Discover
Switched on Pop
524 Episodes
Reverse
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
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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"
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Charlie Puth joins Switched On Pop in Studio A at Power Station at Berklee NYC, live before a room of current students, ten days after performing the national anthem at Super Bowl 60 and weeks before releasing his fourth album, Whatever's Clever. The conversation is grounded in one question: how do you absorb the music you love and turn it into something that actually sounds like you?
Puth traces his national anthem arrangement through a lineage running from Jose Feliciano's 1968 World Series performance to Marvin Gaye's 808-driven 1983 All-Star Game version to Whitney Houston's 1991 Super Bowl rendition. The through-line: citation is letting your influences dissolve into your hands until they become unrecognizable. That principle runs throughout the new record, from the Quincy Jones guitar tone on "Cry" to the Chick Corea quotation buried in "Boy" that Puth didn't realize was there until after writing it.
Songs Discussed
Bruce Springsteen – "Born in the USA"
Madonna – "Like a Virgin"
David Bowie – "Let's Dance"
Charlie Puth ft. Wiz Khalifa – "See You Again"
Charlie Puth – "We Don't Talk Anymore"
Charlie Puth – "Attention"
Charlie Puth – "Light Switch"
Whitney Houston – "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Babyface – "Whip Appeal"
Jose Feliciano – "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Jimi Hendrix – "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Marvin Gaye – "The Star-Spangled Banner"
Marvin Gaye – "Sexual Healing"
Soulja Boy – "Crank That (Soulja Boy)"
DeBarge – "Who's Holding Donna Now"
Charlie Puth ft. Jeff Goldblum – "Until It Happens to You"
Charlie Puth – "Changes"
Charlie Puth – "Cry"
Kenny G – "Lullaby"
SOPHIE – "It's Okay to Cry"
Michael Jackson – "Human Nature"
Johnny Hates Jazz – "Shattered Dreams"
Madonna – "Into the Groove"
Joshua Redman – "St. Thomas"
Charlie Puth – "Boy"
Chick Corea – "Spain"
Charlie Puth – "How Long (Has This Been Going On)"
Bell Biv DeVoe – "Poison"
Elton John – "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me"
Prince – "When Doves Cry"
Schoolly D – "PSK What Does It Mean"
Rick Astley – "Never Gonna Give You Up"
Charlie Puth – "Beat Yourself Up"
Britney Spears – "Lucky"
George Benson – "Give Me the Night"
No Doubt – "Hella Good"
Michael Jackson – "Beat It"
Michael Jackson – "Billie Jean"
Charlie Puth – "Washed Up"
Charlie Puth – "I Used to Be Cringe"
Richard Smallwood – "Center of My Joy"
Richard Smallwood – "Total Praise"
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
RAYE names Amy Winehouse and Edith Piaf as her artistic predecessors on the opening tracks of new album This Music May Contain Hope. Both died young, undone by the same darkness they sang about, and placing them there reads as a dare to herself. The album that follows is her attempt to find a different ending: a 17-track, 75-minute work featuring Al Green, Hans Zimmer, the London Symphony Orchestra, and over 80 collaborators, structured around the four seasons as a journey from autumn despair toward summer light.
Every genre shift on the record, from Vivaldi's Winter to post-bop jazz combo to gospel choir, serves that arc: small emotional truths get cinematic treatment, most strikingly when the click of heels on pavement becomes the central rhythm of an anthem about getting dressed to go out with friends. The episode serves as a field guide to the album's vast musical language, and to the argument that hope is something you have to build, genre by genre, track by track.
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
RAYE – "WHERE IS MY HUSBAND!"
Nat King Cole – "Let There Be Love"
Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong – "Summertime"
RAYE (ft. 070 Shake ) – "Escapism."
RAYE – "Intro: Girl Under the Grey Cloud."
RAYE – "I Will Overcome."
Edith Piaf – "La Vie en Rose"
RAYE – "Nightingale Lane."
RAYE – "Fin."
RAYE – "The WhatsApp Shakespeare."
Mark Ronson & RAYE – "Suzanne"
RAYE – "I Hate The Way I Look Today."
RAYE – "Winter Woman."
Vivaldi – "The Four Seasons: Winter"
RAYE (ft. Hans Zimmer) – "Click Clack Symphony."
RAYE (ft. Al Green) – "Goodbye Henry."
Al Green – "Love and Happiness"
Aretha Franklin – "Rock Steady"
RAYE – "Skin & Bones."
