martes, marzo 10, 2026

In Memoriam: Boston Lead Singer "Tommy DeCarlo" Dies At 60

Tommy DeCarlo, who became the lead singer of the band Boston for nearly 20 years based on a Myspace tribute to the band's original singer, has died at 60.

DeCarlo's children, Annie, Talia and Tommy Jr., said in posts on his Facebook and Instagram pages that their father, who had been struggling for months with brain cancer, died Monday. They said, "He fought with incredible strength and courage right up until the very end." 

Brad Delp, the original singer of the band that was founded in 1975 and had hits including "More Than a Feeling" and "Peace of Mind,", & "Amanda" died in 2007. DeCarlo, then a 43-year-old working at a Home Depot in North Carolina, wrote, sang and recorded a tribute song to Delp. He posted that song along with a few Boston covers to his Myspace page and sent the link to the band.

DeCarlo initially got a polite rejection, according to Rolling Stone. But founding guitarist and songwriter Tom Scholz, struck by his voice's resemblance to Delp, invited DeCarlo to perform at a tribute concert for the late singer. Scholz then asked him to join the band. "It wasn't like I was trying to sing like Brad," DeCarlo said in a bio on the band's website, "it was just that I loved to sing along with him."

DeCarlo toured with Boston for nearly 20 years and sang on their 2013 album, "Life, Love and Hope."

lunes, marzo 09, 2026

New Music: The Monster Of Pig Alley

           

Morrisey has just released their brilliant new album "Make-Up Is A Lie" and a week later of the released of Roxy Music cover "Amazona", the icon released his new single with a video "The Monsters Of Pig Alley" with a video directer by Lewis Cater, the track is fantastic, you see this is what happens when Mozza and aAlain Whyte work together, a brilliant tune from the beginning 'til the end.  


domingo, marzo 08, 2026

New Music: All In Now

           

Keanu Reeves band "Dogstar" have announced their new album "All In Now" and shared its title track as a single, the alt-rock band, in which the movie star Reeves plays bass alongside vocalist Bret Domrose and drummer Rob Mailhouse, reunited in 2023 after a two-decade absence. Now, they have confirmed that the follow-up to that album ‘All In Now’ will be released on May 29. The video was shot by Carlos Garcia Medina.

New Music: Why Don't You

           

The legendary band Squeeze are back with a brand neew album "Trixies" and a new single "Why Don't You" it's the band first new album in nearly a decade is based on material written when they were teenagers, the single has all the Squeeze classic sound and video mixing scenes of the band with dancers and acrobats was directed by Oska Zaky and Connie Virdie

sábado, marzo 07, 2026

New Music: The Best Thing

           

The legendary icon rockers Cheap Trick have released the official music video for their latest single "The Best Thing", taken from the band 21st studio album "All Washed Up" out now. The album was produced by Cheap trick with longtime associate Julian Raymond and mixed by Chris Lord-Alge. 

New Music: Universal Soldier

           

The English electronic band Depeche Mode has just released the brand new track "Universal Soldier" via War Child Records. The track is out now as part of the charity compilation "HELP(2)", released last March 6, 2026, and is included alongside contributions from Anna Calvi, Arctic Monkeys, Arlo Parks, Arooj Aftab, Bat For Lashes, Beabadoobee, Beck, Beth Gibbons, Big Thief, Black Country, New Road, Cameron Winter, Damon Albarn, Dove Ellis, Ellie Rowsell, English Teacher, Ezra Collective, Foals, Fontaines D.C., Graham Coxon, Greentea Peng, Grian Chatten, Kae Tempest, King Krule, Nilüfer Yanya, Oasis, Olivia Rodrigo, Pulp, Sampha, The Last Dinner Party, Wet Leg and Young Fathers.

martes, marzo 03, 2026

Rocktrospectiva: The Brilliant "Absolute Beginners" Turns 40

Released on 3 March 1986 "Absolute Beginners" was a song written and performed by the English singer-songwriter David Bowie. Recorded in August of 1985, and released on 3 March 1986, it was the theme song to the 1986 film of the same name and itself an adaptation of the book Absolute Beginners. Although the film was not a commercial success, the song was a big hit, reaching No. 2 on the UK singles chart. It also reached the top 10 on the main singles charts in ten other countries. In the US, it peaked at No. 53 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Bowie performed "Absolute Beginners" live on his 1987 Glass Spider Tour, his 2000 "Mini" Tour, and his 2002 Heathen Tour. Since then, the song has been included on a number of Bowie's compilation and "Best-of" releases, and was included as a bonus track on the 1995 re-release of Tonight (1984).

