The loss of a legend. Iconic soccer star Pelé, widely considered to be the greatest player of all time, died on Thursday, December 29, after a battle with colon cancer. He was 82.
15.12.2022 - 00:07 / theplaylist.net
“My name is Mary,” she says in the opening voice-over. “Abbey Road Studios has been part of my life for as long as I can remember.
Every time I walk through these corridors, it feels magical.” If you’re cringing reading it, imagine watching it with saccharine dripping off the voice track and twinkly music filling the soundtrack; that feeling doesn’t subside as the camera slow-pans through the studios, the drippy music continues, and celebrities pop up to give their sound-byte testimonials, from Elton John (“It’s history, you can feel it seeping through the walls”) to Liam Gallagher (“It’s a national treasure, innit?”). Continue reading ‘If These Walls Could Sing’ Review: Paul McCartney’s Daughter Helms A Shallow, Unsatisfying Chronicle Of Abbey Road Studios at The Playlist.
.The loss of a legend. Iconic soccer star Pelé, widely considered to be the greatest player of all time, died on Thursday, December 29, after a battle with colon cancer. He was 82.
Billy Connolly once revealed he was diagnosed with a sleeping disorder after a particularly disturbing dream about murdering Sir Paul McCartney.
LadBaby have made chart history by securing the Christmas number one for a fifth consecutive year - surpassing a record set by The Beatles in the 1960s.
And kick! The Radio City Rockettes have been a classic part of Christmas for decades and Us Weekly has an exclusive look inside the day of Tiffany Billings as she marks more than 10 years as part of the Christmas Spectacular.
Scots singer-songwriter Joesef has thanked Paolo Nutini and his crew for being 'so welcoming' and allowing him to warm up the OVO Hydro crowd - in his first ever arena gig.
The unexpected visitor: it’s a well-loved and much-explored horror trope that’s the jumping-off point for many a terrifying tale over the years. In Alison Star Locke’s new horror thriller “The Apology,” audiences get a new version of that story bolstered by two inspired and impactful performances.
It’s 2002 and raining brains in Riyadh, at least from the gormless Nasser’s wonky perspective. Nasser’s doctor is firmly convinced he has a brain tumour, which is his explanation for the protracted hallucinations Nasser experiences and that he, Dr Ahmed, is all too ready to excise. Nasser isn’t so sure: his dreams, fantasies and visions are more fun than the rest of his life, yoked beneath the twin tyrannies of his fanatical father and his boss at the thinly patronized Dove Hotel. Why get rid of the good stuff? Especially once those visions start to include the mysterious young woman who arrived unannounced one day to ask for the key to room 227. She’s welcome to walk the corridors of his mind any old time.
Angelo Badalamenti, the David Lynch composer whose music for Twin Peaks gave television one of its most haunting and memorable themes, died Sunday at his home in New Jersey. He was 85.