Eduardo Rivadavia (aka Ed Rivadavia) was born in São Paulo, Brazil, and by his late teens had already toured the world (and elsewhere), learning four languages on three continents. Having also accepted the holy gospel of rock & roll as his lord and savior, Eduardo became infatuated with the New Wave of British Heavy Metal and all things heavy, crude, and obnoxious while living in Milan, Italy, during the mid-1980s. At this time, he also made his journalistic debut as sole writer, editor, publisher, and, some would claim, reader of his high school's heavy metal fanzine, earning the scorn of jocks and nerds alike, but uniting the small hardcore music-loving contingent into a frenzied mob that spent countless hours exchanging tapes, talking shop, and getting beat up at concerts. Upon returning home to Brazil, Eduardo resumed a semi-normal existence, sporadically contributing music articles to local papers and magazines while earning his business degree. Finally, after years of obsessive musical fandom and at peace with his distinct lack of musical talent, Eduardo decided the time had come to infiltrate the music industry by the fire escape. He quit his boring corporate job, relocated to America, earned his master's degree while suffering the iniquities of interning for free (anything for rock & roll!), and eventually began working for various record labels, accumulating mountains of records and (seemingly) useless rock trivia in the process. This eventually led him back to writing, and he has regularly contributed articles to multiple websites since 1999, working with many different rock genres but specializing, as always, in his personal hobby: hard rock and heavy metal. To quote from the insightful 'This Is Spinal Tap': "People should be jealous of me...I'm jealous of me...." Eduardo currently resides in Austin, TX, with his wife, two daughters, and far more records, CDs and MP3s than he'll ever have time to listen to.
Eduardo Rivadavia
The Day Lynyrd Skynyrd Pianist Billy Powell Died
The band lost yet another seminal member when their longtime keyboard player passed away suddenly.
When Alice in Chains Showed a Different Side on ‘Jar of Flies’ EP
They were one of grunge’s biggest names, and among the world’s most popular rock bands of any kind.
How Journey Finally Broke Through With ‘Infinity’
Ever wake up one morning and realize you somehow missed something that was sitting right under your nose?
How AC/DC Made a Comeback With ‘Blow Up Your Video’
Arguably no album released during the Brian Johnson era arrived with smaller fanfare than this one.
55 Years Ago: Led Zeppelin’s Debut Becomes a Hard Rock Paradigm
This eponymous debut was full of firsts, beyond the ‘I’ frequently tacked onto its title nowadays.
42 Years Ago: Aerosmith Release Their First Album
When Aerosmith’s eponymous debut slipped unassumingly onto record stores in January 1973, most critics could barely tell them apart from fellow longhaired upstarts the New York Dolls.
11 Years Ago: Ozzy Osbourne Nearly Dies in ATV Accident
Ozzy Osbourne is nearly killed when an ATV flips over onto him.
33 Years Ago: Iron Maiden’s First Concert With Bruce Dickinson
On October 26, 1981, New Wave of British Heavy Metal standard bearers Iron Maiden performed their first concert with new lead singer, Bruce Dickinson at the Palasport of Bologna, Italy— a daring personnel change for a band that was already enjoying great success with two fine albums recorded behind well-liked frontman Paul Di’Anno...
30 Years Ago: AC/DC Catch Up With Their Past on ‘’74 Jailbreak’
On Oct. 15, 1984, a tiny treasure trove of long-lost AC/DC rarities ttiled ‘’74 Jailbreak’ arrived to help curb the seemingly insatiable consumer demand for the world’s hottest hard-rock heroes.
25 Years Ago: Western Rockers Play the Moscow Music Peace Festival
On August 12, 1989, rock bands like Bon Jovi and Motley Crue played the Moscow Music Peace Festival.