Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on April 1st, 2025

The Sex Pistols and their current collaborator Frank Carter have announced a North American tour that will kick off at the Longhorn Ballroom in Dallas, Tex. in September, then visiting cities including Washington D.C., Philadephia, Brooklyn, Montreal, Toronto, Denver, and San Francisco before the final date at Los Angeles' Hollywood Palladium on Oct. 16. The "God Save the Queen" rockers haven't performed in the US at all since 2008 and last toured there in 2003, but now guitarist Steve Jones, bassist Glen Matlock and drummer Paul Cook have announced on Instagram that "we're comin to the USA and Canada." The irreverent rockers reformed in 2024 for a UK tour with the Gallows frontman Carter as vocalist in place of John Lydon, and Jones revealed Carter was the only singer they tried working with. "Frank was the first singer we [tried], because me, Cookie and Glen wanted to play. It just worked straight away," said Jones, 69. "He's a lot younger than us. He's 40, so he has all that energy and us old farts can just jam at the back! It was so much fun and people loved it, and I loved looking at people loving it." - Music-News.com, 3/28/25...... 'The Beatles' CastAt the end of a Sony Pictures CinemaCon presentation on Mar. 31 in Los Angeles, it was revealed that the "Fab Four" in the studio's upcoming Beatles series of films -- one each dedicated to John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr -- will be Harris Dickinson (as Lennon), Paul Mescal (as McCartney), Joseph Quinn (as Harrison), and Barry Keoghan (as Starr). In another blockbuster announcement, project director Sam Mendes revealed that all four films will arrive in Apr. 2028, though not at the same time. Sony Pictures head Tom Rothman added that the franchise will be titled The Beatles - A Four-Film Cinematic Event, and that the films will mark the first "bingeable moment in cinema." Mendes, who has not confirmed the order in which the four films will be released, confirmed that filming all four films will take over a year, but is confident for an Apr. 2028 launch. Mendes says he toyed with the idea of a Beatles mini-series but ultimately decided that "the story was too huge to fit into a single movie." Each of the four films will be told from the perspective of one of the four Beatles. It is also the first-ever film to be granted music rights to the Beatles' discography. The films were first announced back in Feb. 2024. Sony Pictures has also posted on X announcing the full cast. - New Musical Express, 4/1/25...... In other Beatles-related news, a YouTuber named Ian Hartley has uploaded a rare studio recording of the '70s prog rock band Yes covering the Fab Four's "Eleanor Rigby" to YouTube. The intense cover of the 1966 Beatles classic is said to have been recorded by Yes and producer John Anthony at London's Polydor Studios in Feb. 1969. "This particular recording has never been publicly released before," Hartley noted. "Here is the first (failed) take of the ER run-throughs as recorded in raw form at the time. Apart from some speed correction, no remastering was done to the master tapes." The uploader added: "Depending on reactions to this, further such things might follow." There are three known takes of Yes recording "Eleanor Rigby" in the studio, according to the Yes Fans forum, but none have been released officially. The exact origins of the Hartley's Yes audio are not known. Back in 2009, however, Bonhams auction house in London listed a tape recorded with John Anthony on Feb. 14, 1969. This included three other songs: Yes' cover of Stephen Stills' "Everydays," their take on Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim's "Something's Coming," and Yes' own composition "Dear Father." Yes released their self-titled debut album later in 1969 via Atlantic. None of the tracks known to have been recorded with Anthony made the final tracklist. However, versions of "Everydays," "Something's Coming" and "Dear Father" were featured as B-sides of Yes' first three single releases. At the time of writing, the Yes's "Eleanor Rigby" cover has been streamed on YouTube over 8,000 times. - NME, 3/31/25...... On Mar. 30 a teenage American Idol contestant -- and aspiring preacher -- caused one of the talent show's judges, Lionel Richie, to have a religious experience during a soulful rendition of Earnest Pugh's "I Need Your Glory." Seventeen-year-old Dallas native Canaan James Hill's pitch-perfect, run-filled version of the gospel track prompted Richie to jump out of his seat while Bryan mimed getting the chills during his performance. "Would you do that again?" Richie said, marching straight up to Hill after the song was over and putting a hand on his shoulder. "You are so blessed. That was something so spectacular, I just can't even describe what I heard." Not only did Richie and the other judges give Hill a unanimous "yes" for his audition, but Richie also presented him with the final platinum ticket of the season, meaning the hopeful gets to skip straight past the first Hollywood round. Hill's glorious Idol audition can be viewed on YouTube. - Billboard, 3/31/25...... The WhoRoger Daltrey shocked The Who's fans during the first of two Who shows at London's Royal Albert Hall on Mar. 27 when he opened up about his current medical condition. "The problem with this job is that you go deaf," he said from the stage. "And now I've been told that I am going blind." Referencing the band's 1969 rock opera title character, he added: "Thank God I've still got my voice. If I lost that I'll go full Tommy." The Who played another hits-packed show at the Royal Albert Hall the following night, with proceeds going to the charity concerts that Daltrey founded in 2000. Daltrey, who turned 81 in early March, announced in 2024 that he was stepping down as the TCT concerts curator, allowing The Cure's Robert Smith to take the reins. "I have to be realistic about my age... I'm on the way out," he told the London Times in 2024. "The average life expectancy is 83 and with a bit of luck I'll make that, but we need someone else to drive things," he said about the decision to step down from the curator role, instead opting to "work in the back room... talking to the government, rattling cages." During the Mar. 27 show, The Who performed their Who's Next track "Love Ain't For Keepin'" for the first time in 21 years. They also broke out classic tracks like "Pinball Wizard," "The Seeker," "My Generation" and "Behind Blue Eyes." Fan-shot footage of several performances can be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 3/29/25...... Longtime REO Speedwagon vocalist Kevin Cronin has taken to Facebook to share his thoughts on his lack of inclusion in an upcoming one-off REO reunion event. Cronin, who has been