
Fall Out Boy is unafraid of reinventing their sound with each and every new album. Here’s an introduction to some of their best songs.

Headed up by its exhilarating titular song, Seger’s first album was a proto-punk Detroit classic.

Helmed by Rick Rubin, Johnny Cash’s American Recordings saw the country legend make a stunning return late his career, re-establishing his rebel cred.

The unapologetic new single from the country singer-songwriter reclaims a loaded word and honors a long line of thick-skinned women.

The new track arrives alongside a music video and ahead of the band’s May album release.

The new clip extends the storyline introduced in ‘Desgraça’ and the project ‘FÉ E FESTA.’

The Japanese group previews the June 26 LP with ‘Hanagasa Ondo’ featuring Frente Cumbiero.

Mendes once described the 2018 Grammy-nominated single about anxiety ‘the closest song to my heart that I’ve ever written.’

The DJ is bringing his festival to the East Coast for the first time.










Original versions of Guns N’ Roses’ first-ever release, ‘Live ?!*@ Like A Suicide,’ has become one of their rarest collectibles.

As the new millennium dawned, George Strait’s self-titled album proved that the King Of Country would have no problem retaining his crown.

With his trio The Blue Line, Robben Ford recorded an exquisitely played and impressively varied set of covers and originals in the 1995 LP ‘Handful Of Blues.’

Ringo’s first studio recording outside of The Beatles featured remakes of standards that the Starkey family would sing around the house and at special gatherings.

The ever-versatile Bobby Darin turned his hand to country music on 1963’s ‘You’re The Reason I’m Living,’ and put his own unique spin on the style.

With mutual appreciation for each other’s blues prowess, John Lee Hooker and Canned Heat collaborated on the smoking-hot album ‘Hooker ’N Heat.’

