Put down your iPod and pick up one of these Popdose Staff endorse books.
Dave Steed likes Rush! Dave Steed likes Rush! No, this isn’t a typo. He’s finally wised up and listened to his peers for a change.
We all recognize iconic music from great films, but what about those great scores for movies that are long-forgotten?
Martin Clunes stars in the British hit, “Dirty Tricks,” now on DVD.
Dave Steed reviews the new Frank Sinatra metal tribute album and the eighth record from Amon Amarth.
Yesterday, Neil Diamond was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s Class of 2011. It was the ultimate recognition for the iconic singer-songwriter, responsible for some of the…
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…
Dave Matthews – Where Are You Going Jackson Browne – Your Bright Baby Blues Jack Johnson – Rodeo Clowns Neville Brothers – Yellow Moon Jewel – Hands John Mayer –…
Hall & Oates are, of course, the poster boys for what happens when hair gel meets R&B. Funny thing is, they were originally anything but polished. Hall had reportedly been…
More news for 2011 including Journey, Whitesnake, Britney and… Ugh… Smurfs.
Rob Smith Can’t Say No to another roundup of kindie music, including new records from DidiPop, Music for Aardvarks, and Joanie Leeds.
The excellent documentary, “The Tillman Story” is on DVD and reviewed.
David Ackles released his masterpiece, “American Gothic,” in 1972. Critics loved it, but the public didn’t get it. Ken Shane remembers this lost classic.
Molly Marinik reviews Broadway’s newest great contemporary play, Good People, by David Lindsay-Abaire (Rabbit Hole) and starring Francis McDormand and Tate Donovan.
In this half-hour episode of Look of the Week, Bay Area film critic, trade journal editor and film studies teacher Sara Vizcarrondo talks with Brian Darr, who joins Sara in…
Fall into a Memory Lane pothole of Nineties goodness, in the Popdose Weekly Mixtape.
Welcome back to Confessions of a Comics Shop Junkie, in which I give you the skinny, the straight dope, the 411 (and other out-of-date slang terms) on comics and graphic…
Popdose delves into the strange phenomenon of aliens in our midst on TV and the big screen.
Buddy Miller has assembled a veritable guitar army for his latest effort, and matched the pickers with a talented roster of singers doing classic country songs.
After a three-month hiatus, Jeff, Jason, and Dave are back to rip apart a Billboard Top 10 from 1985. It’s the Popdose Podcast, Episode 16: CHART ATTACK! Edition!
Metal! Priest, Entombed and Nine Inch Nails meet up with the blackened stylings of Carpathian Forest in the 25th week of False Metal, Dead!
Wednesday’s anti-democratic (and anti-Democratic) shenanigans in Wisconsin were just part of a GOP effort to destroy the Democrats’ power base nationwide. Can they succeed? Jon Cummings says, definitely maybe.
Chris Holmes steps into the Cassingle Vault to look at an offering from prog metal stalwarts QueensrÁ¿che — 1988’s “I Don’t Believe In Love.”
Popdose goes back to 1991 with the debut album from Australia’s Baby Animals.
The Chi-Lites got together in the late ’50s, but they didn’t have their first huge hit until they released the unforgettable “Have You Seen Her” in 1971.
This column usually presents semi-obscure or forgotten songs that should have been hits. ”Walking on Thin Ice” is different, because if you’re the kind of person with an obsessive enough…
It’s a bird! It’s a plane! No, it’s a … it’s … a man-rat? (And we’re not talking about the mug of Keith Richards, either.)
Who’s that girl? Why it’s Jane Eyre, back again, as a new documentary revisits The Boys in the Band and some Monsters cause trouble on home screens.
It’s an extreme metal week as Dave Steed reviews the blistering new albums from Trap Them and Rotten Sound.