Sunday, March 2, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on March 2nd, 2025

Interviewed by the London Sunday Times, Daryl Hall insisted he'll never work with his former Hall & Oates partner John Oates again. "That ship has gone to the bottom of the ocean. I've had a lot of surprises in my life, disappointments, betrayals, so I'm kind of used to it...," Hall said. "I've been involved with some pretty shady characters over the years. That's where the problems start." In 2023, Hall sued his former musical partner to stop him from selling their stake in their publishing company, Whole Oats Enterprises -- a move he branded "the ultimate partnership betrayal" -- and while he can't talk about the ongoing legal proceedings, the "Rich Girl" hitmaker admitted things have gone too far for them to reunite. Hall, 78, also admitted he feels frustrated that his prolific songwriting in Hall & Oates -- who sold 60 million records -- has largely gone unrecognized. He said: "The songs with his lead vocal are the songs he wrote, and all the other ones, which is about 90 per cent, are the ones I wrote... It was very frustrating." Since Hall and Oates went their separate ways, Hall has worked with former Eurythmics star-turned-producer Dave Stewart on several projects and insists their partnership is far more "meaningful" than the one he had with John. "[Dave is] a whirlwind. Witty and amusing, for sure. Also manic. He never stops," Hall said. In May, Hall is set to head out on the road with Squeeze's Glenn Tilbrook and, despite his advancing years, he still loves performing live. "[Playing live] is the way that music is supposed to be communicated, and it's unforgiving. What you do is what people hear." - Music-News.com, 3/2/25...... Jimmy PageLed Zeppelin's Jimmy Page and The Black Crowes are revisiting their 1999 collaboration with an expanded edition of Live at the Greek, and they've just shared a fresh taste from it on YouTube -- a newly unearthed live recording of Zeppelin's "The Lemon Song." Originally recorded during a soundcheck, this take on the Led Zeppelin II classic captures the raw chemistry between Page and the Crowes as they breathed new life into Led Zepp's bluesy, groove-heavy material. It's one of several unreleased tracks included in the expanded reissue, which drops Mar. 14. "I'm really looking forward to the soon-to-be-available release of Jimmy Page & The Black Crowes material from concerts in 1999," Page said in a statement. "The new mixes capture the collaboration of those historic encounters and provide the full explosive passion and exciting energy of those alchemical moments." - Billboard 2/25/25...... The Rolling Stones producer Andrew Watt has defended the legendary British band winning Best Rock Album at the most recent Grammys for their 2023 LP Hackney Diamonds. The Stones beat out the likes of Green Day, IDLES, Fontaines D.C and Jack White with their comeback album, their first full-length for 18 years and their first since the death of drummer Charlie Watts. However, some claimed their win was the result of their rich musical legacy as opposed to the quality of the album itself, and as such felt the other artists nominated were "robbed." Now Watt, who produced the album, has argued that the songwriting still made the Stones worthy of the Grammy. "They are in their 80s, They're 82 and 83 years-old. Tell me another band ever in history that has made a latter-day album that good in their 80s, with that level of songwriting, that level of performance?" Watt said in an interview with Rolling Stone's Music Now podcast. Watt accepted the award on the band's behalf during the ceremony. "Talked to Mick [Jagger] yesterday and he just wanted to say a big thank you to the Academy from the entire band. For a little boy that grew up playing guitar, it was one of the most amazing experiences to be around those musicians," he said at the time. Meanwhile, Watt has revealed that Ozzy Osbourne is back in the gym in preparation for the upcoming final Black Sabbath gig in Birmingham, UK on July 5. "He's OK. It's just his body is not doing what he wants it to do all the time," Watt explained. "But I talked to him a couple days ago, and he's, like, starting to get in the gym again a little bit by little, get himself ready for this last concert." - New Musical Express, 2/28/25...... On Feb. 28 Neil Young announced he'll be headlining a July 11 at the UK's annual BST Hyde Park festival in London, where he will be joined by "Peace Train" singer Yusuf/Cat Stevens and Van Morrison, with more support acts to be announced later. The gig will be Young's first at BST Hyde Park since a 2019 co-headlining gig there with Bob Dylan. Young's show will join a growing roster of 2025 BST Hyde Park headliners, which also include Jeff Lynne's ELO and such rising artists as Sabrina Carpenter, Olivia Rodrigo, Zach Bryan and Noah Kahan. The addition of the Hyde Park show expands Young's burgeoning 2025 "Love Earth" tour roster, which is slated to kick off in Europe on June 18 at Dalhalla in Rttvik, Sweden before moving to North America on Aug. 8 with a show in Charlotte, N.C. - Billboard, 2/28/25...... The ever inscrutable Bob Dylan has inexplicably posted a 2016 video of an in-store performance by Machine Gun Kelly at the Park Ave. CDs record store in Orlando, FL. While Dylan has posted some on-brand messages lately, including a tribute to his friend and late The Band member Garth Hudson in January following the death of The Band's longtime keyboardist, the MGK love is in keeping with his out-of-left-field online activity. Earlier in 2025, the 83-year-old folk rock legend joined TikTok just days before what was slated to be a ban of the app, posting a kind of career retrospective clip, followed by a half dozen other archival videos. Perhaps we'll never know why the rock bard feels such love for MGK, but both Kelly and his good pal, singer/producer Mod Sun, were beyond pumped at the unexpected shout-out. "You having a phone is so rad," Kelly wrote in the comments on the post, with Mod Sun adding, "This is my favorite thing that's ever happened on the internet. What does it all mean? Who knows? But in the immortal words of Dylan: "don't criticize what you can't understand." - Billboard, 2/27/25...... Pink Floyd's beloved 1972 concert film, Pink Floyd at Pompeii -- MCMLXXII -- will return to movie theaters worldwide beginning on Apr. 24. The film directed by Adrian Maben, will also be screened on IMAX in a digitally remastered, 4K version taken from the original 35mm footage, with enhanced audio that has been newly mixed by Steven Wilson, representing what a press release said is the "definitive version of this pioneering film." "Since 1994, I have searched for the elusive film rushes of Pink Floyd At Pompeii, so the recent discovery of the 1972 original 35mm cut negative was a very special moment," said Lana Topham, Floyd's director of restoration in a statement. "The newly restored version presents the first full 90-minute cut, combining the 60-minute source edit of the performance with the additional Abbey Road Studios documentary segments filmed shortly after." The movie's re-release will be accompanied by a Legacy Recordings release of the live album on Blu-ray and CD, digital audio and for the first time in Dolby Atmos and on vinyl on May 2, featuring performances of the songs "Careful With That Axe, Eugene," "Something Else," "Syncopated Pandemonium," "Storm Signals" and "Echoes -- Part II," among others. - Billboard, 2/26/25...... Nick and Gene Simmons and Paul and Evan StanleyNick Simmons and Evan Stanley, the sons of KISS' Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, have recorded 10 songs together, and the pair recently shared photos with fans on Instagram showing themselves beside recording equipment as they performed as yet unheard material. Another post featured Nick and Evan performing an original track with guitarist Jacob Bunton, which Paul Stanley called "magic!!!" while Nick's sister Sophie Simmons gushed "we want the album" in the comments. Bunton has also been writing with the duo, although it remains unclear if an actual album will materialize. Meanwhile, Simmons recently responded to those who criticised his involvement in the recent Ronald Reagan biopic. The singer/bassist recorded a cover of the 1933 classic "Stormy Weather" for Reagan. During an appearance on Bill O'Reilly's podcast No Spin News, he was asked if he had received any pushback for his contribution to the movie. "How do I say this as nicely as I can? I don't give a squat," he said. - NME, 2/27/25...... Paul McCartney has commented on his forthcoming Wings book Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run. Scheduled for release on Nov. 4 via Liveright/W. W. Norton and Allen Lane/Penguin Press, the book is authored by McCartney and edited by historian Ted Widmer, featuring an in-depth personal account of his post-Beatles band, as told by McCartney, key players, and family members. "I'm so very happy to be transported back to the time that was Wings and relive some of our madcap adventures through this book," said McCartney in a statement. "Starting from scratch after The Beatles felt crazy at times. There were some very difficult moments and I often questioned my decision. But as we got better I thought, 'OK this is really good.' We proved Wings could be a really good band. To play to huge audiences in the same way The Beatles had and have an impact in a different way. It was a huge buzz." A description of the book notes that it is "organized around nine Wings albums," implying the narrative begins with 1971's Ram and also includes 1976's triple live record Wings over America. The volume also contains 150 black-and-white photographs, of which many are unseen, and focuses on many iconic stories of the band's history, including how they "survive a robbery on the streets of Nigeria [during the 1973 Band on the Run sessions], appear unannounced at various university halls, [and] tour in a sheared-off double-decker bus with their children." Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run follows a number of recent Wings-related releases, including a 50th anniversary reissue of Band on the Run and the long-awaited arrival of the live record and film One Hand Clapping in 2024. A 50th anniversary reissue of 1975's Venus and Mars is also scheduled to arrive on Mar. 21. - Billboard, 2/26/25...... In other Beatles-related news, a piece of toast that was left behind by George Harrison in 1962 has been sold. The crust of the bread left over by the late Beatles legend was saved by a fan named Sue Houghton, who was 15-years-old at the time. According to the Daily Express, she preserved the bread on a scrapbook page alongside the caption: "Piece of George's breakfast 2-8-63." The date noted indicates that the bread was from around the time that the Fab Four made their return to Liverpool after seven weeks of touring. As reported by the New York Post, the fan had taken the remains from Harrison's plate after befriending his family and making a visit to their home. Her scrapbook also contained other memorabilia from Harrison, including fluff from under his bed and thread from his jeans. The bread was originally sold in 1992 when Houghton auctioned off her scrapbook for $1,600 (1,265) to fund home repairs. Now it has been reported that the leftover piece of bread has changed hands again, with memorabilia collector Joseph O'Donnell buying the piece of toast, although the price he paid has not been publicly disclosed. O'Donnell did, however, say that it has been preserved by being framed in UV-protected glass of museum standard. "It's a brilliant story that is both bizarre, historical and a story I'll continue telling friends, memorabilia collectors and fellow Beatles fans," he said. The NY Post also highlights that word of the swiped piece of toast has made its way over to members of The Beatles, and has become an inside joke to the members. In 1992 for instance, Harrison jokingly claimed that the toast couldn't have belonged to him in an interview with Vox.com, saying: "I ate all my toast! I never left any!" Harrison died in November 2001 following a battle with lung cancer at age 58. - NME, 2/27/25...... Tom Waits has added his talents to the final episode of Italian documentary series, Il Fattore Umano (The Human Factor), with his work accompanying stories of homelessness in America. The eight-part series, created by the Italian public television channel RAI3, offers investigative insights into how human rights have been violated by authoritarian regimes, autocracies and even democratic regimes. Focusing on how the most vulnerable and minorities face oppression in these countries, the final episode - titled "Ultima Fermata (The Last Ride)" -- serves as an in-depth look at American poverty. Looking specifically at four southern states -- Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana -- filmmakers