Fred Wesley and The J.B.'s (ft. James Brown) – "Damn Right I Am Somebody"
RAYE – "Beware.. The South London Lover Boy."
The Supremes – "You Can't Hurry Love"
Iggy Pop – "Lust for Life" Jet – "Are You Gonna Be My Girl?"
Mark Ronson (ft. Amy Winehouse) – "Valerie"
Charles Albert Tindley – "I'll Overcome Someday"
Prince - “Purple Rain"
Beyoncé – "Love on Top"
RAYE (ft. Amma & Absolutely) – "Joy."
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On a recent podcast interview, Kentucky rapper Jack Harlow said that, to craft his new album Monica, he “got blacker.” The problem is… Jack Harlow is white. The statement, while extremely tone-deaf, speaks to his intentions with this musical pivot: musically, Monica turns to the historically Black genres of R&B and neo-soul to craft a new image designed to shed the stigma of being a “white rapper.”
The pivot is more costume than culture, but in doing so, Harlow seems to be following in the footsteps of several white rappers over the past decade. Artists like Post Malone, MGK, and Jelly Roll have all had radical shifts in sound and image over their career, separating themselves from their roots in hip-hop. So, in response to Monica, Reanna and Charlie ask: where have all the white rappers gone?
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
Songs discussed:
Jack Harlow – First Class
Jack Harlow – Lovin On Me
Jack Harlow – Trade Places
Post Malone, Hank Williams Jr. – Finer Things
Jack Harlow – Tyler Herro
Jack Harlow, Doja Cat – Just Us
Jack Harlow – Lonesome
J Dilla, Common, D’Angelo – So Far to Go
D’Angelo – Spanish Joint
D’Angelo – Feel Like Makin’ Love
Jack Harlow – All Of My Friends
Led Zeppelin - Babe I’m Gonna Leave You
Paul Wall, Big Pokey – Sittin’ Sidewayz
Beastie Boys – Fight For Your Right
Post Malone – White Iverson
Post Malone – Leave
Post Malone, Morgan Wallen – I Had Some Help
James Taylor – Machine Gun Kelly
MGK – LOCO
MGK, blackbear – my ex’s best friend
5 Seconds of Summer – She Looks So Perfect
MGK – cliche
Jelly Roll – F*ck What They Talkin Bout (ft. O.N.E.)
Jelly Roll – Need A Favor
Bubba Sparxxx – Deliverance
Eminem – Cleanin’ Out My Closet
Eminem – Without Me
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Jacob Collier is a rare musician: an expert in so many musical languages (western harmony, negative harmony, microtonalism) and a phenomenal communicator about music. He's something like an Ambassador for Music, traveling the world and getting thousands of people, musicians and non-musicians alike, to sing in his audience choirs.
Live at On Air Fest, this conversation, catches Jacob between projects. Last year he released The Light for Days, a comparatively minimalist collection of songs written on his special five-string guitar, a quiet turn after the massive Djesse quadrilogy, which featured over 50 collaborators from Herbie Hancock to Anoushka Shankar and wove hundreds of thousands of audience choir voices into the recordings.
Given that Jacob is always improvising with the best collaborators, Charlie wanted one of his own own. Five minutes before the show, Charlie spotted Sam Sanders, co-host of Vibe Check and host of the Sam Sanders Show on KCRW, and asked him onstage. Sam's a musician and one of the great interviewers, and he showed how improvising in conversation is just as essential as it is in music.
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The dance floor is where Harry Styles does his therapy, and this album is the session notes. Four years after Harry's House, Styles returns with Kiss All the Time, Disco Occasionally, a record built from minimal ingredients: live drums, Moog bass, nylon guitar, and synth sequences that stretch across entire songs without a drop in sight. This is Styles' anti-drop album. Where classic disco era dance celebrated collective joy, Styles uses the dance floor as a stage for self-examination.
Links: Newsletter, YouTubeSongs discussed:
Harry Styles – "Aperture"
Ice Spice – "In Ha Mood"
PinkPantheress – "Boy's a Liar"
Zara Larsson – "Midnight Sun"
LCD Soundsystem – "Dance Yrself Clean"
LCD Soundsystem – "Someone Great"
LCD Soundsystem – "Oh Baby"
Harry Styles – "Pop"
Harry Styles – "Sign of the Times"
David Bowie – "Space Oddity"
Elton John – "Rocket Man"
Harry Styles – "Dance No More"
Chic – "Good Times"
Stevie Nicks – "Edge of Seventeen"
Simon & Garfunkel – "Keep the Customer Satisfied"
Paul Simon – "You Can Call Me Al"
Harry Styles – "Carla's Song"
Paul Simon – "Kathy's Song"
Simon & Garfunkel – "Bridge Over Troubled Water"
Harry Styles – "Are You Listening Yet?"
