Bassist Tetsu Yamauchi, who played with both Free and the Faces during his lengthy musical career, died Dec. 4, his family ...
The former singer of the 1970s British progressive rock band Gentle Giant unveiled his autobiography, 'Giant Steps.' ...
KC and the Sunshine Band, racism, instrumental songs, forgettable melodrama, good to great FM radio fodder, and a Bowie ...
While still in high school, Upchurch started playing with popular neighborhood groups such as the Cool Gents, who were ...
The first exhibition at Melbourne's new Australian Museum of Performing Arts is a star-studded look at the diva through the ages.
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Today-Music-History-Dec05

Today in Music History for Dec. 5: In 1828, a Harmonic Society was formed in Lunenburg, N.S., by 24 men who met every week to sing church music. The society was one of the earliest musical ...
San Ramon, California – December 08, 2025 – PRESSADVANTAGE – Six Gun Rebels, a Pacific Northwest-based Bad Company tribute ...
Drummer Simon Kirke believes that Bad Company’s decision to replace lead singer Paul Rodgers ultimately "tarnished" the band. It was 1982 when arguments within the group led Rodgers to quit. At the ...
Bad Company’s classic rock standard “Ready For Love” first appeared on Mott The Hoople’s 1972 album, 'All The Young Dudes'.
The 1970s were such a good era for music that even the "worst" albums from that decade still have some redeeming qualities.
Simon Kirke reflects on Paul Rodgers’s early-’80s exit and explains why the band’s attempt to replace him made it worse.
Paul and Earl Hudson were born to a Jamaican mother and an American father who worked as a mechanic for the U.S. Air Force, and they moved all over the country before settling down in Washington, D.C.