travel through the regions on public buses, discovering forgotten communities while exploring the dignity and solidarity of those forced to live in marginalized conditions thanks to a system that lacks safety nets. "The Last " pairs the stories of these individuals with the voice of Waits, who shares performances on acoustic guitar and piano while also reading from his poem "Seeds on Hard Ground." A trailer for the episode is soundtracked by Waits performing "The Fall of Troy," which originally appeared on the soundtrack to 1996's Dead Man Walking. "I am an individual who is deeply concerned with the inequities as we all are, but ill equipped to solve any of them," Waits said in a statement. "I tell the world in the only way I know how: through my music. I don't deal with politics or laws, and I don't have answers to the big questions that concern us all. All I can do is try -- through songs and poems -- to inspire someone. I'm here to open up the window and open up our eyes. I guess a little bit, if I can." The episode was made available for global streaming on Feb. 26 via RAI's RaiPlay streaming platform. - Billboard, 2/25/25...... Bob EzrinAs the divisiveness in American politics grows increasingly sharper, veteran classic rock producer Bob Ezrin has said he plans to renounce his US citizenship and make a full return to his native country of Canada from his most recent US base, Nashville. Ezrin explained to the UK paper The Globe that the current polarized state of American politics and society is the driving force behind this move. "In the last few years, it seems as if America is split in half," Ezrin says. "The voices of a radical right have become so much louder. Conspiracy theories abound, people are armed to the teeth, and it's just a different place than the place I went to." Already a member of the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, Ezrin was recently named as a recipient of the lifetime artistic achievement award by The Governor General's Performing Arts Awards Foundation, honoured for a legendary discography that includes milestone albums by such international stars as Alice Cooper, Peter Gabriel, Pink Floyd, U2, Deep Purple, Rod Stewart, Nine Inch Nails, Kiss, Lou Reed, Taylor Swift and many more. He received a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year in 1981 as producer of Pink Floyd's The Wall, which was subsequently voted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2008. Ezrin and his family moved to Los Angeles from Toronto in 1985, and he became heavily involved in the community of that area. The following decade, he became a US citizen in order to vote. He teamed up with U2's the Edge co-found Music Rising, an initiative to replace musical instruments lost in natural disasters. He is also a board member of the Mr. Holland's Opus Foundation, a national initiative that supports music in U.S. schools by donating musical instruments to under-funded music programs. - Billboard, 2/28/25...... Billy Joel will make history this summer when he plays all three New York City-area sports stadiums, making him the first artist to ever play all three in one summer. His impressive feat will come over a month-long period. Joel will play Yankee Stadium in the Bronx on July 18; East Rutherford, N.J.'s Metlife Stadium, home to the New York Giants and New York Jets, on Aug. 8; and Citi Field, home to the New York Mets, in Queens, N.Y., on Aug. 21. Rod Stewart will join him July 18, Stevie Nicks on Aug. 8 and Sting on Aug. 21. The feat is all the more remarkable in that it comes on top of ending his 10-year residency at New York's Madison Square Garden last July after playing the vaunted venue once a month for 10 years. Joel's 2025 tour kicks off March 15 in Toronto and ends Nov. 1 at Hard Rock Live in Hollywood, Fla. - Billboard, 2/24/25...... Brian May says he fears for the music industry as the UK government plans to make changes to AI copyright laws. The Queen guitarist is among those protesting the proposed amendment that would see artists have to opt out of having their work mined by AI algorithms. Sir Brian believes the damage is already done and has hit out at the "monstrously arrogant billionaire owners" of artificial intelligence and social media, making it "impossible for artists to be able to "afford to make music." May, 77, gave his stark warning to the UK's The Daily Mail as part of their campaign against the Labour government's proposed AI law changes. My fear is that it's already too late -- this theft has already been performed and is unstoppable, like so many incursions that the monstrously arrogant billionaire owners of Al and social media are making into our lives," May said. "The future is already forever changed." May backing the campaign comes after more than 1,000 artists -- including Kate Bush, Damon Albarn and Annie Lennox -- released a silent album in protest to the new changes. - Music-News.com, 2/28/25...... Robert JohnRobert John, the Brooklyn-born singer-songwriter whose inimitable voice lent itself to a number of Billboard Hot 100 hits including "Sad Eyes" and an enduring version of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight," died on Feb. 24. He was 79 years old. The singer's son, Michael Pedrick, confirmed the news of his death to Rolling Stone. While no cause of death was given, John was still recovering from a stroke he suffered a few years prior to his passing. Born Bobby Pedrick, Jr., in Brooklyn, N.Y., first made waves in the pop world at just 12 years old with the single, "White Bucks and Saddle Shoes." The song peaked at No. 74 on the Hot 100 in 1958, marking his first of many hits on the chart. In 1965, he changed his name and by 1971, he notched a major hit, a cover of The Tokens' 1961 classic, "The Lion Sleeps Tonight." John's version, one of the most popular renditions of the track to this day, made its way to No. 3 on the Hot 100 and No. 6 on the Adult Contemporary songs chart. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, John was a mainstay on the Billboard charts, hitting No. 49 with 1968's "If You Don't Want My Love," No. 71 with 1970's "When the Party Is Over," and No. 99 with 1972's "Hushabye." In 1979, after John worked as a staff writer for Motown for a few years, he topped the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart with his seminal hit, "Sad Eyes," which also hit the top 10 on the Adult Contemporary chart. At the 22nd annual Grammy Awards, "Sad Eyes" was nominated for best pop vocal performance, male. "Sad Eyes" was also featured on John's third, self-titled album, which peaked at No. 68 on the Billboard Hot 200 albums chart. His career continued throughout the 1980s, with the release of his last album, Back on the Street in 1980. Overall, John earned a collective 10 Hot 100 tracks and five Adult Contemporary hits. John is survived by his four sons and several grandsons, his ex-wife Diane and his partner Susan. - Billboard, 2/25/25...... The Isley Brothers member Chris Jasper -- also an award-winning songwriter, producer and keyboardist -- died on Feb. 23 after being diagnosed with cancer in December. He was 73. The Rock & Roll Hall of Famer's family broke the news with a notice on Facebook posted one day after Jasper's death. "He will be deeply missed and his legacy will live on as an inspiration for generations," it reads. Born Dec. 30, 1951, and educated at the Juilliard School of Music, the Cincinnati native helped transform The Isley Brothers from vocal trio to full-fledged band when he joined the original lineup -- comprised of brothers O'Kelly Jr., Rudolph and Ronald Isley -- in 1973 alongside Ernie and Marvin Isley. During his decade with the group, they scored numerous entries on the Billboard Hot 100, including top 10 hits "That Lady (Part 1)" and "Fight the Power Part 1," both of which Jasper helped write. The Isley Brothers also charted a dozen albums on the Billboard Hot 200 during Jasper's tenure, including 1975's No. 1 LP The Heat Is On. 1973's 3+3, 1976's Harvest for the World, 1977's Go for Your Guns, 1978's Showdown and 1980's Go All the Way also all reached the top 10. After the group disbanded in 1984, the pianist formed Isley-Jasper-Isley with Ernie and Marvin, and recorded hits such as 1985's "Caravan of Love." He would later go on to pursue a solo music career, becoming known for tracks such as "Superbad" and "The First Time." He released his final album, It Started With a Kiss, in 2023. He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame along with the rest of his Isley Brothers bandmates in 1992. In 2014, the Grammys honored the group with a Lifetime Achievement Award, eight years after which the Songwriters Hall of Fame inducted the members into its 2022 class. He is survived by his wife, New York attorney and author Margie Jasper, as well as his three sons Michael, Nicholas and Christopher. - Billboard, 2/25/25...... David JohansenDavid Johansen, frontman with glam rock band New York Dolls, died on Mar. 1 at his home in New York City. He was 75. "David Johansen died at home in NYC on Friday afternoon holding hands with his wife, Mara Hennessey, and daughter Leah, surrounded by music, flowers and love," his rep said in a statement. "He died of natural causes after nearly a decade of illness." The news of Johansen's death comes after the punk pioneer announced in early February that he was battling stage 4 cancer and a brain tumor. The musician was diagnosed in 2020, and after a fall that broke his back in two places in Nov. 2024, he decided to share his story. "We've been living with my illness for a long time, still having fun, seeing friends and family, carrying on, but this tumble the day after Thanksgiving really brought us to a whole new level of debilitation," revealed Johansen, who also acted and has appeared in films such as Scrooged and TV shows including Oz. "This is the worst pain I've ever experienced in my entire life. I've never been one to ask for help, but this is an emergency. Thank you." The Staten Island-born Johansen joined the Dolls in 1971, playing his first show with the group at a homeless shelter on Christmas Eve that year. Favoring simple, sloppy rock n' roll over the increasingly complex and conceptual rock music of the early '70s, New York Dolls made up for what they lacked in technical mastery and professionalism with attitude, gender-bending fashion (women's clothes and high heels) and gobs of lipstick. Gigging around Manhattan in 1972, the group steadily increasing in popularity among young, disaffected audiences looking for something different and the NYC art crowd. The group's self-titled 1973 album is a no-notes distillation of their rough-and-tumble, campy take on the straight-forward, blues-boosted rock n' roll of the '50s. "Personality Crisis" is a wild, careening send-up of self-obsessed people manufacturing drama for attention that rings as true today as it did half a century ago; "Looking for a Kiss" opens with a cheeky reference to The Shangri-Las; and while the Dolls weren't renowned for their lyricism, "Frankenstein" is a clever metaphor for the lumbering, confused and patched-together New York City of the '70s. Despite inspiring countless punks, glam rockers, heavy metal bands and Morrissey (who cites seeing the band on TV as a watershed moment in his life), the band's debut only reached No. 116 on the Billboard Hot 200, and its follow-up, In Too Much Too Soon (another seminal classic), peaked at No. 167. The band broke up in the mid '70s, and thanks in no small part to superfan Morrissey, eventually reunited in the '00s, playing several reunion shows before hitting the studio for three well-received albums: One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This(2006), Cause I Sez So (2009) and Dancing Backward in High Heels (2011). Johansen released four solo albums between 1978 and 1984, the first three of which included members of the New York Dolls in some capacity. While his self-titled solo debut found him delivering a slightly more polished version of the Dolls' rock ("Funky But Chic" is a treat), he began experimenting with disco ("Swaheto Woman") on its follow-up, In Style, and by 1981's Here Comes the Night, he was contemporizing his rock palette in a fashion that set him up for a commercial breakthrough with 1987's Buster Poindexter, the debut LP from his martini-swigging, lounge lizard alter ego Buster Poindexter. "We were a band's band in a lot of ways," Johansen said of the New York Dolls in an interview featured in Personality Crisis: One Night Only. "We influenced a lot of bands and a lot of kids were influenced by us who started bands. Take The Ramones. The Ramones saw us and they looked at each other said, 'Hey, if these guys can do this, we can do that.' To have an influence like that on people is really good. To give people the idea, like, 'Hey, I can do that.'" Johansen is survived by his wife, Mara, and daughter, Leah. - Billboard, 3/1/25.

