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Peter Ormerod’s ‘David Bowie And The Search For Life, Death And God’ Reframes A Legend Through A Spiritual Lens

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Journalist and writer Peter Ormerod, arts editor for NationalWorld and a longtime contributor to The Guardian on culture and faith, has written ‘David Bowie and the Search for Life, Death and God,’ a wide-ranging spiritual meditation on Bowie’s music and creativity that is already drawing serious praise. The Spectator calls it a book where “the Bowie you thought you knew is recast completely,” Publishers Weekly describes it as “a transfixing look at David Bowie’s life through a spiritual lens, fresh and revealing,” and The Guardian’s Simon Critchley says Ormerod “had me singing in the choir with him.” Raised in a clergy family with a lifelong fascination with religion, Ormerod brings a perspective to Bowie’s story that has largely been overlooked, tracing a spiritual quest that runs from his earliest recordings all the way through to his final album.

The book follows Bowie’s restless search for meaning across decades and traditions, from his earliest encounters as a choirboy to his enrapture with Tibetan Buddhism as a young musician, through the Kabbalah-influenced tracks of ‘Station to Station,’ the messiah complex embedded in Ziggy Stardust, and the profound affinity between “Heroes” and Christian thought. Ormerod takes Bowie’s spiritual obsessions seriously as a creative force, showing how that ongoing quest powered his most profound lyrics and propelled him through both his darkest moments and his greatest artistic peaks, including his occult phase in LA and the remarkable final album recorded in the shadow of his own death.

What makes the book essential for any serious Bowie reader is its argument that the spiritual dimension of his work is not incidental but central, the engine behind a genius that crossed genres, eras, and generations. Available in hardback, ebook, and audiobook formats, ‘David Bowie and the Search for Life, Death and God’ offers a genuinely fresh entry point into one of the most written-about figures in popular music history.

Jonathan Bernstein’s Authorized Biography Of Justin Townes Earle Is A Harrowing, Deeply Researched Portrait Of A Singular Life

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Rolling Stone journalist Jonathan Bernstein has written ‘What Do You Do When You’re Lonesome,’ the authorized biography of Justin Townes Earle, produced with the full cooperation of the Earle estate and already earning a starred review from Kirkus, which calls it “a superb biography of a singular life.” When Earle died of an overdose alone in his Nashville apartment, his death sent waves of grief through the country and Americana community. The son of alt-country hellraiser Steve Earle had long wrestled with mental illness and addiction, punctuated by encouraging stretches of sobriety that included the years leading up to his 2010 album ‘Harlem River Blues,’ a career peak that announced him as one of the most authentic troubadours of his generation. By the time of his death he had recorded eight albums, leaving behind a striking and original body of work.

Bernstein unravels the backstories behind Justin’s greatest songs and traces his feral, formative years as a rootless kid developing a unique guitar style while absorbing the musical influences of Nashville, alongside the emotional displacement, economic anxiety, and wandering that ran through both his life and his lyrics. The book also captures a shadow world of neglected children of Nashville legends, wrestling with the legacies of hard-living, road-weary, often absent parents. Justin’s marriage to Jenn Marie Earle and the birth of their daughter represent some of the book’s most hopeful passages, moments of genuine promise in a life that Bernstein chronicles with deep care and unflinching honesty.

What makes ‘What Do You Do When You’re Lonesome’ essential reading is its refusal to reduce Earle’s life to either tragedy or myth. Bernstein documents what Justin himself called “the myth,” the destructive idea that an artist must suffer for their art, and shows how powerfully that belief took hold.

Unearthed: Watch 17-Year-Old Britney Spears Perform “Baby One More Time” On Canadian TV Just Four Days After Hitting #1

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A remarkable piece of pop history has resurfaced on the Dini Petty Show YouTube channel: Britney Spears performing “Baby One More Time” on February 3, 1999, exactly four days after the song hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100. She was 17 years old, the album had been out less than a month, the video was in heavy MTV rotation, and here she is on a Toronto soundstage at the precise moment between before and after.

The Dini Petty Show aired on CTV from 1989 to 1999, broadcasting from Toronto and earning multiple Gemini Award nominations for Petty’s warm yet probing interview style, and this performance, followed by a full interview also available on the channel, captures Britney with an unguarded confidence and joy that feels genuinely rare, a 17-year-old four days into the rest of her life.


