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New York Dolls: Glam, Grit and Proto-Punk

  One Band Per Month: New York Dolls “ Please kill me if I can’t be young.” — New York Dolls March belongs to the New York Dolls — a band that didn’t just play music, but detonated an attitude the moment they stepped on stage. Before punk had a uniform or a rulebook, the Dolls were already tearing holes in both.  They stepped onto stages in early-70s New York looking like glam and sounding like chaos, fusing swagger with something far more dangerous: honesty. A City That Matched the Noise They formed in 1971, right in the middle of a city that felt like it was unraveling and reinventing itself in the same breath. New York wasn’t polished — it was gritty, loud, unpredictable — and the Dolls mirrored it perfectly.  Fronted by David Johansen and driven by Johnny Thunders’ razor-edged guitar work, they built a sound that didn’t care about precision. It cared about feeling. And it hit like a punch. Beautiful, Unfiltered Arrival When their 1973 debut album landed, it didn’t sou...
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Back In The New York Groove

  We’re Back, Back in the New York Groove A B-Side Tour Through New York’s Loudest Hidden Gems New York has always been more than a city — it’s an amplifier. It takes noise, attitude, poetry, grit, and ambition and turns it into music that changes scenes and decades. From downtown art-rock to outer-borough hard rock, New York bands didn’t just write hits — they buried gold on the flip side. This week, we’re heading into the crates. No radio staples. No overplayed singles. Only New York born, bred, or based bands — and the B-sides that prove the real story is often hiding on side two. Drop the needle. Subway doors closing. The Street-Punk Spark — The Ramones Few bands are more tightly wired to New York than Ramones. Fast, stripped, zero-frills — they made the city sound like it felt. B-side spotlight: “Sheena Is a Punk Rocker” (early B-side pairing pressings / alternate flip releases) While the A-side grabbed attention, the flips and alternate pairings around this era showed how dee...

The Month of Love B-side Quiz

  War, Peace and the Human Heart - The Month of Love B-side Quiz   War isn’t always fought on battlefields. Sometimes it lives in addiction, love, regret, longing, and the quiet spaces in between. This month’s quiz dives into conflict and calm, chaos and tenderness — told through B-sides, covers, deep cuts, and emotionally raw tracks. All answers are song titles. Some will hit instantly. Others will linger… then strike. Just when they thought Hidden Gems was going quiet… 🎲 THE QUIZ — 25 QUESTIONS 1. Which Gun Club track turns obsession into something dangerous and addictive? 2. Suicide captured fragile, minimalist love on which hypnotic track? 3. Which Velvet Underground song feels like emotional release and spiritual escape? 4. Nick Cave delivers one of his most tender love songs aboard what vessel-themed track? 5. Swans offered redemption and salvation through which haunting piece? 6. Saxon captured battlefield storytelling and live power on which soaring track? 7. Echo ...

War & Peace

  War & Peace: Love as the Only Thing That Survives Love has never been polite. It didn’t wait for permission in the 70s, and it doesn’t wait now. While wars raged on television screens and protest spilled into the streets, love showed up in unexpected forms — not as romance, but as resistance, refuge, and remembrance. This isn’t a story about one decade. It’s about love as a universal language, spoken loudest when the world is at its noisiest. And as always, the deepest truths often live on the B-side. The Playlist: War, Peace & the Human Heart 1. War: Love as Protest Creedence Clearwater Revival – “Graveyard Train” This isn’t a chant. It’s a slow, ominous march. “Graveyard Train” doesn’t shout about war — it drags you through it. Love here isn’t idealistic; it’s the unspoken grief for those who don’t come back. The track feels like standing on a platform, watching futures disappear into smoke. War doesn’t always explode. Sometimes it just keeps moving forward, taking ever...

Indie Love, Unfinished

  Indie Love, Unfinished: The B-Sides That Say What Hit Singles Won’t There’s a different kind of love story hiding in modern indie rock. Not the kind that explodes in a chorus or demands a stadium to feel complete, but something quieter and far more personal. It lives in the margins—in the tracks that didn’t make the headlines, in the songs you only find if you’re really listening. This is where bands like The Kooks, The Struts, and their contemporaries reveal something deeper. Their B-sides aren’t just leftovers—they’re where the polish fades and the truth begins. It’s not about perfection; it’s about honesty, and that’s what makes these tracks linger long after the first listen. The Sound of Almost Love Indie rock didn’t abandon the love song—it reshaped it into something more fragile and uncertain. Instead of giving us clear answers, it leans into questions, into moments that feel unresolved. These songs don’t try to define love; they sit in the confusion of it, exploring what ...