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on February 27th, 2025

Gene HackmanGene Hackman, the Oscar-winning actor whose gruff but soulful turns in classics such as The French Connection, The Conversation and Unforgiven made him one of the most respected performers in Hollywood, was found dead in his Santa Fe, N.M., home on Feb. 26. He was 95 and found dead alongside his wife, Betsy Arakawa, 64, a classical pianist, and the couple's dog, according to the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office. "Foul play is not suspected as a factor in those deaths at this time however exact cause of death has not been determined. This is an active and ongoing investigation by the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office," a statement by the authorities said. In a remarkable acting career that spanned six decades, Mr. Hackman established himself as one of the most distinctive and dependable film stars of his generation, and compiled one of the most impressive filmographies in the history of American cinema. He was part of a group of unconventional leading men who helped define the "New Hollywood" cinema of the 1970s, but he was just as prominent across the '80s and '90s. Born Jan. 30, 1930, in San Bernardino, Calif., Mr. Hackman dropped out of school at 16 and fibbed about his age to join the U.S. Marines. He was trained as a radio operator and served in China, where he picked up work as a disc jockey. He took his talents to the radio industry, moving to New York City following his military discharge to learn the trade at the School of Radio Technique. He eventually switched gears and decided to pursue acting, enrolling at the Pasadena Playhouse in Southern California, where he was deemed "least likely to succeed." In time, Mr. Hackman left Pasadena and moved back to New York, where he roomed with fellow striving thespians Dustin Hoffman and Robert Duvall. George Morrison, a former instructor at the famed Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute, took Mr. Hackman under his wing and schooled him in the Method technique, teaching him to draw from personal experiences in his acting. Mr. Hackman started to get gigs in theater and on various television shows, such as the first episode of the CBS courtroom drama The Defenders, and in 1964 he landed his first meaty movie part alongside Warren Beatty and Jean Seberg in the psychological drama Lilith. Impressed with Mr. Hackman, Beatty chose him to play his older brother Buck Barrow in his breakout role in 1967's Bonnie & Clyde, a shockingly violent crime drama that mixed classic outlaw archetypes with the energy of the French New Wave and the playful spirit of the American counterculture. He picked up more film work in the late 1960s, including as a quietly intense Olympic coach in Downhill Racer, and opposite Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr in The Gypsy Moths as a barnstorming skydiver. But with William Friedkin's The French Connection (1971), Mr. Hackman catapulted to new heights of fame and acclaim as vulgar, bigoted NYC narcotics cop Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle. The action-packed film, which featured one of the most electrifying car chases in movie history, picked up five Oscars, including best picture and best actor for Mr. Hackman. The thriller propelled him to memorable turns in The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Scarecrow (1973), Night Moves (a 1975 French Connection sequel), A Bridge Too Far (1977) and as Lex Luthor in the 1978 blockbuster Superman. Mr. Hackman's portrayal of obsessive surveillance expert Harry Caul in The Conversation (1974) was a highlight of his 1970s filmography. Gene HackmanTamping down the volcanic anger that fueled The French Connection, he created an introverted character ravaged by paranoia and suspicion. The film and Mr. Hackman's tragic performance brilliantly captured the unease of the Watergate era. He entered one of the busiest stretches of his career in the 1980s, taking on a combination of leading roles and supporting parts in various dramas, action flicks and romances. He played a magazine editor in Beatty's epic Reds, a small-town basketball coach in Hoosiers and the secretary of defense in the noirish political thriller No Way Out. He capped his busy 1980s run with Mississippi Burning, playing an FBI agent, a role based on real-life investigator John Proctor, who was looking into the mysterious disappearances of three civil rights volunteers in a fictional Mississippi county. Mr. Hackman, who seemed drawn to projects that explored moral gray areas, earned his second Oscar in 1992 for his supporting work as the brutal Sheriff Little Bill Daggett in Unforgiven, Clint Eastwood's revisionist Western drama. The movie picked up four Oscars, including the best picture prize and best supporting actor for Mr. Hackman, and six years later the film earned a spot on the American Film Institute's list of the 100 best American movies ever made. In the 1990s, Mr. Hackman continued to work at a steady clip and frequently played a grizzled foil to younger stars, including Tom Cruise in The Firm, Denzel Washington in Crimson Tide, Robin Williams in The Birdcage and Will Smith in Enemy of the State, a frenetic surveillance thriller that paid homage to The Conversation. In 2001, he endeared himself to a new generation of moviegoers as the deeply flawed but rakishly charming family patriarch in Wes Anderson's ensemble film The Royal Tenenbaums, showing off his comedic chops and a more mischievous side of his public persona. Three years later, he left Hollywood behind, making his final film appearance in the largely forgotten Ray Romano vehicle Welcome to Mooseport. In a rare 2004 interview, Mr. Hackman told Larry King that he did not have any film projects in the pipeline and expected that his screen acting days were mostly behind him. He remained creative even in retirement, however, writing four historical fiction novels -- Wake of the Perdido Star, Justice for None, Escape From Andersonville: A Novel of the Civil War and Payback at Morning Peak: A Novel of the American West -- as well as the 2013 police thriller Pursuit. Mr. Hackman, who spent his final years in Santa Fe, N.M., is survived by three children -- Christopher, Elizabeth and Leslie -- from his first marriage to Faye Maltese. - NBCNews.com, 2/27/25.

On Feb. 24 Neil Young announced he'll hit the road with his new band The Chrome Hearts this summer, playing Europe in June and July and North America in August and September -- a total of 24 cities in all. The first leg of his "Love Earth" tour will kick off in Europe on June 18 at Dalhalla in Rttvik, Sweden before moving on to gigs in Norway, Denmark, Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany. On Aug. 8, he'll begin the North American leg with a show at the PNC Music Pavilion in Charlotte, N.C., hitting Detroit, Cleveland, Toronto, New York, Chicago throughout the month, then in September visiting Denver and Vancouver before winding down on Sept. 15 at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. More dates are expected to be added later. Young, 79, will be accompanied by the Chrome Hearts, whom he debuted during a 2024 concert and has said an album from the group is tentatively slated for release in April. After taking a break from regular touring during the Covid-19 pandemic, Young toured for a few dates with his longtime backing band Crazy Horse in summer 2024 before cancelling the remaining dates due to an unspecified health issue. - Billboard, 2/24/25...... Ronnie PlattMidwestern '70s and '80s prog rockers Kansas have been forced to cancel two shows following the revelation that their current frontman, Ronnie Platt, has been diagnosed with thyroid cancer. Platt, who has been singing with the band for a decade, took to social media on Feb. 19 to announce his diagnosis, assuring fans his cancer has been caught early. "For all of you asking, Tuesday I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer but before everyone gets all excited, it has a 99 per cent survival rate," said Platt, who took over lead vocal duties with Kansas from Steve Walsh in 2014 before singing with the band Shooting Star. "It has not spread. It's contained to my thyroid. I just have to have my thyroid removed. Go through some rehab time and be right back in the saddle." Ahead of the announcement the band nixed their Feb. 21 show in New Orleans citing "band illness," and have also canceled a Mar. 1 show in Louisiana for the same reason. The "Carry On Wayward Son" band celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2023. - Music-News.com, 2/21/25...... In a new interview with Mojo magazine, Phil Collins says he isn't "hungry" to make music nowadays because he's been "very sick." Collins, who is 73 and has been plagued with health issues for several years, disclosed that he's thought about getting back behind the kit, but hasn't been able to, due in large part to his condition. "I keep thinking I should go downstairs to the studio and see what happens. But I'm not hungry for it anymore. The thing is, I've been sick. I mean, very sick," he said. The "In the Air Tonight" singer's health issues stem from a 2007 spinal injury that left him with severe nerve damage and limited mobility, complicating his ability to play the instrument. He went into further detail about his condition in a December documentary titled Phil Collins: Drummer First, in which he revisited his drums for the first time in years. "It's still kind of sinking in," Collins says in the doc, which premiered on the Drumeo YouTube channel on Dec. 18. "I've spent all my life playing drums. To suddenly not be able to do that is a shock." Collins' son, Nic Collins, explained in the doc how years of playing such a physically demanding instrument also took its toll on his father's body. In 2022, Nic took over drumming duties for his dad during Genesis' farewell tour, while Phil sang sitting down. - Billboard, 2/21/25...... Actor Timothée Chalamet was plainly surprised when he walked away with an outstanding performance by a male actor in a leading role SAG (Screen Actors Guild) award on Feb. 23 at the Shrine Auditorium & Expo Hall in Los Angeles. "I was not expecting this at all," Chalamet told the audience as he accepted the honor for his titular role in the A Complete Unknown Bob Dylan biopic. "I know the classiest thing would be to downplay the effort that went into this role and how much this means to me. But the truth is it was five-and-a-half years of my life. I poured everything I had into playing this incomparable artist, Mr. Bob Dylan, a true American hero, and it was the honor of a lifetime playing him." Adrien Brody had won in the leading male category at most other 2025 awards shows for The Brutalist and was expected to win the SAG award too. Chalamet, 29, is the youngest actor to win SAG's lead actor prize, replacing Nicolas Cage who was 32 when he won for Leaving Las Vegas in 1996. Individual SAG winners for film acting generally go on to win Oscars, and Chalamet is vying to also become the youngest Oscar winner for best actor on Mar. 2. However the SAG win, and Chalamet's thoughtful acceptance speech, won't affect his Oscar chances as final-round voting closed Feb. 18. - Billboard, 2/18/25...... Elton JohnDespite announcing his retirement from touring in late 2023, Elton John set to headline Singapore's 2025 Formula 1 Grand Prix, closing out the huge three-day motor racing event on Oct. 5. More than two years after concluding his "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" tour with an emotional concert in Stockholm, Sweden, Sir Elton will make his highly-anticipated return to the stage on the Padang Stage in Zone 4 after the F1 race. John previously told fans that he would possibly still play "the odd show" after retiring from touring, and since concluding his mammoth Farewell Yellow Brick Road run, he has made live appearances at numerous events. These include the 50th annual Candlelight Concert in the US last December, and the opening of the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center over the summer. In 2023, Elton played live at the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame ceremony where he inducted his longtime songwriting partner Bernie Taupin. Last October, he made a surprise appearance during his "Cold