Bryan Wawzenek is a freelance journalist who writes for Diffuser.fm and Ultimate Classic Rock. He learned more from a three-minute record than he ever learned in school. His mind is racing, as it always will. Don't start him talking, he could talk all night. The sunshine bores the daylights out of him. Don't touch him, he's a real live wire. Most things he worries about never happen anyway. But he's been smiling lately, thinking about the good things to come.
Bryan Wawzenek
Alice Cooper Albums Ranked Worst to Best
You can’t kill Alice Cooper.
The Day the Beatles Shot the ‘Sgt. Pepper’ Cover Photo
At the time, it was one of the most expensive ever created.
Tom Petty Albums Ranked Worst to Best
Compiling our list of Tom Petty Albums Ranked Worst to Best wasn't easy.
Top 10 Rock Songs About Ireland
These tracks delve into everything from the country's natural beauty and folk heroes, to the struggle for a united country.
The Day Heartbreakers Bassist Howie Epstein Died
His former bandmates kept a bass guitar onstage at every performance to honor his memory.
The Day Fleetwood Mac Debuted Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham
Less than six months earlier, the situation had looked pretty dire.
The Day Jimi Hendrix Set His Guitar on Fire for the First Time
Distinguishing yourself in the colorful musical climate of 1967 wasn't easy.
When the Rolling Stones Got Shocked Onstage
Bob Dylan famously "went electric" in 1965, but most of this band actually experienced a shocking accident that same year.
Tom Petty, ‘Honey Bee’ – Rock’s Hidden Gems
Tom Petty's 'Honey Bee,' released on 'Wildflowers,' is one of Rock's Hidden Gems.
45 Years Ago: The Kinks Release ‘Village Green Preservation Society’
‘The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society’ was both ahead of and behind the times when the British rockers released the album in November 1968. A critical success, but commercial disappointment at the time, the ‘Village Green’ LP eventually became the Kinks’ bestselling studio album, prompting frontman Ray Davies to once refer to it as “the most successful flop of all time.”