Recent Grammy winners The Cure took #4 with the dreamy "Just Like Heaven" (1987), topped by the Beatles and their timeless ballad "Something" (1969), which Frank Sinatra once called the “the greatest ...
I won’t belabor this point. If David Bowie isn’t the most influential artist in the history of post-war pop music, he is at least on Mount Rushmore, along with Chuck Berry, Elvis, Lennon/McCartney, ...
In the early 1970s, David Cassidy shot to fame as the lead singer of the Partridge Family. The made-for-TV band, which featured Cassidy, his stepmother Shirley Jones, and several session musicians, ...
Curious from birth, Fiona is a music writer, researcher, and cultural theorist based in the UK. She studied her Bachelor of Music in London, specializing in audiovisual practices, and progressed to a ...
David Bowie had a lot of personas over the years, as well as famous characters in his music. The most recognizable might be Major Tom, who debuted in 1969. This character would go on to be referenced ...
David Crosby was a folk-rock legend, with hits like “Turn, Turn, Turn” and “Mr Tambourine Man” decimating the charts of the day. Someone with that much unique musical ability might expect to face some ...
David Lynch left an indelible mark in the film world, but a major part of what shaped his particular style of avant genius was his deep connection to music. Sound was integral to his lush, haunting ...
Not many filmmakers have such a unique style as to become an adjective, but David Lynch was one of them. His uncanny, dream-inspired style extended beyond film, too. If music is described as “Lynchian ...