Heart" collaborator Dua Lipa's orchestral show at the Royal Albert Hall in London. In March, he played at the 2024 Gershwin Prize in Washington, D.C. - where he and Taupin were honoured with the Library Of Congress Gershwin Prize For Popular Song. On Apr. 4, he'll release Who Believes In Angels?, a collaborative effort with Brandi Carlile. - New Musical Express, 2/20/25...... Variety magazine revealed on Feb. 20 that Michael Jackson accusers Wade Robson and James Safechuck are readying a sequel to their bombshell 2019 HBO documentary Leaving Neverland, in which the two men first described in graphic detail how the late King of Pop allegedly molested them at his Neverland Ranch in California when they were both minors -- accusations Jackson's estate has continuously and emphatically denied. Airing Mar. 18 on the U.K.'s Channel 4, the hourlong follow-up will catch up with the two men as they share how they've fared against the public's varying responses to their allegations since Leaving Neverland aired, with Dan Reed returning as director. This time around, though, HBO is not involved. In 2019, Jackson's estate sued the cable network for $100 million over claims the documentary violated a 27-year-old non-disparagement clause from a 1992 concert film for the King of Pop's "Dangerous" world tour. The case was sent to private arbitration that year and was still pending as of September. Robson and Safechuck make up just two of several accusers who have alleged sex abuse claims against Jackson before and after his 2009 death. The star was never convicted or held legally liable on any of the claims, however, and he and his estate have always maintained his total innocence. - Billboard, 2/20/25...... Grammy-winning songwriter Diane Warren will be fêted by The New York Pops at the orchestra's 42nd birthday gala this spring. "Words and Music: Diane Warren" will take place on Apr. 28, in Stern Auditorium/Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall, with a guest artist lineup that includes Taylor Dayne, Sofia Carson, Micaela Diamond, Shoshana Bean and Anglique Kidjo. Several of these artists have noteworthy ties to Warren -- Dayne sang "Love Will Lead Me Back," which in Apr.1990 became Warren's fifth No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 as a songwriter. (She has since had four more.) Carson sang "Applause" in the film Tell It Like a Woman, which two years ago became Warren's 14th song to receive an Oscar nomination for best original song. (She has since had two more.) Diamond was an original Broadway cast member of "The Cher Show." Cher sang two of Warren's 33 top 10 hits on the Hot 100 to date -- "If I Could Turn Back Time" (perhaps Cher's most iconic hit) and "Just Like Jesse James." Warren co-wrote the latter song with Desmond Child. Warren has penned nine No. 1 and 33 top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100. Her songs have been featured in more than 150 films, leading to 15 Academy Award nominations for best original song. In Nov. 2022, she became the first songwriter in history to receive an Honorary Oscar, as voted on by the Academy's Board of Governors. She has won a Grammy, a Primetime Emmy winner and two Golden Globes. She was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2001 and received that organization's top prize, the Johnny Mercer Award, in June 2024. - Billboard, 2/19/25...... John LydonFormer The Sex Pistols frontman John Lydon (née Johnny Rotten) has dismissed a new Sex Pistols tour in 2025 featuring his fellow original band members Steve Jones, Paul Cook and Glen Matlock as "karaoke." News of a new Sex Pistols tour emerged in 2024 when it was first announced that the band -- sans Lydon -- were to reunite for a two-night affair to benefit West London's Bush Hall. Instead, the group was to be fronted by Frank Carter, who has previously fronted acts such as Gallows, Pure Love and Frank Carter And The Rattlesnakes. The initial shows soon led to further dates around the U.K. and Europe, with the band billed as "Sex Pistols featuring Frank Carter." Further shows have since been announced for Australia, New Zealand, and other European countries throughout 2025. In January, Jones confirmed U.S. dates would follow, though specifics are yet to arrive. Although Lydon has remained largely quiet about the new Sex Pistols activity, on Feb. 13 he spoke to British publication The i Paper about the tour, explaining that he largely felt "annoyed" by the whole affair and feared it would tarnish the group's legacy. "When I first heard that the Sex Pistols were touring this year without me it pissed me off," he explained. "It annoyed me. I just thought, 'they're absolutely going to kill all that was good with the Pistols by eliminating the point and the purpose of it all.' I didn't write those words lightly. They're trying to trivialise the whole show to get away with karaoke but in the long term I think you'll see who has the value and who doesn't. I've never sold my soul to make a dollar. It's the Catholic in me -- that guilt I don't want to trip." The Sex Pistols initially existed from 1975 until 1978, releasing their sole studio album Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols in 1977. Lauded as a pioneering punk outfit despite their short initial tenure, the band would later reform in 1996 for a world tour, and undertook sporadic tours until 2008. Famously -- or perhaps infamously -- the band were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006, though refused to attend the ceremony, labeling the institution a "piss stain." - Billboard, 2/18/25...... In other '70s punk rock news, on Feb. 24 The Stranglers announced a raft of autumn 2025 UK tour dates on social media, with support from The Buzzcocks. The Stranglers will be bringing their "51 Tour" to the UK between Oct. 17 and Nov. 1, including two nights at London's Roundhouse. "They say 'making it to a goal is one thing, but making it further is even better'," the post read. "We are thrilled to announce The Stranglers 51 UK Tour. Fifty-one years on the road and still going strong." The Stranglers tour will make stops at cities including Newcastle, Bristol, Leeds, Manchester and Aberdeen, as well as London. The Buzzcocks will join the band on all dates, except in Scotland -- a support act for their Scottish shows will be announced at a later date. The Stranglers will also mount tours in Australia and New Zealand this year, where they will be playing in cities including Sydney, Perth, Auckland and Christchurch. These shows are part of their "50 Years In Black World Tour." The band has scored 23 UK top 40 singles and 20 UK top 40 albums to date in a career spanning five decades -- making them one of the longest-surviving bands to have originated in the UK punk scene of the 1970s. - Music-News.com, 2/24/25...... British singer Lulu announced on Feb. 24 that she's launching her very own charitable fund, Lulu's Mental Health Trust, a restricted fund operating under the auspices of Prism the Gift Fund. Lulu says she decided to set up the fund while writing her memoir, which celebrated 60 years since she stormed into the UK charts with her iconic hit "Shout" and realized the part mental health has played throughout her life, whether her own or her loved ones. For her first initiative, Lulu will lead a mammoth sponsored walk on May 16 which will take her from the school where she filmed the 1967 movie To Sir With Love in E1 0AQ to the old Decca studio where she recorded "Shout" in NW6 3AU -- passing more places connected to her incredible six-decade long career along the way. "I have been on such an amazing journey filled with so many memories over the last 60 years, but it has come with lows as well as the incredible highs as my memoir will detail," Lulu says. "While writing my book, I had the chance to reflect on how mental health has played a big part in my life whether mine or people I love, and I feel compelled to give help to those going through their own struggles." Lulu is known for her dedication to charity work, having supported: Comic Relief, Elton John AIDS Foundation, Help For Heroes, Prince's Trust, Teenage Cancer Trust, and Young Lives vs Cancer amongst many others throughout her career. In 2021, she was awarded a CBE by the late Queen Elizabeth II for her services to charity as well as music and entertainment. - Music-News.com, 2/24/25...... British cult folk musician and songwriter Bill Fay died "peacefully" on the morning of Feb. 22 in London at the age of 81. A cause of death has not been given, though Mr. Fay had been diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease. After being dropped from his label in the 1970s, Mr. Fay's career was revived nearly 40 years later when his music was discovered by the likes of Jim O'Rourke, Jeff Tweedy and Nick Cave. Born in North London in 1943, Mr. Fay went to Wales to study electronics at University. During his time studying, he began writing songs on the piano and harmonium, recording some demos that were noticed by former Van Morrison drummer Terry Noon. Noon helped Fay sign to Decca Records subsidiary Deram and he released two albums: 1970's Bill Fay and 1971's Time of the Last Persecution. His second LP didn't sell well, and he was eventually dropped from his label. After his music career seemed to come to an end, Mr. Fay pursued various other careers, as a groundskeeper, fishmonger and fruit picker. In 1998 -- almost 40 years after the release of Time of the Last Persecution -- a small British label reissued his music, leading to its discovery by producer Jim O'Rourke. O'Rourke played the albums for Jeff Tweedy during the writing and recording sessions for Wilco's seminal Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, and Tweedy liked the songs so much that he began performing a cover of "Be Not So Fearful" during their live shows. Mr. Fay eventually joined the band to perform the song, once in 2007 and once in 2010. Mr. Fay never toured and made only one television appearance on Later with Jools Holland. In their statement, Dead Oceans Records shared that he had been working on an album at the time of his death. "Our hope is to find a way to finish and release it," they wrote. - NME, 2/23/25...... Jerry ButlerJerry Butler, the beloved Chicago soul singer, producer and, later, politician who began his career in the late 1950 singing alongside childhood friend Curtis Mayfield in The Impressions, died on Feb. 20 of undisclosed causes after a long battle with Parkinson's disease. He was 85. Working alongside singer/guitarist Mayfield -- whom he'd met as a teenager singing in a church choir -- Mr. Butler began his career in the Northern Jubilee Gospel Singers group before joining the Roosters, who in short order became known as The Impressions. The group struck gold off the bat with the Mr. Butler co-written "For Your Precious Love," a slow-burning, yearning song inspired by a poem Mr. Butler wrote in high school -- credited to Jerry Butler & the Impressions -- that melded the friends' church-based gospel roots with a stirring soul sound. The single, released by Vee-Jay Records and ranked in 2003 as the No. 335 on Rolling Stone magazine's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list, would be one of only two Mr. Butler recorded with the group, followed up by that same year's No. 29 Billboard R&B chart hit "Come Back My Love." Tensions in the group over Mr. Butler's first-billing status led to the singer going out on his own, though his first solo hit was a reunion with Mayfield on the 1960 Vee-Jay co-write "He Will Break Your Heart." That song peaked at No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. While Mayfield soon became a star in his own right thanks to his funky soul soundtrack to the 1972 blaxploitation film Superfly and such civil rights anthems as "People Get Ready," Mr. Butler embarked on run of hits in the 1960s and 70s that included 38 career Hot 100 entries -- including three top 10s -- as well as 53 songs on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts. In 1961, Mr. Butler's impressive vocal range and always fresh attire earned him the career-long nickname "The Iceman" from WDAS Philadelphia DJ George Woods, bestowed on the singer after he kept his cool and continued to sing after the PA system burned out on him at a Philly show. He scored another top 10 hit in 1964 with the hopelessly-in-love