Your pals over at Something Else! Reviews begin an occasional feature focusing on the best of the 1980s with a look at producer and songwriter Daniel Lanois’ impact on the…
Rob Smith Can’t Say No to the boyish faces and solid rock of Chicago’s Filligar.
Iggy Pop is a truly unique individual; in the history of popular music, there are few who come close to the unpredictability displayed by Pop, both on record and in…
We look at a book the recounts the day when one man’s obsession with celebrity nearly brought down the President of the United States.
In Popdose’s newest reoccurring feature, that wacky decade of the ’70s is examined, and our commentators wonder how we ever recovered.
Comics don’t stay in comics. For better or worse, most comics are produced in the hopes they will lead to films, cartoons, action figures, video games, backpacks, beach towels and…
Ambitious, charming, and possessing a spine-shivering voice, Anna Ash took Parlour to Parlour straight to the ballroom for the series’ 30th interview.
You can’t really call Brian Johnson’s memoir a kiss-and-tell. Popdose asks the question: what do you call it?
Anyone who felt that Eddie Murphy had lost his edge after the string of family friendly films he made in the mid to late 90’s should have taken a look…
Molly Marinik reviews Cradle and All, Daniel Goldfarb’s new play about the ups and downs of parenthood from two very different perspectives.
Get ready for an activator overdose with the latest Jheri Curl Fridays column! This week, we visit singers/rappers/producers Full Force and their clip for “Alice, I Want You Just for Me!”
The Boston-area band released only three albums before breaking up in 2000, but have reunited for a series of shows in Europe. Robert Cass takes a look back at their brief but stellar discography.
Death Cab for Cutie – I Will Possess Your Heart Colbie Caillat – The Little Things Kenny Loggins – Danny’s Song Jason Mraz – I’m Yours Boz Scaggs – Lowdown…
If you had to go away for awhile and you could only take five of your favorite albums with you, which ones would you choose? Yes, we know it isn’t…
It’s already May. Do you know where your Buckethead is?
Fandom: what does it mean, who inspires it, and where will you go in its name? We have some thoughts on the subject, and you’ll hear ’em on Episode 18 of The Popdose Podcast!
Flamboyant filmmaker Alejandro Adams invokes Lawrence Durrell, James Agee and Jean Renoir while dismissing Terrence Malick’s highly anticipated Palme d’Or winner THE TREE OF LIFE; Walter von Tagen proposes a…
Soul Serenade continues the Bob Dylan 70th birthday celebration with covers of Dylan songs by legendary soul artists Etta James, and the Persuasions.
Rap shifted out of the gangsta and East Coast/West Coast stuff in about 2000 and into a more rounded world where different styles had a shot at the mainstream. Outkast,…
Another week, another ’80s Dance Party. This week, Kelly finds further evidence of her theory that when an ’80s remix introduces the flute, it means business.
Since we’re dealing, at least at first, with a retro series I figured I’d use the retro spelling…so welcome once more to Confessions of a Comics Shop Junky, in which…
Dave Steed finishes up the letter T this week, celebrating the birthday of Bob Dylan with some Wilbury magic.
Australia’s Little River Band placed 11 songs in the Top 40 in the late 1970s and early 1980s, becoming one of the most successful acts to come from Down Under….
Bob Dylan is 70 years old, and the Popdose Staff has pulled together a massive post to honor him. Here are 70 of our favorite Dylan songs, one for each year.
When Scottish cock rockers Nazareth slowed things down to play “Love Hurts,” the whole world slowed with them. Rob Smith pays tribute in this week’s Death by Power Ballad.
Scott Malchus reviews the rebirth of a classic British series, “Upstairs, Downstairs.”
Rob Smith reviews the new Journey record, “Eclipse,” and finds a lot to like.
Popdose.com faces the wrath of Journey fans everywhere with a review of their latest, Eclipse.
This week’s Jheri Curl Fridays looks at the ill-fated solo career of Earth Wind & Fire’s Maurice White, specifically his remake of Ben E. King’s “Stand by Me”.
Bluegrass legend Del McCoury discusses his new album and tour with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.