DJO – "Basic Being Basic"
Harry Styles – "Season Two, Weight Loss"
Sons of Kemet – "Play Mas"
Harry Styles – "Coming Up Roses"
Harry Styles – "American Girls"
LCD Soundsystem – "American Scum"
LCD Soundsystem – "Drunk Girls"
Harry Styles – "As It Was"
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Bruno Mars is back with a new album called The Romantic, his first solo release since 2016’s 24k Magic. At first listen, the lead single, “I Just Might,” sounds like an outtake from 2021’s collaborative album with Anderson Paak, the Philly soul-inspired An Evening with Silk Sonic. Listen closer though and another element emerges: a fast-paced conga drum line.
The rest of Mars’s nine-track confection chases that Latin influence. This is not just another retread of 70s funk and soul. In fact, The Romantic makes the case that Mars is pop’s great counter-programmer, finding styles of the past that no one else has yet mined.
Charlie and Nate break down all the new territory covered by Mars, from Latin boleros to Cuban cha chas, Nuyorican boogaloo to a mariachi “My Way.” The results may not change your mind about Mars, but they might make you appreciate the finer points of what is sure to be an omnipresent new release.
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
Songs discussed:
Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars - Die With A Smile
ROSÉ, Bruno Mars - APT.
Bruno Mars - Risk It All
Eydie Gormé, Los Panchos - Sabor a Mí
Frank Sinatra - My Way
Bruno Mars - Cha Cha Cha
JUVENILE, Soulja Slim - Slow Motion
Pete Rodriguez - I Like It Like That
Cardi B, Bad Bunny, J Balvin - I Like It
Young-Holt Unlimited - Soulful Strut
Bruno Mars - I Just Might
Redbone - Come and Get Your Love
Leo Sayer - You Make Me Feel Like Dancing
Junior Senior - Move Your Feet
Bruno Mars - God Was Showing Off
Billy Paul - Me and Mrs. Jones
Bruno Mars - Why You Wanna Fight?
Bruno Mars - On My Soul
Curtis Mayfield - Move on Up
Bruno Mars - Something Serious
Willie Bobo - Evil Ways
Santana - Evil Ways
Santana - Oye Como Va
Tito Puente - Oye Cómo Va
Bruno Mars - Nothing Left
Bruno Mars - Dance With Me
Stephen Sanchez - Until I Found You
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Emerald Fennell's new adaptation of Emily Brontë's 1847 gothic romance "Wuthering Heights" is the most talked-about film of the year. But for pop lovers, the soundtrack is the real event: Charli xcx, asked to write one song, ended up recording an entire album for the movie while in the middle of the BRAT tour.
If BRAT gave people permission to be messy on the dance floor, this score gives permission to be messy in your souls. But Charli isn't the first artist to channel "Wuthering Heights" into music. Line up her hyperpop strings and cavernous reverb against Kate Bush's winding harmonies, a Hollywood orchestral score from 1939, and Ryuichi Sakamoto's unsettled piano, and something surprising emerges: the most operatic, passionate, Wuthering Heights-obsessed recording of them all might belong to someone you'd never expect.Songs discussed:
Charli xcx “Everything is Romantic”
Charli xcx “Always Everywhere”
Charli xcx “House” (feat. John Cale)
Hans Zimmer “Inception score”
Charli xcx “Wall of Sound”
Ike & Tina Turner “River Deep, Mountain High”
Charli xcx “Chains of Love”
Charli xcx “Out of Myself”
Charli xcx “Funny Mouth” (co-written with Joe Curie)
Alfred Newman “Wuthering Heights score (1939)”
Ryuichi Sakamoto “Wuthering Heights score (1992)”
Kate Bush “Wuthering Heights”
Celine Dion “It’s All Coming Back to Me Now”
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It's the middle of award season, and Ryan Coogler's ode to the Black music canon Sinners has emerged as the Oscars frontrunner and the most nominated film in Academy Awards history. The love the movie has for the Delta blues is front and center, and begs the question: will the movie's legacy help bring the blues back into popular culture? There's already been a precedent for films reviving dead genres – think The Sting and its ragtime score, or O Brother Where Art Thou's relationship to bluegrass – and on this episode of Switched On Pop, Reanna and Nate talk with Vulture writer Fran Hoepfner about the times in which movie soundtracks have shifted the musical culture.
