The sweet science will take center stage on Friday night when Mike Tyson, one of boxing's greatest-ever showmen, returns to ...
Thank you to everyone that hung out underneath the sonic umbrella today for a rainy day mix on In The Groove … featuring new ...
It's a four-quarter week filled with big-name new music releases, including a revamped Linkin Park, newly minted Rock and ...
Author Steve Platto will be giving talks and signing copies of his new book, "Motor City Famous," about celebrities linked to ...
It’s the morning after an all-night recording session at Studio Katy, a music studio in Ohain, near Waterloo in 1982. Marvin Gaye is riding shotgun in a blue Mercedes saloon heading back on the ...
In 1974, Quincy Jones was given just a 1% chance of living after suffering a brain aneurysm. “It was scary,” Jones told GQ in 2018. “Like somebody blew my brains out. The main artery to your brain ...
However, it all came to a brief but screeching halt in 1974, when he'd developed a life-threatening brain aneurysm. He told GQ that at the time, when he was just 41, he felt a searing pain in his head ...
He played the trumpet with Lionel Hampton, produced albums ('Thriller'), songs ("We Are the World," "It's My Party"), films ('The Color Purple') and TV shows ('Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'), scored movies ...
Quincy Jones, the musician-producer whose work was on several of the biggest pop LPs of the century, has died at 91.
How do I not get excited looking at Ray Charles and Marvin Gaye and Billy Eckstine and Cannonball Adderley ... it looks like ...
I had one aneurysm that erupted and it didn’t look like I’d make it, so my friends planned a memorial service,” Quincy Jones ...
Overprotecting such basic elements would threaten to stifle creativity and undermine the purpose of copyright law," read the ...