After nonstop ’70s touring, ZZ Top disappeared, then rebooted with Eliminator: drum machines, synth sheen, and videos that conquered MTV.
Browsing: Music
Roger Hodgson left Supertramp in 1983. Here’s why it happened, what the band lost, and how their sound and legacy shifted afterward.
How “Borderline” was written, recorded, and sold to the world – plus the video, the chart leap, and why its impact still echoes in pop.
After the Montreux casino burned, Deep Purple recorded Machine Head in a closed hotel with a mobile studio, battling noise, nerves, and bad luck.
Fans have whispered for decades. Here’s what credible sources say (and don’t say) about David Lee Roth and MTV VJ Martha Quinn.
In 1967 San Francisco, Grace Slick and Janis Joplin became the loudest proof that rock’s revolution had teeth.
Why Monk’s “unplayable” charts became playable fast – and what his son’s stories reveal about jazz, money, and mentorship.
From Glasgow folk songs to Cream’s high-voltage improvisations, Jack Bruce made the bass a lead voice and rewired rock’s ambitions.
Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode” is rock’s ultimate origin story: a riff, a myth, and a masterclass in guitar-driven ambition.
In 1985, Andy Warhol used a Commodore Amiga to paint Debbie Harry. Here’s what really happened, why it mattered, and what the pixels foretold.









