It is an understatement to say that rock wouldn't be the same if it weren't for The Beatles. After all, the band formed by Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr, and George Harrison had a decade-long trajectory that went hand in hand with the sociocultural movements of the '60s.
The Beatles' famed 1963 song "Please Please Me" wasn't an easy sell to American record producers, but it changed the Fab Four's lives.
The hangover from The Beatles' breakup was still stubbornly lingering in 1973. Legal proceedings entangling the principals were very much still in play. Fans of the Fab Four certainly couldn't take for granted any sign of unity from the four band members.
The Beatles' 'Now and Then' may win record of the year. Is it singular for the academy, or a boomer-rock harbinger?
The Beatles bring Let It Be back to several charts in the U.K. this week, as the final release from the rockers is a bestseller once more in their home country.
Robbie Williams has secured a huge milestone on the U.K. Album Charts. Better Man, the soundtrack to his recent biopic of the same name, has given the British pop icon his 15th No. 1 album, and sees him pull ahead of The Rolling Stones (14) in the all-time rankings.
Breed" was paired with a cover of The Beatles' "The Long and Winding Road" that made a lackluster song even worse.
Jorge Pezzimenti (The Loving Paupers, The Pietasters) and Jay Nugent (The Slackers) explore the Fab Four's ska connection. Did The Beatles Invent Ska-Punk?: Podcast
MITCHELL- Don’t miss your chance to immerse yourself in the Beatles experience! The Rigbys will rock the Mitchell Opera House on February 1 at
A long-awaited — and fraught — film about Brian Epstein hits some of the right notes but misses plenty of others.
Jacob Fortune-Lloyd plays Epstein and shows us his business genius, and the torment of his gay life. But even the dark side is a bit too on-the-nose.
On "Look Up," his first full album in nearly six years, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Ringo Starr has taken a country turn -- which he did with the band by singing Buck Owens' "Act Naturally" on on his own with his second solo album,