touring with his own Kevin Cronin Band, addressed a fan on Facebook who noted the singer's absence from REO's forthcoming concert in Champaign, Ill. on June 14, responding that organizers of the event could have picked a date when many of the band's former members were readily available to attend. "Instead they chose June 14, 2025, a date where it was public knowledge that I was previously committed to perform with Styx and Kevin Cronin Band in Bend, Oregon," Cronin wrote. "Bottom line, I am being asked to participate in an event on a date when I can't possibly be there in-person. And then being falsely accused of turning down the invitation. I am deeply disturbed and hurt by all of this. After all I have done to help build the legacy of REO Speedwagon, I feel I have earned and deserve to be included in any event honoring that legacy. Instead, I have been knowingly excluded." Cronin joined REO Speedwagon in early 1972, taking over from Terry Luttrell who reportedly left due to personal issues with guitarist Gary Richrath. Though Cronin was himself briefly replaced by Mike Murphy the following year, he returned in 1976 and remained in the band until their end, performing on tracks such as their two Billboard chart-toppers "Keep On Loving You" and "Can't Fight This Feeling." In late 2024, REO Speedwagon announced that they would cease touring as of Jan. 1, 2025. In a note shared to fans, the group explained that bassist Bruce Hall had not recovered sufficiently from previous back surgery and his inability to tour led to "irreconcilable differences" between Hall and Cronin. REO Speedwagon played their final live performance on Dec. 21 at The Venetian Theatre in Las Vegas, but in March announced they would be playing a special one-off show at the State Farm Center in their hometown of Champaign, Ill. on June 14. Officially titled as an event "Honoring the Legacy of REO Speedwagon," the show is described as a "concert retrospective featuring special guests & former members." Two former REO members (Luttrell and Murphy) are confirmed to attend, and a special tribute will be held to late members Richrath and Gregg Philbin. - Billboard, 3/30/25...... David Bowie's old childhood home in Bromley, Greater London, has been put on the market for £449,500. The late rock icon moved with his family into the two-bedroom terraced house for a year, before they moved to the East End section of London, where they settled at 4 Plaistow Grove. According to a property listing for the house, it has "two double bedrooms, one bathroom, a dining room, living room, small kitchen and moderate back garden." "Possibly the least eye-catching house I have featured architecturally, but interesting because this is David Bowie's childhood home in Bromley, Greater London, which is now up for sale," realtor WowHauser posted on X on Mar. 28. He building is also affectionately described as a "charming two-bedroom period terraced house, located in a quiet residential position close to the heart of Bickley on the borders of Bromley... This Victorian property exudes a sense of peace and tranquillity, making it the perfect place to call home." Meanwhile, Bowie is set to be one of the featured artists in London's brand new Live Odyssey immersive experience that's set to kick off in May 25 in Camden, UK. The attraction -- which combines a show, an exhibition museum and live experience together -- will take attendees through six decades of music via a two-and-a-half-hour adventure that captures the evolution of British music, from the early anthems of the '60s and '70s to the Britpop explosion of the '90s and today's cutting-edge hits. - NME, 3/28/25...... Randy BachmanBachman-Turner Overdrive announced on Mar. 28 they are "takin' care of business" again with the release of "60 Years Ago," a new sentimental single that was penned by BTO frontman Randy Bachman and his son Tal Bachman during their pandemic YouTube show Bachman & Bachman Friday Night Train Wreck aspart of a father-son album that has not yet been released. But after hearing that a highway section in Randy's native Winnipeg was to be renamed the Bachman-Turner Overpass -- with the dedication on Apr. 18, the day before BTO plays the city -- inspired the Bachmans to revise the song and make the song public. "I thought, 'I'll go and get "60 Years Ago," and I'll give it back to Winnipeg as a thank-you,'" Randy Bachman says. "There was no great plan for this song, y'know. But maybe they'll play it on Winnipeg radio, and if you live in Winnipeg maybe you'll want to download it and drive around singing '60 years ago, so damn cold, so much snow' and that kind of stuff. And I have a million BTO fans, followers on Instagram and my web site, so maybe some of them will download it. I have a lot of people asking me, always, 'Is there anything new? Is there anything new?' So now yes, there is." With its remembrances of the Winnipeg music scene of the mid-'60s, Bachman further torqued up "60 Years Ago" with some appropriate guests - childhood friend and fellow Winnipegian Neil Young, whose guitar solo can be heard at the end, and BTO co-founder Fred Turner who, despite spates of bad health, contributed vocals to the song. Both men are name-checked in the lyrics, along with Bachman's The Guess Who partner Burton Cummings and, as Bachman notes, Winnipeg's frigid climate. "60 Years Ago" comes as BTO prepares to hit the road on Apr. 1 for an extensive 22-date Canadian tour, followed by summer dates in the U.S., both on its own and with the Marshall Tucker Band, Jefferson Starship and The Outlaws from July 18 through Aug. 22. He's also hoping that Takin' Care of Business, a documentary about finding his stolen Gretsch 6120 guitar while in the midst of a serious cancer battle a couple of years back, will see wider release after running on the film festival circuit. - Billboard, 3/28/25...... On Mar. 27, London's legendary Abbey Road Studios celebrated its recent extensive restoration with an event called Synergy In Motion, which combined contemporary dance and music in a unique event. The choreography was helmed by Royal Ballet choreographer Joseph Toonga and set to the film scores of composer Daniel Pemberton (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), remixed and arranged by Jordan Rakei, Abbey Road's Artist in Residence. The studio has now reopened and is in operation for recording sessions. Abbey Road Studio One is described by the northwest London studio as "world's largest purpose-built recording studio," and can comfortably host 100-piece orchestras. The room is primarily used for the recording of classical and movie scores, with the soundtracks to a number of blockbusters having been recorded in in the space, including much of John Williams' movie canon, such as Raiders of The Lost Ark, Star Wars: The Return