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Not actually brothers, John (Maus), Gary (Leeds) and Scott (Engel) succeeded against the odds, becoming one of world's biggest bands of 1966/67.
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Metallica, the seventh-biggest recording act in American history, are consummate musicians but it wasn't always that way.
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Bill Bruford once called "the godfather of progressive-rock drumming" has been at the top of his profession for four decades, playing with Yes, King Crimson, Genesis, Earthworks, and many more.
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By turns fiercely confrontational, literate, primitive and sweetly melodic,
The Velvet Underground remain one of the most influential bands in the history of rock.
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The 100 Greatest Metal Guitarists is a book with a mission. Since we emerged from the primeval ooze, mankind has laboured under the mistaken impression that hard rock is heavy metal and heavy metal is hard rock.
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Forty years ago, former Byrds Chris Hillman and Gram Parsons released
The Gilded Palace Of Sin, the debut album by their new band, The Flying Burrito Brothers.
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In 1958 Gibson introduced an electric guitar called the Les Paul Standard, a solidbody electric with mahogany body, two pickups, and a three-colour sunburst maple top, priced at $280.
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In March 2008 Neil Aspinall, for so long the overseer of
The Beatles empire, died. But the machine he ran for decades continues to print money.
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Bowie In Berlin tells the fascinating story of the three years David Bowie spent in Germany in the mid 1970s, making the most extraordinary music of his career.
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Million Dollar Bash tells the story of the "basement tapes", a sequence of recordings made by
Bob Dylan and his associates during the psychedelic summer of 1967.
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