Back in 1984, director Julien Temple who was a Bowie friend and who worked first for him in the Jazzin' For Blue Jean" short film, agreed to Temple's request to write music for the film if he could also play the part of Vendice Partners.

The song was recorded at Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley's Westside Studios in Shepherd's Bush, London, in the summer of 1985. One of the musicians, Kevin Armstrong, said that after only twenty minutes of trying various things, they had a structure and shape that seemed to please Bowie. He took a pen and paper and started jotting down lyrics.

The sessions were completed rapidly, but the song was delayed due to the problems with completing the film. Virgin wanted the release to tie in with the film's opening. The song featured Rick Wakeman on piano, who had previously performed on Bowie's "Space Oddity" single and Hunky Dory studio album. Shortly after the sessions wrapped, Mick Jagger flew in to record the charity cover of "Dancing in the Street" with Bowie, which used many of the same musicians. Bowie recorded the lead vocal of "Absolute Beginners" at Westside Studios in August.
 
Julien Temple shot the music video, which echoed the 1950s style of the film. The video was a homage to an old British advert for Strand cigarettes. The ill-fated advertising tagline "You're never alone with a Strand" is quoted by Partners in the film. The video also uses footage from the film.

Back in 2016, Entertainment Weekly chose it as one of Bowie's 20 best music videos. They stated the video "does a far better job of expressing the noirish romanticism" of MacInnes' novel than the film did and also praised the "great dance-fighting scene at the end".

Critics described "Absolute Beginners" as "the gem of his post-Let's Dance '80s output, a big, breathtaking ballad allowing him to indulge the [Frank] Sinatra croon that's driven many of his best performances". It was also considered as "Bowie's last great composition of the 1980s", while rock critic Chris O'Leary described it as "gorgeous and valedictory," with "one of the great Bowie melodies" in its refrain. Don Weller's saxophone solo has been described as perhaps the best saxophone solo in a Bowie song. They characterised it as "the sound of one man trying to violently expel his innards through the bell of his instrument" and "one of the most heartbreaking things put to record". 

Absolute Beginners Track List  
 
3-inch CD: Virgin CDT 20 (UK): 
 
1. Absolute Beginners
2. Absolute Beginners (dub mix) 
 
Virgin CDF 20 (UK)
 
1. Absolute Beginners
2. Absolute Beginners (dub mix) 

7-inch Virgin VS 8383 (UK)
 
1. Absolute Beginners
2. Absolute Beginners (dub mix)
 
12-inch Virgin VSG 838-12 (UK)
 
1. Absolute Beginners (full lenght version)
2. Absolute Beginners (dub mix) 

12-inch: EMI America SPRO 9623 (US)

1. Absolute Beginners (edited version)
2. Absolute Beginners (full length version) 

Rocktrospectiva: The Stone Cold Classic "Master Of Puppets" Turns 40

Released on 3 March 1986, "Master Of Puppets" was the 3rd., album by US heavy metal band Metallica. It was recorded in Copenhagen, Denmark, at Sweet Silence Studios with producer Flemming Rasmussen, it is the band's final album to feature bassist Cliff Burton. While touring in support of Master of Puppets, he died on September 27, 1986, after the band's tour bus was involved in an accident in Dörarp, Sweden.The album spawned the outstanding single "Master Of Puppets".

Metallica's 1983 debut Kill 'Em All laid the foundation for thrash metal with its aggressive musicianship and vitriolic lyrics. The album revitalized the US underground scene, and inspired similar records by contemporaries. The band's second album Ride the Lightning extended the limits of the genre with its more sophisticated songwriting and improved production. The album caught the attention of Elektra Records representative Michael Alago, who signed the group to an eight-album deal in the fall of 1984. Elektra reissued Ride the Lightning on November 19, and the band began touring larger venues and festivals throughout 1985. After parting with manager Jon Zazula, Metallica began working with Cliff Burnstein and Peter Mensch of Q Prime. 

