What resonated about Endtroducing when it was released in 1996, and what makes it still resonate today, is the way in which it loosens itself from the mooring of the known and sails off into an uncharted territory that seems to exist both in and out of time. Learn More
When the Motor City 5 stormed the stage, the band combined the kinetic flash of James Brown on acid with the raw musical dynamics of the Who gone berserk. Learn More
The most commercially successful album of Bruce Springsteen's career, BORN IN THE USA, has often been underrated by critics and hardcover fans. Learn More
The received wisdom handed down by rock scholars and historians has been that for Dylan and The Hawks this was a period of woodshedding; of quiet meditation, musical reflection and scholarly, almost Spartan, diligence. Learn More
Conceived as the last testament of a charismatic recluse who believed he was about to die, 'Forever Changes' is one of the defining albums of an era. Learn More
The Pixies have had a career unlike any other in alternative rock, disappearing as a not-quite-next-big-thing only to become gods in absentia. Learn More
Alex Green places the Stone Roses within the ecstasy-enhanced playground that was the late 80s Manchester scene and theorizes about what could have been had they maintained the brilliance of this peak performance. Learn More
The record was replete with references to babies, childbirth, and reproduction (the album's very title means 'in the womb'), witch hunts, the loss of privacy, illness and disease, and ambivalence about fame. Learn More