The new documentary “Radical Wolfe” captures a singular writer whose story is bound up with our own. Here, for the first time, you can read all his New York magazine stories online.
what was great about the me decade is it allowed the greatest artists of our times to do some of their greatest work, because they were really exploring. that is as deep as popular art ever gets. i hope i never get home this ain t no party, this ain t no disco, this ain t no fooling around. i love to hold you, i love to kiss you, but i m tumbling it down. we blending in with the crowd. we are not computers, we have our own lives. we know there ain t no love. there are colonies of
i thought i d write a song about urban guerillas about the boyfriend of their daily lives, instead of the point of view of their politics. a van that s loaded with weapons packed up and ready to go this area of new wave music is where stars of the 1980s are going to come from. a place that nobody knows what makes the 70s so special is that there s still a sense of naivete, the innocence that music could really make a difference in your life. this ain t no party this ain t no disco this ain t no fooling around this ain t no cbgd i ain t got time for that now you pick any genre you like and the best music made in that genre is made in the 1970s. and you ll have a hard time proving me wrong. what was great about a me decade is it allowed the greatest artists of our times to do some of their greatest work, because they were really exploring.
what s great about a me decade is it allowed some of the greatest artists of our time to do some of their greatest work because they were really exploring. that is as deep as popular art ever gets. in the nighttime-i may not ever get home this ain t no party this ain t no disco this ain t no fooling around i love you hold you and i love to kiss you but i don t have time for that now hello, and welcome.
In June 1970, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young released the protest anthem Ohio. Recorded on May 21 that year, the song documents Neil Young’s outrage at the killing of four students by Nationa