Jul 14

Do Julian Lennon and Nancy Sinatra make the grade? We rate rock stars’ offspring following in their famous parents …
Born to rock (but are they worthy?) We rate the musical offspring of superstars.

Read more on The Cleveland Plain Dealer

Jul 9

BQ: What’s your favorite band from that label?
BQ2: Why is white chocolate called chocolate? It’s not chocolate. It doesn’t taste like chocolate. It doesn’t smell like chocolate. There’s nothing chocolate about it.

Jul 5
Jul 5

Always wore those big dark glasses and dark clothes maybe a reflection of low self esteem from his youth, didn’t move around a lot, and if you really get into his music it is actually quite dark, heartbreaking, and depressing for a big part.

Jul 3

Why the best rock docs bend the truth
The Kings of Leon documentary, Talihina Sky, asks a key question about movies on pop stars: how real should they be? The film, which has been simulcasted on the internet and in cinemas, is the latest expression of a relationship between pop music and celluloid that goes back to the mid-1950s. In 1955, Blackboard Jungle used Bill Haley’s “Rock Around the Clock” as its theme tune and, as teens …

Read more on Independent

Jun 23
Jun 17

Music Review: Kenny “Blues Boss” Wayne – An Old Rock On A Roll
share: digg facebook twitter a career that was derailed in 1962 when, during a gig behind the legendary Jimmy Reed, a violent incident led him to abandon the devil’s music in favor of the sacred for some twenty years. An absolute master of blues and swing guitar, he’s also a very busy man in the studio, responsible for resurrecting the careers of several semi-forgotten legends. Elsewhere titles …

Read more on seattlepi.com

Jun 12

Jack Black: Rock music ‘scares’ kids
Jack Black likes recording his vocals for Kung Fu Panda 2 on his own because then it’s all about him.

Read more on Cover Media via Yahoo! Malaysia News

Jun 8


This is a complete experience POV of Rock n’ Roller Coaster starring Aerosmith at Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida formally known as MGM Studios. Video includes line, queue, pre-show, off-ride shots, and POV in Night Vision. Length: 3403′ Height: 80′ Inversions: 3 Speed: 57 mph Duration: 1:22 G-Force: 5 After winding through a shaded outdoor queue, guests enter the offices and recording studios of record label G-Force Records, whose lobby is decorated with posters of real acts signed to labels owned by The Walt Disney Company. Next, guests are led into a room looking into the recording studio, where the five members of Aerosmith are shown finishing a recording session. The group’s manager, portrayed by Illeana Douglas, enters and informs them that they’re late for a concert. Lead singer Steven Tyler expresses regret at being forced to leave the band’s fans and requests backstage passes for the entire group. The band then departs by limousine to “the Forum” (a reference to a famous Los Angeles concert venue). The harried manager summons a “super stretch” limo, to carry guests to the concert and directs them outside. The pacing of the film is such that there is brief pause between the time that the band mentions to their manager that they should do something for their fans and Steven Tyler agreeing. The interval of time is just long enough that the line “How about some backstage passes” can be shouted from the audience (often by the cast member who is acting as the

Jun 4

All I know of is the Electric Factory.

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