Joan Baez’s new documentary rips away the halo to reveal trauma, activism, aging and art – and why the Queen of Folk still refuses to go quietly.
Browsing: Music
In a fiery 1984 interview, Rory Gallagher tore into lazy rock guitar, synth worship and click‑track rhythm. His rant still sounds like a blueprint for better playing.
Inside the infamous 1969 Miami concert where Jim Morrison supposedly bared it all, the trial that followed, and the posthumous pardon.
In 1957 the Everly Brothers’ seemingly innocent hit “Wake Up Little Susie” was too hot for Boston. Here is how a teen date song sparked a moral panic.
Inside the strange story of Echo & The Bunnymen’s “The Killing Moon” – from a lyric McCulloch swears came from God to Russian folk trips, studio drama and Donnie Darko.
From Born in the U.S.A. to anti-Trump tirades, Bruce Springsteen has turned heartland rock into a long-running love affair with left wing politics.
From Idol ballads to House bids, how Clay Aiken’s campaigns, activism and Trump feuds reveal a cautious but committed brand of Southern liberal politics.
How The Clash’s 1979 double album ‘London Calling’ turned punk inside out, reinvented rock, and left its mark on guitars, basses and politics for generations.
In 1986 Stevie Ray Vaughan collapsed on tour in Germany. Warned he had weeks to live, he got sober and turned In Step into a fierce recovery manifesto.
For decades, Ray Burton turned his son’s royalties from Metallica’s first three albums into scholarships at Castro Valley High. Here is the true story.