Metallica was motivated to make an album that would impress critics and fans, and began writing new material in mid-1985. Lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist James Hetfield and drummer Lars Ulrich were the main songwriters on the album, already titled Master of Puppets. The two developed ideas at a garage in El Cerrito, California, before inviting bassist Cliff Burton and guitarist Kirk Hammett for rehearsals. Hetfield and Ulrich described the songwriting process as starting with "guitar riffs, assembled and reassembled until they start to sound like a song". After that, the band came up with a song title and topic, and Hetfield wrote lyrics to match the title. Master of Puppets is Metallica's first album not to feature songwriting contributions from former lead guitarist Dave Mustaine. 

The band was not satisfied with the acoustics of the American studios they considered, and decided to record in Ulrich's native Denmark. Ulrich took drum lessons, and Hammett worked with Joe Satriani to learn how to record more efficiently. Ulrich was in talks with Rush's bassist and vocalist Geddy Lee to produce the album, but the collaboration never materialized because of uncoordinated schedules. Metallica recorded the album with producer Flemming Rasmussen at Sweet Silence Studios in Copenhagen, Denmark, from September 1 to December 27, 1985. The writing of all the songs except "Orion" and "The Thing That Should Not Be" was completed before the band's arrival in Copenhagen. Rasmussen stated that the band brought well-prepared demos of the songs, and only slight changes were made to the compositions in the studio. The recording took longer than the previous album because Metallica had developed a sense of perfectionism and had higher ambitions. 

Rasmussen and Metallica did not manage to complete the mixtapes as planned. Instead, the multitrack recordings were sent in January 1986 to Michael Wagener, who finished the album's mixing. The cover was designed by Metallica and Peter Mensch and painted by Don Brautigam. It depicts a cemetery field of white crosses tethered to strings, manipulated by a pair of hands in a blood-red sky. Ulrich explained that the artwork summarized the lyrical content of the album—people being subconsciously manipulated.

Master of Puppets featured dynamic music and thick arrangements. Metallica delivered a more refined approach and performance compared to the previous two albums, with multilayered songs and technical dexterity. This album and its predecessor Ride the Lightning followed a similar track sequencing: both open with an up-tempo song with an acoustic intro, followed by a lengthy title track, and a fourth track with ballad qualities. Although both albums are similarly structured, the musicianship on Master of Puppets is more powerful and epic in scope, with tight rhythms and delicate guitar solos.

The songs explored themes such as control and the abuse of power. The lyrics describe the consequences of alienation, oppression, and feelings of powerlessness. Author Ryan Moore thought the lyrics depicted "ominous yet unnamed forces of power wielding total control over helpless human subjects". The lyrics were considered perceptive and harrowing, and were praised for being honest and socially conscious by writer Brock Helander. The compositions and arrangements benefited from Burton's classical training and understanding of harmony.

The album opened with "Battery" a track that refered to angry violence, as in the term "assault and battery". Some critics contended that the title actually refers to an artillery battery, and interpreted it as "Hetfield singing of a war tactic as the aggressor" personifying destruction. The song began with bass-heavy classical guitars that build upon multitracked layers until they are joined by a sonic wall of distorted electric guitars, "Master Of Puppets" the iconical single featured lyrics from the point of a voice of a personification of addiction and it was about cocaine addiction. The song consisted of several riffs with odd meters and a cleanly picked middle section with melodic solo. The song shared a similar structure with "The Four Horsemen" from the band's first album: two verse-chorus sets lead to a lengthy interlude to another verse-chorus set, the song closes with a fade-out of sinister laughter

"The Thing That Should Not Be" was inspired by the Cthulhu Mythos created by famed horror writer H.P. Lovecraft, with notable direct references to The Shadow over Innsmouth and to Cthulhu himself, who is the subject matter of the song's chorus. It is considered the heaviest track on the album, with the main riff emulating a beast dragging itself into the sea. The Black Sabbath-influenced guitars are down-tuned, creating slow and moody ambience. "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)" the song's subject matter was about madness and served as a metaphor for honesty and truth, and it was based on Ken Kesey's novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and conveyed the thoughts of a patient unjustly caged in a mental institution. "Disposable Heroes" is an anti-war song about a young soldier whose fate is controlled by his superiors. With sections performed at 220 beats per minute, it is one of the most intense tracks on the record.

