Sasha Frere-Jones
Sasha Frere-Jones is a musician and writer who was born and raised in Brooklyn. He founded Ui in 1990; the band toured and recorded until 2010. Frere-Jones was the pop critic of the New Yorker from March 2004 to December 2014 and was anthologized six times in Da Capo’s Best Music Writing series. He left The Times in 2016.
Latest From This Author
The Necks have made few mistakes in the last 30 years.
April 1, 2016
On Tuesday, Malik Isaac Taylor, an original member of the hip-hop group A Tribe Called Quest and professionally known as Phife Dawg, died.
March 23, 2016
I was 7 years old the first time I read the word “producer” on an album.
March 10, 2016
Is Maggie Nelson a poet, a critic, or a memoirist?
March 8, 2016
“The Old Kanye,” as even Kanye West refers to himself, was like the Robert Moses of hip-hop, tearing apart neighborhoods, installing roads and requiring the general population to follow his rules.
Feb. 12, 2016
It feels odd to congratulate an awards ceremony that is already an exercise in self-congratulation.
Feb. 12, 2016
In summer 2014, four writers and one record collector were sitting in a room in Faber, Va.
Jan. 28, 2016
“Teenage Jesus and the Jerks: Live 1977-1979” contains 29 songs recorded in the mid-’70s.
Jan. 23, 2016
He was just like us, David Bowie. Sounds wrong, doesn’t it?
Jan. 12, 2016
Losing David Bowie isn’t like losing a favorite musician or losing a parent. I’ve experienced both.
Jan. 11, 2016