25 Album Covers That Are Better As Animated GIFs
The day we figure out how to print these at the size of vinyl records is the day we level up as a species.
The day we figure out how to print these at the size of vinyl records is the day we level up as a species.
In 1981, the show’s biggest musical mistake was hosting an obscure L.A. punk band who caused a riot in the studio. In 2004, it was allowing Ashlee Simpson to lip-synch. Here’s a look at everything else that’s changed over the years.
The Twitter-savvy astronaut, who returns home from the ISS today, saves the best for last, by making the first ever music video in space.
Get ready for a LOT of creepy Catholic iconography in the clip for “The Next Day.”
Inspired by this wonderful Dangerous Minds post, we seek to make a definitive list. Ah, the 1970s.
Can I be young again now, please?
Plus a bizarrely funny supercut of Robert De Niro crying, a new use for Tetris, and the 10 most ridiculous anti-drug PSAs of the 80s and 90s.
Famous lyrics, taken literally.
Like, did you know Rashida Jones sings on a bunch of Maroon 5 tunes?
You love the games, you love the songs. It’s like peanut butter and jelly for your other senses.
The glamor is almost too much to bear.
It is an undeniable truth that people were better at dancing in the ’70s.
The glam icon stares down death on The Next Day, his best record in 30 years.
Imitation is flattery, or something like that. Or influence? That’s the nice word for it.
They play husband and wife in the amazing video for his new song, “The Stars (Are Out Tonight).”
Nooooooo, you guys! Don’t do this! Think of the children!!
“My real name is David Jones and I don’t have to tell you why I changed it.”
Catch up on the month’s best songs, albums, and moments with new music by Justin Timberlake, David Bowie, Tegan and Sara, A$AP Rocky, and more.
The clamor over the surprise announcement — on his 66th birthday — of David Bowie’s first new album in 10 years offers a valuable lesson for our current era of breathless 24/7 celebrity: you actually have to be gone for a while in order for people to legitimately miss you.
It doesn’t take much work to customize the sleeve of his new album The Next Day, since it’s pretty much the laziest cover in the history of music. Or the most clever?
Everyone from Adrian Tomine to the singer of TV on the Radio has paid tribute to the icon in Sean T. Collins’ Thin White Sketchbook.
You’d think that some people are so famous they don’t even need websites. They think you’re wrong.
It’s called “Where Are We Now?,” and it’s going to be on The Next Day, his first allbum in a decade. He’s been gone so long, everyone just thought he was retired.
Gadgets, instruments, art, apparel, and more!
A guy named Josh is turning classic music moments into 8-bit animations, and it’s wonderful.
The resemblance is uncanny.
Underground artists may complain when pop stars run with their ideas, but they actually have a lot to gain.
Whether you’re into boy bands or Krautrock, you don’t truly love a band until you’ve knit a sweater with their name on it.