A look into Born Under Punches (The Heat Goes On) the opening track from the Talking Heads album Remain In Light and how its the band's most complex song.
So it’s a bold move for her to try a different musical role: one of the band. She even names the album after her new quartet, ...
Tasty Kings leader and guitarist Andrew Morse, who wrote all 10 of the record’s songs, isn’t well known. However, any rock fan who reads album credits will be familiar with the names of many of the ...
The musician discusses his history, his ever-evolving playing style, and why his solo career validates his creative ...
The video speeds up as Jula runs her fingers along vinyl records densely packed into wooden shelves in her bedroom before randomly plucking Blondie’s 1978 “Parallel Lines.” The record spins on a ...
A year ago, just days after my husband Michael had died, I gave away his shoes. The boots, running sneakers and Jordans he kept on the shelves at our back door were the first things I brushed ...
Fill up your tank and fasten your seatbelts as Radio X Classic Rock have you covered for the best driving songs. We're taking a trip with some our favourite Classic Rock anthems for road trips ...
Invest in a transmitter/receiver and ditch trailing cables with our pick of the best wireless guitar systems from beginner to pro It used to be that the best guitar wireless systems were reserved for ...
Korea's Yoon Suk Yeol rose from star prosecutor to the presidency in just a few years, but after a series of scandals and a bungled martial law decree, he's become the country's first-ever sitting ...
To be totally honest, it’s nigh on impossible to select the best electric guitar. Guitars come in such a variety of styles and configurations that finding a single instrument in such a crowded ...
The monument depicts Ramone from the thighs up, playing his signature Mosrite guitar and wearing a leather jacket. The base of the statue features the inscription of a quote by Johnny that reads ...
And the guitar was near the center of them all. Hear the fast, swinging fretwork of Lonnie Johnson or Teddy Bunn, playing in single-note lines, and you’ll hear jazz history being made — though ...