ballad "Let It Be Me," a collaboration with singer Betty Everett on the Everly Brothers-written song that appeared on their joint Delicious Together album and peaked at No. 5 on the Hot 100. Mr. Butler's third top 10 song came in 1969 with the inspirational soul stirrer "Only the Strong Survive," one of the singer's collaborations with the hit songwriting team of Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. The song appeared on his The Ice Man Cometh album and served as his highest-ever charting single after reaching No. 4 on the Hot 100, as well as spending two weeks at the top of the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart (then called the Billboard Black Singles Chart). One of his most enduring hits, the song would later be covered by, among others, including Elvis Presley, Rod Stewart and Bruce Springsteen, who also made it the title of his 2022 R&B/soul covers solo album. Mr. Butler, whose vocals often climbed from a deep baritone to a crystal falsetto, would land Hot 100 hits in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, last charting on the singles tally in 1977 with "I Wanna Do It To You," which peaked at No. 51. Born in Sunflower, MS on Dec. 8, 1939, Mr. Butler moved to Chicago at age three, where he grew up in the since-demolished Cabrini-Green housing projects. With is biggest music years behind him by the early 1980s, Mr. Butler -- who had earlier set up his own short-lived record label, Memphis Records and production company -- pivoted to running a Chicago beer distributorship. He entered politics a few years later after being inspired by the city's first Black Mayor, Harold Washington. Former Black Panther and longtime Chicago alderman Bobby Rush encouraged Mr. Butler to run for the Cook County Board of Commissioners in 1985, where the singer served three four-year terms before his retirement from public office in 2018. The singer kept performing live into the early 2000s and hosted oldies R&B specials (Doo Wop 50, Rock Rhythm and Doo Wop) for PBS, as well as serving as the chairman of the board for the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991 as a member of the Impressions. Mr. Butler published his autobiography, Only the Strong Survive: Memoirs of a Soul Survivor, in 2000. "He was one of the great voices of our time," Motown legend Smokey Robinson told the Chicago Sun-Times. "We will really miss Jerry. He was a one of a kind music legend!," songwriters Gamble and Huff said in a statement. - Billboard, 2/21/25...... Roberta FlackRoberta Flack, the beloved, Grammy-winning 1970s singer best known for such hits as "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" and "Killing Me Softly With His Song" died on Feb. 24. She was 88 years old. No cause of death has been announced, but it was previously revealed that she had been battling amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) for the past three years. "We are heartbroken that the glorious Roberta Flack passed away this morning, February 24, 2025," read a statement from her representative. "She died peacefully surrounded by her family. Roberta broke boundaries and records. She was also a proud educator," it added. Born Roberta Cleopatra Flack in Black Mountain, N.C. on Feb. 10, 1937, and raised in Virginia, Ms. Flack began singing at various churches throughout her childhood, before learning piano at age nine and going on to get a full scholarship to Howard University. After graduating, she began a career as a music teacher and started getting work as a singer in various clubs. It was around the late '60s that she made a shift to pop music and famously performed at Mr Henry's Restaurant on Capitol Hill -- getting recognition from the likes of Bill Cosby, Woody Allen and more. By 1969, Ms. Flack had shared her debut album First Take with Atlantic Records, and in 1971 she famously starred in the Ghana Independence Day concert film Soul To Soul, which also featured Santana, Ike & Tina Turner and more. Throughout the '70s, her success continued to grow. Her now-classic track "The First Time I Ever Saw Your Face" was notably chosen by Clint Eastwood to feature in his directorial debut Play Misty for Me. It would later go on to win Record Of The Year at the '93 Grammys and become her first chart-topping single. She would work with the revered Hollywood star again in his 1983 film Sudden Impact. That same year her Killing Me Softly album saw her take home Record of the Year and Best Female Pop Performance at the 1974 Grammys and reach the top of the charts again. "Feel Like Making Love" marked another No. 1 hit, and was released in 1974. "Killing Me Softly" would go on to get more recognition over two decades later, when The Fugees dropped their hit cover for The Score. She would also continue making music up until the late 2010s. Her final album Running was shared in 2018, and she also paid homage to The Beatles in 2012 with her covers album Let It Be Roberta. Ms. Flack was a resident of NYC's The Dakota apartment building, and had a close relationship with Dakota neighbors John Lennon and wife Yoko Ono, helping to comfort Ono after the murder of Lennon in Dec. 1980. In 2020 Ms. Flack was given the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award at the ceremony, and went on to announce her amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) diagnosis, a neurodegenerative disease that impacts the nerves in the brain and spinal cord, in 2022. The disease sadly left Ms. Flack unable to sing. Her final years saw her work on projects including a children's book and a documentary about her life. The latter was titled Roberta, and was shared in Nov. 2022, while the children's book, The Little Green Piano: How Little Me Found Music, arrived the following year. In total, she was given 13 Grammy nods throughout her career, with the last coming in 1995 for Roberta, which was nominated for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance. An activist and philanthropist, Flack remained a teacher at heart. She established the Roberta Flack Foundation in 2010 to help young people fulfill their dreams through education and mentorship. She is survived by her son Bernard Wright, who is also a musician. - Billboard/NME/Music-News.com, 2/24/25.

Saturday, February 15, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on February 23rd, 2025

Smokey Robinson has responded to a rumor about a '70s song he wrote which is speculated to be about an alleged affair with his fellow Motown legend Diana Ross, saying he "could not possibly have experienced everything" he has written music about. Robinson, 84, spoke to The Times about his music, the soul genre, and hanging out with the likes of The Beatles and Marvin Gaye. He was also asked about his 1975 track "The Agony and The Ecstacy" (available on YouTube) and whether it was about the affair he was having with Ross at the time. "As a songwriter, I could not possibly have experienced everything I've written about, and that song seemed like a good idea because so many people were in that situation," he said. "I've known Diana Ross since she was eight years old, man! She's precious to me. She's my longest living friend. Oh yeah, she's my babe." Smokey had been married to Claudette Robinson for more than a decade when he had the alleged affair with Ross. Robinson is scheduled to play his first UK show in over 15 years this summer in East Sussex. He will play a headline set at the "Love Supreme Jazz Festival" in Glynde Place in the South Downs, which will run from July 4 to 6. - NME, 2/17/25...... Paul SimonHe isn't quite "slip-slidin' away" yet -- on Feb. 18 Paul Simon announced an ambitious 2025 North American tour on Twitter/X, some seven years after he retired from playing live. The 55-show, 19-city "A Quiet Celebration" trek will kick off in New Orleans' Saenger Theater on Apr. 4, hitting most major American cities and Vancouver, B.C. Runs of five shows in New York's Beacon Theater (6/16,18, 20, 21, 23) and Los Angeles' Walt Disney Concert Hall (7/9, 11, 12, 14, 16) are included in the run, which finally wraps in Seattle's Benaroya Hall on Aug. 3. The legendary 83-year-old singer-songwriter played what at the time was described as his final ever concert in Sept. 2018 in Queens, New York's Flushing Meadows Corona Park. "I've often wondered what it would feel like to reach the point where I'd consider bringing my performing career to a natural end," he said at the time. "Now I know: it feels a little unsettling, a touch exhilarating and something of a relief." In 2024, Simon opened up about being diagnosed with hearing loss while recording his 2023 album Seven Psalms, describing the process as "incredibly frustrating." A year earlier he had told The Times that he lost "most of the hearing in my left ear," saying the process happened "quite suddenly." "Nobody has an explanation for it," he explained, "so everything became more difficult." However, Simon went on to tell The Guardian in Nov. 2024 that he was "optimistic" about returning to perform live, saying he was "hoping to eventually be able to do a full-length concert." On Feb. 16, Simon made a surprise return to live performing when he was joined by rising singer Sabrina Carpenter for a duet of the Simon & Garfunkel classic "Homeward Bound" on the 50th-anniversary episode of NBC's Saturday Night Live. Introducing the performance, Simon told the audience: "I sang this song with George Harrison on Saturday Night Live in 1976," to which Carpenter responded: "I was not born then. And neither were my parents." Their duet can be streamed on YouTube. NBC has said the 3 1/2 hour extravaganza was watched by nearly 15 million people, the network's most-watched prime-time entertainment telecast in five years. It will be available to stream on Peacock. - NME, 2/18/25...... Speaking of the SNL special, Paul McCartney closed out the event with a stirring performance of The Beatles' Abbey Road medley, "Golden Slumbers"/ "Carry That Weight"/ "The End." Sir Paul, who was a musical guest on the show in 1980, 1993, 2010 and 2012 and made cameos in 2006, 2013 and 2015, also previously appeared on SNL's 40th anniversary special. His performance with members of his touring band -- guitarist Rusty Anderson, bassist/guitarist Brian Ray, keyboardist Paul "Wix" Wickens and drummer Abe Laboriel Jr. -- can be viewed on YouTube. In 1993, McCartney appeared in a skit with the late SNL cast member Chris Farley in which a starstruck Farley asked the Beatle legend "In the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make.' Is that true?," before being overjoyed when the artist said he thinks it is. Now some fans are speculating Macca's latest SNL performance was a nod to Farley. The skit can be viewed on YouTube. - Billboard, 2/17/25...... In other Beatles-related news, details of the forthcoming John Lennon documentary Borrowed Time: Lennon's Last Decade have been revealed. The film follows the legend as he evolves beyond The Beatles, creating revolutionary music and standing at the forefront of anti-war protests that would make him one of the most influential pop culture icons of all time. Musicians, journalists, and close friends of the man himself set the record straight on the truth behind many famous Lennon moments, brought to life by rare archive footage, including never-before-seen interviews. For the first time ever, the full story of how John and Yoko Ono met is revealed and the curtain is lifted on the 1981 comeback tour that, sadly, never came to be. Speaking on the upcoming release director Alan G. Parker said: "I am so excited to share Borrowed Time: Lennon's Last Decade with UK audiences. I've made a number of films, but this is the first one that feels personal. I never met John Lennon, but through his music he became the older brother that this bullied kid needed." Borrowed Time: Lennon's Last Decade opens in UK cinemas on May 2, with an exclusive Director's Cut available on the Icon Film Channel on the same day. Special Q&A events about the documentary are to be announced soon. - Music-News.com, 2/20/25...... Elsewhere on the Fab Four front, Ringo Starr has told Britain's Mojo magazine that he loves living in Los Angeles, where he has lived on and off since 1973. "When I first came to America and we landed in New York, I wanted to live in New York," said Starr, who was born and raised in Liverpool. "And then