Once describing himself as “a blues piano player with chops,” Gene Harris rose to fame as the flamboyant, nimble-fingered leader of The 3 Sounds, a popular soul jazz trio who
The group once dismissively referred to as the “no-hit Supremes” were on their way to becoming the hottest act in America in the summer of 1964. On August 13, with
Punk’s anti-establishment stance means it openly thrives on controversy and the desire to provoke, so its spearhead acts have inevitably been drawn to commenting on socio-political issues since the genre’s
Weird instruments? Why bother? Indeed, Lou Reed once wrote “you can’t beat two guitars, bass, and drums,” in the liner notes of his 1989 album, New York. Sorry, Lou, but
It all began in a sweltering wooden cabin next to a creek in rural Florida, and yet – despite its humble beginnings – the debut album that Lynyrd Skynyrd released
As a British jazz musician who rose to became something of a household name in the US, George Shearing belongs to a small but elite club that includes clarinetist Acker
“Blue Gene baby.” A generation of British rockers grew up knowing those two words from Ian Dury’s tribute to “sweet” Gene Vincent. Many fans never heard them from the original
Legions of fans of rock’n’roll instigator Chuck Berry know that his birth name was Charles Edward Anderson Berry, and that he was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1928. It’s
With Chuck Berry, what comes straight to mind are the pulsating rock’n’roll hits of the 50s, such as “Roll Over Beethoven,” “Johnny B. Goode,” and “Maybellene.” However, Berry’s prodigious output
For some, the allure of the decade that gave us Adam Ant, Prince, Madonna and Wham! is just as fresh as the Jordache jeans they once wore while bouncing down