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Backpacker Found Alive in Australian Bush After 12 Days–Surviving a Major Mistake
Largest Black Hole Merger Ever Observed Detected by LIGO–a Universe-Shaking Event
‘Significant Milestone’ For Turbine That Uses the Tides to Create Energy Off Scottish Coast
1,500 Bikers Show Up to Escort Bullied Teen to Prom in Spectacular British Convoy: ‘I don’t feel alone anymore’
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Also, catch Brett on Alienating the Audience with Andrew Heaton
Squirrel Nut Zippers had the good fortune to make it to the big leagues at the same time the swing revival of the 1990s crested. Although the group’s roots stretched far beyond the Rat Pack — they were informed by New Orleans jazz, hot dance music, Harlem jazz, and other jumping music of prewar America — they nevertheless benefited from the lounge revival, which helped lift their 1996 album, Hot, and its accompanying single, “Hell,” into the Billboard charts. Squirrel Nut Zippers kept touring into the early 2000s, after which they went on hiatus. Leader Jimbo Mathus revived the group in 2008 for a live album but it wasn’t until 2018 that they released a new album, Beasts of Burgundy. The reconstituted band kept rolling into the next decade with 2020’s Lost Songs of Doc Souchon.