Inside the 1969 Apple Corps rooftop concert: setlist, gear, police drama, why it mattered, and how Get Back reshaped what we thought we saw.
Browsing: 1960s rock
Inside the only Denver Pop Festival: a powerhouse lineup, fan-run production, and the McIntosh amps that helped Hendrix fill Mile High.
A brutal A&R no, a manager who wouldn’t quit, and a Decca “pay-to-produce” twist. Here’s what’s fact, what’s folklore, and why it mattered.
Inside W. Eugene Smith’s 1965 Dylan session photos – and how they frame the split-second when folk purity met electric ambition.
Jeff Beck’s 1966 super-session spawned a rock classic – and a credit mystery: did Eric Clapton really play on “Beck’s Bolero”?
The Guess Who name began as a “mystery band” stunt. Here’s how the tag sold records, filled halls, and became the brand by 1966.
From sweaty mod clubs to “My Generation,” The Who’s mid-60s run forged a louder, smarter kind of rebellion.
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.
Released 24 Feb 1968, Fleetwood Mac’s debut hit No.4 in the UK and introduced Peter Green’s radical idea: tone and feel beat speed.
Before hashtags, fans spray-painted ‘Clapton Is God’ on Underground walls. Here’s how the slogan spread and why his blues tone felt divine.









