
13 ‘Farewell’ Tours That Didn’t Stick — From Mötley Crüe to Kiss
Mötley Crüe are the first band to tour again after signing a legal document saying they wouldn’t, but they’re hardly the first band to hit the road after a so-called final tour
Get The Magazine
The best in culture from a cultural icon. Subscribe now for more from the authority on music, entertainment, politics and pop culture.
Subscribe NowMötley Crüe are the first band to tour again after signing a legal document saying they wouldn’t, but they’re hardly the first band to hit the road after a so-called final tour
In 2010, the future president attended a Roger Waters performance of Pink Floyd’s masterpiece but didn’t stick around long enough to see the wall fall. Could he have learned something if he’d stayed?
Even for the biggest stars, getting music onto streaming services can still be a complicated endeavor. To release ‘Jesus Is Born,’ West turned to Vydia
The unlikely feature was a decidedly un-emo risk that paid off for band’s ambitious ‘Black Parade’
Between a mysterious 1975 song set and a bounty of new publications, the late trailblazer continues to fascinate new generations of scholars and superfans
How American music legends made millions off the work of a Zulu tribesman who died a pauper.
The band didn’t write “Revolution Rock,” Joe Strummer started “Lost in the Supermarket” on the back of a guitar-string package, and Paul Simonon smashed his bass a day…
In a decade defined by loss, David Bowie, Leonard Cohen and others made transcendent art in their last days.
In an excerpt from the new book ‘1973: Rock at the Crossroads,’ Andrew Grant Jackson breaks down the counterculture moments of the summer of 1973
Their 1969 classic remains the band’s darkest LP, and that’s why it sounds perfect right now