Devon Maloney
Devon Maloney is the former pop music editor for the Los Angeles Times. An alumnus of Billboard, SPIN, WIRED, Rolling Stone and New York Magazine’s Vulture, her byline has also appeared in Vanity Fair, GQ, Grantland, the Village Voice, Nylon and many more. She’s a South Bay native, a dystopian lit fan, a Ewok dog parent and a Trekkie to the bone.
Latest From This Author
As a Middle-Class White Millennialâ„¢, I am drawn to Millennial Talk.
Going by his newest music video, you’d think Boogie was the life of the party.
There’s lots of blame to throw around when it comes to the early demise of Amy Winehouse.
Michael Jackson, Justin Timberlake, Nick Jonas -- is it a law of the universe that the first boy band member to abandon the pack for a solo career inevitably becomes a smooth, R&B-crooning sex symbol?
If you can hum a classic movie theme song, there’s a good chance it was written by John Williams.
When the world is ending and the devil is coming for your soul, the most important question you have to ask yourself is this: What soft rock song do I want playing me out as I spiral my way down to Hell?
Sitting with her bandmate Cleo Tucker on the back patio of a coffee shop in Silver Lake, Girlpool’s Harmony Tividad remembers the jarring contrast when the acoustic pop duo arrived in Philadelphia after uprooting their lives in their native L.A.
Wrapping a final round of tour dates in support of their 2013 self-titled album, Hayley Williams and her band look to the past -- from a very specific perspective
On paper, a Lana Del Rey/Courtney Love tour sounds like one of the best pairings in recent pop music history.