six. They were once the biggest band in the world. Can they regain their throne? Or has the world moved on. Leaning on traditional Korean sounds and a bevy of international producers, from Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker to JPEGMafia, is their album Arirang the future or the past of K Pop? Hye Jin Lee, communications professor at USC and K Pop scholar, joins to break down the album's references and ponder how longtime fans will respond.

    Songs Discussed

    BTS - Body to Body

    Koreana - Hand In Hand

    Lee Chun-Hee - Arirang

    BTS - Hooligan

    Michel Magne - Yang Tse Kiang - Bande originale du film "Un singe en hiver"

    ROSALÍA - MALAMENTE - Cap.1: Augurio

    Prefuse 73 - The End of Biters - International

    BTS - Aliens

    Kim Young-gil and Yoon Ho-Se - Ajaeng sanjo - Jungmori

    BTS - FYA

    Junior Sanchez - Lookin 4 Love - Extended Mix

    BTS - No. 29

    BTS - SWIM

    BTS - Merry Go Round

    Tame Impala - New Person, Same Old Mistakes

    BTS - NORMAL

    BTS - they don’t know ’bout us

    The Four Freshmen It's A Blue World

    BTS - Paldogangsan

    BTS - No More Dream

    BTS and Zara Larsson - A Brand New Day

    Agust D - Haegeum
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  • Switched on Pop

    Maggie Rogers: going viral is a trap

    17.04.2026 | 37 min.
    Ten years ago, Maggie Rogers was a senior at NYU, scrambling to finish a song for a music production class she was close to failing. The guest critic that week happened to be Pharrell Williams. She played him "Alaska," a track she'd written in about fifteen minutes. It is a bit of folk songwriting crossed with the electronic music she'd fallen for studying abroad. Pharrell told her he'd never heard anything that sounded like it. Someone was filming. The clip went viral, and it launched Maggie into pop stardom. 

    Ten years later, she's released three studio albums, earned a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist, and gone back to school to pick up a master's from Harvard Divinity School, where she studied the spirituality of public gatherings. And in the last few months she's been as visible offstage as on — advocating for free speech in DC, performing for 200,000 people at a protest in Minneapolis alongside Joan Baez, and delivering a haunting performance during the final run of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, which CBS is ending in May.

    This week host Charlie Harding got to sit down with Maggie live at Chelsea Studios, in front of a room of current NYU students. It’s the same school, ten years later, now with Charlie in the professor's chair and Maggie as the visiting artist.

    SONGS DISCUSSED

    Maggie Rogers "Alaska"

    Maggie Rogers "Better"

    Maggie Rogers "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)"

    Maggie Rogers "Different Kind of World"

    Marvin Gaye "What's Going On"

    Bob Dylan "The Times They Are a-Changin'"

    USA for Africa "We Are the World"

    More

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  • Switched on Pop

    Learning to Love Train: "Drops of Jupiter" is back in the atmosphere

    14.04.2026 | 47 min.
    Train is the kind of band that some people love to hate. Songs like "Meet Virginia" and "Hey Soul Sister" gave the band huge hits, and no small amount of snark. And then there's "Drops of Jupiter." Released in 2001, the song is almost impossible not to love, no matter how many lyrics about soy lattes and Tae Bo it includes.

    "Drops of Jupiter" was released 25 years ago, so there's no more perfect time to plumb the secrets of this celestial smash, and there's no more perfect guest than Train's lead singer and songwriter, Pat Monahan. Pat breaks down the origin of the song, why he thought it would flop, how Train is like a rom com, and why he'd rather his songs be more famous than him. By the end of our conversation, you might find yourself learning to love Train.

    Songs Discussed

    Train - Drops of Jupiter, Meet Virginia, Hey Soul Sister

    Taylor Swift - Drops of Jupiter
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  • Switched on Pop

    Slayyyter might actually be the 'Worst Girl in America'

    07.04.2026 | 38 min.
    Going for broke turned out to be the most honest thing Slayyyter ever made. After financial losses and a depressive episode that left her ready to quit music entirely, Slayyyter entered the studio planning to make one final album. In this conversation, she traces how that desperation shaped every decision on Worst Girl in America. This conversation will leave you feeling Daddy AF.

    SONGS DISCUSSED

    Slayyyter – "Daddy AF"

    Slayyyter – "Brittany Murphy"

    Slayyyter – "Dance"

    Slayyyter – "Crank"

    Slayyyter – "Gas Station"

    Slayyyter – "Beat Up Chanels"

    Slayyyter – "Old Technology"

    Slayyyter – "Yes God"

    Slayyyter – "Unknown Lovers"

    Slayyyter – "Cannibalism"

    Slayyyter – "Actually Kind of Famous"

    Slayyyter – "What It's Like to Be Liked"

    Slayyyter – "Mine"

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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.
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