From swing-era powerhouse to Verve icon and late-career survivor, Ella Fitzgerald’s five career eras show how greatness adapts (and sometimes refuses to).
Browsing: Music
Derek Trucks’ switch to open E and fingers-only slide is a masterclass in ditching nostalgia while keeping deep roots in the Allman tradition.
Lightnin’ Hopkins bent time, keys, and lyrics to his will. Here’s how his boozy grooves, sharp wit, and storytelling changed Texas blues.
How Peter, Paul & Mary turned coffeehouse folk into chart-topping pop, powered by Seeger songs, Dylan connections, and civil-rights urgency.
Elvis and his mother Gladys shared a fierce bond. Here’s how it fueled his rise, fed his anxieties, and changed his music after her death.
In 1984 Metallica escaped to Copenhagen, wrote bigger songs, bent thrash rules, and let Cliff Burton’s musical brain widen the band’s future.
After Lexi’s birth, David Bowie chose a quieter New York life with Iman. Here’s how they kept it private and why it mattered.
Winehouse treated her voice like an instrument: jazz phrasing, nightly reinvention, and a fearless refusal to “sing it the same.”
Melvins’ Buzz Osborne argues Badmotorfinger is the smartest “grunge” record: odd meters, buried complexity, and songs that still hit hard.
Duane Allman’s voice-like slide, fearless phrasing, and studio hustle reshaped Southern rock, blues, and jam culture long after 1971.









