Inside Bret Michaels’ unlikely path from small-town diabetic kid to hairsprayed ringmaster of Poison and one of glam metal’s most enduring frontmen.
How Jack Bruce went from Cream’s volatile heartbeat to a genre-hopping solo maverick whose bass lines rewrote the rules of rock.
In 1975 the Eagles jumped from country-rock hopefuls to stadium kings. Inside One of These Nights, the brutal tour, and the beer that ended the original band.
From a million-selling debut to Dylan’s poem and fashion domination, Françoise Hardy turned quiet melancholy into global pop power.
Decades before American Horror Story, Stevie Nicks was dodging stalkers and ditching black dresses to prove she wasn’t a witch. Here’s how she took the myth back.
She sounded gentle, but her 1970s run was a masterclass in crossover pop-country. Key hits, big myths, and musician lessons from Anne Murray.
Keith Richards on meeting Howlin’ Wolf, chasing Robert Johnson’s ghost, and how those bluesmen quietly built the Rolling Stones.
From MTV chaos to chart-topping duets and hard health battles, Ozzy and Kelly’s bond stayed loud, loyal, and surprisingly tender.
Alan Lomax recorded Muddy Waters at Stovall in 1941-42. One playback, $20, and a jukebox helped ignite Chicago blues (and rock).
How a cheap paperback, a ten-minute burst of inspiration and exorcism-level live shows turned Stevie Nicks’ “Rhiannon” into one of rock’s most haunting classics.









