vintage
Vintage music and beat content throughout history and the music archives.
Rice Purity Test: How a College Checklist Turned Into an Internet Ritual. AI-Generated.
The Rice Purity Test doesn’t look impressive at first. There’s no design trick. No clever scoring system. No promise to reveal a hidden personality type. Just a long list of statements and a number at the end.
By Enzo Marcelli5 days ago in Beat
The Quiet That Follows the Applause
I didn’t cry at the end of Better Call Saul. I cried three days later, while washing dishes. The water was hot, the sponge worn thin, and suddenly—without warning—I saw Kim Wexler’s hands again. Not in the courtroom. Not in the finale. But in that tiny Albuquerque office, adjusting the blinds just so, trying to control one small thing in a world spinning out of her grasp.
By KAMRAN AHMAD11 days ago in Beat
The Song That Brought Him Back
After my mother passed, grief settled into our home like winter fog—thick, gray, and impossible to ignore. He stopped whistling while fixing the sink. Stopped tapping his boot to the oldies station. Even his laugh, once so loud it startled the dogs, vanished into a silence so heavy it filled every room. For two years, he moved through life like a man walking in someone else’s shoes. So when he said, voice barely above a whisper, “Let’s go south for New Year’s,” I didn’t ask why. I just booked the tickets.
By KAMRAN AHMAD11 days ago in Beat
Tyla’s Chart-Topping Rise
Introduction When South African singer Tyla released her self-titled debut album in late 2023, few predicted it would ignite a global movement. But by 2025, her name was everywhere: on Billboard charts, Grammy stages, and playlists from Lagos to Los Angeles. Fueled by her breakout hit “Water”—a seductive fusion of amapiano, R&B, and pop—Tyla didn’t just enter the global music scene; she reshaped it.
By KAMRAN AHMAD12 days ago in Beat
Grooves That Never Fade: The Essential Bands of 70s Funk, Soul & R&B
I am a crazy music freak. At the peak of my vinyl obsession, I owned somewhere around 15,000 to 20,000 albums and 10,000 to 13,000 singles (45s). That was a mountain of music. Later came CDs, and I ended up with another mountain — around 12,000 to 14,000.
By Rick Henry Christopher 12 days ago in Beat
Richard Smallwood
Introduction In recent months, false rumors have spread online with alarming speed: searches like “gospel singer Richard Smallwood died”, “Richard Smallwood passed away”, and “Richard Smallwood cause of death” have surged—despite having no basis in truth.
By KAMRAN AHMAD12 days ago in Beat
Guitar Serial Numbers Reveal Why My 'Mint 1965 Stratocaster' Had 1982 Numbers: A Market Lesson
I've been staring at scratched plastic, worn-down brass, and half-faded ink on guitar headstocks for longer than I care to admit. You know what's funny? Half the guitars I've bought over the years had serial numbers that told me everything I needed to know, but I barely looked at them until I got burned on a fake '62 Strat.
By Resyn Marketplace17 days ago in Beat
The Synesthetic Architect of Alt-Pop
In a landscape crowded with genre mashups and trend-chasing experimentation, Alon Mylo stands out as the rare artist who makes the fusion feel inevitable rather than forced. An alt-pop, hip-hop, and trap singer-songwriter-producer, Mylo constructs songs the way a director builds a film: scenes of sound, emotional close-ups, and wide cinematic sweeps stitched together through a synesthesia-driven connection between color and music. For him, melodies aren’t simply notes — they’re pigments. Beats aren’t just rhythms — they’re textures, shadows, and moving visuals.
By Dena Falken Esqabout a month ago in Beat











