The patron saints of Popdose are an unconventional bunch, to be sure. The big joke among the staff at the annual board meeting, held in Matt Wardlaw’s palatial estate, is…
Music
This week’s Popdose mixtape, presented by Chris Holmes, offers up 20 of the greatest jazz songs ever recorded.
I’ve had Live at Shea Stadium for a couple of weeks now, and I’ve spent them alternating between watching 30-minute chunks of the film and struggling with what to say…
We’ve reached the Top 70 metal albums on Dave Steed’s iPod and it includes Europe?
Chris Holmes examines a buried treasure from the golden age of soft rock – Bertie Higgins’ 1982 solo debut Just Another Day in Paradise.
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…
In 1973 the legendary Bay Area funk band broke out with their third album, which included some of their best-known songs. Ken Shane recalls their biggest hit.
A look at songs that aren’t necessarily good or bad, merely ones that, because of the climate of the music world during their release, somehow, someway, were not the massive…
“The world don’t need any more songs.” —Bob Dylan If you follow me (or the AV Club) on Twitter, you probably read yesterday’s collaborative post between Steven Hyden and Greg…
It may be a bit too early to call them a supergroup, but according to Ken Shane, members of Dawes, Deer Tick, and Delta Spirit have made a fine debut album.
Was Michael Stipe bat-shit crazy back in the ’80s too? Did REO Speedwagon have any balls at all? Debate these and other topics as we look at more rock songs from the ’80s.
Dave Steed reviews some great new metal records including the best thrash record released in 3 years!
Thirty years in, no one would have been surprised if the Rolling Stones simply ground to a halt in the 1990s. Instead, they managed a small, very late career resurgence.
With a new R.E.M. album in hand, Annie Zaleski tackles the difficult task of assessing the latest offering by her favorite band.
Popdose.com’s continuing series The Composers turns the light toward Alan Silvestri.
Lady Gaga’s “Born This Way” exemplifies the shift among pop’s reigning divas — from P!nk to Katy to Ke$ha — away from self-aggrandizement and toward messages of self-help aimed directly at their audiences. Jon Cummings explores the new pop paradigm.
In the latest Random Play, Robin Monica Alexander explains how hip-hop group Yo Majesty is as American as apple f***in’ pie.
No, it’s not Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood – but it’s close! Sean Olmstead of fpodbpod gives us a tour of his funhouse in this month’s Parlour to Parlour.
John Waite gives us another classic piece of heartbreak poetry with “If You Ever Get Lonely,” causing Rob Smith to swoon in his latest “Death by Power Ballad” column.
David Gray – Babylon k.d. lang – The Consequences of Falling Robert Bradley’s Blackwater Surprise – Baby Train – I Am Tori Amos – 1000 Oceans.mp3 Jonny Lang – Breakin’…
In between more timely projects and content, the Popdose staff are dissecting albums from 1991, which happens to be one of my favorite years of music. It was also…
What do you do with a seriously weird music video? Make it weirder, that’s what you do!
Radiohead dropped a new album last week. So why aren’t we even breaking a sweat over it?
The question’s not whether Gaga’s latest sounds like Madonna’s hit. The question is whether she meant it or whether it was just born that way.
This week Ken Shane brings us a non-disco hit from one of the dance genre’s most iconic bands.
A look at songs that aren’t necessarily good or bad, merely ones that, because of the climate of the music world during their release, somehow, someway, were not the massive…
Actor Larry Thor sings a fun collection of children’s songs about neighborhood fights, Gimme Pigs, and riding dinosaurs.
Don’t think sorry’s easily said, unless you’re guilty. Popdose ponders this latest round of plagiarism speculation.
Chris Holmes offers the second part of his overview of thrash-metal legend Megadeth’s discography, covering 1997’s Cryptic Writings through 2009’s Endgame.
Dave Steed reaches the letter R this week on his quest to have you listen to every crappy 80’s song ever!
