Polyphonic on MSN
Why the 1950s couldn’t stop singing about dead teenagers
A stray question online cracks open one of pop music’s strangest micro-genres: the teenage tragedy song, where love stories keep ending in crashes, drownings, and melodrama. Starting with a ...
Associate Professor of Film and Television studies Charlotte Howell joins WIRED to answer the internet's burning questions ...
Rob Reiner made the kind of movies that we all rewatch already – the ones we hold up as gold standards, the ones we wish they ...
The Rockefeller Center Christmas tree was first displayed in New York City in 1931. See how the evergreens have transformed ...
Finn Wolfhard and George Harrison are bringing you peace on Earth this holiday season — or at least, they’re sharing a very sincere wish for it, via the first-ever music video for the late artist’s ...
Filmmaker Craig Brewer of 'Hustle & Flow' returns with a quirky music biopic about a Neil Diamond cover band that opened for Pearl Jam only to be stricken with bad luck.
D'Angelo. Brian Wilson. Sly Stone. We lost these greats and so many more in 2025 — singers, producers, conductors and writers whose departures gave us a pang of loss, but whose art still lifts us up.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results