Angie Stone's contribution to R&B and neo-soul music has left an indelible mark on the landscape of American music.
Roberta Flack did not write Killing Me Softly. There is some dispute about who did. Two music industry veterans were involved ...
Angie Stone’s voice was always more than a sound — it was an emotion, a truth-teller, a vessel for love, pain, and survival.
‘You Are My Heaven’ (1979) Propelled by the success of “Closer I Get,” Flack and Hathaway set to work on a second duets ...
Marin-based Hammond B-3 organ legend Booker T. Jones brings his current band to Yoshi's in Oakland for three shows over two ...
The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum celebrated the legacy of incarcerated Nashville soul pioneers Johnny Bragg and The ...
At the Stax Music Academy, students are using soul and R&B music from the 1960s and 1970s to teach lessons for Black History ...
Stacker surveyed Billboard's Hot 100 chart in 1975 to highlight the top 50 songs turning 50 in 2025. See which hits made the ...
This week in Philly music features Father John Misty in Fishtown, Rufus Wainwright in Bucks County, sumptuous soul music at ...
Marlowe tells Billboard about making his heartache album, co-writing with Vince Gill and how his stint on ‘The Voice’ came ...
Roberta Flack, the Grammy-winning singer who sang "Killing Me Softly With His Song" and "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face, ...