of The Jedi, as well as the Harry Potter movies. The premises was first built as a residential townhouse in 1831, and was converted into a recording studio a century later, reopening as EMI Studios in 1931. A number of classical greats including Edward Elgar and Sergei Prokofiev recorded there; in 1958, Studio Two was opened, with a number of influential acts like The Beatles and Pink Floyd recording in the space. The studio is currently owned by Universal Music imprint Virgin Records. - Billboard, 3/27/25...... Carlos SantanaCarlos Santana says his latest effort, Sentient, is a metaphor for floral arrangements. "When I go to the lobby in hotels in Europe, they always have these incredible flower arrangements," Santana told Billboard. "They hire some people to come in and arrange the flowers in the lobby. That's how this album was made -- that's how I make all my albums. I feel like a florist who is trying to combine the right colors and textures and create a beautiful ornament. That's what Sentient is, an ornament of flower arrangements -- colors, passions, textures, emotions." The 11-track set, which dropped on Mar. 28 and is the follow-up to 2021's Blessings and Miracles, includes three previously unreleased tracks, while the rest are remastered songs drawn from various points in the musician's career, including collaborations with friends living (Smokey Robinson, Darryl "DMC" McDaniels and his wife Cindy Blackman Santana) and deceased (Michael Jackson, Miles Davis). After Sentient's release Santana will begin a nine-date Oneness Tour beginning April 16 in Highland, Calif., and wrapping May 1 at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. His next residency at the House of Blues Las Vegas runs May 14-25, and a European Oneness Tour leg begins June 9 in Poland and runs through Aug. 11 in Copenhagen. The original 1969 Woodstock veteran says he's also working on a multi-day, multi-act worldwide festival with the utopian perspective of Woodstock. "I want to create a global concert that goes around the world and (promotes) unity, harmony, oneness," he says. - Billboard, 3/27/25...... Iconic '80s hitmakers Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo are set to receive the 2025 ASCAP Harry Chapin Humanitarian Award at the annual Chapin Awards Gala on June 4 at Jazz at Lincoln Center's Frederick P. Rose Hall in New York City. The 2022 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees and longtime activists, who have been married since 1982, will become the second married couple to receive the award. R&B songwriting greats Nicholas Ashford and Valerie Simpson received it in 2010. The Chapin Awards Gala will include a cocktail reception, dinner, and live music, and additional honorees will be announced in coming weeks. The award's namesake, Harry Chapin, was an early music industry advocate for the world hunger movement. The "Cat's in the Cradle" singer co-founded WhyHunger, for which the ASCAP gala benefits, a full decade before music industry titans came together as USA for Africa to record "We Are the World" in 1985. Chapin gave tirelessly gave of his time and talents to perform at benefits and events in support of a range of social causes before his life was tragically cut short when he was killed in a car crash in 1981 at age 38. (On the afternoon he was killed, he was driving to a benefit, where he was slated to perform.) Previous ASCAP Harry Chapin Humanitarian Award recipients include the likes of John Mellencamp, Kenny Loggins, Yoko Ono, Elvis Costello, Jackson Browne, Judy Collins, Barbra Streisand and Peter, Paul & Mary. - Billboard, 3/27/25...... Late Alice star Linda Lavin, who died unexpectedly on Dec. 29 at age 87 due to complications from lung cancer that had been recently discovered, will be honored with a "brutally honest" episode of her new Hulu series Mid-Century Modern. "It was a directive actually from Linda... When she was diagnosed with [lung cancer], she was like, 'I don't know how I'm going to respond to this, but whatever it is, write it into the [Sybil Schneiderman] character," reveals cocreator David Kohan (Will & Grace). How fitting that TV's most iconic waitress knew just what to order. Mid-Century Modern launched its series premiere on Hulu on Mar. 28. - TV Guide, 3/24/25...... Bruce Glover, a prolific character actor known for playing icy villains and no-nonsense lawmen, including an assassin who goes after Sean Connery in the James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever and a private dick who works with Jack Nicholson in the 1974 neo-noir classic Chinatown, died on Mar. 12 at a hospital in Los Angeles. He was 92. His son, actor and director Crispin Glover, announced the death but did not cite a specific cause. Mr. Glover, a streetwise Chicago native who said he spent years trying to get rid of his "dese, dems and dose" accent, appeared in more than 100 movies and television shows, building his resume in the 1960s and '70s with roles on Perry Mason, Adam-12, Mod Squad and Gunsmoke," among other westerns and crime dramas. Although he dabbled in comedy, making a cameo as an eccentric wheelchair-user in Terry Zwigoff's 2001 film Ghost World, he was typically cast as crooks, cops and other assorted tough guys. He played a Tennessee sheriff's deputy in the hit crime movie Walking Tall (1973), reprising the part for two sequels, and was a mob boss trying to recoup a debt from a hustler in the boxing film Hard Times (1975), starring Charles Bronson and James Coburn. He remained best known for his villainous turn in Diamonds Are Forever (1971), the sixth Bond film to feature Connery as the suave secret agent. Mr. Glover played a deceptively polite henchman, Mr. Wint, who teams up with fellow assassin Mr. Kidd (played by the mustached jazz musician Putter Smith) to protect a smuggling operation run by the cat-loving supervillain Blofeld (Charles Gray). For years, Mr. Glover painted and taught acting when he wasn't performing on the stage or screen. His approach was instinctual -- practical, not theoretical -- and honed during his early years performing in summer-stock theatre, when he sometimes did a play a week. "No 12, no 25 steps," he said of his approach. "Think the thoughts of the character. Have a conversation. That's how simple it is." In addition to his son Crispin, survivors include a brother. - The Washington Post, 3/31/25...... Richard ChamberlainLegendary actor Richard Chamberlain, the handsome leading man who thrilled women as the young star of Dr. Kildare and then centered the epic, melodramatic miniseries Shogun and The Thorn Birds, died on Mar. 29 in Waimanalo, Hawaii, of complications following a stroke, according to his publicist. He was 90. On the big screen, Mr. Chamberlain played Julie Christie's brutal husband in Richard Lester's Petulia (1968), the woman-loving Aramis in a trio of Three Musketeers films and the fortune hunter Allan Quatermain opposite Sharon Stone in King Solomon's Mines (1985) and Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1986). Mr. Chamberlain started off his miniseries career by starring as trapper Alexander McKeag in James Michener's 16 1/2-hour, 12-episode saga Centennial, which aired on NBC in 1978-79, and he was the first actor to portray Jason Bourne onscreen when he starred as the Robert Ludlum character in an ABC miniseries in 1988. Raised in Beverly Hills, Mr. Chamberlain was a rather inexperienced actor when he was hired to play James Kildare, an earnest intern with terrific bedside manner -- and the mentee of Dr. Leonard Gillespie (Raymond Massey) -- on Dr. Kildare. The NBC drama was based on popular MGM radio and film serials (Lew Ayres portrayed the character on the big screen). Female viewers quickly fell for the suave Mr. Chamberlain, and he received upward of 12,000 fan letters a week, more than anyone had ever received at MGM, even Clark Gable. The show aired for five seasons, from Sept. 1961 until Aug. 1966. "I went through life pretending to be perfect, and that helped me play Dr. Kildaire, because he was close to perfect," he once said. In the early 1980s, Mr. Chamberlain gained a reputation as the "king of the miniseries" for his starring roles in Shogun, The Thorn Birds and Wallenberg: A Hero's Story. He received Primetime Emmy nods for outstanding lead actor in a limited series or a special for all three productions. In the Australian-set The Thorn Birds based on Colleen McCullough's novel and which aired on ABC over four nights in Mar. 1983, he portrayed Father Ralph, a Catholic priest who is involved in a tortured romance with the ravishing young Meggie (Rachel Ward), who seeks solace from a ranch hand (Bryan Brown, her future real-life husband). James Clavell's Shogun was originally envisioned as a feature starring Robert Redford. NBC got the rights after those plans fell through and wanted Sean Connery to star as the tempestuous Englishman John Blackthorne. The network then cast Mr. Chamberlain, who had read the book and pushed for the part. He spent six months shooting the miniseries in Japan, and it aired for 12 hours over five nights in 1980. Shogun earned Mr. Chamberlain a best actor Golden Globe and Emmy nomination, and for The Thorn Birds, he took home another Globe for best actor in a miniseries or motion picture for TV. George Richard Chamberlain was born in Los Angeles on Mar. 31, 1934, the youngest of two sons and raised in Beverly Hills, but on the "wrong side of Wilshire Boulevard, the wrong side of Beverly Drive, in an extremely normal neighborhood," he noted. He attended Beverly Hills High School, where he appeared in such plays as "I Remember Mama." His film resume also included Twilight of Honor (1963), Joy in the Morning (1965), The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969), Julius Caesar (1970), The Music Lovers (1971), The Towering Inferno (1974), The Slipper and the Rose: The Story of Cinderella (1976), Peter Weir's The Last Wave (1977) and The Swarm (1978). More recently, Mr. Chamberlain guest-starred on Nip/Tuck, playing a gay millionaire who forces his younger lover to have plastic surgery so as to resemble himself; recurred on Brothers & Sisters as a former love interest of Ron Rifkin's character; hilariously portrayed Craig Ferguson's mom, Maggie Wick, on The Drew Carey Show; and appeared on the Twin Peaks reboot. In his liberating 2003 autobiography Shattered Love, Mr. Chamberlain, then 69, came out as gay. "When you grow up in the '30s, '40s and '50s being gay, it not only ain't easy, it's just impossible," he told The New York Times in 2014. Mr. Chamberlain learned while growing up "that being gay was the worst thing you can possibly be. I assumed there was something terribly wrong with me. And even becoming famous and all that, it was still there." - The Hollywood Reporter, 3/30/25.

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on March 27th, 2025

On Mar. 27 ABBA and their ABBA Voyage team announced the virtual concert residency is receiving a "small" revamp this May for its third anniversary in London. "When we first opened we never imagined that we'd still be in London 3 years on. We're very grateful that so many of you have joined us," the band said in a press release. "Of course, the reason for us being able to sustain our concert for so long is because of our incredible audience. As we say in Sweden Vilken resa!" As a result, the band will be implementing "a little something to our concert" beginning on May 27, three years to the exact date that ABBA Voyage first launched, although details surrounding the exact changes being made remain under wraps. ABBA Voyage first kicked off in May 2022, and was due to wrap in Nov. 2024, but has since been extended to Jan. 2026 due to overwhelming demand. Once the show wraps in London, the band intend on bringing the Voyage experience around the world, including Asia, Australia and North America, with details of the itinerary to be announced later. - New Musical Express, 5/27/25...... Bob DylanBob Dylan kicked off his 2025 "Rough & Rowdy Ways" tour on Mar. 25 at the Tulsa Theater in Tulsa, Okla., opening with "All Along The Watchtower" (which according to Dylanologists is his most played track, racking up a total of over 2,285 times performed live), then treating the audience to 16 additional tracks, including performances of "It Ain't Me," "I Contain Multitudes," "Black Rider," "My Own Version of You," "To Be Alone With You," "Watching The River Flow," "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" and more. A bulk of the night's performance saw the icon play the majority of his 2020 LP Rough And Rowdy Ways. To wrap up the show, he ended with "Every Grain of Sand." Elsewhere, the night revealed that Dylan's previous touring drummer Jim Keltner was replaced by Anton Fig, who previously was the drummer with Paul Shaffer and the World's Most Dangerous Band. Fig and Dylan have a history of working together dating back the 1985 "Empire Burlesque sessions." - NME, 3/26/25...... As Elton John promotes the upcoming Apr. 4 release of Who Believes In Angels?, his new collaborative effort with Brandi Carlile, the Rocket Man revealed in a Smartless podcast on Mar. 25, his 78th birthday, that the project left him confronting his mortality. "I wrote a song at the end of the album and I just get the lyrics, Bernie Taupin's lyrics," John explained. "I'm writing the verse, like, 'Oh, this is really pretty.' And then I get to the chorus and of course it's about my death. When you get to my age, which is near 100, you think, 'How much time have I got left?'" he continued, before his thoughts turned to husband David