7 Happy Songs About Breaking Up
Valentine’s Day can be a soul crushing holiday if you planned to share it with someone but they broke your heart before you could get to that day on the calendar.
Valentine’s Day can be a soul crushing holiday if you planned to share it with someone but they broke your heart before you could get to that day on the calendar.
What strikes you first about a Bruce Springsteen show in 2023 is that Springsteen & The E Street Band have been doing this together for 50 years.
Anyone can write one good song. But how many songwriters can create a body of work that – primarily through the voices of others – becomes not only era-defining and genre-defining, but goes beyond its era and beyond its genre to become a classic? Probably only a handful, and Burt Bacharach was one of them.
There are some big names coming to town this week, and they’re long names too: Death Cab for Cutie, Bass Drum of Death, Los Lonely Boys, Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band.
You know you’ve made it big in pop music when your fans start to unite under an adorable nickname. And there’s a big range of fandom names that range widely in creativity.
In the music industry, few people are more important that the producers and engineers. The right kind of production of your record can really make or break you.
Sen. Ted Cruz has a habit of fixating on pop culture tropes the way leeches latch on to blood vessels. He’s had major beef with kid entertainment ranging from Sesame Street to the film Lightyear, and gone to bat for former The Mandalorian actress Gina Carano.
Before Papa Roach cut our lives into pieces with their megahit “Last Resort,” they were just a couple of kids from a small town in California who liked playing rock music.
Extreme music is a tough walnut, because what makes music extreme in the first place is entirely relative. The Who could, in some respects, be more extreme than Japanese noise bans Merzbow, just as Link Wray’s guitar could have a more extreme sound than Venom’s heavy metal.
The stars at night may be big and bright deep in the heart of Texas, but on Sunday night, Texas’ biggest stars shined out in Los Angeles when the music industry’s finest gathered together at the Crypto.com Arena for the 65th Annual Grammy Awards.
The Mitchell Ferguson and Drugstore Cowboy single “Dramatic” released last year for the duo’s Maverick album of collab tracks is about the phoniness drummed up on social media by those who only seem to have a talent for garnering attention.
On Wednesday, Beyoncé dropped a bit of news that almost melted the frozen roads in North Texas. The 41-year-old megastar announced the dates of her highly-anticipated Welcome to the Renaissance world tour, which includes a stop on Thursday, Sept. 21 at Arlington’s AT&T Stadium.
Well, now that things are starting to thaw out, there’s plenty of live music awaiting North Texans this week to get over that cabin fever.
A woman has accused Marilyn Manson of sexual misconduct following a 1995 Dallas show in a pending civil action, Rolling Stone reported on Monday.
North Texas band Big Drag, which is based in Sherman, is another example of how major talent isn’t exclusive to major cities with major record labels.
Just in time for Valentine’s Day, Dallas musicians 88 Killa and Kali Flower have dropped a sweet new collaboration.
Music festival lineup announcement season is upon us, which means that in a few months, music festival season will be in full swing.
An actor, model and alternative pop singer-songwriter, London-born Suki Waterhouse is bringing her Coolest Place in the World headlining tour to Echo Lounge & Music Hall in Dallas on February 6.
North Texas music fans won’t have as many places to choose from this week as three venues are hosting two of this week’s best concerts: Tulips in Fort Worth, Trees in Deep Ellum and House of Blues in Victory Park.
The North Texas metal giants are facing backlash over years-old allegations of racist antics.
Last March on a sprawling soundstage outside Atlanta, Rhett Miller, Murry Hammond, Ken Bethea and Philip Peeples stood together on an elevated drum riser with hundreds watching.
Over the past decade, there’s been a recurring argument in the local industry about who’s the biggest hip-hop artist in North Texas.