Happy Mondays, Troxy, review: Shaun Ryder and co board the nostalgia bus
Manchester’s unruliest band wind back the clock in East London
Manchester’s unruliest band wind back the clock in East London
The Smoke On The Water rockers on punch-ups, the making of their alcohol-fuelled debut album and Ritchie Blackmore’s many eccentricities
Rob Reiner’s 40-year-old spoof remains a perfect study of metal idiocy. Yet real-life rockers are so much more deluded – and accident-prone
Get your facts right, hire the right actor, don’t play nice… As the 007 director plans his four Beatles movies, here’s how they could be fab
Their shortest songs last 20 minutes, they rarely play the same set twice and they’re always on tour. How have they lasted this long?
Eye-popping tales of misbehaviour made the late Pogue a bankable rock legend. But for any fan of his songwriting, they’re hard to stomach
The composer's 3rd Symphony presents a challenge for orchestras, but the London Philharmonic Orchestra handled it with exquisite clarity
The 71-year-old Police drummer on employing an on-tour therapist to fix his bad blood with Sting and why he's a capitalism-loving Democrat
Rush frontman Geddy Lee reflects on how his parents surviving Auschwitz affected his childhood, the death of Neil Peart, and a Rush reunion
From undiscovered classics by artists you've never heard of to underrated gems by all-time greats… Find your next favourite album here
The singer speeds through the experience of selling 50 million albums and writing Karma Chameleon – focusing on his fashion choices instead
To mark the release of a huge live box-set, Mark Knopfler’s longtime brother in arms explains why Dire Straits reached the end of the road
Now and Then promises to be the final release by the Fab Four. But it’s not their only unheard song languishing in the archives
Philip Norman’s new biography of the late Beatle is a fleet and confident portrait of a complicated character
Fifty years ago, Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir’s shambolic, drugged-up jam-band released their first LP – and things only got weirder from there
Noddy Holder and co were the missing link between the Sex Pistols and the Beatles – and they made the 1970s more bearable for millions