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Lou Reed can’t help but laugh after announcing the title of a new song, “Heroin,” on a demo recording from May 1965. He then gives a surprisingly folky, almost Dylan-esque performance of the ...
"Lou Reed: Caught Between the Twisted Stars," at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center, ranges from rare demos to personal and professional ephemera.
A 17-track album of demos recorded by Lou Reed titled “I’m So Free: The 1971 RCA Demos” was briefly released by RCA/ Sony Music on iTunes in Europe over the holiday in an apparent ...
The New York Public Library honors Lou Reed with a new exhibition. July 11, 2022 • A new exhibition at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts offers a rare glimpse into the archives ...
Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65 is a 25-track collection of rare recordings that were issued by the long-defunct label. Pickwick specialized in churning out singles ...
An album of Lou Reed rarities, 'I’m So Free: The 1971 RCA Demos,' was briefly released by Sony Music for copyright reasons and then removed.
The elusive Lou Reed reads from The Raven, his book of Edgar Allan Poe–inspired lyrics, a copy of which is included with the price of admission.
'Lou Reed: Words & Music, May 1965' presents a long-lost recording of the singer and John Cale performing the earliest known versions of the songs that would change rock with the Velvet Underground.
Hear Kris Kristofferson, Lou Reed Talk Songcraft on Rare Live Album 'Lou Reed and Kris Kristofferson: In Their Own Words with Vin Scelsa' captures disparate songwriters onstage in 1994 at New York ...
Fans of Reed’s music have no need to worry though for Lou Reed: Caught Between the Twisted Stars. displays never-before-heard recordings of music from his Freeport High School band, The Shades ...
In 2023, a decade after the death of Lou Reed — songwriter, singer, guitarist, mercurial rock ‘n’ roll change-maker— his literary-minded fans got two fresh volumes: “Loaded: The Life ...
Hermes notes that it was rare to prescribe ECT as a sexual corrective, but the experience was vital to Reed’s own mythmaking and was the first marker of his outlaw status.