Furnish and sons Zachary and Elijah. "You've got children, you've got a wonderful husband, you just think about mortality. And so when I got to the chorus, I just broke down for 45 minutes -- and it's all on film." The sessions were recorded as part of the film Elton John: Never Too Late, which was released in October to widespread acclaim. The titular song "Never Too Late" will also be released on Who Believes in Angels? and was recently up for Best Original Song at the Academy Awards. The latest episode of the Smartless podcast was released to subscribers on Mar. 25, and will be officially released to all listeners on Mar. 31. Meanwhile, in a new interview with Carlisle with Rolling Stone UK, Elton said talent shows like The X Factor and American Idol are "the worst" for aspiring artists, and has instead advised them to "go and play in a pub." "Just keep trying to play live," Elton advised. "That's the way you improve as a musician and songwriter. It doesn't matter if you're playing to 40 people. The more experience you get playing to nobody, the better." The singer continued: "....backbone is so important, because the worst thing that can happen to you in the industry are things like X Factor and instant fame on television where you have no experience of playing live. You get put on stage, you go, and you can't do it. That's the worst thing. American Idol -- just the worst. Take risks. Go and play in a pub." - Billboard/NME, 3/26/25...... Home Box Office has announced a new, two-part Billy Joel will premier on the premium cable channel this summer. Billy Joel: And So It Goes is directed by Susan Lacy -- who created PBS' American Masters series and has previously helmed HBO docs such as docs Jane Fonda in Five Acts, and Spielberg -- and Jessica Levin, who produced those projects as well as The Janes. The upcoming doc "will examine the life and music of Billy Joel, exploring the love, loss, and personal struggles that fuel his songwriting." It also includes access to never-before-seen performances, home movies, and personal photographs, along with one-on-one interviews. The doc announcement comes after the Piano Man recently revealed that he was postponing months of touring due to an undisclosed medical condition. - NME, 3/26/25...... Nancy Wilson of Heart didn't mince words about her view of the current state of the US and the world in a new interview with Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Wilson noted that the band's third single, 1975's "Crazy on You," was written as a critical response to the Vietnam War, though the lyrics have found themselves relevant once again. "We were kind of embarrassed at that time to call ourselves American because of the dirty politics of the Vietnam War," Wilson explained. "To be as subtle as possible, it's more embarrassing now." The discussion also focused on the likes of 1977's "Barracuda," which had been initially written about a sleazy industry figure of the time. However, with reference to an infamous quote from Pres. Donald Trump, Wilson conceded the track "is even more relevant in the salacious billionaire culture with the grab-them-by-the-(expletive) mentality." "These songs will be there long after we are gone," she added, before focusing on the contemporary prevalence of the sexism that inspired "Barracuda." "I think for women in the culture the pendulum will come back again, and there'll be another renaissance in the arts to push back against the oppression of the cranky old rich white guys," Wilson added. "I hope I am alive to see that next revolution." In 2018, Nancy's bandmate sister Ann Wilson claimed that the Seattle band's "Barracuda" could be used by just about any candidate in the 2020 election if they desired. "I think anybody but Trump," she clarified. - Billboard, 3/24/25...... Lindsey BuckinghamFormer Fleetwood Mac guitarist Lindsey Buckingham has teamed up with his former bandmate Mick Fleetwood once again, with the pair reuniting in the recording studio recently. News of the pair's musician reunion was detailed on Threads by Swedish producer Carl Falk, shared a photo from the studio where Fleetwood has been working on a new solo album. The sessions have ostensibly also seen Fleetwood working with The War on Drugs' Adam Granduciel. "Slightly unreal moment to sit with Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood to play Lindsey the album we have been working on," Falk wrote. "And to see his genuine happiness for Mick to finally do his own album and offering to play guitar and to sing on it. Can't wait to finish this one." Another post shared by Falk captured Buckingham in the studio with his guitar in hand. "Mick and Lindsey together again, what a flawless guitar player," the caption wrote. Currently, no official details from Fleetwood have been announced in regard to the content or release of the forthcoming album. Buckingham departed Fleetwood Mac in 1987, but rejoined in 1997 as part of the band's classic lineup reunion of himself, Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks, John McVie and Christine McVie. He remained with the band until the 2018 announcement he would no longer be touring as part of Fleetwood Mac. The departure occurred almost a year after the release of Lindsey Buckingham Christine McVie, an album which featured the band's lineup with the exception of Nicks. Until 2025, it was the most recent collaboration between Buckingham and Fleetwood. - Billboard, 3/25/25...... "Live Odyssey," described as "a celebration of the rich tapestry of British music... offering a unique experience for music lovers of all ages" through "a groundbreaking tribute to the sounds that shaped Britain," is set to launch on May 22 in the London borough of Camden. John Lennon's sister Julia Baird will be unveiling a multi-sensory immersive exhibit dedicated to the late Beatles member on its opening which "details the early years that shaped Lennon through to a life of stratospheric fame with The Beatles." "This is the brutally honest story of The Beatles legend by his sister Julia, who reveals the unorthodox childhood they shared, memories of their mother, renewed family bonds, and the many sides of John Lennon," according to a press release. Elsewhere in the exhibition, fans will move through six different rooms, each immersing guests in a different musical era and recreating the sights, sounds, and cultural moments that define each decade. Also included in the list of acts set to be represented are The Rolling Stones, The Who, Led Zeppelin, Queen, Sex Pistols, David Bowie, Oasis, Duran Duran, Radiohead, Coldplay, Adele and many more. Tickets for the experience are currently on sale, and a portion of sales will support the Music Venue Trust. - NME, 3/25/25...... Bruce Springsteen was a late addition to the lineup for an all-star