6 posts tagged “rock”
The headline says it all: We've gone completely around the bend, and from Oct. 12-18 you can benefit from our insanity by snagging tees like these ...
... and these ...
... and these ...
... and plenty more besides in women's sizes at a mind-blowing HALF OFF. Head on over to WornFree.com on Monday and start shopping before we regain our tenuous hold on reality. As the boilerplate says, while supplies last.
Well, not quite. But we're so enraptured by this blog post (found on Lovely Dress of Japan), that we just had to share.
It took an active part by the United States established in 2005 brand in the 1970's in the chiefly 1960's, and Worn Free ([uo;-nfuri-]) acquired the license and sells T-shirt that a famous lock musician including John Lennon, the queen, and Frank Zappa had actually worn as a facsimile edition.
T-shirt of Worn Free is very high popularity, and being sold by the person of wanting to lead the music scene, and to put on what the musician who kept having a big influence around the young person wore and the same one in not only the United States but also a shop all over the world. Moreover, T-shirt of Worn Free is also high the evaluation as the fashion item, and wears T-shirt of Worn Free from a good sense design by a lot of overseas celebrities.
The photograph where the power of people such as musicians the model including Naomi Campbell and Gary Oldman and besides the actor etc. put on T-shirt of Worn Free is introduced, and only seeing this understands popular of T-shirt of Worn Free on an official homepage of Worn Free. T-shirt of Worn Free can buy in the mail order and the select shop, etc. even in Japan, and is popular among a wide age group.
And before you say anything, we're within our rights to ask: how's your Japanese?
Marko DeSantis (AKA Marko 72) of the Cali band Sugarcult whips yet another crowd into a frenzy while sporting our Yoko Ono Voulez-Vous Couchez Avec Moi Ce Soir? shirt. The French message printed thereon, popularized in the '70s by LaBelle in "Lady Marmalade," means, roughly: Would you like to go to bed with me tonight? We'd wager more than a few fans of the band, now celebrating its 10th anniversary, would likely take him up on that.
Got a photo of yourself (no shirt of any kind required) having a rockstar moment? Post it on our Facebook page and be eligible for a free tee. And while we're in full-on promo mode, visit wornfree.com and sign up for our newsletter, if you haven't already -- those puppies are full of discount offers and other goodies.
Manchester's own The Whip whipped the crowd into a lather on a recent installment of The Jimmy Kimmel Show, with a tip of the hat to Joe Strummer, who originally wore the Out of Control T-shirt design sported here by keyboardist Dan Saville.
The band performed their mesmerizing single "Trash," but Dan's shirt is an ode to lasting quality. Just sayin'.
Why not check out the band's performance, through the magic of the Internet?
C'mon in -- there's cake! And funny hats! And jugglers and dancing girls!
OK, that's not true. We're not equipped to throw Iggy Pop the kind of birthday party he deserves. So we'll have to make do with some worshipful words and a spectacular offer on gorgeous repros of shirts he wore in famous photos.
First, the praise in prose. We have Iggy to thank for laying the groundwork for the passionate punk rebellion in the early '70s, when most of the rock nation was lost in a fog of guitar noodling, album-length songs and, well, actual fog.
The Igster also gets credit for finding (alongside frequent collaborator David Bowie but also on his own) a fascinating niche as an often aggressive but melodically inspired singer-songwriter. A witty, trenchant lyricist, he spun new kinds of stories and put them in a new kind of musical package -- we're talking "Lust for Life," "The Passenger," "China Girl," "Sister Midnight" and "Tonight" (not to mention underrated killers like "Blah Blah Blah").
So: Happy Birthday, Mr. Osterberg. You may be turning 62, but your music is still a brilliant, gawky teen, hurling itself at convention with an abandon both menacing and joyous.
And Happy Iggy's Birthday to you, Worn Free community -- head over to the T-shirt store and get yourself 15% off compelling torso coverings like Dublin Sound Studios, I Wiped Out the 60's, Rainbow and Camel. Just use coupon code NEWVALUES. It's worth a million in prizes.
Jeff Beck is one of the greatest rock guitarists of all time. If you've heard his pioneering blues-rock riffs with the Yardbirds, his questing leads with the Jeff Beck Group (featuring singer Rod Stewart), or his staggering, jazz-inflected pyrotechnics as a solo artist, you already know that.
Then there's the fact that without his hammer-ons and tremolo-bending and other technical brilliance, there'd likely be no Eddie Van Halen. And without his haircut, there'd be no Nigel Tufnel.
But hasn't it seemed that Beck never quite got his due? Nothing like the "Clapton Is God" movement or the Temple of Jimmy Page or the Department of Jimi Hendrix Studies at your local university. Not that these other axemen weren't worthy of worship, but give the Beckster his parade, right?
Well, on Sat. night he got it -- as his old Yardbirds mate Page inducted him into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Then the two rock titans picked up their guitars and squared off on Zep's "Immigrant Song," with Beck's Strat voicing the melody. And lo, it was glorious.
We're really chuffed for Jeff, and to celebrate we're doing two things:
1. We're offering 15% off our Jeff Beck t-shirts (the jaunty, black "Jeff Beck On the Road Again" and the cheeky, yellow "Oh, Yeah?") until the end of April (or while supplies last). Just enter the coupon code RNRHOF when you check out.
2. We're going to plug in the old guitar, stomp on the distortion pedal, and turn the amp up really loud while pretending to be 1/100th as good as Beck on his worst day.
Hey, you wanna jam?
P.S. Follow us on Twitter, won't you?