In 1982, SRV’s loud Montreux set split the room. Backstage, Bowie and Jackson Browne heard a future legend and changed his path.
In 1981, Adam and the Ants ruled the UK album chart for 10 weeks. Here’s how ‘Kings of the Wild Frontier’ rewired pop, punk, and style.
Deep Purple’s Mark II secret weapon was not just guitar heroics-it was Lord’s raging Hammond trading blows with Gillan’s voice.
Why “Thank God I Do” shot to #1 and why its quiet, stubborn hope is landing with listeners who feel lost, tired, or spiritually numb.
From 60s session ace to Led Zeppelin mastermind, Jimmy Page reshaped guitar tone, stage volume, and rock mythology.
Released 24 Feb 1968, Fleetwood Mac’s debut hit No.4 in the UK and introduced Peter Green’s radical idea: tone and feel beat speed.
Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham own the masters – so why is ‘Buckingham Nicks’ still missing from CD, vinyl and streaming?
From Esquire to Broadcaster to Telecaster: the blunt, bolt-on solid-body that killed feedback, cut costs, and reshaped modern guitar tone.
How “I Should Be So Lucky” hit No.1 and how Kylie outgrew the SAW hit factory, reshaping her sound and image through the early 90s.
In 1968 Pink Floyd hit Amsterdam amid Syd Barrett fallout, new sonic experiments, and a live show culture built for risk.









