5) Songs From The Wood (Jethro Tull)– Supposedly beginning a trio of successive folk rock albums from Jethro Tull, their tenth studio releaseSongs From The Woodpresents one of the most intriguing (and simple) of all Tull’s covers. Ian Anderson and company released some rather cool album a...
Going into 2020, few would have predicted that the first rock album to top the Billboard 200 this year would come from Machine Gun Kelly — the Bad Boy-signed rapper who had only released one rock single to date, the 2019 Yungblud and Travis Barker collab “I Think I’m OKAY.” But ...
Once again, we’ve got an artist sharing reverence to an iconic musician. And in this case, Powerwolf delivered a stellar cover of Alice Cooper’s “Poison” in honor of the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer’s 75th birthday back in February. This will be one of the more spot-on covers yo...
Over 200 music fans have voted on the 10+ albums on Best Aesop Rock Albums of All Time. Current Top 3: The Impossible Kid, None Shall Pass, Labor Days
With Rod Stewart now indulging in easy listening covers and the like, it's easy to forget that he always had an effortlessly powerful rock voice. Nowhere was it better showcased that on this record, his third solo album, which featured guest appearances from fellow members of The Faces throug...
Once again, we’ve got an artist sharing reverence to an iconic musician. And in this case, Powerwolf delivered a stellar cover of Alice Cooper’s “Poison” in honor of the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer’s 75th birthday back in February. This will be one of the more spot-on covers yo...
Once again, we’ve got an artist sharing reverence to an iconic musician. And in this case, Powerwolf delivered a stellar cover of Alice Cooper’s “Poison” in honor of the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer’s 75th birthday back in February. This will be one of the more spot-on covers yo...
On a sonic level, no rock album in 2022 felt quite as cozy asBoat Songs.Everything at Asheville, North Carolina singer-songwriter MJ Lenderman’s disposal—his electric guitar tone, his distorted vocals, those thwacking snare drums—blends into a satisfying whole, like a particularly crunchy bi...
During the first week of 1967 when this album was released, the future of rock could be anything, including a jazz-identified band with a Dionysian Beat poet upfront. The Doors’ self-titled debut is remarkably diverse, with covers of songs by both Willie Dixon and Bertolt Brecht. The firs...
“You Ain’t the First,” electrifying covers of Paul McCartney’s “Live and Let Die” and Bob Dylan’s “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door,” both versions of Axl and Izzy’s hard-rock lullaby “Don’t Cry,” and, of course, the quintessential power ballad of the decade, “November ...