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Boasting a seismic legacy on the world of dub, Jamaican producer Lee 'Scratch' Perry wryly draped himself in a mythos ...
About Today' by The National, why its one of the saddest songs in their discography, and the hopeful note that comes from its ...
Across a near 45-year back-catalogue of pioneering electronic pop, we explore Basildon synth stalwarts Depeche Mode's most ...
Motörhead don’t fit into any category, really,” frontman Lemmy Kilmister once declared. “We’re a rock ‘n’ roll band, which no ...
Robert De Niro isn't usually associated with 1960s pop icons, but it turns out that he was instrumental in creating one of ...
No actor with more than a few credits to their name can make it out of Hollywood unscathed, even Audrey Hepburn.
Rock and roll in the 2000s might have been experiencing a strange development, but there were people who took everything a song should be and did the opposite.
You can argue that with their far-reaching progressive inventiveness, Rush were a band built on bravery, but one song has always blown the bassist away.
Despite exploring a myriad of styles and becoming MTV heavyweights in the 1980s, Talking Heads are forever associated with 1970s' New York punk movement.
Bob Dylan remains as elusive as ever, and therefore it's tricky pinning down what his favourite song of his is, but this ...
First appearing on 1966's 'Revolver', 'Yellow Submarine' is one of just eleven songs in The Beatles catalogue where Ringo Starr took on lead vocals.
There isn't much Mark Wahlberg won't try his hand at, but he has categorically removed himself from ever making this type of ...