On the song, "Sorry," Beyonce sings, "He better call Becky with the good hair," leading to a manhunt, with the public trying to figure out who Becky was. In November 2017, Jay-Z finally came clean, admitting that he had cheated on Beyonce. He also rapped about the infidelity on "...
Music journalist and author Dave Rimmer described his voice as "like a foghorn—if a foghorn could be imagined trying to emulate both [Frank] Sinatra and [David] Bowie". His Spandau Ballet bandmate Steve Norman described him as having "a massive vocal range". According to Tim Rice, Hadley...
The Supremes, Diana Ross stepped away from that fame to launch a solo career. And her star continued to rise. After record-setting worldwide concert tours, she tried her hand at acting with her debut performance in “Lady Sings the Blues,” a biographical drama...
BeforeRihanna,Billy JoelandJay-Zbecame some of the biggest names in music, they were students just like the rest of us. Without some particularly special teachers, they might not be the superstars they are today, and they all remember who first encoura...
Also, I like this Lauren Talley as a singer, but now I'm concerned that people might confuse her and "The Talleys" withTallies, a band I like a lot from Ontario, Canada, whose singer doesn't look all that dissimilar. LTSings
is Dylan's tribute to the Great American Songbook by way of Frank Sinatra. And like on its predecessor, Dylan plays old-school interpreter here, shaking off the cobwebs from songs of the '40s and '50s. Others have done it better, but there's no doubt Dylan means every word he sings....
is Dylan's tribute to the Great American Songbook by way of Frank Sinatra. And like on its predecessor, Dylan plays old-school interpreter here, shaking off the cobwebs from songs of the '40s and '50s. Others have done it better, but there's no doubt Dylan means every word he sings....
is Dylan's tribute to the Great American Songbook by way of Frank Sinatra. And like on its predecessor, Dylan plays old-school interpreter here, shaking off the cobwebs from songs of the '40s and '50s. Others have done it better, but there's no doubt Dylan means every word he sings....
like more of an edge of Coaches kind of fighting each other. But I was trying to be genuine, to tell people that I might be able to help them, and use humor, again, just to break down those walls. Because my dad always said: If you're good, you don't have to tell people.”...
like village idiots, here we are. A better song, though, is the exquisitely crafted “Buried,” by veteran Nashville tunesmith Brandy Clark, who knows firsthand the challenges of working in Music City as a gay woman. “If you don't love me anymore,” she sings, “I’ll be an over-...