we want on tours around and we came to Los Angeles, I'd think, 'Uh ... maybe Los Angeles. No New York! Maybe Los Angeles. L ... A!' I just loved the atmosphere. I loved the light. I loved the heat." Despite this, Ringo says he's never been tempted to surf in the Pacific Ocean. "It took me seven years to go to the ocean. A limo took me down the Pacific Coast Highway. I got out the car, walked across the beach, put my feet in the water, turned around, walked back to the car and went for lunch." - Music-News.com, 2/17/25...... Ozzy OsbourneIn what is likely a major disappointment to many fans, Ozzy Osbourne has said he won't play a full Black Sabbath set at the band's upcoming farwell show on July 5 in Birmingham, UK. Osbourne made the announcement on his Ozzy Speaks program on SiriusXM channel Ozzy's Boneyard, where he provided an update as to his plans for the recently-announced "Back to the Beginning" concert with the "ultimate" Sabbath lineup of Ozzy, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward. "I'm not planning on doing a set with Black Sabbath but I am doing little bits and pieces with them," the "War Pigs" singer explained. "I am doing what I can, where I feel comfortable." Osbourne hasn't performed a full set since Dec. 31, 2018 on the final date of his "No More Tours" tour. Just two months later, the heavy metal pioneer was diagnosed with Parkinson's, and any plans for further large-scale performances have been affected by numerous cancellations and health issues. "I am trying to get back on my feet," Osbourne added. "When you get up in the morning, you just jump out of bed. I have to balance myself, but I'm not dead. I'm still actively doing things." Meanwhile, it has been confirmed that Guns N' Roses, Tool and Jason Mamoa have been added to the lineup of the final Black Sabbath concert. Aquaman actor Momoa will host the event, while Rage Against the Machine's Tom Morello will serve as musical director. Other previously announced acts include Metallica, Slayer, Anthrax, Rival Sons, Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith, songwriter-producer Andrew Watt, and bassist Dave Ellefson. Osbourne and Billy Morrison have shared their new single, "Gods Of Rock N Roll," on YouTube. The track is a reworking of the Morrison song "Gods," which appeared on his 2015 album God Shaped Hole. The track saw Ozzy co-write and sing on the original, and now it has been reimagined with a 61-piece orchestra featuring new guitar aspects from Steve Stevens. - Billboard, 2/16/25...... Matt Sorum, a former drummer with Guns N' Roses, says Steven Tyler will never return to touring just weeks after the Aerosmith frontman made a return to the stage as part of his sixth annual "Jam for Janie" Grammy Awards viewing party. With Sorum serving as Musical Director, the event was only the second time that Tyler had performed live since a 2023 vocal injury which halted Aerosmith's touring schedule, and the first time since the band announced their formal retirement in August of 2024. During Jam for Janie, Tyler sung covers of songs by Extreme and Led Zeppelin, and four Aerosmith staples. However, despite the positive response from fans, Sorum told Joe Rock of Long Island radio station WBAB that the strain of global touring would prevent Tyler from performing on a large scale once again. "Some fans were a little bit, like, 'Well, he can sing.' Well, let me just explain what's happening with Steven Tyler, 'cause he's a really good friend," Sorum explained. "He went out and sang. And it was a really big moment for him because he hurt himself bad. Now, is he gonna tour again? No, he's not. Because, and I explained this to people, Steven cannot put himself under the rigors of doing a full worldwide tour because there's a lot of pressure." Sorum went on to explain that Tyler "is 77 years old and a perfectionist... And if he doesn't sing correctly, it bothers him." On Sept. 9, 2023, Tyler fractured his larynx, necessitating the postponement of shows on Aerosmith's Peace Out tour. Ultimately, these shows were canceled entirely when the band announced their retirement from touring in Aug. 2024. In January, Aerosmith's Joe Hamilton said that "if [Aerosmith does] anything in the future, it would come from him." - Billboard, 2/18/25...... Brian MayQueen guitarist Brian May. Created with significant design input from May, only 100 of the Brian May SJ-200 12-String models will be available worldwide in a limited run via Gibson.com, the Gibson Garage Nashville and London, and authorized Gibson dealers. In a press release, May said he "had the idea for the guitar when I needed a 12-String on tour, and the one I was accustomed to wasn't performing right on stage." "The guys at Gibson very kindly said, 'We'll make you something special that you can use on the tours.' One of the things I asked for was for the octaves to be placed around the other way from where it is normally done, because I like to pick upwards and hear the top notes when I'm playing," he added. Referring to his other career as an astronomer, he said: "Gibson was able to put the universe on it in a figurative way and the planet Mercury is here, and that is a little nod to a friend of mine that is always with me." An episode of the Gibson TV podcast with May introducing the instrument has been shared on YouTube. - New Musical Express, 2/19/25...... The Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown has topped the $100 million threshold in worldwide box-office grosses, according to boxofficemojo.com. The film, which has grossed $104 million as of Feb. 18, now ranks No. 8 on Billboard's list of music biopics with the highest worldwide grosses -- between the 2004 Ray Charles biopic Ray at No. 7 ($124 million) and the 2019 French singer Piaf biopic La Vie En Rose at No. 9 ($87.5 million). Released in December, A Complete Unknown received eight Oscar nominations on Jan. 23, and made Oscar history as the first music biopic to receive three acting nods -- for Timothée Chalamet as Dylan, Edward Norton as Pete Seeger and Monica Barbaro as Joan Baez. The runaway all-time highest grossing biopic continues to be the Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018), with a worldwide gross of $910.8 million. - Billboard, 2/16/25...... In other rock biopic news, Jimmy Page has thanked fans for their "humbling and inspiring" reaction to the new IMAX documentary Becoming Led Zeppelin. Page took to Instagram on Feb. 17 to send his personal thanks for the film's enthusiastic reception. "In light of your incredible responses and the demand for the Becoming Led Zeppelin film from those of you that have either viewed it at the IMAX or during its general cinema release, I must say that feedback from fans is just humbling and inspiring," he wrote. Currently in UK cinemas, Becoming Led Zeppelin is the first authorized account of the band's history ever to come to the big screen, and has been in production since first being announced back in 2019. Since hitting IMAX screens on Feb. 5 and receiving a general cinema release two days later, Zeppelin fans have been flocking to see the film, which features new interviews with Page, frontman Robert Plant and bassist John Paul Jones, as well as rare archival interviews with the late drummer John Bonham, who died in 1980. - NME, 2/17/25...... Gary BrookerA unique version of the classic Procol Harum single "A Whiter Shade of Pale" featuring late singer Gary Brooker is among the songs on the new charity album Think Loud 4 Parkinson's. The LP was put together by esteemed manager Ian Grant -- who helped steer the careers of the likes of Big Country, The Cult, The Stranglers, Elizabeth McGovern and many more -- and music producer Paul Mitchell, along with two others, in response to Grant's own experience living with Parkinson's disease for the last nine years. For the special version of "A Whiter Shade of Pale," Mitchell took the performance of the song from the "Remembering Gary Brooker" memorial concert that took place at G Live in Guilford, England, on Dec. 4, 2023. That performance features a 15-year old live vocal recording of Brooker -- who passed away from cancer in Feb. 2022, at the age of 76 -- matched to Procol Harum's live rendition of the track in tribute to the singer at that gig. Speaking at the launch of the album at the offices of Cure Parkinson's in London, Mitchell said: "Gary's widow Frankie Brooker very kindly allowed us to take some tracks from that concert. "The 'Whiter Shade of Paler' version on this -- and this is how valuable this album is going to be -- is super rare. The music is the band playing live in December 2023, but the vocal is Gary Brooker's vocal from Boston in 2010 and it's all synchronised together. It is an absolute one-off." All profits from the LP go to Cure Parkinson's to help the charity fund their vital research into the neurodegenerative disease. It additionally features an array of covers and rare tracks from such other music legends as Leo Sayer, Queen drummer Roger Taylor and former Spandau Ballet frontman Tony Hadley. - Music-News.com, 2/16/25...... Rick Buckler, a longtime rocker best known as the drummer for legendary UK band The Jam, has died. He was 69 years old. News of his death was announced on X via a heartfelt message from his bandmate Paul Weller. "I'm shocked and saddened by Rick's passing.... We went far beyond our dreams and what we made stands the test of time & Rick was a good guy and a great drummer whose innovative drum patterns helped shape our songs. I'm glad we had the chance to work together as much as we did. My thoughts are with [Rick's wife Lesley] and his family at this very difficult time." The Jam was formed in 1972 in Woking, Surrey. Buckler was in the original lineup as drummer, and the group released their debut single "In the City" in 1977, and released their debut album of the same name that same year. The band made waves via their political statements, rising up against police brutality, the British government and beyond. Overall, the group released six albums, their final project being 1982's The Gift, which peaked at No. 82 on the Billboard Hot 200 albums chart. After a world tour in support of the album, the group disbanded due to a decision from Weller. After his time in The Jam, Buckler formed Time UK with Jimmy Edwards and Ray Simone, and later formed a new The Jam tribute band called The Gift. - Billboard, 2/18/25...... Jamie MuirScottish drummer Jamie Muir, a former drummer of the British prog rock group King Crimson, died of as yet undisclosed causes on Feb. 17. He was 82. News of his passing was confirmed by his friend and bandmate Bill Bruford, who wrote on Facebook: "Jamie Muir died today, 17.02.2025, in Cornwall, UK, with his brother George by his side." Mr. Muir was best known for his stint with the legendary King Crimson from 1972 to 1973, playing most prominently on their fifth studio album Larks' Tongues In Aspic, released in 1973. Born in Edinburgh in 1942 and educated at the Edinburgh College Of Art, he moved to London in the 1960s as a passionate jazz trombonist, before switching to percussion. In London, he was involved in several free improvisational groups, including The Music Improvisation Company, and played with respected figures such as Derek Bailey and Evan Parker. King Crimson leader Robert Fripp invited him to join the band via a phone call in the summer of 1972, alongside a new incarnation of the band that included Yes drummer Bruford, bassist John Wetton and violinist David Cross. After just a year, and just days after the release of Larks' Tongues In Aspic, Muir abruptly left King Crimson and moved to a monastery in southern Scotland to pursue life as a Buddhist monk. He did return to music in 1980, appearing on albums by Bailey and Parker, as well as the soundtrack of the 1983 British independent film Ghost Dance. In 1990, he withdrew from the music industry once again, opting to devote his time to painting. Mr. Muir's passing comes just months after King Crimson songwriter and lyricist Peter Sinfield died, aged 80, on Nov. 14. Robert Fripp paid tribute to Mr. Muir on Instagram, writing: "Jamie Muir was a major, and continuing, influence on my thinking, not only musical. A wonderful and mysterious person. Of the five members of KC 1972, Jamie had the greatest authority, experience and presence. Fly well, Master Muir." - NME, 2/18/25.