Read Fran's piece on movie scoring, The Death of the Classic Film Score, here.
Songs discussed:
Miles Caton – I Lied to You
Bee Gees – Stayin' Alive
Underworld – Born Slippy (Nuxx)
Marvin Hamlisch – The Entertainer
Wu-Tang Clan – Fast Shadow
Bee Gees – More Than A Woman
Whitney Houston – I Have Nothing
Harry McClintock – The Big Rock Candy Mountain
Alison Krauss – Down To The River To Pray
The Soggy Bottom Boys – I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow
*NSYNC – Bye Bye Bye
The Brian Setzer Orchestra – Jump Jive An' Wail
Cab Calloway – Minnie the Moocher
Royal Crown Revue – Hey Pachuco!
Caravan Palace – Lone Digger
Big Bad Voodoo Daddy – Go Daddy O
Squirrel Nut Zippers – Hell
Fergie, Q-Tip, GoonRock – A Little Party Never Killed Nobody
Lana Del Rey – Young And Beautiful
Max Richter – On the Nature of Daylight
Kavinsky – Nightcall
College, Electric Youth – A Real Hero
M83 – Midnight City
The Weeknd – Take My Breath
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A$AP Rocky’s latest album, Don’t Be Dumb, is a wild ride through a cacophony of sounds — punk, industrial, drum ‘n’ bass, indie rock, and of course, hip hop. But on one track, “Robbery,” he and the rising superstar Doechii sample the world of jazz, specifically Thelonious Monk’s 1955 cover of Duke Ellington’s “Caravan.” In the process, Rocky and Doechii don’t just loop and flow, they create a whole narrative of jazz age victors and villains inspired by the rhythms and harmonies of jazz greats. The result is a song, and album, that makes the case for why hip hop matters more than ever in 2026.
A$AP Rocky – ROBBERY (feat. Doechii)
A$AP Rocky – STOLE YA FLOW
A$AP Rocky – ORDER OF PROTECTION
A$AP Rocky – PLAYA
A$AP Rocky – STFU (feat. Slay Squad)
A$AP Rocky – AIR FORCE (BLACK DEMARCO)
A$AP Rocky – THE END (feat. will.i.am & Jessica Pratt)
Kendrick Lamar - For Free? - Interlude
Clairo - Sinking
Thelonious Monk - Caravan
A$AP Rocky - L$D
Lou Donaldson - Ode To Billie Joe
Thelonious Monk - Black And Tan Fantasy
Wu-Tang Clan - Shame On a N****
Duke Ellington, John Coltrane - My Little Brown Book
Ghostface Killah - Malcolm
Thundercat - Them Changes
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What makes Weird Al songs so indelible? Why is Bo Burnham more than just a comic? How do the biggest pop hits make us crack up in the middle of a somber ballad? Humor is always present in music, but we rarely confront it head on. Until now. With the help of Comedian Chris Duffy, author of the book Humor Me: How Laughing Can Make You More Connected, Present, and Happy, and a series of lyrical submission from our listeners, we try to answer the question once posed by Frank Zappa, once and for all: Does humor belong in music?
Songs discussed:
Sabrina Carpenter – ManchildMarcia Belsky – 100 TamponsBo Burnham – From God’s PerspectiveSnoop Dogg – Gin and JuiceThe Gourds – Gin and JuiceTaylor Swift – All Too Well (10 Minute Version)“Weird Al” Yankovic – Amish Paradise“Weird Al” Yankovic – My BolognaStevie Wonder – Pastime ParadiseCoolio – Gangsta’s ParadiseBo Burnham – That Funny FeelingBo Burnham – FaceTime With My MomElaine Stritch – Are You Having Any Fun?Barenaked Ladies – If I Had $1,000,000Kendrick Lamar – Not Like UsEminem – The Real Slim Shady2 Chainz – Birthday SongLil Jon – Snap Yo FingersOlivia Rodrigo – Get Him BackChappell Roan – CasualAudrey Hobert – I like to touch peopleAudrey Hobert – Bowling alleyJensen McRae – Immune
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The ultimate gauntlet of popular music is upon us once again: it's Grammy season, and this year, the competition is pretty tight across the board. Big ticket A-listers like Bad Bunny, Sabrina Carpenter, Kendrick Lamar, and Lady Gaga occupy three of the four big categories (Song, Record, and Album of the Year), while folks like Olivia Dean, Lola Young, Leon Thomas, and Addison Rae duke it out in Best New Artist.
