Ain't It Always Stephen Stills
An ode to the guitarist.
An ode to the guitarist.
Lorrie Moore NY Review of Books Aug 2017 15min Permalink
“What can I say about Jaco? When I first met him he was extremely present tense and, I would have to say for lack of a better term, extremely sage.”
Joni Mitchell Musician Magazine Dec 1987 10min Permalink
The ’90s icon and Nine Inch Nails frontman talks about listening to music, his own and others, in 2017.
David Marchese New York Jul 2017 35min Permalink
"If I had been a straight-A student my whole life and had rapped about Jesus coming back to save us all, I wouldn’t get no media. The motherfuckers wouldn’t give a fuck about me. But since I’m telling the truth, and been through what I’m stressing and know what I’m talking about, I’m a threat."
David Sheff, Snoop Dogg Playboy Oct 1995 35min Permalink
A profile of Lil Yachty.
Rembert Browne The Fader Jul 2017 20min Permalink
How a jazz pianist disappeared into his music.
Adam Shatz New York Times Magazine Jun 2017 25min Permalink
The performer behind the anti-comedian Neil Hamburger on being comfortable getting booed.
Marvin Gaye at the beginning and at the end.
Nelson George Village Voice May 1984 10min Permalink
A 16-year-old journalist goes on tour with a band on top. The article that inspired Almost Famous.
Cameron Crowe Rolling Stone Dec 1973 20min Permalink
Watching the jazz singer in New York.
Elizabeth Hardwick New York Review of Books Mar 1976 15min Permalink
A profile of Missy Elliott.
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah Elle May 2017 25min Permalink
A profile of the grieving musician, who lost his teenage son 18 months ago.
Chris Heath GQ Apr 2017 25min Permalink
The creators of This is Spinal Tap, the most influential mockumentary ever made, have been paid almost nothing. Now they are suing for $400 million.
Robert Kolker Bloomberg Business Apr 2017 15min Permalink
How Paul Tollett gets the world’s biggest acts to perform in the California desert.
John Seabrook New Yorker Apr 2017 25min Permalink
A profile of Gil-Scott Heron.
Alec Wilkinson New Yorker Aug 2010 25min Permalink
An interview with Dylan, 75, on the power of recording standards.
Bill Flanagan, Bob Dylan bobdylan.com Mar 2017 35min Permalink
Was the biggest record sale in the history of Discogs actually someone selling the record to themself? Was a serial hoaxer who had posed as Jimi Hendrix’s son in blackface actually behind both the 1989 album and its 2017 sale?
The artist at 85.
Luke Dittrich Esquire Jan 2012 15min Permalink
On the seminal songwriter, who died four years ago today, in his final days before succumbing to dipsomania.
Max Blau Chicago Reader Oct 2014 30min Permalink
A day in the life of Mount Eerie’s Phil Elverum, in the wake of the sudden death of his wife when their daughter was four months old.
Jayson Greene Pitchfork Mar 2017 20min Permalink
The reclusive Swedish songwriting guru gives his first interview in 20 years.
Max Martin Dagens Industri Feb 2016 25min Permalink
"The honesty in Perfume Genius’s music has attracted him a devoted audience, and he receives a lot of messages on Twitter from young kids going through the process of coming out, or dealing with their own addictions. “I think people come to my music just to feel less lonely,” he says. “When I write, sometimes I think, What would I have liked to have heard when I was younger?” But on his new record, out this May, he aimed for something a little more developed: essentially, he wanted to make a grown-up album about life after you’ve trudged through the trauma."
Alex Frank The Fader Feb 2017 15min Permalink
" I really think that for us, who all grew up listening primarily to recorded music, we tend to forget that until about 120 years ago ephemeral experience was the only one people had. I remember reading about a huge fan of Beethoven who lived to the age of 86 [in the era before recordings], and the great triumph of his life was that he’d managed to hear the Fifth Symphony six times. That’s pretty amazing. They would have been spread over many years, so there would have been no way of reliably comparing those performances."
Philip Sherburne Pitchfork Feb 2017 15min Permalink
"And far from the ivory towers of music academia, mostly on his blog, Elgar’s Enigma Theme Unmasked, Bob Padgett has emerged as perhaps the most prolific and dogged of all Enigma seekers. His solution, which has caught the attention of classical music scholars, lies at the bottom of a rabbit hole of anagrams, cryptography, the poet Longfellow, the composer Mendelssohn, the Shroud of Turin, and Jesus, all of which he believes he found hiding in plain sight in the music".
Daniel Estrin New Republic Feb 2017 15min Permalink
Twenty-two years in, E-40 has extended his reign over the Bay Area rap landscape by returning to “making music the way he did back in the late ’80s: completely independently, selling his raps more or less directly to his fans.”
Willy Staley The Fader Jan 2017 20min Permalink