Willie Nelson's 13th annual Luck Reunion concert has been set for March 13 at his ranch in Spicewood, Tex. Nelson's Willie Nelson & Family will top the bill, but the 2025 will also feature the likes of Charley Crockett, Steve Earle, Taj Mahal, Willie's sons Micah and Lucas Nelson, and "more than one surprise guests." The concert will also feature a tribute to Willie's late close friend and Country Music Hall of Famer Kris Kristofferson. Ticket information is available at www.luckpresents.com. - Billboard, 2/14/25...... The lineup for the 2025 Love Rocks Benefit concert, set for the legendary Beacon Theatre in NYC on Mar. 6, will feature sets from Cher, Peter Frampton, Michael McDonald, Alicia Keys, Beck, Kate Hudson, Mavis Staples, Phish's Trey Anastasio and many more. The ninth annual benefit supports God's Love We Deliver -- an organization that cooks and delivers medically tailored meals for people too sick to shop or cook for themselves. God's Love We Deliver was founded in 1985 as a response to the AIDS pandemic and now serves people living with more than 200 different diagnoses. The organization has served more than 40 million meals to date, with this year marking the group's 40th anniversary. Past performers at God's Love shows have included Keith Richards, Robert Plant, Jon Bon Jovi, Dave Grohl, Dave Matthews and The Black Crowes. - Billboard, 2/12/25...... Don FelderA rep for Don Felder says the former Eagles guitarist is "feeling much better" after a medical emergency during a Rock Legends Cruise performance on Feb. 13. In a video shared by an attendee and posted on the celebrity gossip site TMZ.com, Felder is seen introducing the Eagles classic, "Tequila Sunrise," sharing the inspiration behind the song before he began strumming his guitar to perform it. He then appears to look to crew members on the side stage and lose balance, before a member of his team and his bandmates helped escort him offstage. The crowd cheered in support for the musician before the video ends. Posting on Instagram, his rep said medical personnel determined that Felder "was deemed to be suffering from dehydration... He was given fluids, and is feeling much better." The statement continued that the remainder of Felder's cruise performances will be rescheduled to "ensure he has ample time to rehydrate and recover fully," before concluding, "Thank you for your understanding and remember -- drink your water!" Felder, 77, performed with the Eagles from 1974 to 2001, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with the band in 1998. After his departure from the group, he filed two lawsuits alleging wrongful termination, breach of implied-in-fact contract and breach of fiduciary duty, though the case was settled in 2007. Felder published the book, Heaven and Hell: My Life in The Eagles, in 2007. - Billboard, 2/14/25...... In other Eagles-related news, a rare book dealer filed a lawsuit against band co-founder Don Henley, their manager Irving Azoff, and their attorneys in New York state court on Feb. 6. Henley and his co-defendants are being sued by Glenn Horowitz, one of the men who was criminally charged for allegedly attempting to sell handwritten lyrics connected to the Eagles' 1976 album Hotel California, claiming they and their attorneys engaged in a "malicious prosecution" that harmed his reputation and caused him financial losses and emotional distress. Horowitz claims the parties falsely alleged that he and his two co-defendants in the criminal case "knew or had reason to believe" that the lyric sheets "had been unlawfully obtained" and nonetheless attempted to profit off of them via an online auction. However, Horowitz claims the men and their attorneys knew all along that the notes had been acquired through legal means in the first place. Horowitz, a rare book dealer, and his co-defendants -- Rock & Roll Hall of Fame curator Craig Inciardi and memorabilia auctioneer Edward Kosinski -- were criminally charged in 2022 over an alleged conspiracy to resell the lyrics that had been handwritten by Henley while working on the band's iconic Hotel California. At the time, prosecutors had accused the three men of hiding the fact that the documents had been stolen from Henley's home by Ed Sanders, a journalist hired by Henley and Azoff to write a never-published book on the Eagles in the late 1970s. But in a stunning turnaround in March 2024, Manhattan prosecutors dropped the case after Henley produced new evidence previously withheld under attorney-client privilege that cast doubt on his and Azoff's allegations. The judge in the case subsequently dismissed the charges and chastised Henley, Azoff and their attorneys for "obfuscat[ing] and hid[ing] information that they believed would be damaging to their position that the lyric sheets were stolen." Horowitz and his wife are asking for damages amounting to more than 10 million dollars over being "deprived of their liberty, suffering humiliation, defamation, diminished reputation and loss of business and/or wages." Henley and Azoff's attorney, Dan Petrocelli, said the Horowitzes' suit "highlights the dark underbelly of the memorabilia business that exploited the brazen, unauthorized taking and selling of Mr. Henley's handwritten lyrics... The only malicious prosecution involved here is the filing of this case by Mr. Horowitz." - Billboard, 2/10/25...... Marc BolanEnglish Heritage, the charity responsible for the National Heritage Collection of England, announced on X/Twitter that late T. Rex legend Marc Bolan will be among several Londoners who will be honoured with a new London blue plaque in 2025 for their significant impact on the city's cultural landscape. Bolan, the charismatic frontman of glam-rock band T. Rex, was known for his flamboyant style and shape-shifting music and will be honoured with a plaque at one of his former addresses in West London. Others to be honoured with a blue plaque include actress Audrey Hepburn, poet Una Marson, ballerina Alicia Markova, novelist Barbara Pym and artist Graham Sutherland. In 2024, English Heritage paid tribute to George Harrison by unveiling a blue plaque at Harrison's childhood home in Liverpool. - New Musical Express, 2/13/25...... Performing a surprise concert at New York's iconic Bowery Ballroom on Feb. 11, Paul McCartney relived his Beatlemania days with several of the band's classic tracks and paid tribute to late bandmate John Lennon. McCartney, 82, announced the impromptu gig earlier in the day and, unsurprisingly, it swiftly sold out, with 575 lucky fans treated to a once-in-a-lifetime show. Sir Paul, backed by guitarist Rusty Anderson, guitarist and bassist Brian Ray, keyboardist Paul "Wix" Wickens and drummer Abe Laboriel Jr. -- kicked off proceedings in style performing the 1964 Beatles hit "A Hard Day's Night," then dusted off his '70s band Wings' 1975 track "Letting Go," which he hadn't performed live in 11 years. 1966's Revolver track "Got to Get You Into My Life" followed, and other rarities included Wings' "Let Me Roll With It" -- which was last featured in his set at the iTunes Festival in 2007 -- alongside a jam of "Foxy Lady" by The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Elsewhere, Macca gave a stirring stripped-back acoustic performance of the tear-jerking Beatles tune "Blackbird." McCartney was amused to reminisce about the Beatlemania days when he heard a "Beatles scream" and demanded more shrieking from the "girls." "OK, let's get it out of the way. Girls, give me a Beatles scream," he quipped. Paul also paid tribute to Lennon when performing The Beatles' "final song," 2023's "Now And Then," which Lennon had penned in the 1970s and was finished with the help of AI. He said: "Let's hear it for John." After performing a three-song encore of "Golden Slumbers," "Carry The Weight" and "The End" from Abbey Road, the legend declared: "This has been a blast -- we've loo-ved it." McCartney was in the Big Apple to help NBC's Saturday Night Live celebrate its 50th anniversary on Feb. 16. The venerable comedy show announced on X/Twitter on Feb. 14 that musical performances by McCartney, Paul Simon, Cher, Sabrina Carpenter, Miley Cyrus, Lil Wayne and other famous acts will be combined with a three-hour primetime special which will feature various live sketches which will see both past and present SNL cast members, special guests, and retrospectives celebrating the show's 50th anniversary. The special will air 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on NBC and simulcast on Peacock. - Music-News.com/Billboard/NME, 2/14/25...... Appearing on TMZ's new 2 Angry Men podcast on Feb. 12, Village People frontman Victor Willis told hosts Harvey Levin and Mark Geragos that the group's 1978 classic "Y.M.C.A." has an intentional dual meaning. "That was something that I credited myself on is writing my songs with what is called a double entendre," Willis said. "I would write a song to where you can take it any kind of way you wanted it. If you're straight, you can take the lyrics for somebody straight or if you were gay, you could take it for somebody gay." Willis then insisted that "there's like 10% of the gay community that have been coming to my shows and have been there over the past 10 years," although Levin and Geragos insisted that the number would be higher. Willis recently sent a cease and desist letter to Jim Jeffries after the comedian's claims about the song being a "gay anthem." "[Jeffries] went over the line when he got into saying it had to do with men having sex in the bathroom," Willis said. "There is nothing in my lyrics that says anything about that. We approached him and he apologized and said he was going to rephrase what it was he said and say it differently, because the way he said it as worded was defamatory," he added. - Billboard, 2/13/25...... Paul RodgersThe Rock and Roll Hall of Fame revealed its nominees for the Class of 2025 on Feb. 12, with Mariah Carey, Oasis, Bad Company, The Black Crowes, Chubby Checker, Joe Cocker, Billy Idol, Joy Division/New Order, Cyndi Lauper, Maná, Oasis, Outkast, Phish, Soundgarden and The White Stripes making the cut. Eight of those 14 acts -- Bad Company, the Black Crowes, Checker, Cocker, Idol, Maná, Outkast and Phish -- are first-time nominees, while the other six have been in RRHOF consideration in years past. Those names will now be narrowed down by an international panel of more than 1,200 artists, historians and music industry players, with a fan-voted element factored in. That group's selected nominees will be revealed in late April, as well as whether they'll be entering in the Musical Influence or Musical Excellence categories, and who the year's Ahmet Ertegun award recipient will be. An induction ceremony in Los Angeles will follow in the fall. Industry insiders predict Oasis, The White Stripes, Outkast, Phish, Mariah Carey, Cyndi Lauper and Joe Cocker, in that order, have the best odds of being inducted, while an informal Billboard fan poll showed support for Phish, Mariah Carey, Cyndi Lauper, Bad Company, Billy Idol, Soundgarden and Chubby Checker. Bad Company frontman Paul Rodgers says that "[Our] fans and friends have been lobbying for this nomination persistently for years and they never gave up, so big thanks to them. According to them, Bad Company fits all of the criteria and then some to be inducted." Drummer Simon Kirke, however, is more inclined to also note that it's about time. "I think it's been a long time coming. It has rankled me a bit," Kirke says. "We've been around a long time and we've influenced a lot of bands, and I think it's a place that we deserve. I'm just pleased that we're at least on the ballot. I'm happy and I'm honored, and fingers crossed that we make it." Formed during 1973 in London, Bad Company brought together Rodgers and Kirke from Free, guitarist Mick Ralphs from Mott the Hoople and bassist Boz Burrell, fresh out of King Crimson. The group was managed by the legendary Peter Grant and signed to Led Zeppelin's Swan Song label. Its self-titled 1974 debut hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 200, going five-times platinum and launching enduring rock radio hits such as "Can't Get Enough" (No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100), "Movin' On" (No. 19) and the song "Bad Company." Four of the band's other 11 studio albums went platinum or better, as did the 1985 compilation 10 From 6. All told Bad Company sold more than 40 million records worldwide, with a cadre of other top 40 Hot 100 hits such as "Feel Like Makin' Love," "Young Blood," "Shooting Star" and "Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy." The original Bad Company foursome came to a stop in 1982, and Bad Company last toured during 2019. Kirke confirms that "I