
Articles
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5 days ago |
concertmonkey.be | Jeffrey T. Lewis
Indie rock/folk singer-songwriter and comic book artist Jeffrey Lewis began recording homemade cassette tapes in his hometown of New York City in 1998. His unusual, word-rich songs quickly gained critical acclaim and led to him signing with Rough Trade Records in 2001 (home to The Smiths, The Strokes, etc.). Several albums and comic books later, Jeffrey still lives in New York and has played countless shows around the world, both solo and with members of his band. The setlist is always a surprise.
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4 weeks ago |
talkhouse.com | Jeffrey T. Lewis
Jeffrey Lewis is a songwriter and comic book artist from the Lower East Side; Joanna Sternberg is a songwriter and artist from Hell’s Kitchen. Jeffrey’s new record, The EVEN MORE Freewheelin’ Jeffrey Lewis, just came out last week (via Don Giovanni), so to celebrate, the two artists got on the phone to catch up about it, and much more. — Annie Fell, Editor-in-chief, Talkhouse MusicJeffrey Lewis: What were your early recording experiences like?
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Oct 10, 2024 |
wsj.com | Jeffrey T. Lewis
The central banks of most major economies are lowering or preparing to lower interest rates, but two are moving in the opposite direction. Policymakers in Japan and Brazil have already raised rates this year and have indicated that more hikes are likely to come. Both central banks see good reasons to play the maverick: Their economies are growing at a decent pace and workers are getting healthy wage increases, raising concerns about upward pressure on consumer prices.
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Sep 27, 2024 |
wsj.com | Jeffrey T. Lewis
The Federal Reserve’s big rate cut last week gave some investors whiplash as they absorbed the kind of move often seen when the U.S. was facing an economic emergency. And if inflation starts to heat up again, more whiplash could be on the way. The decision to go big has many expecting further such moves by the Fed, and switching to a smaller cut or making none at all might be seen as a tacit, and worrisome, admission that the Fed got it wrong this time around.
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Nov 1, 2023 |
wsj.com | Jeffrey T. Lewis |Samantha Pearson
Nov. 1, 2023 7:29 pm ET|WSJ ProSÃO PAULO—The Central Bank of Brazil cut its benchmark lending rate by half a percentage point, as expected, and said it expects to make more cuts of the same size at coming meetings. The bank’s monetary policy committee, or Copom, cut the key Selic rate to 12.25% on Wednesday. It was the third consecutive meeting with a rate cut, leaving the Selic at the lowest level since May 2022. Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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With global corporations willing to pay top dollar to offset their pollution, companies are selling carbon credits to finance the expensive restoration of Brazil’s rainforest https://t.co/ysNR2GHQOm via @WSJ

“He sits on his throne with his sword in one hand and a beer in the other and leaves me in peace,” says the wife of the Brazilian man who declared himself king. https://t.co/VtRNF8VU7I via @WSJ

Brazil is on track to create a regulated carbon market ahead of next month’s United Nations climate action summit https://t.co/wigu4qEZCx via @WSJ