tribute to Patti Smith on Mar. 26 at New York's Carnegie Hall. The sold out "People Have the Power: A Celebration of Patti Smith" celebrated the 50th anniversary of the punk poetess' legendary 1975 debut album, Horses. In addition to Springsteen, the show also featured appearances from R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe, Bangles singer Susanna Hoffs, Pretenders frontwoman Chrissie Hynde, and such celebrities as Sean Penn, Scarlett Johansson and Michael Shannon. Springsteen and Smith's relationship also stretches back nearly 50 years, when the Boss was struggling to figure out how to finish his song "Because the Night" and his engineer, Jimmy Iovine -- who was also producing Smith's 1978 album Easter at the time -- suggested he give it to Smith. She worked it over and added new lyrics in honor of her husband, the MC5's Fred "Sonic" Smith, and it became her highest-charting single to date, hitting No. 13 on the Billboard Hot 100. Smith will also be hitting the road for a Horses anniversary tour, slated to kick off in Dublin, Ireland on Oct. 6 and criss-cross Europe for a month before landing in Seattle on Nov. 10 for a run of shows that will keep her on the road through a Nov. 29 gig in Philadelphia. - Billboard, 3/25/25...... In other Springsteen news, the rocker has personally praised British actor Stephen Graham for his portrayal of his late father, Douglas "Dutch" Springsteen in the upcoming Springsteen biopic Deliver Me From Nowhere. After filming wrapped on the movie -- which stars Jeremy Allen White as Springsteen -- the Boss sent one of "the most gorgeous texts I've ever had in my life," according to Graham. "I'm racing to get to the airport, and I got this text, and it was so beautiful," Graham told Edith Bowman on her Soundtracking podcast. "It just said: 'Thank you so much. You know, my father passed away a while ago and I felt like I saw him today. Thank you for giving me that memory.' I was crying reading the text, do you know what I mean?.... You couldn't ask for anything more, you know, to share that with someone was gorgeous. He's a lovely man." The biopic, slated for release later in 2025, covers the musician's life during the making of his 1982 classic album Nebraska. - Music-News.com, 3/24/25...... KISSJust 15 months after performing their final concert, KISS have announced their return to the live stage with a one-off "unmasked" concert as part of the KISS Army fan club's 50th anniversary celebrations. The show was announced via an email sent to fans (viewable on Instagram), confirming that the group would be performing as part of the three-day "KISS Army Storms Vegas" event, which runs from Nov. 14 - 16 at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas. Though a full rundown of activities are said to be released soon, the headline of the message is KISS' intention to perform a makeup-free show as part of the event. According to the email, the concert also promises "a special live performance from former KISS member Bruce Kulick, along with other special guests, activities, exclusive experiences and more." While it's unclear if Kulick plans to perform with the band or separately as part of the event, the guitarist had previously been an official member from 1984 until 1996, playing on five KISS albums. The performance will be the band's first since Dec. 2023, where they wrapped up their "End of The Road Tour" with a two-night stand at New York City's Madison Square Garden. Despite their large-scale farewell tour (their second, after 2001's fittingly-titled "KISS Farewell Tour"), fans had speculated that the band could indeed take to the stage again at some point. Bassist Gene Simmons was quick to nix that claim, clarifying the band's plans in an interview with Rolling Stone in Nov. 2023. "I'll say right here, right now, my hand on the Bible, it will be the final KISS-in-makeup appearance," he declared. KISS had previously appeared without their makeup in 1983, beginning their "unmasked"' era alongside the release of their Lick It Up album. This era would continue until 1996, when the group readopted their iconic look ahead of their highly-anticipated "Alive/Worldwide Tour." News of the forthcoming show also coincides with the fact that Simmons recently postponed 17 dates on his forthcoming tour to 2026. An announcement confirmed that the dates were not related to Simmons' health, but offered no further details. This same tour also generated notice after Simmons revealed he would be offering fans the chance to serve as his "personal assistant & band roadie for the day." - Billboard, 3/23/25...... Ozzy Osbourne has confirmed he'll perform from a throne -- possibly even a flying one -- at what's being billed as Black Sabbath's final-ever performance on July 5 at Villa Park in Birmingham, England. Osbourne, 76, has dealt with neck and spinal injuries as well as Parkinson's disease and now occasionally uses a wheelchair, but he says he's determined to make this moment count. Ozzy's longtime collaborator and guitarist Zakk Wylde teased that the frontman could be airborne during the event -- quite literally. "With Oz and his throne that just flies over the stadium or whatever, [where he] shoots out buckets of water and does everything like that," Wylde said in a new interview with Riff X's Metal XS. "So if Oz has a great time and it's just, like, 'I wanna go out on the road again,' it's just, like, 'Good. Let's do it again.' He added, "Ozzy was just sitting at the chair and he was singing 'Mama, I'm Coming Home,' and it sounded great. So hopefully we'll just do this, and then Oz will go, 'Let's just fire up the machine again and we'll do another tour'." "Everybody's gonna be playing Sabbath songs, it's gonna be pretty mind-blowing," he added. Although Ozzy won't be delivering a full set, the "Back to the Beginning" concert is shaping up to be a metal fan's dream, with other heavy metal icons including Metallica, Slayer, Pantera and Anthrax also participating. - Billboard, 3/24/25...... Dead & Company paid tribute to late Grateful Dead bassist and co-founder Phil Lesh on the first weekend of their their 2025 Las Vegas Sphere residency. Dead & Company returned to the venue after a wildly successful residency last year, which saw the band perform in front of the Sphere's 240-foot screens from May to July 2024. Closing out their first weekend of the 2025 residency, the band performed "Box Of Rain" -- which was Lesh's signature track with GD -- as their final song on Mar. 22. It marked the first time the band have performed the song since his passing. The band is due to perform 15 more dates between now and May 17. Lesh died in Oct. 2024 at the age of 84. - NME, 3/24/25...... John McNallyThe '60s "British Invasion" band The Searchers, who are known to be "longest-running band in pop history," are