The Stranger
On Billy Joel’s sardonic gloom.
On Billy Joel’s sardonic gloom.
The alt-country wunderkind turned walking disaster finds peace at 39.
A gospel singer comes out.
Kelefa Sanneh New Yorker Feb 2010 35min Permalink
A woman travels in a band on the way to their next show.
"With raised eyebrows, Jay crouched down, turned his hand up, and motioned wide. From the flat top, we could see oil rigs in the distance. A pair of buzzards looped in a slow figure eight. I wondered what kind of body lay out there on that red expanse, just out of my eye line, drying out under the sun into those bleached desert bones people put on fireplaces. They disgusted me, sure, but something about them called for touch, to feel those natural cracks in skulls, how similar we are to porcelain on the inside. Once we lose our connective tissue, we can show softer to those that put their hands on us."
Beth Gilstrap Fwriction Review Sep 2014 10min Permalink
On Lucinda Williams and her “love affair with loss.”
Bill Buford New Yorker Jun 2000 45min Permalink
A profile of Thelonious Monk.
Lewis Lapham The Saturday Evening Post Apr 1964 15min Permalink
“After listening to him since I was a kid and seeing him live for—gulp—nearly 40 years, I think I’m beginning to figure it out.”
Bill Wyman New York Jul 2014 15min Permalink
An ode to the Bee Gees' strange, successful career.
Bob Stanley Paris Review Jul 2014 10min Permalink
“Like they said in Step Brothers: Never lose your dinosaur. This is the ultimate example of a person never losing his dinosaur. Meaning that even as I grew in cultural awareness and respect and was put higher in the class system in some way for being this musician, I never lost my dinosaur.”
Zach Baron GQ Jul 2014 20min Permalink
The business of being Pitbull.
Emma Rosenblum Businessweek Jul 2014 15min Permalink
The memories of rock stars’ ex-lovers.
Alexandra Molotkow The Believer Jul 2014 25min Permalink
Three years after profiling him, the author checks in with the Bieber experiment.
Vanessa Grigoriadis New York Jul 2014 20min Permalink
How Brian Eno works.
Sasha Frere-Jones New Yorker Jun 2014 20min Permalink
The Maroon 5 singer discusses douchebaggery.
Jessica Pressler GQ Jul 2014 15min Permalink
The postscript of a viral hit.
Leon Neyfakh Rolling Stone Jun 2014 15min Permalink
An unhappy mother yearns for a return to her creative roots.
"It seemed to her now like motherhood was a constant fall, a never-ending tumble. After she’d finished her nursery fresco and looked for surprise shapes in her sky, Marlee couldn’t find any meaning in the edges and swirls she had created."
Katherine Gehan Luna Luna Magazine Jun 2014 Permalink
Britney Spears works Vegas, bitch.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner Matter Jun 2014 30min Permalink
A portrait of Ben Todd, a DIY champion of the emerging music scene in Nashville.
Amanda Shapiro Spin Jun 2014 30min Permalink
The early days of Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers.
Ernie Brooks, Legs McNeil Vice Jun 2014 15min Permalink
An interview with Curtis Mayfield.
David Nathan Blues & Soul Dec 1976 Permalink
A young hopeful competes in an international air guitar competition.
"Aki nods sheepishly, says thank you. The American is last year’s champion. He was interviewed on the BBC and does Dr. Pepper commercials now on American television. 'Air Jesus'they call him. He slurps from a can of Sandels Finnish beer. There are contestants from twenty different countries, and each has a nickname. Aki—the Greek—goes by 'Air-istotle.' There’s the Belgian, Hans 'Van Dammage' Van Deer Meer and the Argentinian, Santiago 'Buenos Air-ace' Carrizo. Hirotaka 'Electric Ninja' Kinugasa is representing Japan."
Steve Karas Pithead Chapel Jun 2014 15min Permalink
Dodging bill collectors, a couple stops at a motel on their way to Tennessee.
"See, Faye was an absolute saint of a woman. Kind, funny, understanding to a fault, but she was young, eight years my junior, and she lacked a certain seriousness about her. Everything to her was solvable, temporary, and the gravity of our situation - how much we'd fucked things up, how much we owed, and what a general shit-storm we were in - didn't seem to bother her for a second. Being with her then was like looking down one day and realizing you were sporting a fancy convertible when what you needed was a four-door sedan."
Jared Yates Sexton Joyland Magazine May 2014 20min Permalink
Making vision boards with rap’s strangest fallen star.
Zach Baron GQ May 2014 15min Permalink
On a recent lawsuit over Stairway to Heaven and Led Zeppelin’s deep catalog of songs that were revealed to have been written by others.
Vernon Silver Businessweek May 2014 15min Permalink
Tensions eat away at a relationship between a musician and his girlfriend.
"Something in her cadence caught my attention. What if…? I imagined the bass line with a new syncopation, a little shift in the rhythm that might liven the song. I ran the part in my head, but I wanted the instrument in my hands, to be certain. Somehow, Anna had wound up at the pier, although it would have been out of her way."
Kate Brittain Vol. 1 Brooklyn May 2014 Permalink