Mikael Wood writes about pop music in all its ever-quickening splendor. Prior to joining the Los Angeles Times in 2012, he was a freelance contributor to Rolling Stone, Entertainment Weekly, Spin and the Village Voice. He grew up in Little Rock, Ark., graduated from Northwestern University and knows every word to Ą°Mo Money Mo Problems.Ąą He was named pop music critic in 2016.
Latest From This Author
The singer and songwriter won a Grammy for traditional pop vocal album in February. Now sheĄ¯s the star of a concert movie shot at the Hollywood Bowl.
The jam band will return to the state-of-the-art dome-shaped venue in March 2025.
The 81-year-old songwriter and composer is the subject of a new biography by former Times pop music critic Robert Hilburn.
A chat with the new indie-rock supergroup featuring Stephen Malkmus, Matt Sweeney, Jim White and Emmett Kelly.
The pop-soul singerĄ¯s new album, ĄŽHurry Up Tomorrow,Ą¯ will come out Jan. 24, and heĄ¯ll mark its release with a concert the next day at the Rose Bowl.
The Compton rapperĄ¯s new LP dropped without warning on Friday in the wake of his epic feud with Drake.
Holiday concert guide
The musician was perhaps best known for his work on Brian WilsonĄ¯s 1988 comeback LP and on the soundtrack to Warren BeattyĄ¯s big-screen ĄŽDick Tracy.Ą¯
Ahead of Wednesday nightĄ¯s CMA Awards, California-born Nate Smith details his journey from the small town of Paradise to a career in Nashville.
As fans swarmed the festival to see the likes of Mustard, Erykah Badu and Playboi Carti, the mindset of letting it all hang out on a Sunday evening was strong throughout the three-stage slate of acts that kept the crowd captivated from beginning to end.