Sault, the elusive UK collective, have released a new surprise album. Titled Acts of Faith, their 11th LP is out now via Forever Living Originals

By 1972, the Byrds had pretty much become a vehicle for Roger McGuinn’s solo recordings. The original quintet began falling apart in 1966 after the

Gustav Mahler (7 July 1860 – 18 May 1911) is undoubtedly one of the most elusive, controversial phenomenons of the early twentieth century. There’s no

The year is 1972. You’re a high-level employee at the British record company Charisma. One of the acts on your roster, the prog rock quintet

Blur drummer Dave Rowntree has failed in his bid to become a member of the United Kingdom’s parliament. Rowntree stood for the centrist Labour Party

Despite being one of rock’s most extravagant individuals, David Bowie could be equally invisible. The ’00s made that clear. He had left music behind after

Music lovers will always yearn to retreat to an open field with their favorite band – and 100,000 other people. But how did the modern

Genesis had been flirting with the mainstream for years with the psych-pop singalong of “I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe),” the crystalline chorus of

Angel Marcloid’s latest as Fire-Toolz—one of her many aliases—collects 14 antsy compositions recorded over the past four years, during which time she sallied deeper into

Quiet Riot singer Kevin DuBrow stood at the lip of the Glen Helen Regional Park stage on May 29, 1983, and delivered a simple exhortation to the roughly 300,000 people sprawled out