On this episode of Switched on Pop, Charlie, Nate, and Reanna take a look at the "big four" categories, and stump for their respective frontrunners in order to predict who will be taking home a golden phonograph (or two).
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
Songs discussed:
Bad Bunny – DtMF
Lady Gaga – Abracadabra
Sabrina Carpenter – Manchild
Kendrick Lamar – squabble up
Olivia Dean – Nice To Each Other
Olivia Dean – Man I Need
Lola Young – Messy
Addison Rae – Headphones On
Addison Rae – New York
Addison Rae – Fame is a Gun
Kendrick Lamar, SZA – luther
Billie Eilish – WILDFLOWER
HUNTR/X – Golden
Chappell Roan – The Subway
Kendrick Lamar – tv off (feat. lefty gunplay)
Justin Bieber – ALL I CAN TAKE
Bad Bunny – NUEVAYoL
Bad Bunny – VOY A LLeVARTE PA PR
Bad Bunny – LO QUE LE PASÓ A HAWAii
Bad Bunny – LA MuDANZA
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Swedish pop star Robyn emerged as a phenomenon in the mid 1990s, an ingenue whose work with Max Martin presaged the R&B crossover hits of acts like Britney and the Backstreet Boys. Since her debut, she’s released a string of albums that have shaped the sound of dance music as we know it.
Now, Robyn is releasing her first new album in eight years, Sexistential, and she’s given us three singles made up of her signature combination of thumping bass and ethereal vocals, while innovating into new personal –and vulnerable — territory. With raps about IVF, references to Blondie, a return to her collaboration with Max Martin, and our introduction of “drum n grace” to the lexicon, this episode is manna for Robyn fans and tyros alike.
Stick around as we unveil a new feature, “Quick Hits,” a down-and-dirty carousel ride through the most interesting new releases, from ASAP Rocky to Zach Bryan.
Songs discussed:
Robyn – Dopamine
Robyn – Show Me Love
Charli XCX, Robyn, Yung Lean – 360 remix
Jamie XX, Robyn – Life
Robyn – Konichiwa Bitches
Blondie – Rapture
Robyn – Honey
Robyn – Missing U
Robyn – Call Your Girlfriend
Taio Cruz – Dynamite
Robyn – Play
Robyn – Talk to Me
Robyn – Do You Know (What It Takes)
Robyn – Sexistential
Andre 3000 – I Swear, I Really Wanted to Make a 'Rap' Album but This Is Literally the Way the Wind Blew Me This Time
Robyn – Cobrastyle
Robyn – Dancing On My Own
A$AP Rocky – PUNK ROCKY
Zach Bryan – Plastic Cigarette
David Byrne – Driver's License
Moonchild – Up From Here
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Two years ago, Audrey Hobert had never written a song. She was a staff writer on a Nickelodeon series and had recently moved in with her childhood friend Gracie Abrams in Los Angeles. About six months later, a phrase spoken by a heartbroken acquaintance caught their attention; Hobert and Abrams sang it back to each other and wrote a complete song that night. Within the following year, Hobert co-wrote songs including “I Love You, I’m Sorry” and “Risk” for Abrams’s number-two album The Secret of Us. When the television show she was working on was later canceled, Hobert made a hard pivot into her own music.
What happened was Who's the Clown, a debut album where every track came from Hobert's own pen. In this live conversation recorded at NYU Steinhardt's Music and Performing Arts Professions program at Chelsea Studios, Hobert traces her path from dance classes choreographed to One Direction to eight-hour writing sessions that yield two good lines on a lucky day. She explains why she can't write in front of anyone, why she refuses to repeat a chorus three times, and why the Steve Martin documentary made her open her album with the disarmingly strange declaration: "I like to touch people."
The conversation moves from craft to confession as Hobert reflects on what it means to finally be looked at, and whether the view from inside the spotlight is everything she'd imagined.
Subscribe to the Newsletter to play along with our annual bingo predictions (last episode)
SONGS DISCUSSED
Gracie Abrams "I Love You, I'm Sorry"
Gracie Abrams "That's So True"
Smash Mouth "All Star"
One Direction "Kiss You"
Audrey Hobert "Wet Hair"
Audrey Hobert "Chateau"
Audrey Hobert "I Like to Touch People"
Audrey Hobert "Sex in the City"
Audrey Hobert "Sue Me"
Audrey Hobert "Bowling Alley"
Semisonic "Closing Time"
Audrey Hobert "Silver Jubilee"
Audrey Hobert "Don't Go Back to His Ass"
Audrey Hobert "Shooting Star"
Black Eyed Peas "I Gotta Feeling"
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It’s a brand new year, and what better way to ring it in than with the second annual Switched On Pop bingo? Like last year, Charlie, Nate, and Reanna polish their crystal balls and play Popstradamus, each throwing out eight outlandish pop predictions for the coming months. This time, there’s piano ballads, cover songs, and what Charlie calls the impending “death of auto-tune.”
