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Let's Burn Some Midnight Oil

  One Band a Month – July:  Let's Burn Some Midnight Oil Midnight Oil aren't just another great Australian rock band. They're one of those rare bands that proved rock music could make you think as much as it made you move. While many artists wrote songs about love, heartbreak or excess, Midnight Oil looked outward. They wrote about people. About communities. About injustice. About the environment. About a country still wrestling with its own identity. Yet somehow, none of it ever felt like a lecture. It felt like rock 'n' roll. For most listeners, the journey begins with "Beds Are Burning." Maybe "Blue Sky Mine." Perhaps "The Dead Heart." Those songs deserve every bit of their legendary status. They're powerful, unforgettable and remain as relevant today as when they were first released. But if that's where the listening stops, you're only hearing half the story. Because hidden beneath those huge singles is a catalogue fille...
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Hidden Gems Quiz, with a difference - June Edition

  “Hidden Gems: Signals, Stories & Sonic Clues” The Visual B-Side & Deep Cut Challenge This month’s quiz is built differently. Instead of straightforward trivia, each question combines: a photo clue a song or track reference a story, lyric, or piece of music history Your task is simple: name the band or artist. Some clues are obvious. Others are buried in studio lore, instrument choices, songwriting stories, or cultural moments that shaped music history. From prog epics and punk pioneers to indie breakthroughs and arena rock giants — this is a tour through the hidden architecture of rock and alternative music. 🎲 QUESTIONS 1. Vanilla Queen Question: This track features a massive synthesizer outro. Which Dutch band used the same tape-replay keyboard famously heard on “Strawberry Fields Forever” to create its symphonic sound? Clue: The instrument mimics orchestras using recorded tape loops. 2. The King Will Come Question: Which British progressive rock band used twin-lead gui...

When Rock Music Rewrote History

  The Covers That Became Bigger Than The Originals When Rock Music Rewrote History Rock music has always thrived on reinvention. A riff gets louder. A lyric gets darker. A folk tune becomes a stadium anthem. Sometimes an artist doesn’t just cover a song — they completely absorb it into their own identity until the world forgets the original ever existed. Some of the biggest “originals” in rock history… weren’t originals at all. These are the cover songs that escaped their creators and became legendary in the hands of someone else. Jimi Hendrix – “All Along the Watchtower” Originally by: Bob Dylan Few cover songs changed their source material as dramatically as this one. Dylan’s 1967 version on John Wesley Harding was stripped-down, mysterious folk poetry — cryptic and haunting, but restrained. Hendrix took those same lyrics and detonated them into a psychedelic thunderstorm of electric guitar chaos. The guitar solos sounded like lightning tearing through the sky. The tension built ...

When Rock Put on Makeup

  When Rock Put on Makeup, Bought a Synthesizer, and Invaded MTV Ask a rock fan to name the biggest bands of the 1980s and you'll hear names like Van Halen, AC/DC, and Bon Jovi. Ask them about Thompson Twins, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, or Adam and the Ants and you might get a shrug, followed by, "That's pop music." But is it? Maybe one of the greatest musical misconceptions of the MTV era is that rock and pop occupied opposite corners of the room. The reality is far more interesting. Many of the bands we file under New Wave, synth-pop, and alternative weren't abandoning rock and roll. They were reinventing it. The guitars didn't disappear. They simply learned a few new tricks. The Punk Connection Take Adam Ant. Before the pirate jackets, war paint, and chart-topping videos, he emerged from Britain's punk underground. Listen to Dog Eat Dog or Kings of the Wild Frontier and you'll hear pounding drums, snarling guitars, and enough attitude to fill an aren...

The Rock World Cup

  🌍 The Rock World Cup: Where Everyone Wins A global tournament for hidden gems, forgotten legends, and the songs that never got the spotlight Every few years, the world comes together to crown champions on the football pitch. But what if rock music had its own World Cup? No overplayed anthems. No predictable winners. No stadium-sized hits that everybody already knows. Instead, every nation sends one of its finest underground contenders to the tournament—a band or artist carrying a hidden gem that deserves to be heard. In this World Cup, there are no red cards, no penalty shootouts, and no losers. The only prize is discovering your next favourite song. So grab your headphones and welcome to the first Rock World Cup. πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Group A – The Americas πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ Canada – The Tragically Hip Hidden Gem: Ahead by a Century Beloved across Canada but criminally underrated elsewhere, The Tragically Hip combined roots rock with poetic storytelling, led by the unforgettable Gord Downie. πŸ‡²πŸ‡½ Mexico – C...