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161 articles found. Page 3 of 9.
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Jerry Lee Lewis: Echoes: Jerry Lee Lewis
Retrospective by Bill Millar, Record Mirror, 11 March 1972
ON 22nd MAY 1958, an immigration officer manning the desk for TWA flights from New York to London Airport North scratched his head, sighed, picked ...
Kate Bush: "They thought she was the stripper"
Retrospective by Graeme Thomson, Daily Telegraph, 9 August 2014
A year before 'Wuthering Heights' made her a star, Kate Bush cut her teeth performing in London's pubs. ...
Al Green: Higher Ground: Al Green Blends His Sacred and Secular Instincts When He Steps Onstage
Retrospective by Geoffrey Himes, Baltimore City Paper, 17 July 2002
ALBUMS ARE NOT the only means of making great music any more than movies are the only means of doing great acting. Every time a ...
Retrospective by Don Waller, LA Weekly, 29 October 1981
RITCHIE VALENS, born Richard Valenzuela in Pacoima, California, on May 13, 1941, cut three hit records before he finished high school: 'Come On Let's Go', ...
Retrospective by Dave Thompson, Goldmine, 17 May 2006
THE ODD thing about the history of punk is, it's very easy to forget some of its best progenitors. ...
Retrospective by Tom Hibbert, The History of Rock, 1982
An Australian group with stardom on their minds. IN MID-SIXTIES AUSTRALIA, home-grown acts found it difficult to penetrate the music scene on a national ...
The Osmonds: The Osmond Family: Puppy Love
Retrospective by Tom Hibbert, The History of Rock, 1983
"It was not until groups like the Osmond brothers appeared on the scene that the pop revolution really get underway," wrote Richard Robinson in his ...
Little Willie John: The Turbulent Career Of Little Willie John
Retrospective by Bill Millar, The History of Rock, 1982
Little Willie John brought soul to blues balladry and helped to change the whole direction of black popular music. Born William Edward John in Camden, ...
Clyde McPhatter, The Drifters: Clyde McPhatter
Retrospective by Bill Millar, The History of Rock, 1981
PERHAPS THE MOST INNOVATIVE OF ALL R&B singers, Clyde McPhatter brought a new and radical sound to popular music by singing with a spirit and ...
Morrissey, The Smiths: This Disarming Man: In Defence of Morrissey
Retrospective by Barney Hoskyns, Rock's Backpages, September 2001
NOTE: These were liner notes for a Rhino compilation of solo Morrissey songs. The singer rejected them. ...
Retrospective by Bill Millar, The History of Rock, 1981
AS ROCK'N'ROLL GROUPS PROLIFERATED, the age at which they turned professional took a nosedive. With names such as the Classmates, the Juniors or the Sixteens, ...
Retrospective by Bill Millar, The History of Rock, 1982
TEX-MEX, A PHRASE commonly used to describe the rocknroll of such artists as Buddy Holly and Buddy Knox, has nothing whatever to do with Mexican ...
Retrospective by Johnny Black, Q, July 1995
Summer, 1976. Punk, live punk, is about to explode in the capital. Tap rooms, Poly bars and sweaty clubs will host its unwashed greats. Johnny Black looks ...
U2: Eyewitness: U2 Conquer London
Retrospective by Johnny Black, Q, July 2002
WHEN U2 visited the capital in the summer of 1980, their intention was to play a handful of low-key club shows. Three months, a Marquee ...
Butthole Surfers: Crust Of A Wave
Retrospective by David Stubbs, Uncut, August 2001
THEY STARTED musical life riding the first wave of US punk rock in the early Eighties, Texans purveying lo-fi snotballs of geetar with titles like ...
Beatles, The: The Beatles' No. 1s: 1963
Retrospective by Phil Sutcliffe, MOJO, August 2015
'From Me to You' #1 in: UK Released: April 11, 1963 ...
Elvis Presley: The Rise Of Rockabilly
Retrospective by Nick Tosches, Country Music, December 1977
MONDAY, JULY 5th, 1954. The most popular albums in America are Jackie Gleason's Tawny on Capitol, Frank Sinatra's Songs for Young Lovers, also on Capitol, ...
War Within War: Black Americans And The Vietnam Conflict
Retrospective by James Maycock, The Guardian, 15 September 2001
The Vietnam war saw countless numbers of America's young men – both black and white – thrown into combat. They were there to fight the ...
Bob Marley & the Wailers: Bob Marley: The undisputed world ambassador of reggae
Retrospective by Chris Salewicz, The History of Rock, 1983
BOB MARLEY ALMOST SINGLE-HANDEDLY introduced reggae music to European and American audiences and, more than any other artist, was responsible for establishing it as a ...
Retrospective by Ian Fortnam, Vox, 1996
WITH INDIEDOM firmly in the grip of the inane and the insipid, the doleful delinquents of 1986 were in dire and desperate need of a ...
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