Rock & Roll

I wasn’t going to share this, but “Sound of Love” is the Bee Gees at their most quietly devastating—like they wrote a lullaby and then let real life interrupt it. It’s an Odessa track from 1969, written by Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb, with Barry singing lead as the song opens on images of children playing—so tender it almost hurts—before the melody widens into something cinematic and lonely. The hook is that contrast: innocence on the surface, a grown-up ache underneath, as if happiness is something you can see but can’t quite hold. If that feeling caught you, the deeper story behind why this song lands so hard is waiting—just keep going.

Introduction I almost kept this to myself, but “Sound of Love” feels like the Bee...

15 MINUTES AGO! Agnetha Fältskog shared her first photo from her hospital bed, finally confirming the rumors that had been swirling for weeks. She admitted to undergoing a private medical treatment — with positive results. Yet the beloved pop legend confessed: “This is only the beginning.” A statement from her team stunned fans worldwide: “It turns out Agnetha Fältskog was battling…

Introduction 15 MINUTES AGO — Agnetha Fältskog broke weeks of silence with a single image:...