Frank Sinatra And Antônio Carlos Jobim’s Legendary 1967 Bossa Nova Medley Returns In Stunning Remastered HD

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A timeless piece of television history has been remastered and released in HD. Frank Sinatra and Antônio Carlos Jobim’s celebrated medley from the 1967 special ‘A Man and His Music’ brings together Sinatra’s smooth, effortless phrasing and Jobim’s lush bossa nova rhythms across four songs, “Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars (Corcovado),” “Change Partners,” “I Concentrate on You,” and “The Girl From Ipanema,” in a performance that remains one of the most sophisticated and unhurried collaborations in the history of American popular music.


Video: Cynthia Erivo Delivers A Spine-Tingling Cover Of Prince’s “Nothing Compares 2 U” At The Kennedy Center

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Cynthia Erivo rang in the New Year with an unforgettable performance of Prince’s “Nothing Compares 2 U” at the Kennedy Center, captured for PBS as part of the Next at the Kennedy Center series. The performance speaks for itself, Erivo filling every note with the kind of deep, aching soul that reminds you exactly why this song has endured for decades, and exactly why she is one of the most compelling vocalists working today.


Coldplay Unveil Director’s Cut of “All My Love” Video Featuring Dick Van Dyke, Directed by Spike Jonze

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Coldplay have shared the directors’ cut of the video for “All My Love,” taken from their tenth studio album ‘Moon Music,’ directed by Spike Jonze and Mary Wigmore and starring the legendary Dick Van Dyke alongside his wife Arlene Silver. Van Dyke’s presence bringing an effortless warmth and charm that perfectly matches the song’s emotional generosity.


Video: Jack White Breaks Down How Johnny Cash’s “Walk The Line” Shaped Punk Music

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Jack White sits down with Dan Rather for AXS TV to strum the iconic riff from Johnny Cash’s “Walk The Line” and trace its direct influence on punk music, before turning the conversation to The White Stripes and the story behind “Seven Nation Army.” It is the kind of conversation that only works when the person talking genuinely loves the music, and White delivers exactly that.


Eddie Vedder And Paul Shaffer Honor David Letterman With A Moving Cover Of Warren Zevon’s “Keep Me In Your Heart”

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Eddie Vedder and Paul Shaffer, Letterman’s longtime bandleader, teamed up at the Kennedy Center Honors to perform a thoughtful cover of Warren Zevon’s “Keep Me In Your Heart” in tribute to David Letterman, who received the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. The choice of song and performers felt entirely right. Vedder and Letterman share a long and genuine friendship built across multiple Late Show appearances, including a special visit during Letterman’s final week on air, and Letterman later returned the gesture by inducting Pearl Jam into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Watch U2’s First Ever Television Performance As The Hype On Irish TV In 1978

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Before they were U2, they were The Hype, and this is the footage to prove it. Aired on March 2, 1978 on RTÉ’s teen-oriented show Youngline, this performance marks the band’s first ever television appearance, captured just weeks before they would head to Limerick for the talent contest where they would change their name to U2. The four-piece lineup still included Dik Evans, who would officially leave the band shortly after, having been largely unavailable due to his engineering studies. The band talked their way onto the show by convincing a producer to attend a rehearsal, where they performed the Ramones’ “Glad to See You Go” and, when asked if they had written it, Bono claimed they had. It worked.

Nathaniel Rateliff And Tedeschi Trucks Band Open Joe Cocker’s Rock Hall Tribute With A Raw Take On “The Letter”

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Nathaniel Rateliff and Tedeschi Trucks Band opened the Joe Cocker tribute at the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in Los Angeles with a soul-drenched performance of “The Letter,” the song that gave Cocker his first top 10 hit in the U.S. when his Mad Dogs & Englishmen version reached number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1970. Susan Tedeschi’s vocals kicked things off before Rateliff joined in, the two voices meeting somewhere between Sheffield and Denver, both carrying the kind of raw, ragged soul that Cocker built his entire career on. No band has carried Cocker’s legacy more deeply than TTB, who recreated the entire ‘Mad Dogs & Englishmen’ album at the 2015 LOCKN’ Festival with surviving members of Cocker’s original touring band including Leon Russell, Rita Coolidge, and Claudia Lennear, a performance finally released as ‘Mad Dogs & Englishmen Revisited (Live At LOCKN’)’ just two months before the ceremony. The tribute continued with Teddy Swims on “Feelin’ Alright” before closing with an all-star finale of “With a Little Help From My Friends” featuring TTB, Rateliff, Swims, Bryan Adams, Cyndi Lauper, and Chris Robinson.