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The Day B-Sides Took Over Rock

  The Day B-Sides Took Over Rock (And No One Noticed) There’s a story they don’t tell you about rock ‘n roll. Not in documentaries. Not in “greatest hits” compilations. Not even in the liner notes. Because if they did… it would change everything. It starts, like all good conspiracies do, with something small. A flip of a record. A song you weren’t meant to play first. The B-side. 🌀 The First Crack in the Story We were told the A-side was the hit. The polished one. The radio-friendly one. The one that mattered. But every now and then… you’d flip the record. And what you’d hear didn’t sound like leftovers. It sounded like something else entirely. Unfiltered. Unchecked. Like All in Your Mind by Stray. A driving, sprawling piece of heavy rock that doesn’t care about format, structure… or permission. That’s not a B-side trying to keep up. That’s a track stretching its legs where no one was looking. 🌙 The Ones That Didn’t Fit the Narrative Some songs didn’t just sit quietly on the flip...
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Streets, Static and Swagger: March B-side Quiz

  Streets, Static and Swagger - March B-side Quiz  Before the polish… before the playlists… there was noise, attitude, and songs that didn’t ask permission. This month we dug into CBGB corners, garage explosions, alt-rock echoes, and B-sides that carried more attitude than the A-side ever could. All answers are song titles. Some are loud. Some are loose. Some feel like they might fall apart at any second. That’s the point. Just when they thought Hidden Gems was going quiet… THE QUIZ — 25 QUESTIONS 1. Which Velvet Underground track captures raw desire with a loose, almost chaotic groove? 2. Blondie flirted with literary attitude on which lesser-known track? 3. Blue Öyster Cult blended menace and mystique on which vampiric deep cut? 4. Which Talking Heads song feels jittery, nervous, and oddly addictive in its rhythm? 5. Kiss leaned into vulnerability and storytelling on which Rod Stewart-penned track? Just getting started . 6. Which New York Dolls track explodes with attitude a...

Blink and you missed them

  Blink and You Missed Them: Rock’s Forgotten Bands Some bands fade. Some burn out. And then there are the ones that vanish so completely… you start to wonder if they were ever real at all. No greatest hits. No reunion tours. No streaming algorithm bringing them back from the dead. Just a handful of tracks—pressed onto vinyl, passed between collectors, whispered about in corners of the internet. This isn’t just about B-sides anymore. This is about bands that left behind just enough to haunt rock history… and then disappeared. The Ones Who Left a Mark Writing on the Wall – It Came On A Sunday  A thunderous, almost mystical track that feels bigger than the band itself. Heavy, theatrical, and completely out of time—like it should’ve sparked a movement. Instead, it became a relic. Captain Beyond – Dancing Madly Backwards (On a Sea of Air) A supergroup with serious pedigree… and yet, no lasting foothold. This track is chaotic, brilliant, and ahead of its time. Proof that even talen...

Where Did They Go?

  Where Did They Go? Rock Bands That Seemed Destined for Glory… Then Vanished Rock history isn’t just built on legends. For every band that becomes immortal, there are others that seem ready to conquer the world—massive songs, huge hype, devoted fans—only to disappear almost overnight. Sometimes it was label trouble. Sometimes internal conflict. Sometimes they were simply ahead of their time. These are some of rock’s most fascinating “what happened next?” stories. 1. The La's Moment: 1990 indie explosion Signature track: “There She Goes” Liverpool’s The La's looked like they were about to become Britain’s next guitar-pop giants. Their jangly masterpiece “There She Goes” became one of the most beloved songs of the era and influenced bands like Oasis. But perfectionism and label frustrations derailed everything. Frontman Lee Mavers rejected the album’s production and the band effectively dissolved. The tragedy? They released only one album. Hidden gem: “Timeless Melody” 2. Blind ...

When Rock Got Loud

And Now for Something Completely Different: Heavies from the ’60s When people talk about heavy rock, the conversation usually starts around 1970. Names like Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin dominate the origin story. But the truth is a little messier — and far more interesting. Before heavy metal had a name, a handful of bands in the late 1960s were already pushing rock music into darker, louder territory. Fuzz-drenched guitars, thunderous drums, and riffs that felt more like earthquakes than melodies were beginning to appear in underground clubs and experimental studios. Some of these bands disappeared into cult status. Others were overshadowed by the giants who came later. But listening today, it’s clear: these songs were already heavy before “heavy” was a genre. Let’s dig into a few forgotten monsters from the decade that quietly laid the groundwork for everything that followed. The Fuzz Revolution The late 60s saw guitarists pushing their equipment far beyond what it was...