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Saints, Sinners and Frontmen

  Saints, Sinners, and Frontmen We're Not Religious. We're Rockligious. There are moments in life when a song finds you exactly when you need it. Maybe it's a battered vinyl record discovered in a second-hand store. Maybe it's a crackling radio broadcast late at night, or a B-side hiding on the flip side of a famous single, waiting patiently to be discovered. Whatever the source, most rock fans can remember that feeling—the moment a song stopped being background noise and became part of who they were. For many of us, rock music was never just music. It became ritual. Not a religion, perhaps, but something close enough that generations of fans instantly understand the feeling. We're not religious. We're Rockligious. The Church of Vinyl Every movement has its sacred objects, and rock fans are no different. Album covers, concert posters, ticket stubs, faded band T-shirts, and shelves lined with records all become artifacts of a life spent chasing music. Long before...
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From the Outback to the Underground

  From the Outback to the Underground: The Fierce Spirit of Aussie & Kiwi Rock There’s something different about rock music from Australia and New Zealand. Maybe it’s the isolation. Maybe it’s the endless highways, sweat-soaked pubs, DIY attitude, or the feeling that bands had to scream louder just to be heard across the world. Whatever it is, the result has always been explosive. While the rest of the world obsessed over London, New York, Seattle, or Los Angeles, Australia and New Zealand quietly built one of the fiercest underground rock legacies on the planet — packed with snarling punk, jangling indie guitars, garage rock chaos, and unforgettable B-sides. This is the sound of the southern underground. Australia: Loud, Raw, and Built for the Pub Radio Birdman — The Birth of Aussie Punk Chaos Before punk exploded globally, Sydney’s Radio Birdman were already tearing through high-speed guitar assaults inspired by Detroit proto-punk legends. Their landmark album Radios Appear d...

Forgotten Giants of Rock

  The Unsung Kings of 70s Hard Rock There was a time when rock music smelled like cigarette smoke, engine oil, spilled beer, and hot amplifier tubes. A time when bands didn’t need elaborate gimmicks or polished social media campaigns to build loyal followings. All they needed were towering riffs, relentless touring schedules, denim jackets stitched with patches, and songs loud enough to shake arena walls. The 1970s produced some of the most legendary names in rock history, but beneath the towering shadows of Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, and Deep Purple lived another class of bands — groups every bit as powerful, influential, and unforgettable, yet somehow never granted the same mythical status. These were the road warriors. The cult heroes. The hard-rocking outsiders who built devoted fanbases through sweat, volume, and pure attitude. This is their story. Golden Earring — More Than Radar Love For many listeners, Golden Earring begin and end with “Radar Love.” But reducing the Dutch...

Who’s the Real Deal... and Who Are the Pretenders?

  Who’s the Real Deal… and Who Are the Pretenders? Our one band per month. Some bands feel like a fixed moment in time. You hear a certain lineup… a certain sound… and in your head, that’s the band forever. Then time moves on. People leave. People pass away. Styles change. And suddenly the question starts creeping in: When does a band stop being the band you fell in love with? That’s the strange space The Pretenders has lived in for decades. For a lot of people, the story starts and ends with Chrissie Hynde. The voice. The attitude. The sharp edges. And to be fair, without her, there probably isn’t a Pretenders story at all. But here’s where things get interesting. Because the magic of early Pretenders wasn’t just one person. It was chemistry. Messy, unpredictable, lightning-in-a-bottle chemistry. Back in the late 70s and early 80s, the original lineup had something dangerous about it. James Honeyman-Scott brought texture and atmosphere that made the songs shimmer without losing th...

No Kings In Seattle

  No Kings In Seattle: The Voices That Carried Grunge There was never supposed to be a winner. That is probably the biggest misunderstanding about grunge music. The media tried to turn it into a contest. Who was louder? Who sold more records? Who had the darkest lyrics? Who represented Seattle best? But grunge was never built like glam metal. There were no kings sitting on chrome thrones. No frontman wore the crown for long. The scene survived because every voice brought something different to the storm. One sounded wounded. One sounded spiritual. One sounded furious. One sounded haunted. One sounded like he was fighting through every single note. And together, they created one of the most important movements rock music ever witnessed. This is not about choosing the best. This is about understanding why nobody could replace them. The Broken Poet: "Kurt Cobain","Nirvana frontman" When people think about grunge, they usually begin with "Nirvana". Not because...