set to play their last ever show at the Glastonbury 2025 music festival. The Liverpool band, best known for their their version of The Drifters' hit "Sweets For My Sweet," "Sugar And Spice," "Love Potion No. 9," and "Don't Throw Your Love Away,", will end nearly 70 years of touring with their debut at Worthy Farm on the Acoustic Stage on June 27, after the line-up was announced on Mar. 22. Founding member John McNally told BBC News: "A Glastonbury debut at 83, can anyone top that? I don't think life gets any better, does it? There will be a few nerves, but in a good way, and we'll be nicely warmed up from our shows in June. We can't wait to see our fans again for this incredible final farewell." Bassist and singer Frank Allen, who joined the group in 1964, added: "I have played shows across the world with The Searchers for over 60 years; Glastonbury has always been an ambition that has eluded us -- until now. The Searchers are finally performing at the greatest music festival of them all. What a way to round off a tour and a career. I can't wait to get up on stage and give our fans one final blast." - NME, 3/23/25...... Legendary crooner Johnny Mathis announced his retirement from live performing via a Facebook post on Mar. 26. "As many of you may already be aware, Johnny Mathis is approaching his 90th birthday this year," the statement reads. "So, it's with sincere regret that due to Mr. Mathis' age and memory issues which have accelerated, we are announcing his retirement from touring and live concerts." The post notes that all shows scheduled after June 2025 will be canceled, as his final show will take place May 18 at the Bergan Performing Arts Center in Englewood, NJ. Known for such tunes as "Wonderful! Wonderful!" and "It's Not for Me to Say," Mathis was honored by the Recording Academy with the Lifetime Achievement Award and he was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame for three separate recordings: in 1998 for "Chances Are," in 2002 for "Misty" and in 2008 for "It's Not for Me to Say." His achievements also include more than 70 albums on the Billboard Hot 200 LP chart (including the No. 1s Johnny's Greatest Hits, in 1958, and Heavenly, in 1959), 34 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart (including the No. 1 "Too Much, Too Little, Too Late" with Deniece Williams in 1978) and 50 entries on the Adult Contemporary airplay chart. His Greatest Hits project spent 490 weeks on the Billboard 200, and was the longest-charting album by a solo artist until 2020. - Billboard, 3/26/25..... The '70s ska revival band The Specials have shared a new single to honour the "fallen heroes" of ska. The new track, "When A Light Goes Out," was aired for the first time during a special event at the 2 Tone Museum in London. It is co-written by founding members of The Specials -- Lynval Golding, Mark Adams and Nikolaj Torp Larson -- and pays respects to giants of the ska genre. Proceeds will go to the Specialized Project & Tonic (Music For Mental Health) charities. The event came just days after the late Specials frontman Terry Hall would have celebrated his 66th birthday. Hall died in Dec. 2022 after being diagnosed with cancer months earlier. He was 63 years old. The rest of the band celebrated the milestone with a post on Instagram, wishing the singer a "happy heavenly birthday." - NME, 3/21/25....... Another beloved '70s UK band, Madness, announced on Mar. 25 they'll embark on a major "Hits Parade" UK arena tour this December. Kicking things off at Sheffield Utilita Arena on Dec. 4, the Nutty Boys will perform 13 dates across the country, culminating with a special hometown show at London's The O2 on Dec. 20. Madness will also be joined by very special guest Squeeze. Celebrating their biggest hits that have defined their lengthy career, Madness will be performing all the classics from their iconic, extensive back catalogue and fan favourites including "Our House," "It Must Be Love," "House Of Fun," "Baggy Trousers," "One Step Beyond," and more. Throughout their career, the band have had 11 UK top ten albums, 15 top ten singles and have won a multitude of awards including a prestigious Ivor Novello. Known for their high energy, raucous sets, Madness have performed on the top of Buckingham Palace as part of the Queen's Jubilee celebrations and set the record for the biggest ever audience for the BBC's Live New Year's Eve Broadcast -- the most watched TV music event of 2018. - Music-News.com, 3/25/25...... Larry TamblynLarry Tamblyn, founding member of the '60s garage band The Standells and brother of actor Russ Tamblyn, died of as yet undisclosed causes on Mar. 21. He was 82. The frontman and keyboardist's death was announced by his nephew, Dennis Tamblyn, in a Facebook post. "My uncle Larry Tamblyn passed away today," Dennis posted. "I have very fond memories of him and his family over the years. He lived an incredible life. He was in a band called The Standells, whose hit song 'Dirty Water' is still played to this day whenever the Red Sox or the Bruins win a home game. They also played on an episode of The Munsters." Tamblyn continued: "A few years ago, The Standells played at Hotel Congress here in Tucson, Ariz., and Larry stayed with me. It was so great to hang out with him and catch up. He was still making music well into his later years. You will be missed, Uncle Larry." Mr. Tamblyn, who is the younger brother of Twin Peaks actor Russ Tamblyn and uncle of actress Amber Tamblyn, was born in Los Angeles on Feb. 5, 1943. The Standells were formed in 1962 by Tamblyn, guitarist Tony Valentino, bassist Jody Rich and drummer Benny King. In 1966, they recorded their most famous hit "Dirty Water" which is still played after every Boston Red Sox and Boston Bruins home win. It peaked at No. 11 on the Billboard charts. "Dirty Water" became the band's calling card, acting as one of the anchors of both the 1972 Nuggets garage rock compilation as well as a sports anthem for a number of Boston-area professional teams. In addition to 1965 episodes of The Munsters, The Bing Crosby Show and Ben Casey, The Standells also appeared in such low-budget films as Get Yourself A College Girl (1964) and Riot On Sunset Strip (1967). After taking a long break to pursue a solo career, Mr. Tamblyn performed again under the band's name in 2009 with bassist John Fleck, guitarist Paul Downing and drummer Greg Burnham. They released their final album Bump in 2013. That same year former drummer Dick Dodd, died aged 68 after battling cancer. In addition to his work with the group, Mr. Tamblyn released an autobiography, From Squeaky Clean to Dirty Water: My Life with Sixties Garage Rock Trailblazers the Standells, in 2022. In Dec. 2023, Mr. Tamblyn was inducted into the California Music Hall of Fame by his brother. - NME, 3/23/25.

