From Tres Hombres to Eliminator: the riffs, beards, and business smarts that made ZZ Top an American rock institution.
Browsing: Music
From sweaty mod clubs to “My Generation,” The Who’s mid-60s run forged a louder, smarter kind of rebellion.
400,000+ people, mud, music, and myth: how Woodstock 1969 became rock’s defining weekend and a blueprint for festivals ever since.
Melodic, high-in-the-mix, and relentlessly propulsive: how Simon Gallup’s basslines became The Cure’s emotional engine.
Warren Haynes says the real upgrade is slowing down. Here’s how BB King, Albert King and rock’s loudest heroes taught him to mean every note.
Jimi Hendrix said he was influenced by everything at once. Here’s what that really means and how to turn chaos into a personal sound.
Lanie’s Fleetwood Mac “Dreams” cover exploded online and drew Stevie Nicks comparisons. Here’s what really makes it work and what artists can learn.
Cameron Crowe’s Singles is a sweet rom-com and a Seattle music time capsule, with band cameos and a soundtrack that still hits hard.
The wild two-day studio gamble that made Dylan’s loudest pivot: a blues ace told to stop bending strings, and a guitarist who stole the organ bench.
Ronnie Van Zant turned working-class Jacksonville grit into rock scripture. Here’s how his voice, songs, and tragedy shaped Southern rock forever.









