Billy Fury 国际流行 · 2002年 试听 1 Forget Him 试听 3:19 2 Like I've Never Been Gone 试听 2:11 3 Give Me Your Word 试听 2:23 4 I Love How You Love Me 试听 2:09 5 I'll Never Fall In Love Again (Mono Version) 试听 2:14 6 Once Upon A Dream...
Prince must have sensed these winds of change. On that night of the Disco Demolition in Chicago, he and his band were in Colorado, recording throwback rock songs under the name The Rebels, including a diss on disco written by Dez Dickerson calledDisco Away. The songs were deemed too generic...
Written ByJonathan Bernstein, Jon Blistein, David Browne, Jayson Buford, Nick Catucci, Mankaprr Conteh, Bill Crandall, Jon Dolan, Gavin Edwards, Jenny Eliscu, Brenna Ehrlich, Jon Freeman, David Fricke, Andy Greene, Joe Gross, Kory Grow, Keith Harris, Will Hermes, Brian Hiatt, Christian Hoard...
By: Billy Vera What constitutes a “great” blues song? Since the melodies can vary depending on the singer’s personal choices, blues songwriting is primarily about the lyrics. Most knowledgeable fans would agree that, among blues songwriters, there are two who tower above all others: Willie ...
(1978), with its breakneck pace and lyrics about modern disillusionment, set forth many hardcore conventions. Black Flag’s shows were marked by brash intensity and fury, appealing to a largely white male audience who met the music’s aggression with their own. The typical hardcore show ...
(1978), with its breakneck pace and lyrics about modern disillusionment, set forth many hardcore conventions. Black Flag’s shows were marked by brash intensity and fury, appealing to a largely white male audience who met the music’s aggression with their own. The typical hardcore show ...
Billy Gibbons wrote the lyrics – all three verses – on a road trip from the Gulf Coast up to Austin. Then ZZ Top recorded it using a found-object 200-watt Marshall with a blown tube. Doobie Brothers, China Grove (1973) Warner Bros. Doobie Brothers, "China Grove" (1973) Tom ...
Prog and hardcore punk once seemed like polar musical opposites, but by the late Nineties, a handful of innovative acts had found a way to combine the complexity of the former style with the fury of the latter. The Dillinger Escape Plan’s “43% Burnt” — from the New Jersey band’s ...
Adam Yauch made it by running a tape backwards, and then everyone fell backward in the studio, laughing. Or so the story goes. Out of all the songs on Licensed to Ill, "Paul Revere" is the only one that doesn’t feel like a time capsule. Its storytelling rhymes, written with ...
Right from the title, you can guess this is going to be one of Costello’s double-entendre songs, with a title that invokes both fashion and fury. It’s a nasty song, one that makes you laugh and flinch in almost equal measure. Has Costello ever written a grander put-down couplet th...