vacilando los reebok pump since 1979

2headedsnake:

do-wild-thing.blogspot.com

2headedsnake:

do-wild-thing.blogspot.com

(via shenaniganswillensue)

Source: do-wild-thing.blogspot.com

rollingstone:


Pearl Jam guitarist Stone Gossard talked to Rolling Stone about how his side project, Brad, has managed to stay together for two decades, and why he changed his style a bit for their new album, United We Stand. He also dropped some info about Pearl Jam’s next record, which he says is going to more experimental than their last few LPs.

rollingstone:

Pearl Jam guitarist Stone Gossard talked to Rolling Stone about how his side project, Brad, has managed to stay together for two decades, and why he changed his style a bit for their new album, United We Stand. He also dropped some info about Pearl Jam’s next record, which he says is going to more experimental than their last few LPs.

Source: rollingstone

shenaniganswillensue:

Melissa Haslam

shenaniganswillensue:

Melissa Haslam

Source: shenaniganswillensue

rollingstone:

David Bowie once thought Satan was living in his indoor swimming pool. He also cohabited with Iggy Pop in West Berlin in 1976, during which time he became consumed with Third Reich history and Nazi mythology. Bowie, like many rock stars before and many more to come, struggled with drugs and faced somewhat of an identity crisis in attempts to reinvent his sound and eclipse the popularity of his alter-ego Ziggy Stardust. 
But there was a light at the end of his tunnel, and Bowie created “a new language of music from fragments, accidents and dreamed-up textures,” that sparked a comeback and influenced a future generation of musicians. 
For an excerpt of our latest cover story, “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust”, check out RollingStone.com.
— Parry Ernsberger

rollingstone:

David Bowie once thought Satan was living in his indoor swimming pool. He also cohabited with Iggy Pop in West Berlin in 1976, during which time he became consumed with Third Reich history and Nazi mythology. Bowie, like many rock stars before and many more to come, struggled with drugs and faced somewhat of an identity crisis in attempts to reinvent his sound and eclipse the popularity of his alter-ego Ziggy Stardust. 

But there was a light at the end of his tunnel, and Bowie created “a new language of music from fragments, accidents and dreamed-up textures,” that sparked a comeback and influenced a future generation of musicians. 

For an excerpt of our latest cover story, “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust”, check out RollingStone.com.

— Parry Ernsberger

Source: Rolling Stone

Que viva la che chu

Que viva la che chu

Pilas

Pilas

Que tan careverga el que te manda en avion a helice

Que tan careverga el que te manda en avion a helice

Walter en el camino

Walter en el camino

Eddie con el lagarto juancho

Eddie con el lagarto juancho