Stephen Thompson

Stephen Thompson is an editor and reviewer for NPR Music, where he curates Song of the Day, fusses over the placement of commas and appears as a frequent panelist on the podcasts All Songs Considered and Pop Culture Happy Hour. In 2008, he and Bob Boilen created the weekly NPR Music video series Tiny Desk Concerts, in which musicians perform at Boilen's desk.

In 1993, Thompson founded The Onion's entertainment section, The A.V. Club, which he edited until December 2004. In the years since, he has provided music-themed commentaries for the NPR programs Weekend Edition Sunday, Weekend All Things Considered and Morning Edition, on which he earned the distinction of becoming the only member of the NPR Music staff ever to sing on an NPR newsmagazine. (Later, the magic of AutoTune transformed him from a 12th-rate David Archuleta into a fourth-rate Cher.) Thompson's entertainment writing has also run in Paste magazine, The Washington Post and The London Guardian.

During his tenure at The Onion, Thompson edited the 2002 book The Tenacity of the Cockroach: Conversations with Entertainment's Most Enduring Outsiders (Crown) and copy-edited six best-selling comedy books. While there, he also coached The Onion's softball team to a sizzling 21-42 record, and was once outscored 72-0 in a span of 10 innings. Later in life, Thompson redeemed himself by teaming up with the small gaggle of fleet-footed twentysomethings who won the 2008 NPR Relay Race, a triumph he documents in a hard-hitting essay for the forthcoming anthology This Is NPR: The First Forty Years (Chronicle).

A 1994 graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Thompson now lives in Silver Spring, Md., with his two children and a Frogger machine. His hobbies include watching reality television without shame, eating Pringles until his hand has involuntarily twisted itself into a gnarled claw, using the size of his Twitter following to assess his self-worth, touting the immutable moral superiority of the Green Bay Packers and maintaining a fierce rivalry with all Midwestern states other than Wisconsin.

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Best Music Of 2012
12:55 pm
Wed December 12, 2012

Stephen Thompson's Top 10 Albums Of 2012

Originally published on Wed December 12, 2012 1:18 pm

The caveats practically write themselves at this point: Top 10 lists are subjective and inherently insufficient to sum up any given year in music. They capture the opinions of one person and one person only — think "favorite," not "best" — and are bound to reflect not only individual tastes, but also individual experiences over the course of a given year.

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Tiny Desk Concerts
2:03 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Lyle Lovett: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit Ryan Smith / NPR
Lyle Lovett performs a Tiny Desk Concert on Nov. 13, 2012.

Originally published on Mon December 10, 2012 10:15 pm

For all of Lyle Lovett's considerable artistic gifts — a distinctive voice, easygoing charisma, rare talent for wordplay — his greatest attribute may be the way he radiates infectious calm. He's a one-time tabloid fixture who writes wry, bittersweet songs of longing, but Lovett in person is like a vortex into which stress and drama disappear.

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Tiny Desk Concerts
2:03 pm
Thu December 6, 2012

Anaïs Mitchell: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit Lauren Rock / NPR
Anais Mitchell performs a Tiny Desk Concert on Oct. 23, 2012.

Originally published on Thu December 6, 2012 2:32 pm

Her voice is soft and sweet, her guitar work deft and evocative, but Anaïs Mitchell is a songwriting storyteller first and foremost. Robbed of a gift for melody and poetry, Mitchell would probably (and may yet) write some tremendous novels.

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Tiny Desk Concerts
2:03 pm
Mon November 26, 2012

Martha Wainwright: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit Ryan Smith / Ryan Smith/NPR
Martha Wainwright performs a Tiny Desk Concert on Oct. 15, 2012.

Originally published on Tue November 27, 2012 4:37 pm

Martha Wainwright's songs examine uncomfortable moments and life experiences gone wrong, but as she acknowledges in between songs at this Tiny Desk Concert, she often has to fudge her own life story to make the details more unsettling. ("Take everything with a grain of salt," she says, "except the good stuff.") What she does is the opposite of sugarcoating: She roughs up life's smooth spots, then digs her fingertips into the cracks that form.

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All Songs Considered
11:32 am
Wed November 21, 2012

We Get Mail: How Much Music Is Too Much Music?

Credit passetti / via Flickr
With so much new music, who has time to listen to this? And with all this old music, who has time to listen to the new stuff?

Originally published on Mon November 26, 2012 2:37 pm

Tiny Desk Concerts
2:03 pm
Mon November 19, 2012

Ben Gibbard: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit Lauren Rock / NPR
Benjamin Gibbard performs a Tiny Desk Concert at the NPR Music offices on Nov. 8, 2012.

Originally published on Mon November 19, 2012 3:17 pm

Ben Gibbard has spent so much time at the head of various bands — Death Cab for Cutie, The Postal Service, All-Time Quarterback — that it's easy to forget how well his sweetly brainy songs work in a solo acoustic setting. His melodies are sturdy enough to withstand skeletal arrangements, and though his persona is unassuming by nature, he remains a charismatic and charming live performer.

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All Songs Considered
11:49 am
Wed November 14, 2012

We Get Mail: What To Enjoy And How To Enjoy It

Credit Vanessa Heins / Courtesy of the artist
Don't dare besmirch the good name of Carly Rae Jepsen.

Originally published on Wed November 14, 2012 5:12 pm

All Songs Considered
6:01 pm
Mon November 12, 2012

Song Premiere: Ra Ra Riot, 'Beta Love'

Originally published on Tue November 13, 2012 10:46 am

Ra Ra Riot has experienced constant change in its six-year existence, from commercial success and an aborted label deal to the 2007 death of drummer John Pike. But the band's sound has never shifted as radically as it does on its new album, Beta Love, which comes out Jan. 22. With the departure of cellist Alexandra Lawn — there's that constant change again — Ra Ra Riot shifts gears once more, dialing down the string arrangements in favor of a more synth-driven sound.

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Field Recordings
1:17 pm
Thu November 8, 2012

The Civil Wars: A Song Of Loyalty, Before It's Tested

Credit Mito Habe-Evans / NPR/KEXP

Joy Williams and John Paul White call their Grammy-winning band The Civil Wars, but the two have built a gentle, harmony-rich folk-pop sound in which warm chemistry more than counteracts the tension under the music's surface. Though not a couple themselves — each is married, and Williams just had a baby — they convey many hallmarks of a loving union, particularly in the way she stares at him sweetly as they sing.

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All Songs Considered
1:46 pm
Wed November 7, 2012

We Get Mail: How To Make A Mixtape Without Looking Like A Creeper

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Artwork for Every Breathe You Take: The Singles by The Police.

Originally published on Wed November 7, 2012 7:15 pm

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