NEW YORK — Before the technology existed for Rupert Murdoch's journalists to hack into phone records, past generations of dubious reporters have given readers 4-foot(1.2-meter)-tall furry creatures living on the moon, a bogus 8-year-old heroin (...)
It's hard to think of how Paul McCartney could have given his first solo album a bigger publicity hurdle to overcome, unless he'd been arrested for some vile crime on the week of its release in April 1970.
The newly ex-Beatle distributed a (...)
It wasn't part of any master plan that Steve Earle released a CD and his debut novel virtually simultaneously and with the same titles, "I'll Never Get out of This World Alive."
The novel, named for the last single released by Hank Williams (...)
Ron Sexsmith doesn't want your pity. He wants your attention.
The Canadian singer-songwriter hired producer Bob Rock, known for his work with hard rock bands Metallica and Motley Crue, to give his delicate voice and melodies a beefier sound that (...)
NEW YORK: In multiple incidents, journalists covering Egypt's unrest were pummeled, hit with pepper spray, shouted at and threatened by loyalists to President Hosni Mubarak as the scene at anti-government demonstrations suddenly turned ugly.
"For (...)
The Kings of Leon took more than musical cues when they opened a concert tour for U2 a few years back. They learned that ambition isn't a dirty word.
That lesson is clearly evident on "Come Around Sundown," the rock band's first collection of (...)
A new project aims to introduce Bob Dylan's music to young people by having buzz-worthy indie artists cover one of his best-known albums in a digital-only format.
"Subterranean Homesick Blues: A Tribute to Bob Dylan's `Bringing It All Back Home'" (...)