Polygon spoke with Hazbin Hotel songwriters Sam Haft and Andrew Underberg about season 2’s music, what changed from season 1, and what it was like working with the performers. This is the second in a ...
The song has been streamed over 3 million times in under a month. A song created through artificial intelligence has made history topping a Billboard country music chart, but it has also sent ...
Hazbin Hotel Season 2 is now streaming on Prime Video, which has released a new sing-along video of the villainous anthem “Once We Get Up There!” performed by Tony Award winner Christian Borle as Vox.
The song "Mine, Mine, Mine" is the song of the villain from Pocahontas, Governor Ratcliffe. Ratcliffe, in my opinion, is not Disney's best villain, nor his most well-known, but he deserves to be ...
Explore the genius behind Disney’s most iconic villain songs, from "Poor Unfortunate Souls" to "Be Prepared." Learn how Disney masterfully combines dark visuals, twisted musical themes, and ...
Watch: Dylan O'Brien Reacts to Rumors He’s the Alleged “Villain" Referenced in Sabrina Carpenter Song Dylan O’Brien was ready to go go when it came to discussing Sabrina Carpenter’s new song. The Teen ...
Disney villains have a way of stealing the spotlight, and their songs are a big reason why. This video dives into how Disney crafts its most memorable villain songs, using music theory, visual ...
Billy Joel is one of the all-time great pop legends — the piano man who’s kept the world singing along for over fifty years and thousands of Saturday nights. He’s a songwriter with an attic full of ...
Being the bigger person is overrated. At least, that’s the idea the best revenge songs would have you believe — and they’ve honestly got a point. Swapping anger for inner peace is a noble concept, ...
For playwright Kimberly Belflower, there’s countless individuals that helped turn her play John Proctor Is the Villain from a collaborative college workshop into the hit play currently running on ...
The Salem Witch trials have, many times over, proven themselves near unbreakable as allegory, starting at least with Arthur Miller’s 1953 The Crucible, in which the goings on in Massachusetts Bay ...