
Ed Sheeran's first single was "The A Team," a song about a drug-addicted prostitute.

Members of the San Francisco 49ers, including Dwight Clark, Joe Montana and Ronnie Lott, sang backup on "Hip to Be Square" by Huey Lewis and the News.

Taylor Swift's "Shake It Off" was inspired by how she'd learned to deal with all the false rumors that circulated about her. She realized she could either let it get to her or "just shake it off."

"Virginia" in "Only The Good Die Young" is named after a real girl Billy Joel was trying to impress.

James Brown's "Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine" was the first Hot 100 hit with the word "sex" in the title.

The Kenny G instrumental "Songbird" owes much of its success to VH1, which launched a year earlier and played the video to death.
Yngwie Malmsteen and Steve Vai were two of Graham's co-writers for some '80s rock classics.
Just how much did these monsters of rock dabble in the occult?
Rosanne talks about the journey that inspired her songs on her album The River & the Thread, including a stop at the Tallahatchie Bridge.
Ozzy biting a dove? Alice Cooper causing mayhem with a chicken? Creed so bad they were sued? See if you can spot the real concert mishaps.
Call us crazy, but we like it when an artist comes around who doesn't mesh with the status quo.
As a songwriter and producer, Narada had hits with Aretha Franklin, Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey and Starship. But what song does he feel had the greatest impact on his career?