John Wetton Still Loves One of King Crimson’s Most Misunderstood Albums: ‘I Don’t Regret What Happened’
Robert Fripp unceremoniously ended King Crimson before this project even appeared on store shelves.
Robert Fripp unceremoniously ended King Crimson before this project even appeared on store shelves.
Cain boasts a huge appreciation for Perry, despite their lengthy time apart.
Judas Priest’s ‘Redeemer of Souls’ shows you don’t need new tricks if you can perform the old ones with the fire, passion and energy of 30 or so years ago.
She will change your perceptions of what a “jazz vocalist” in this day and age means.
Jerry Garcia’s take is simply enveloped in an atmosphere of absence.
Spartan but sturdy arrangements, capped with hummable choruses and spiky breaks.
Another unfinished diamond in the rough that evokes a feeling of what could have been.
Their atmospheric, unreleased ‘Big Spliff’ sessions apparently sparked a new project.
Little other than a sense of soul holds this list together. That’s more than enough.
The Monkees, in fact, employed the same sidemen as the Beach Boys, and the Byrds.