'Awww Sh--, Look Who Got a Web Site'

How Ryan Adams (of all people) became an Internet visionary.

If you put a nickel in the bank every time the word prolific appeared in print before Ryan Adams' name, you'll have saved enough by next year to buy a Ferrari Enzo that's been dipped in beluga caviar and bedazzled with pink sapphires.

Burning Man

They travel thousands of miles to create an idealized, albeit temporary, society -- while trying not to bake in the harsh Nevada desert.

Once, Burning Man sounded like a ghost story: people trekking through sand dunes, building a city in the middle of nowhere, making a fire, then disappearing completely. When the festival's founder, Larry Harvey, first invited his friends to San Francisco's Baker Beach in 1986 to set an eight-foot wooden figure aflame, the ritual was just one man's spontaneous art.

The Spin Interview: Cat Power

The artist also known as Chan Marshall is ready to sing the blues away.

What follows is an unabridged version of the Cat Power interview that appears in our December issue. Chan Marshall does not look troubled. On this late September afternoon, the fresh-faced and ponytailed 34-year-old singer, better known as Cat Power, perches on a windowsill outside Manhattan's Mercer Hotel, humming little ditties. Petting homely poodles.

The Art of Falling Apart

Raw nerves, dead bodies, broken bunnies, clashing egos, and a friendship on the verge. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs may not be talking to each other, but for now, they've got a thrilling new album, and maybe that's enough.

If you're looking for the punk-rock girl from New Jersey, you'll find her in West Hollywood, sipping wine.

Prime Directives

Four filmmakers share the secrets behind their best-known music videos. No radio stars were harmed in the making of this article.
Syndicate content