![The English band's new album, <em>Sun Structures</em>, draws on the past while still sounding fresh. The English band's new album, <em>Sun Structures</em>, draws on the past while still sounding fresh.](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/dentonfracking/20141106192732im_/http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2014/02/10/temples_byjamesloveday-79384fa320d188dfa1db91756bf5a5e4fabc8b54-s3-c15.jpg)
Temples.James Loveday/Courtesy of the artisthide caption
Temples.James Loveday/Courtesy of the artisthide caption
Lake Street Dive.Jarrod McCabe/Courtesy of the artisthide caption
Alabama Shakes' members infuse rock 'n' roll with soul, blues and country.Autumn de Wildehide caption
J Mascis. Justin Lapriore/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Field Report's Christopher Porterfield. Brittany Salerno/XPN hide caption
Jungle Fire. Duran Castro/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Paolo Nutini. Shamil Tanna/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
James Williamson. Tanya Alexis/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Machito, Jose Mangual and Carlos Vidal in 1947. William Gottlieb/Library Of Congress hide caption
The Barr Brothers. John Londono/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Jukebox The Ghost. Eric Ryan Anderson/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
The Stray Birds. Doug Seymour/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
The Budos Band. Justin Borucki/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Sam Amidon (right) & Bill Frisell. Kelsey Stanger/XPN hide caption
Black Prairie. Jason Quigley/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Justin Townes Earle performs live at WXPN in Philadelphia. Brittany Salerno/WXPN hide caption
Divine, in John Waters' 1972 film Pink Flamingos. Divine Heirs LLC hide caption