AsGeorge Harrisonwould remember it, the beginning of "Tweeter and the Monkey Man" came about as he and Jeff Lynne sat around one afternoon listening to Bob Dylan and Tom Petty talk about "all this stuff that didn't make much sense." Nevertheless, it turned into this track, an outlandish ...
This updated version of one of the stand-out tracks from his 1985 solo debut,Mr. Bad Guy, showcased Freddie’s pioneering music to a new audience. The music that had inspired much of Freddie’s first disco-influenced solo work had come out of the gay clubs; by 1993, it was no longer...
To his credit, I think director Michael Winterbottom was aiming for a profound statement about the nature of contemporary society, but it just didn't work. He went off the track somewhere. Nine Songs does have some striking scenery of endless wind-swept snowy tundra that is supposedly Antarctic...
“Work hard, play hard,” is the mantra of many high-performing teams, and is the chorus of this song. This party hit implies that to enjoy the high life, you must put in hard work and effort. The song has a high-energy beat and is the perfect addition to any spontaneous team danc...
All songs are relatively calm throughout with death parts (sudden increases in difficulty) that can instant-kill you. In Aterlβus, there are two death parts. The first death part is 2 yellow hold notes on each side, repeated 2 times. There are 13 yellow hold notes in total to this...
Since I was a little girl, I would always get excited to hear songs on the radio that talked about Lake Charles.
on "Animals."Prem spoke with Pitchforkabout their collaboration, having said: "I watched him work the boards old-school style. He’s got ProTools hooked up, but he’s still on the Control 24 board, turning the knobs, working each fader by hand. A lot of kids now don’t do that; ...
“Fruit Loop” ramps that energy up until it snaps. She delivers simple, cutting bars like “You bitches really weak and you just talk online” and the laugh-out-loud diss “Tryna talk big but he got a lil pee-pee” with a peppy vindictiveness, like Harley Quinn faking a conversation ...
Consider this an introduction to the many K-pop singles that dazzled us, impressed us, and moved us throughout the past 12 months.
Let’s talk about yoga and your journey for a bit, Olu. Is there a song from the project that you’ve incorporated into your practice or feels particularly fitting for a flow? Olu:Everybody's got a yogi in them. When you said that our lyrics were profound, it...