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With synthesiser technology becoming commercially available by the late 1960s, The Beatles embraced its electronic tones for some of their most acclaimed work.
The rest of the Beatles pushed back, saying that the bluesy song was too slow to be a single. "We recorded the song twice.
As such, when John Lennon tried to call any Beatles song “pure,” you must take it with a pinch of salt. However, that’s ...
Chinmaya Dunster, who died of cancer in February 2025, was a renowned sarod player whose compositions incorporate elements of ...
Phish opened a 3-night run at Hollywood Bowl, the final stop on the band's whirlwind West Coast spring tour, with a brilliant "Light" jam.
MSNBC’s new docuseries 'David Frost Vs' revisits the Beatles' pivotal 1967 interviews, where John Lennon and George Harrison ...
Clarivate’s Robert Reading examines the history of trademarks becoming increasingly important in the music industry.
The RuPaul's Drag Race star will be at Joe's Pub on April 27 and June 8 with a new show, 50 WAYS TO LEAVE YOUR LOVER. Read a ...
A first-call keyboardist, he worked with Elvis Presley and Dolly Parton, helped make Muscle Shoals a recording hub, and had a ...
The Beatles made some of their best music in the second half of the 1960s. A friend of the band said they weren't focused on their songs.
John Lennon hated a few Beatles songs, including many that he wrote himself. Here's why he was wrong at times about those very tracks.
Even then, at just 22, the son of Chris Eubank had established himself as his own man. His thoughts were his own, and he cared for nobody else’s. His hands were for punching, not shaking. “If I give ...