Bob Dylan said The Band’s “golden days” weren’t “The Weight,” but Motown covers like “Baby Don’t You Do It.” Here’s why that claim matters.
Browsing: live performance
On New Year’s 1982, ABBA played a low-key Stockholm TV performance that became their final live appearance as a group.
Buddy Guy’s raw interview reveals a blues philosophy built on proof, not praise. Here’s what it teaches about performance, feel, and Chicago grit.
Winehouse treated her voice like an instrument: jazz phrasing, nightly reinvention, and a fearless refusal to “sing it the same.”
Gregg Allman said the Allman Brothers once played 300 days a year. Inside the per diem misery, stage magic, and the live craft that built Southern rock.
David Lee Roth’s mid-song splits and wild acrobatics turned Van Halen gigs into spectacle. Here’s how the moves worked and why they mattered.
Inside the 2010 CMT Crossroads pairing that made “A Pirate Looks at Forty” feel like a singalong therapy session.
From Scotland to Australia, Angus Young built AC/DC’s riff empire with a Gibson SG, savage groove, and a stage persona that still shocks arenas awake.
When Eurythmics reunited for their Rock & Roll Hall of Fame moment, Lennox and Stewart proved the hits still hit – and the craft still shocks.
Tina Turner turned singing into full-contact performance. Here’s how her voice, moves, and message rewired rock, R&B, and pop.









