In 1975, she transformed poetry into punk. Neither would ever be the same. More than 20 artists who made and admired the ...
From TheatreWorks’ new play about a mother-son road trip to a jazz guitar icon, there is plenty to see and do in the Area ...
Patti Smith's Horses is about to turn 50. The legendary album is a testament to rebellion, artistic expression and punk rock.
At the annual Lehigh Valley Development Corp. event, leaders from five iconic area companies explain why they make the Lehigh ...
Hannah Pezzack looks back half a century to Patti Smith's Horses and finds an album pulsating with erotic energy ...
Longtime Bay Area bluesman J. C. Smith has been around the block, traveling not only across the U.S., but also to far-flung places like Argentina, Armenia, Canada, Chile, China, Latvia, ...
Gordon Lightfoot and his band recorded the "little ditty" in a Toronto studio in December 1975, just weeks after the ...
Stacker takes a look at Black artists music wouldn't be the same without, from Sister Rosetta Tharpe to Tupac Shakur.
The King of Rock n' Roll rose above his humble start in life. He's still revered for his music and what he represents.
American music, at its core, is inseparable from a history defined by reinvention, resilience, and Black artists.
Smith's debut album ushered in a new era of rock and roll. Critic Ken Tucker reviews the new anniversary edition of Horses, plus we listen back to Terry Gross' 1996 and 2010 interviews with Smith.
Patti Smith’s Horses turns 50, celebrating a groundbreaking album that reshaped rock and poetry and inspired generations of artists.