Capitol Records took advantage of a pair of very time-specific trends with “The Beatles Movie Medley”: A surge in home-video viewing and the brief chart
Bill Fay, the cult British singer-songwriter who experienced a late-in-life career revival, has died, according to a statement from his label, Dead Oceans. “Bill was
While most of AC/DC’s catalog was inspired by the holy trinity of booze, women and rock, one of their biggest hits had a far unlikelier
For most of the 90s, The Roots were the best-kept secret in hip-hop. They’d already amassed a cult following by honing their skills on the
45 Years Ago: Aerosmith Keep Riding High on ‘Back in the Saddle’
Jerry Butler, the decorated soul singer who became a senior politician in his adopted home state of Illinois, died at his Chicago home on February
How AC/DC Channeled Record Label Anger Into ‘Dog Eat Dog’
The year of 1969 went into the history of British blues-rock favorites Ten Years After as the one in which they broke through in America
Songwriter Harlan Howard once described country music as “three chords and the truth.” Stevie Nicks embraced this ideology to create one of Fleetwood Mac’s best-known songs,
MJ Lenderman is the subject of a new profile in GQ. And, in the article, written by longtime Pitchfork contributor Grayson Haver Currin, it’s revealed
