The newest addition to the world of entertainment, Rooster, has already grabbed the attention of the viewers with not just the storyline but also the soundtrack.
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 ...
American actor, director and writer Alan Alda in the driving seat of a jeep, surrounded by Loretta Swit and other cast members of the hit television show M.A.S.H, in costume as members of a US Army ...
What I Like About You is finally streaming on Netflix — but the theme song will sound a little different. The hit WB sitcom, which aired from 2002 to 2004, followed the lives of two sisters living ...
Comedy Central's signature animated sitcom "South Park" features one of the most eccentric theme songs of all time. The theme song, composed by the American rock band Primus, captures the bizarre, ...
Despite a surging demand from film historians, physical media collectors, and a vocal segment of the public, Disney CEO Bob Iger has reportedly doubled down on the decision to keep the 1946 film Song ...
Bob Weir was the quiet linchpin of the Grateful Dead. Though he was uninterested in competing with the mythical presence of Jerry Garcia, saying fans’ deification had ultimately killed the frontman, ...
When Bob Marley and the Wailers released Rastaman Vibration in April 1976, Jamaica was teetering on the edge. It was an election year defined by public anxiety and partisan violence–tensions that ...
This story was featured in The Must Read, a newsletter in which our editors recommend one can’t-miss story every weekday. Sign up here to get it in your inbox. The instrumental theme of “Playing in ...
The guitarist, singer and songwriter, who died at 78, cut his own path among his elders in the Grateful Dead, and beyond. By David Browne As the youngest member of the original Grateful Dead, Bob Weir ...
Willie Nelson, and specifically his life on the road, is the focus of a new opus profile in The New Yorker. The highlights are many, but Bob Dylan’s attempt to explain the appeal of Nelson stands ...