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The Best and Worst of Hall & Oates, According to Daryl Hall

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The latest in pop-culture news, recaps, and reviews, plus close reads, profiles, interviews, and mor

The latest in pop-culture news, recaps, and reviews, plus close reads, profiles, interviews, and more from Vulture.com. [Brand Logo]( SUPERLATIVES [The Best and Worst of Hall & Oates, According to Daryl Hall]( “There are a lot of songs I would redo.” Photo-Illustration: Vulture and Photo: Lynn Goldsmith/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images Rock and roll and soul music are brothers from another mother, and few performers have dedicated their careers to accentuating the closeness of the genres as much as Daryl Hall. He cut his teeth on the Philadelphia soul scene in the 1960s before meeting John Oates, a fellow Temple University student who sang and played guitar. The two became fast friends, roommates, and eventually bandmates who flourished in the ’70s after signing to Atlantic Records, releasing classic albums like 1973’s Abandoned Luncheonette — a collection of slick rock, R&B, and easy-listening gems, including the slow-boiling breakup ballad “She’s Gone” — and 1975’s Daryl Hall and John Oates, best known for the soulful single “Sara Smile” but bolstered by brilliant rockers like “Gino (the Manager)” and “Grounds for Separation.” By the ’80s, Hall & Oates were accomplished hitmakers with a pliable sound, capable of balancing bubbly love songs and angular New Wave jams and making rock, punk, soul, and doo-wop collide in hits like “You Make My Dreams (Come True).” [Read The Story »]( The Latest TV Recaps • [The Good Fight:]( Parking Violations • [Good Trouble:]( Good Night and Good Luck • [The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills:](The Get-Along Gang [Learn more about RevenueStripe...]( Stories We Think You’ll Like [Matt Amodio Studied TMZ Before His Remarkable Jeopardy! Run “I did my best to be interested in the minutiae of the celebrity eye. I’m naturally a curious person, which helps.”]( [Inside HBO Max’s Scramble to Fix Its Glitchy App “We see the crash logs. We’re not blind to it.”]( [Heels Can Be Clunky But Also Winning The new Starz wrestling drama about brothers-in-well-toned-arms is a show that knows itself but doesn’t trust its audience to figure it out.]( [Respect Dulls the Inherent Glow of Aretha Franklin This movie may satisfy those who want to bask in Franklin’s music. But if that’s the desire, I’d suggest playing her records instead.]( [Steve Agee Knows Exactly Why He Was Cast to Play Shark King’s Body The comedian had zero experience in motion-capture work, but he was handpicked to be Sylvester Stallone’s Suicide Squad stand-in anyway.]( [Hayley Mills Answers Every Question We Have About The Parent Trap The actress talks working with Walt Disney, life as a teen icon in the ’60s, and her new memoir about a Hollywood that no longer exists.]( [Learn more about RevenueStripe...]( Devour pop culture with us: [Subscribe to Vulture now for unlimited access.]( Vulture Recommends We consume it all so you don’t have to. Photo: NBC • As it enters its final act, we selected [17 essential Brooklyn Nine-Nine episodes]( that took this workplace sitcom from nice to noice. [Read more from Vulture]( If you enjoyed reading Vulture’s daily newsletter, forward it to a friend. Or dive deeper into the Vulture universe with our other newsletters: • [1.5x Speed](: Podcast recommendations and listening notes from Nick Quah, sent every Wednesday. • [Buffering](: Joe Adalian reports on the streaming industry, sent every Thursday. • [Read Like the Wind](: Book recommendations and literary mischief by Molly Young, sent the first Tuesday of every month. • [The Housewives Institute Bulletin](: For dedicated students of the Reality TV Arts and Sciences, sent every other Friday. [logo]( [facebook logo]( [instagram logo]( [twitter logo]( [unsubscribe](param=daily) | [privacy notice]( | [update preferences]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Was this email forwarded to you? [Sign up now]( to get this newsletter in your inbox. [View this email in your browser.]( You received this email because you have a subscription to New York. Reach the right online audience with us For advertising information on e-mail newsletters please contact AdOps@nymag.com Vox Media, LLC 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, 11th Floor Washington, DC 20036 Copyright © 2021, All rights reserved

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