Get your own bingo card to play along through our Newsletter!
Find us on YouTube!
Songs discussed:
The Prodigy – Firestarter
The Chemical Brothers – Block Rockin’ Beats
Basement Jaxx – Jump ’N Shout
Fatboy Slim – The Rockafeller Skank
Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars – Die With A Smile
Benson Boone – Beautiful Things
Post Malone, Ozzy Osbourne, Travis Scott – Take What You Want
LCD Soundsystem – Losing My Edge
Anamanaguchi, Hatsune Miku – Miku
Crazy Frog – Axel F
Hampton The Hamster – Hampsters Get the Blues
K/DA – POP/STARS
Madison Beer – make you mine
Forrest Frank – YOUR WAY’S BETTER
Tate McRae – Sports car
Tata Taktumi, Timbaland – Pulse x Glitch
PARTYNEXTDOOR, Drake, Yebba – DIE TRYING
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones – The Impression That I Get
Maddox Batson – Tears In The River
JAY-Z – D.O.A. (Death Of Autotune)
Adele – Someone Like You
Bruno Mars – When I Was Your Man
Lewis Capaldi – Someone You Loved
Rihanna, Mikky Ekko – Stay
Baauer – Harlem Shake
Billie Eilish – bury a friend
This Is Lorelei, MJ Lenderman – Dancing in the Club – MJ Lenderman Version
WITCH – Once In A Lifetime
MOLIY, Shenseea, Silent Addy, Skillibeng – Shake It To The Max (FLY) – Remix
Geese – Bow Down
Turnstile – LOOK OUT FOR ME
Rebecca Black – Sugar Water Cyanide
Bad Bunny – DtMF
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A scientist asked people to sit in a silent room for 15 minutes. Almost half of them decided to give themselves a painful electric shock instead. What is it about our brains that makes our relationship with silence so strange? And should we learn how to listen to it?
This is the third episode of the four-part Unexplainable series, The Sound Barrier.
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Every Christmas season, pop stars far and wide throw their Santa hats into the ring to see who has the next "All I Want for Christmas Is You," and this year is no exception. It's a yearly tradition on Switched On Pop to explore the deluge of holiday hits, and 2025 sees formidable entries to the canon from folks like Kylie Minogue, Leon Bridges, and Willie Nelson.
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
Songs discussed:
Ariana Grande – Santa Tell Me
Kelly Clarkson – Underneath the Tree
Cher – Christmas Is Here
Cher – Believe
Kylie Minogue – Hot in December
Zach Top – For You For Christmas
Willie Nelson – Christmas Love Song
Mickey Guyton – Sugar Cookie
Meghan Trainor – Gifts For Me
The Ronettes – Sleigh Ride
Gwen Stefani – Hot Cocoa
Train – Let's Stay in Tonight
Brenda Lee – Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree
Leon Bridges, Norah Jones – This Christmas I'm Coming Home
Elysia Biro – The Christmas Song
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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.
Links: Newsletter, YouTube
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
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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"
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices


























😂
💃🕺🪩
🎄
🎶
If the Disney curse is to become hugely successful then have that success and relevance taper off, I think you need to redefine the word curse.
So disappointed with 15 min of coverage
So interesting!
🎧
🎧
🤘🏼
Big pharma commercials on shows that have NOTHING to do with medicine are gross and annoying. 🤬
AOTY discussion has some hot takes, we'll see how it shakes out.
🇵🇷🎶
Hrishikesh Hirway AND Dallas Taylor weigh in!?! What a plethora of guests on this one!
Most sequels are subpar to their original counterparts.
Never knew the history of this Christmas classic.
Love the breadth of genres and time periods Switched on Pop covers.This episode is a quintessential example of their work- the deep dive on an iconic group, and the introduction to a project (and artists) to discover.
Great tie in to Halloween 🎃
Some great examples of this genre! 🎶
Love being introduced to artists I don't know yet. I'm glad Porter is feeling open to exploring different genres.