"It's almost a dying art form in that people cherry-pick songs and put them on playlists and so, I don't know that the listening audience really ever gets the sense of the full artistic statement," Sheryl Crow says. Dove Shore/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

Mary Louise Kelly
Thursday
Thursday
Real Disappearances Are The Premise For Laura Lippman's 'Lady In The Lake'
Monday
Jim Bridenstine became NASA administrator in April 2018. He says that before the space agency can send humans to Mars, it has to get them back to the moon. Olivia Falcigno/NPR hide caption
50 Years After Apollo 11 Moon Landing, NASA Sets Its Sights On Mars
Tuesday
How The Push For Renewable Energy Is Changing Southwest Georgia
Monday
An aerial view of the 52-megawatt solar farm built by Silicon Ranch in Hazlehurst, Ga. Ever cheaper and better solar technology, available land and lots of sunshine are driving demand for massive, utility-scale solar projects across the American Southeast. Silicon Ranch hide caption
How Georgia Became A Surprising Bright Spot In The U.S. Solar Industry
Wednesday
There's More To Look Forward To After Peaking Professionally
Monday
University Of Alabama Returns $21.5 Million To Hugh Culverhouse
Friday
Elliot Ackerman is also the author of the novels Dark at the Crossing and Waiting for Eden. He's pictured above during a TV taping in Milan in March 2016. Antonio Calanni/AP hide caption
'I Write To Understand What I Think': A Veteran Turns To Words After War
Tuesday
Kishi Bashi's Omoiyari, out May 31, is largely inspired by the artist's visit to ex-internment camps in America. Max Ritter/Courtesy of the artist hide caption
Kishi Bashi Uses The History Of Japanese Internment To Explore America Today
Monday
As Silence Looms For Rolling Thunder, A Vet Explains What It's Meant To Him
As Floodwaters Threaten To Wash Away WWII Sub, Crews Race To Sink It
Analysis: Voters Choose A New Direction For Europe's Future
As Asia Transforms, Abe Looks To Clarify U.S.-Japan Alliance In Trump Meetings
Veteran Tennis Stars Still Prove Le Creme De La Creme In Paris
Friday
Beanie Feldstein, left, and Kaitlyn Dever, play Molly and Amy, two star students who decide they need to cram four years of high school partying into one night in Booksmart. Annapurna Pictures hide caption