Norah Jones' Puss N Boots and Billy Joel's 'Bridge to Russia' top this week's new music
It isn’t easy keeping up with Norah Jones. But it’s always worth the effort. Including this time.
QMI Agency
National music writer Darryl Sterdan is old enough to know better. He lives mostly in his head but also on his couch in Winnipeg, where he listens to music, thinks about music, writes about music and obsesses over music 24/7/365. Not that there's anything wrong with that. But he really will have to get that couch cleaned one of these days.
It isn’t easy keeping up with Norah Jones. But it’s always worth the effort. Including this time.
Some guys just have a knack for making friends. Then there’s Morrissey.
That proverb about being careful what you wish for? Robbie should be feeling that one right now.
Nice guys don’t always finish last. But let’s face it: Bad boys have more fun.
QMI Agency's Darryl Sterdan runs through the best albums of the year... so far.
Same shtik, different dude. Overhyped noir-pop chanteuse Lana Del Rey — a.k.a. poor little rich girl Lizzie Grant — has nothing new to say on the followup to her wildly overhyped 2012 major-label debut Born to Die.
Jack White is not sorry. Not by a long shot. He can apologize to The Black Keys, Meg White, Lana Del Rey and the rest of the world all he likes.
You can take the girl out of the trailer park … unless that girl is Miranda Lambert.
If I never have to see Damian Abraham’s gonch again, it’ll be too soon. Don’t get me wrong; I respect and admire Abraham and F---ed Up’s work ethic and egalitarianism as much as the next aging punk.
Forget the El Camino. These days, The Black Keys travel by jet.
Some artists could make an album from the phone book. Only Neil Young would make one in a phone booth.
Exactly who is Damon Albarn? It’s not that simple a question, really.
Trust Jack White to put a new spin on Record Store Day — and set a new record in the process.
What big albums are coming this spring/summer? Should you buy them? Will they suck? Glad you asked. Here’s a chronological rundown:
Hats off. Between the runaway successes of Robin Thicke’s Blurred Lines, Daft Punk’s Get Lucky, Despicable Me’s Happy — and the various Grammy trophies, MTV awards and Oscar love they’ve generated — uberproducer Pharrell Williams is probably having the best year of his professional life.
It was 50 years ago today ... OK, not quite. But you get the drift. Nearly half a century ago, on Feb. 7, 1964, The Beatles landed in New York City to play The Ed Sullivan Show.
A rap messiah, a glam god, caveman queens and a dead president: If you’re looking for music’s class of 2013, look no further. Here are my favourite albums of the year:
Let’s get ready to waaaaarrrrrrbllllllllle! That’s right, pop fans: It’s time for the biggest Canadian music melee of the season. The Brawl of the Belters. The Diva Dustup. The Prima Donnybrook.
“Ain’t no grave can hold my body down,” Johnny Cash once sang. Truer words were never spoken — assuming he meant his body of work.
Out with the old tunes and in with the new. Here are 10 of the most-anticipated albums of 2014. But before you mark the calendar, remember: Everything is subject to change.
It seems the terrorists have won. And by terrorists I mean Russell Brand, of course.
When you’re trying to mix politics with pop, you could always listen to your gut. But it might be better to listen to The Clash.
Rihanna will flash her Diamonds -- and likely much more -- in Canada next spring.
You learn something new every day. Even when you’re watching pointless award shows. Here are a dozen things I learned from enduring the 2012 MTV Video Music Awards:
For Bryan Ferry, listening to Roxy Music is more labour than love these days.
Barbra Streisand’s Canadian fans are the luckiest people in the world today.
Everybody knows Jay-Z is a player. But now he's running the game in a whole new way.
Eternal youth. Universal adulation. Multiple awards. No more paparazzi. And more money than you can ever spend.