The syncopated riffing of "Leper Messiah" challenged the hypocrisy of the televangelism that emerged in the 1980s. The song describes how people are willingly turned into blind religious followers who mindlessly do whatever they are told. The 136 beats per minute mid-tempo riffing of the verses culminates in a descending chromatic riff in the chorus; it increases to a galloping 184 beats per minute for the middle section that climaxes in a distorted scream of "Lie!". "Orion" was a multipart instrumental highlighting Burton's bass playing. It opens with a fade-in bass section, heavily processed to resemble an orchestra. It continues with mid-tempo riffing, followed by a bass riff at half-tempo. The tempo accelerates during the latter part, and ends with music fading out. Burton arranged the middle section, which features its moody bass line and multipart guitar harmonies.

And finally "Damage, Inc." ranted about senseless violence and reprisal at an unspecified target. It starts with a series of reversed bass chords based on the chorale prelude of Bach's "Come, Sweet Death". The song then jumped into a rapid rhythm with a pedal-point riff in E that Hammett says was influenced by Deep Purple.

Master of Puppets was hailed as a masterpiece by critics outside of the thrash metal audience and cited by some as the genre's greatest album. The band had redefined heavy metal with the technical skill and subtlety showcased on the album, which he described as "the sound of global paranoia". The album was the one that finally put Metallica into the big leagues where they belong". The album became thrash metal's first platinum album and by the early 1990s thrash metal successfully challenged and redefined the mainstream of heavy metal, until now, the album is widely accepted as the genre's most accomplished album, and paved the way for subsequent development.

Master Of Puppets Track List: 
 
1. Battery 
2. Master Of Puppets
3. The Thing That Should Not Be
4. Welcome Home (Sanitarium)
5. Disposable Heroes
6. Leper Messiah
7. Orion (Instrumental)
8. Damage, Inc.

sábado, febrero 28, 2026

Rocktrospectiva: The Incredible And Greatest "Pretty In Pink: Soundtrack" Turns 40

 
Released on 28 February 1986 "Pretty In Pink: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack" was the official soundtrack of the film the same name and as with previous films by John Hughes. The title song by the Psychedelic Furs acted as a bit of inspiration for the film and was re-recorded specifically for the film's opening sequence in a version that was less raw than the original version that appeared on the 1981 album Talk Talk Talk. "Left of Center" was remixed by Arthur Baker. The first track, "If You Leave", by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, was written in 1985 specifically for the film. In addition to their soundtrack song "Shellshock", New Order also contributed an instrumental version of "Thieves Like Us" and the instrumental "Elegia", both of which appear in the film but not on the soundtrack.
 
The Rave-Ups, who appear in the film performing "Positively Lost Me" and "Shut-Up" from their Town and Country album, do not have any songs on the soundtrack album. Nik Kershaw's "Wouldn't It Be Good" appears on the soundtrack in a version by former Three Dog Night vocalist Danny Hutton's band, Danny Hutton Hitters. The Smiths' "Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want" appears on the soundtrack and was later covered by the Autumns for the 2000 Isn't She Still... The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Revisited album. Also noteworthy is the inclusion of Echo & the Bunnymen's "Bring On the Dancing Horses", which, according to the liner notes of the CD release of the band's compilation album Songs to Learn & Sing, was recorded specifically for the film.

The film also includes Otis Redding's "Try a Little Tenderness", to which Duckie lip-synchs in the film, the Association's "Cherish" and Talk Back's "Rudy". These three tracks do not appear on the official soundtrack album.

Another Hughes film cracker and according to certain stories, the idea came from Molly Ringwald herself. She reached out to John Hughes, urging him to create a film inspired by her favourite tune at the time—The Psychedelic Fur' "Pretty in Pink" at the time of its released  it was nothing quite like the soundtrack that Hughes assembled for Pretty in Pink, the third film he'd written to star Molly Ringwald in a lead role, following 1984’s Sixteen Candles and 1985’s The Breakfast Club

The film made almost $7.5M in its opening week – In Ringwald’s own words: I made three movies with John Hughes; when they were released, they made enough of a cultural impact to land me on the cover of Time magazine and to get Hughes hailed as a genius.  There was music in Hughes’s previous film, The Breakfast Club, and it even featured a #1, era-defining single in Simple Minds’s “Don’t You (Forget About Me)” – but as many people said, there was not much else on that soundtrack that was particularly memorable.

Pretty in Pink, however, was different cause the album had a number of now-iconic UK college rock artists (back then) on it, none of whom had come anywhere near the tops of the US pops in 1986: New Order had a trio of songs featured in the film, though only  "Shell-Shock" appeared on its soundtrack, Echo and the Bunnymen, the Smiths, Psychedelic Furs and the British synthpop stars Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, a/k/a OMD, whose "If You Leave" soundtracked the film's climactic prom scene. 

