NIGHT

NIGHT


  • Johnny Cash Flipping the Bird at San Quentin

    In 1969, in the concrete bowels of San Quentin State Prison, Johnny Cash raised his middle finger to the lens of photographer Jim Marshall. The image is rebellious, iconic, and transcendent, much like the Man in Black himself. But itโ€™s not just a picture; itโ€™s a complex narrative of America, of its music, its social…

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  • JADE BIRD and GRETA VAN FLEET ALBUMS REVIEWED!

    Jade Bird sharpens her edge on Different Kinds of Light, weaving rock grit with intimate songwriting, while Greta Van Fleetโ€™s The Battle at Gardenโ€™s Gate finds the band maturing into a grander, more cinematic soundscape.

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  • Sammy Davis Jr. at Elvis’ Stage Comeback

    In the kaleidoscopic universe of Las Vegas, where neon lights pierce the desert night and every high note echoes the clink of a jackpot, legends Sammy Davis Jr. and Elvis Presley found a friendship as enduring as their tunes. It all came into focus on July 31, 1969โ€”Elvisโ€™s comeback night at the International Hotel. There,…

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  • The Rocket Man’s First U.S. Gig: Elton John at the Troubadour

    In 1970, a fresh-faced British musician named Elton John boarded a plane for Los Angeles, a city where dreams could be made or broken. Having already made a name for himself in the UK, Elton had a simple goal: to introduce his music to the American audience and see if it resonated as it had…

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  • The DUALITY of Sinรฉad O’Connor

    In this moving tribute, Sinรฉad Oโ€™Connorโ€™s battles with trauma, fame, and faith are laid bareโ€”yet itโ€™s her transcendent voice and fierce vulnerability that ultimately defined a life lived beyond the grasp of convention.

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  • The Night George Harrison & Bob Marley Met

    On July 13th, 1975, the Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles was electrified by the sounds of Bob Marley & The Wailers as part of their โ€œNatty Dreadโ€ tour. Amidst the crowd of fans was a familiar face, George Harrison, the Beatle known for his mastery of the slide guitar. As word reached Marley that Harrison…

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  • Boogie With Canned Heat: Thank You Henry

    Reflecting on his first Fillmore East show in 1968, Twisted Sister’s Jay Jay French recalls how Canned Heatโ€™s Henry Vestine provided the inspiration he neededโ€”a blue-collar blues guitarist whose tone and style were accessible enough to emulate and transformative for a budding player.

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  • Hendrix’s Guitar Inferno at Monterey

    The stage, lit only by spotlights and the soft glow of amplifiers, became his canvas. From the opening riffs, the audience was entranced. Each note, each chord was not just heard but felt

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  • Blur: The Ballad of Darren Review

    As Blur returns with The Ballad of Darren, Mark Lepage highlights their mature, melancholic soundโ€”and wonders if the albumโ€™s strength might provoke the ultimate Britpop revenge: an Oasis reunion just to spite them.

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  • Sinรฉad O’Connor, A Tribute In Pictures

    Acclaimed Dublin singer Sinรฉad Oโ€™Connor, whose death was announced on Tuesday, released 10 studio albums, while her song Nothing Compares 2 U was named the number one world single in 1990 by the Billboard Music Awards. Throughout her music career, she cut a striking figure.

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  • The Art of Hi-Fi Volume 02: Soundstage

    PS Audioโ€™s Octave Records follows up with The Art of Hi-Fi Volume 02: Soundstage, a DSD 256 showcase designed to test speaker setup and capture the illusion of three-dimensional sound, reports The Sound Advocate.

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  • The Night Bob Dylan Plugged In: Newport’s Shock Waves Still Reverberating

    In a world ruled by the sweet and somber strums of acoustic guitars, there came a night when one man dared to buck the system. That man was Bob Dylan, and the date was July 25, 1965. The world of folk music, and indeed the wider spectrum of popular music, was about to be forever…

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  • Rock Chronicles, Part 9 โ€” Badfinger’s Tragic Story Begins

    Apple Recordsโ€™ prodigal sons Badfinger were poised to inherit the Beatles’ mantleโ€”complete with George Harrisonโ€™s guiding handโ€”yet behind the scenes, turmoil, label neglect, and internal fractures began unraveling their golden opportunity.

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  • Rock Chronicles, Part 8 โ€” Paul McCartney saves the Poisoned Iveys (temporarily)

    George Harrison championed them, Paul McCartney produced their debut hit, and Apple Records signed themโ€”yet the Iveys (soon to be Badfinger) nearly vanished before they began, victims of internal rifts and corporate reshuffling.

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  • Michael Fremer bares all in exclusive interview with PMA Magazine, Pt 1/3

    Michael Fremer reflects candidly with Gilles Laferriere on receiving a surprise Lifetime Achievement Award at Montreal Audiofest, critiquing exhibitors’ setups, and detailing his emotional departure from Stereophile after building AnalogPlanet and championing vinyl for decades.

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