And the only way to do that, given the weight of the Beatles’ presence, is to take a look at everything the band put on record over its eight-year recording career. It turns out that ranking the songs recorded by the Beatles in the 1960s is easy; you put the worst one at the ...
just so we could include as many different folks as possible. As you’ll see below, there was an enormous amount of great music being produced, so take this list as a starting point for future exploration. The best songs of the 70s do the same, pointing the way to music and art that...
Cleotha, Pervis, and Yvonne (that makes five – Pervis and Yvonne swapped places twice), The Staple Singers were one of the best Stax vocal groups with a social conscience. Their sound was earthier and rawer than that of most vocal groups of the late 60s and 70s. While ...
The 200 Best Songs of the 1960s From James Brown to Etta James, Jimi Hendrix to Patsy Cline, here are the tracks that lit up the decade By PitchforkAugust 17, 2006 Graphic by Martine Ehrhart It was the decade of Dylan and Aretha, the Beach Boys and the Beatles, Hendrix and Zeppelin....
💂 50 great British actors🔥 The 100 best movies of all-time🎥 The 100 best movies of the 20th century so far🇬🇧 The 100 best London songs 100 Best British Movies 1. Don't Look Now (1973) FIlm 4 Director Nicolas RoegCast Julie Christie, Donald SutherlandThe number one film...
Best ’90s songs, ranked 1.‘Juicy’ by The Notorious BIG Image: Bad Boy | | No one before or since has done more to justify the gangsta rap lifestyle than Christopher Wallace, on the lead single to his immense debut album‘Ready to Die’. ‘Juicy’ works because Biggie balances ...
Despite growing into one of the best-remembered songs of the late ’60s, The Band’soriginal “The Weight”failed to make a significant Hot 100 impact in 1968, peaking at No. 63. It was a wrong that the Queen of Soul saw fit to correct with her own undeniable cover version a year ...
Best rock songs 1. Stairway to Heaven by Led Zeppelin Stairway, denied. So goes the iconic scene in Wayne’s World but, realistically, how can we ever deny one of the greatest songs ever made? From the arpeggio opening, the impenetrable lyrics and the sudden shift from acoustic to full...
Neil Young: After the Gold Rush (1970) After the gold rush of 1960s California rock, most of its main players spent the ’70s slowly hippie-twirling towards irrelevance and rehab resorts. Not so for Mr. Young, who was just hitting his stride as the decade turned over, kicking off a r...
The film widely associated with the end of the American independent cinema movement of the ‘60s and ‘70s? Really? Yes. There are many versions of this much maligned relic of cinema’s history, but the one we recommend is the latest cut, currently available through the Criterion Collection,...