This timeless long song topped the Billboard Hot 100 67 years ago today and became one of the biggest songs of 1959.
In a conversation with pianist Lara Downes, the New Yorker staff writer says music in America will keep evolving as long as the country keeps an open door to new people and new sounds.
Film critic Jesse Hawthorne Ficks of Movies for Maniacs breaks down his favorite films of last year, in his preferred ...
In addition to his performances, Sedaka wrote dozens of hits for singers who became superstars in part because of his ...
Country” Joe McDonald, a hippie rock star of the 1960s whose “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-To-Die Rag” was a four-lettered rebuke to the Vietnam War that became an anthem for protesters and a highlight of ...
But with hindsight he was blind to the charm of a tacky romp that stars the great comic actor Niall Tóibín as a heroic priest battling both his possessed verger (Ronan Wilmot) and the eponymous and ...
Southwest Florida Theatre transports audiences back to the 1950s with “Sh-Boom! Life Could Be A Dream.” Fans of doo-wop are sure to love this story of a quartet hoping to launch their careers by ...
The barbershop style consists of four parts — bass, lead, tenor, and the part that makes barbershop so special: the baritone.
The Rock & Roll Diner in Oceano, California, is proof that you don’t need a DeLorean to visit the past, just a healthy appetite and a sense of adventure. Cruising down Highway 1, you might think ...
Sedaka, who died Feb. 27, was a classical piano prodigy whose hits in the late '50s and early '60s included "Calendar Girl" and "Breaking up is Hard to Do." Originally broadcast in 2007.
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