Sunday Nov 22 | Internet Archive
Lineage: DAT>Adobe Audition 19. Dancing Days 20. Egypt 21. Dancing Days 22. Black Dog 23.
Apple launches iTunes Music Movies with exclusive content
Apple has begun to promote music-themed movies on the iTunes Store with a new landing page, a place the company plans to fill with exclusive content.
Album Review: Wolfmother, "Cosmic Egg"
's major calling card has been singer/guitarist Andrew Stockdale's classic rock riffing, his enormous 'fro, and his banshee-like wail, which makes him sound like the mutant offspring of Robert Plant and Ozzy Osbourne.
Ready to Rock: The director of An Inconvenient Truth makes an inconsequential doc.
It’s a testament to how far White Striper Jack White has come in the rock roll world since the release of the first White Stripes album 10 years back that he’s now the most interesting figure in this musical triptych, which also includes geezers Jimmy Page and U2’s the Edge .
Kim Morgan: You Shook Me, Jimmy Page: 'It Might Get Loud'
Inspired after watching Davis Guggenheim's fantastic It Might Get Loud featuring The Edge, Jack White and...Jimmy Page, I've fashioned some sort of list... As a teenager, I discovered all kinds of music, from traditional to offbeat, blues to punk, country to classical, classic rock to rockabilly, but no matter who I got into, no matter how great I ...
Kim Morgan: You Shook Me, Jimmy Page: 'It Might Get Loud'
Inspired after watching Davis Guggenheim's fantastic It Might Get Loud featuring The Edge, Jack White and...Jimmy Page, I've fashioned some sort of list... As a teenager, I discovered all kinds of music, from traditional to offbeat, blues to punk, country to classical, classic rock to rockabilly, but no matter who I got into, no matter how great I ...
Kim Morgan: You Shook Me, Jimmy Page: 'It Might Get Loud'
Inspired after watching Davis Guggenheim's fantastic It Might Get Loud featuring The Edge, Jack White and...Jimmy Page, I've fashioned some sort of list... As a teenager, I discovered all kinds of music, from traditional to offbeat, blues to punk, country to classical, classic rock to rockabilly, but no matter who I got into, no matter how great I ...
Kim Morgan: You Shook Me, Jimmy Page: 'It Might Get Loud'
Inspired after watching Davis Guggenheim's fantastic It Might Get Loud featuring The Edge, Jack White and...Jimmy Page, I've fashioned some sort of list... As a teenager, I discovered all kinds of music, from traditional to offbeat, blues to punk, country to classical, classic rock to rockabilly, but no matter who I got into, no matter how great I ...
Kim Morgan: You Shook Me, Jimmy Page: 'It Might Get Loud'
Inspired after watching Davis Guggenheim's fantastic It Might Get Loud featuring The Edge, Jack White and...Jimmy Page, I've fashioned some sort of list... As a teenager, I discovered all kinds of music, from traditional to offbeat, blues to punk, country to classical, classic rock to rockabilly, but no matter who I got into, no matter how great I ...
YOU MAYBE A LITTLE FOGGYON EXACTLYWHAT a Theremin is, but you've probably heard one.
Dirty Projectors Take To The Hills
Making 70s style, prog-influenced videos went out of style after Robert Plant galloped around the Welsh countryside in Led Zeppelin's The Song Remains The Same .
I had a chance to see a sneak preview of the documentary It Might Get Loud yesterday.
Get The Led Out: Zeppelin's song remains the same
The path to musical success isn't always the obvious one. Take Paul Sinclair, a Philadelphia native with Jimmy Page hair and a record collection full of the founding fathers of hard rock, who set his sights on one day following in the footsteps of his idols by belting out lyrics to a packed arena crowd.
Zoso recreates Led Zeppelin on stage
Peruse the pop charts these days and it's difficult to find many rock bands. In fact, at press time, only two kinda-sorta such acts were in the Top 10 on the Billboard 200 album survey.
Blogcritics
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Blogcritics
Whatever Happened To The Drum Solo?
This is a follow-up of sorts to fellow Blogcritic Glen Boyd's recent "Whatever Happened To The Live Album?" article published on BC a couple of weeks ago. I really enjoyed Glen's piece. But there seemed to be an essential element of the Seventies live album absent from his article.
Whatever happened to the drum solo?
When you went to a concert in the Seventies, the drum solo was a given. And it was never really an issue. It simply provided you with an opportunity to reload the bong, or to take a whizz. Kind of an intermission basically. But then someone got the bright idea to include the drum solo in the inevitable double live album, and all hell broke loose.