A choir teacher was exasperated with hearing slang like “67” in her middle school classroom. Rather than ban it, she asked her students to write and perform a song about it. “Some teachers get ...
Is the world ready for Taylor Swift, utterly untortured poet? Possibly — it’s not as if a whole season’s worth of NFL television cutaways didn’t prime the planet for the idea that Dark Taylor might be ...
Fans of Shinedown should certainly be celebrating, as the hard rock/arena rock band not only achieved a career milestone this past Friday night by making their Grand Ole Opry debut, but they also ...
Keith Urban has shocked fans by changing the lyrics of his song about Nicole Kidman romance to include the name of his new female guitarist. The pair have dominated headlines since news of their break ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. When my father was crossing the U.S.-Mexico border like an undocumented Road Runner back in the 1970s, la migra ...
Keith Urban took a little time to tweak his song. Just days before Nicole Kidman and the country star’s breakup was confirmed, he made an eyebrow-raising change to the song "The Fighter," inspired by ...
Taylor Swift’s double entendre-filled “Wood” has the entire internet in a tizzy over the pop star’s very suggestive lyrics. “Forgive me, it sounds cocky / He ah-matized me and opened my еyes,” Swift, ...
You know how sometimes you think, did I dream that or did it actually happen? That's how I feel when I think back to first meeting Lady Gaga in Manchester. In Whalley Range to be precise in 2009.
Taylor Swift isn’t trying to hide her tears. Before The Life of a Showgirl was released Oct. 3., many fans theorized the song “Ruin the Friendship” would be about where Taylor stands with Blake Lively ...
The pop star, 35, outright sings about her fiancé Travis Kelce in several of her tracks. She also appears to subtly reference people like Charli XCX and Blake Lively in other songs. Swift is no ...
The celebrity memoir is a form of which I’m reflexively skeptical. Some books lean solely on name recognition, without much concern for the content inside. Others promise salacious details of a life ...