Suzanne Vega, then hot off her self-titled 1985 album, also appears on the soundtrack, with Joe Jackson on piano, INXS, former Time member Jesse Johnson, former Three Dog Night singer Danny Hutton and UK synthpopper Belouis Some, who had notched a pair of top 10 US dance hits in ‘85. 

In summary, the Pretty in Pink soundtrack wasn't just another collection of tracks—it’s was life-changer! and made a huge impact in pop culture regarded as one of the ‘Best Movie Soundtracks: The 15 Film Music Compilations That’ll Change Your Life'.
 
Pretty In Pink Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Track List: 
 
1. If You Leave
2. Left Of Center
3. Get To Know Ya
4. Do Wot You Do
5. Pretty In Pink
6. Shell-Shock
7. Round, Round
8. Wouldn't It Be Good
9. Bring On The Dancing Horses

Film: The Iconic Teen Drama "Pretty In Pink" Turns 40

Originally premiered at Mann's Chinese Theatre on January 29, 1986, and was released theatrically in the United States on February 28, 1986 by Paramount Pictures. The film received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised Ringwald's performance, and grossed $40.5 million against a $9 million budge. 

Pretty in Pink was a 1986 American teen romantic comedy-drama film about love and social cliques in American high schools in the 1980s. The film stars Molly Ringwald, alongside Harry Dean Stanton, Jon Cryer, Annie Potts, James Spader, and Andrew McCarthy. A cult classic of the 1980s an it was commonly identified as a "Brat Pack" film. The film followed high school senior Andie Walsh (Ringwald), and her relationships with her love interest Blane McDonnagh (McCarthy), her best friend Philip F. "Duckie" Dale (Cryer), and her father (Stanton).

It was directed by Howard Deutch, produced by Lauren Shuler Donner, and written by John Hughes, who also served as co-executive producer. The film was named after a song by the Psychedelic Furs, and the film's soundtrack, which has been acclaimed as "among the most brilliant in modern cinema", featured a re-recorded version of the song. Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark's "If You Leave" became an international hit and charted at number four on the US Billboard Hot 100 in May 1986.

Hughes explored the spectrum of teenage angst in the films he wrote or directed. Its 1985’s The Breakfast Club, explored the cliches of high school cliques and the misunderstandings that come with them. Ferris Bueller’s Day Off was a love letter to middle-class misbehavior in the pursuit of finding oneself. With Pretty in Pink we saw complex characters handle the weighty issues of love, family and class inequity. It shows us the ups and downs of romance between a lower-middle-class girl and an upper-class boy, as well as the jealousy and lovelorn feelings of a friend. The film leans into some tired tropes of high school life, sure, but it shows a refreshing female lead who is smart, confident, creative and has no desire to sell herself out to win the guy. 

But the film isn’t just remembered for its story, either. It's also considered to have one of the most remarkable soundtracks in cinema, which includes bands such as Psychedelic Furs, The Smiths, New Order, Orchestral Maneuvers in the Dark and Echo and the Bunnymen. And the outstanding Cryer's unforgettable lip-synching performance to Otis Redding's "Try a Little Tenderness," which resulted in some injuries and the demise of some vintage shoes he wore. Meanwhile, the record store Andie works in, Trax, is an audiophile's wet dream with larger-than-life posters and seemingly endless aisles of vinyl.

In the early era of teen movies, from the 1950s to the '80s, plots centered on archetypes such as rebellion, greasers, jocks and nerds, often with lighter themes. The 1990s and early aughts saw a rise in comedies like Clueless and Mean Girls; supernatural stories like Twilight and the Harry Potter series; queer narratives in films like Love, Simon; and mental health struggles like those in The Edge of Seventeen. Today, teen-focused content includes increased realism with topics like suicide, addiction, sexual identity and the pressures of social media. And it’s not just white suburbia that’s represented. 

The idea of what teen movies are has dramatically changed since their golden age in the 1980s.But high hormones, low confidence, love triangles, the woes of popularity and class divide remained until now on any teen drama. And that's the reason why Pretty in Pink remained iconical today, cause it certainly glamorizes this era of life that feels so heavy when we're in it, but so inconsequential as an adult. And even though we can predict these same old plot lines one after another, it's the proof, perhaps, that some stories like this won't die.