think it's safe to say (the band's) playing days are pretty much over." He and Rodgers are still active, however. Though Rodgers is also battling health issues -- he's suffered several strokes since 2016 and 2019 -- he released the solo album Midnight Rose during 2023 and is continuing to write new material. Kirke, meanwhile, has written a stage musical about addiction that's currently being shopped and is planning to record his fourth solo album during the spring. - Billboard, 2/12/25...... On Feb. 12 The Jacksons shared details of three UK shows this summer. Comprised of founding members Jackie Jackson and Marlon Jackson, brothers of the late King of Pop Michael Jackson, the band are set to break out hits from their lengthy discography as they headline GuilFest at Stoke Park in Guilford, Surrey on July 5. From there, they'll take to the stage at the Heritage Live Shows at the Englefield House in Berkshire on July 19. For their set at GuilFest, the band -- formerly known as The Jackson 5 -- will join Razorlight at the top of the bill. They also join other previously announced acts on the 2025 line-up, including KT Tunstall, Soul II Soul, The Amy Winehouse Band, Sleeper, Elvanna, Stereo MCs and Dub Pistols. At the Heritage Live gig, they will appear alongside Sister Sledge, Boney M and Maizie Williams. For the Essex show, Sister Sledge will also be performing, as will Miss Disco. The news of their UK shows arrives months following the death of founding member Tito Jackson, who passed away on Sept. 15 at age 70 after he suffered a heart attack while driving from New Mexico to Oklahoma. At the time, the group's manager said The Jacksons were "far advanced" in the process of recording and releasing their first album since 1989's 2300 Jackson Street. - NME, 2/12/25...... Though not known as a country artist, Sammy Hagar will be among the eclectic lineup of headliners at this year's Stagecoach Country Music Festival, set for the Empire Polo Club in Indio, Calif., on April 25-27. Hagar will perform on the final night of the festival on the event's Palomino Stage, with other notable performers during the three days including Lana Del Rey, Nelly, Tracy Lawrence, Goo Goo Dolls, Tommy James & the Shondells and Crystal Gayle. - Billboard, 2/11/25...... Patti SmithPatti Smith has announced she'll be hitting the road in the U.K. and U.S. this fall to celebrate the 50th anniversary of her iconic debut album, Horses. The singer will be joined by longtime side men guitarist Lenny Kaye and drummer Jay Dee Daugherty, who both played on the seminal 1975 LP that is considered a punk classic and is often cited by R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe as the album that made him want to make music, and has been enshrined in the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry as a historically significant work. Her Patti Smith Group will kick off the 20-date jaunt on Oct. 6 at the 3Arena in Dublin, Ireland. The outing is then booked to hit Madrid, London, Burssels, Oslo and Paris before moving over to the U.S. for theater gigs in Seattle, Oakland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, Boston and Washington, D.C. before winding down on Nov. 29 at the Met in Philadelphia. "Please join us to help celebrate the final ride of our irreverent thoroughbred," read a statement announcing the run that will mark the first time in 20 years that Smith, 78, has performed the whole album. In 2005, she celebrated its 30th anniversary at that year's Meltdown Festival in London, which she curated. Before she hits the road, Smith will be feted at a March 26 all-star concert at New York's Carnegie Hall, "People Have the Power: Celebrating the Music of Patti Smith," which will feature appearances by Stipe and members of Sonic Youth and the Yeah Yeah Yeah's. In January, Smith assured fans that she was okay after collapsing on stage in So Paulo, Brazil on Jan. 29. The health scare came a month after Smith was ordered by a doctor to rest following a brief stay in an Italian hospital to deal with what was described as a sudden, unnamed illness, resulting in the cancellation of a pair of European shows. - Billboard, 2/11/25...... Van Morrison has added two Scotland shows to his forthcoming 2025 UK tour. In addition to the initially confirmed four gigs in Nottingham (3/18), Birmingham (3/19), Oxford (3/23, 24) and Stroud (3/24), Morrison has scheduled a pair of headline concerts in Scotland at the end of the trek. He'll take to the stage at Glasgow's Royal Concert Hall on Mar. 30, before heading to Edinburgh for a performance at Usher Hall the following night. Morrison had previously announced two homecoming shows at Whitla Hall in Belfast on February 21 and 22, as well as European headline gigs in Antwerp, Brussels and The Hague. - NME, 2/11/25...... The legacy of legendary folk singer Joan Baez was celebrated on Feb. 8 with a star-studded Sweet Relief Musicians Fund benefit show at the Masonic Auditorium in San Francisco. Performers included Emmylou Harris, Rosanne Cash, Margo Price, Bonnie Raitt, Tom Morello, Joe Henry, Lucinda Williams, Taj Mahal and Baez herself. There were also appearances by Jackson Browne and the Glide Ensemble. Actress Monica Barbaro, who recently received an Oscar nomination for playing Baez in the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown, was in attendance, as were Linda Ronstadt and local counterculture icon Wavy Gravy. Eric Steinberg, executive director at Sweet Relief Musicians Fund said, "We're thrilled to celebrate 30 years of Sweet Relief while honoring the great Joan Baez and her amazing career. Joan has supported our charity for many years, and it was a privilege to honor her alongside so many incredible artists." Sweet Relief Musicians Fund provides services and financial assistance for career musicians and music industry professionals. Grants are earmarked for medical and vital living expenses, including insurance premiums, prescriptions, medical treatment and operative procedures, housing costs, food costs, utilities, and other basic necessities. The event raised more than $600,000, and 100% of all donations will go to Sweet Relief for California fire relief for distribution to victims. - Billboard, 2/10/25...... Graham Gouldman10cc's Graham Gouldman and Kevin Godley celebrated the 50th anniversary of their 1975 hit "I'm Not In Love" on Vernon Kay's BBC Radio 2 program Piano Room on the morning of Feb. 14. Accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra at the BBC Maida Vale studios, Gouldman and Godley performed their seminal hit "I'm Not In Love" plus their new single -- "I Don't Wanna Get To Heaven," and a cover of The Everly Brothers' "All I Have To Do Is Dream." When Kay asked about "I'm Not In Love" going through different iterations, Godley said: "There were two versions, the first recording of it was dreadful. It sucked. So we put it to one side. We knew it was a good song and then we came back to it when we were deeper into the album and discovered this new way of approaching it and suddenly it came to life." A full 10cc reunion seems unlikely however, as Godley said "no" when asked if there was a chance the band would be getting back on stage together. - Music-News.com, 2/14/25...... On Feb. 12, Nordoff and Robbins, the UK's largest music therapy charity that uses music to transform lives, announced the first wave of winners for the 2025 O2 Silver Clef Awards. Pink Floyd's David Gilmour will be the 2025 recipient of the coveted O2 Silver Clef Award, which celebrates outstanding contributions to music. "It's such an honour to receive the O2 Silver Clef Award," Gilmour said in a statement. "Music speaks its own language and it's inspiring to see Nordoff and Robbins using it to make a real difference to people's lives. What they do reminds us of music's ability to reach across boundaries and bring people together." Gilmour and other 2025 winners, including Rick Astley and Soul II Soul, will be celebrated at an exclusive awards evening hosted by broadcaster Edith Bowman on July 2 at the JW Marriott Grosvenor House, London. Previous winners of the prestigious O2 Silver Clef Award include David Bowie, Annie Lennox, Ed Sheeran, The Rolling Stones, Kylie Minogue and many more. First held in 1976, the O2 Silver Clef Awards is Nordoff and Robbins' largest annual fundraising event, raising over 13.5 million for the charity across its 49-year history. - Music-News.com, 2/12/25...... Ozzy Osbourne's new single "Gods of Rock N Roll" has already appeared on the charts days before its official release date of Feb. 14. It comes as the song as a new version of the Billy Morrison song "God," which appeared on his 2015 album God Shaped Hole The track saw Osbourne co-write and sing on the original, and now it has been reimagined as an orchestral edition featuring new guitar contributions from Steve Stevens. The reason that it has found its way onto the charts already comes as Morrison gave the new version of the track its premiere while on SiriusXM's Ozzy's Boneyard channel last month. Since then, it has been picked up by other radio stations and has made its way to the Number 26 spot on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Airplay chart. "Gods Of Rock N Roll (Orchestral)" is set to feature on the upcoming deluxe edition of Morrison's 2024 album The Morrison Project, which will arrive digitally on Feb. 21. - NME, 2/11/25...... Sir Tom Jones and Sugababes have been unveiled as headliners for the UK's 2025 Camp Bestival. The "She's A Lady" hitmaker and the "Freak Like Me" group will top the bill at the family festival at Lulworth Cove in Dorset, which takes place between July 31 and Aug. 3. They join previously confirmed headliners Basement Jaxx. Other acts on the stacked bill include Lightning Seeds, The Zutons and drum and bass legend Goldie, who will perform with a full band. - Music-News.com, 2/12/25...... The StylisticsThe Stylistics have shared their first new song in more than 16 years, "Yes, I Will," featuring country star Shania Twain. The '70s soul legends -- who are behind the hits "You Are Everything," "Betcha by Golly, Wow," "I'm Stone in Love with You," "Break Up to Make Up" and "You Make Me Feel Brand New" -- have joined forces with the "You're Still the One" hitmaker on the lead single from their star-studded album Falling In Love With My Girl, their first in almost 20 years. Twain says she came up with the song and just so happened to be with musicians Steve Luthaker, Ray Parker Jr and Nathan East at the time, who contributed to the finished tune, but she says it wasn't until The Stylistics added their vocals that it "really came together." "I'm not known for making Soul records but Soul has always been a big influence for me musically," Twain says. "I'm so in awe of The Stylistics for their natural talent and effortless delivery. I can listen to their voices endlessly. I had this idea for the song Yes, I Will it all came together quite quickly for me lyrically and melodically, it was just a natural flow." The 21-track collection by the iconic group -- comprised of Airrion Love, Herb Murrell and Jason Sharp -- also features the likes of Ronnie Wood of The Rolling Stones, KISS' Gene Simmons, and ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons. Falling In Love With My Girl -- the group's follow-up to 2008's That Same Way -- drops on Feb. 21. - Music-News.com, 2/13/25....... In a new interview with People, Elvis Presley's ex-wife Priscilla Presley set the record straight on the end of her relationship with the King of Rock & Roll. Priscilla, 79, was married to Elvis from 1967 until 1973 and birthed his only child -- the late Lisa Marie Presley, who died in 2023 aged 54. Director Sofia Coppola released her film, titled Priscilla, in 2023 and it chronicled the romance between the star and the late music legend -- who died in 1977 aged 42. While the film was based on Priscilla's 1985 memoir, Elvis and Me, Presley says the film failed to depict the end of the relationship accurately. "The only thing was the ending. I wasn't really happy about the ending. It didn't end that way, and we ended -- Elvis and I ended very lovingly," she told People. Presley made her comments to the magazine during a panel event at MegaCon Orlando -- where she went on to explain she remained close to Elvis after their divorce. She divulged, "We kept our relationship. We did. He would drop by my home unannounced, and I was going with someone by the way, and he would come unannounced. Thank God it was two o'clock in the morning, and I knew who it was, so I quickly tried to get to the door before he rang the doorbell, and of course he came in, we went in the kitchen, we talked for a couple of hours." - Music-News.com, 2/12/25.