The late The Ramones frontman Joey Ramone will be the subject of a new children's book, Gabba Gabba We Accept You: The Wondrous Tale Of Joey Ramone. Due on June 27 via the record label Drag City, the book "tells the story of a misfit kid who grew up to be a punk rock hero," according to a press release. "The challenging times that Jeffrey Ross Hyman endured before becoming Joey Ramone speak to young folks navigating the complexities of growing up, via teachable punk stuff: being your own person with your own compass, embracing uniqueness, etc.... [and] affirm everyone has a place in the world," it adds. The book's announcement can be viewed on Drag City's X page. Meanwhile, a legal battle has ensued over a planned Joey Ramone biopic, with Pete Davidson in the lead, with Johnny Ramone's estate suing Joey's brother Mickey Leigh over the biopic. It was claimed that Leigh -- real name Mitchel Hyman -- "covertly developed an unapproved and unauthorized Ramones-based biopic" based on his "one-sided recitation of the history of the Ramones." He counter-sued Johnny's widow Linda Cummings-Ramone, calling her attempts to shut down the biopic as "baseless and flimsy." Hyman also later filed a lawsuit against her for allegedly "exploiting" the Ramones' legacy. - New Musical Express, 3/20/25...... The EaglesThe Eagles have added eight more dates to their ongoing residency at Las Vegas' Sphere. Their remaining dates at the mind-bending venue will be on Apr. 4, 5, 11 and 12, with four late summer dates on Sept. 5, 6, 12 and 12. Their original string of gigs kicked off on Sept. 20, 2024, and feature ticket prices beginning at $175. Ensuring that they get into the hands of fans, presale registration is available now at https://eagles.com, and begins Mar. 25) at 1 p.m. ET. Live Nation and SiriusXM presales will launch on Mar. 26 at 1 p.m. ET. Limited VIP ticket packages will go on sale on Tuesday as well at 1 p.m. ET and include premium seats, exclusive merch and parking. Vibee, the hotel & experience package partner for the Eagles Sphere residency, has packages including a concert ticket and two-night stay at The Venetian Resort Las Vegas -- the only resort attached to Sphere -- with guests receiving priority entry to the venue, commemorative keepsakes and more. Vibee packages for the existing and newly announced dates are available now at Eagles.vibee.com. When the Eagles began their residency at Las Vegas' Sphere in September, they also debuted a "Third Encore" fan experience at the neighboring Venetian Resort. The space allowed fans to go inside a re-creation of the famed West Hollywood Troubadour venue where the California rockers got their start in the 1970s and where legend has it that Don Henley and Glenn Frey. Live Nation's travel and music company Vibee expanded the VIP experience to include a Hotel California pop-up, paying tribute to the band's 1976 album and its immortal title track. The most interactive piece of the space is three hotel room doors that open to three different moments in the song, with each room number representing the time code of the corresponding lyrics. Room 052 takes you to a "dark desert highway," with a circa-1970s car dashboard leading the way; room 118 has a "mission bell" hanging above the doorway; and room 354 leads to a spooky mirrored hallway in search of "the passage back to the place I was before." - Billboard, 3/18/25...... Speaking of Sin City, on Mar. 19 Rod Stewart announced another six-pack of residency shows at Las Vegas' the Colosseum for this fall. "Las Vegas! You wanted more, so here we go I've added more shows! I'll be back at @colosseumatcp this September and October, Can't wait to see you all for another round of unforgettable nights," Stewart wrote on Instagram on Mar. 18. Tickets for the shows, which are slated to take place on Sept. 24, 25, 27 and Oct. 1, 3 and 4, went on sale on Mar. 21 through Ticketmaster. Stewart, 80, began a trio of shows at the Colosseum on Mar. 19, and also plays there on Mar. 21 and Mar. 22. After that he heads to Europe, with shows in Lithuania, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Germany, Poland, Italy and Portugal through mid-May. He will return to Europe in November for more gigs in Germany, as well as stops in Switzerland, Austria, Bulgaria and Greece. - Billboard, 3/19/25...... Neil Young announced on his Neil Young Archives site on Mar. 20 that he's cancelling a recently-announced free concert in Ukraine over safety concerns. Earlier in March, Young shared word of the forthcoming gig in the war torn country, revealing that his upcoming European tour with The Chrome Hearts would be preceded by his debut performance in the country. "We are currently in talks and will make the announcement of details here at NYA," he wrote on his Archives website. While specifics were not forthcoming, the tour is set to begin in Rättvik, Sweden on June 18, meaning the as-yet unannounced Ukrainian show would have ostensibly occurred in the immediate lead-up. However now the "Heart of Gold" singer says the show is no longer going ahead as initially planned. "We had a good venue, close to a shelter, but the changing situation on the ground was too much," he posted. "I could not in good conscience take my crew and instruments into that area. My apologies to all. Ukraine is a great country with a good leader. Slava Ukraini." In February, Young posted a message titled "Leader of the Free World No More" in which he said "under [Pres. Donald Trump's] leadership, the US has lost its standing. Loyalists will never be stronger than Patriots, and Patriots are in the majority here in the USA. Our Patriots will take to the streets to peacefully demonstrate. There will be a moment of truth in our country and we will show the world who we really are. The USA will again be the leader of the Free World." - Billboard, 3/20/25...... Queen'70s stars Queen and Herbie Hancock will be among the 2025 recipients of Sweden's prestigious Polar Music Prize. The Polar Music Prize, founded in 1989 by ABBA manager/publisher/lyricist Stig "Stikkan" Anderson, is presented at a ceremony in Stockholm in the presence of the Swedish royal family. Each Laureate will receive a cash award of one million Swedish Krona (approx. 74,082 GBP and $93,897 USD). Previous prize Laureates include Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Peter Gabriel, Chuck Berry, Led Zeppelin, Patti Smith, Stevie Wonder, Paul Simon and Elton John, among others. This year's ceremony will be held on May 27, at the Grand Hotel in Stockholm and is set to broadcast live in Sweden on TV4 at 8 p.m. CET. "We are highly and deeply honoured to be given the Polar Music Prize this year," the three surviving Queen members -- Brian May, Roger Taylor and John Deacon -- said in a statement. "It's incredible, thank you so much." Hancock, 84, said: "The Polar Music Prize is a prestigious honour, and I am both thrilled and humbled to be a recipient. The Laureates who have come before me have left an indelible mark on humanity through their profound examples of inspiration and dedication." - Billboard, 3/18/25...... In related news, Elton John has been named the 2025 recipient of the Glenn Gould Prize, which was established in 1987 by The Glenn Gould Foundation to honor the legacy of legendary Canadian pianist Glenn Gould. Gould, whose 1956 album Bach: Goldberg Variations is considered a classic, died in 1982 at age 50, and he received a posthumous lifetime achievement award from the Grammy Awards' Recording Academy in 2013. "After spending decades admiring the virtuosity of Glenn Gould's work, I am awestruck and honored to receive this award," Sir Elton said in a statement. The Glenn Gould Prize is awarded biennially and includes a CDN$100,000 cash award for the Laureate, who also selects an exceptional young artist to receive the CDN$25,000 Glenn Gould Protege Prize. The prize will be presented to John during a special gala celebration to be held in Toronto this fall. Previous recipients include Philip Glass, Leonard Cohen, André Previn, Pierre Boulez and Yo-Yo Ma. In other Elton news, a concert special showcasing the Rocket Man and his recent collaborator Brandi Carlile, An Evening With Elton John and Brandi Carlile, will air on CBS on Apr. 6 at 8-9 p.m. ET/PT and stream on Paramount+. In a concert filmed on Mar. 26 at London's iconic Palladium Theatre and accompanied by a live band, John and Carlile perform songs from their new album, Who Believes in Angels?, which is due Apr. 4 via Interscope Records. The musicians will also play a selection of their individual greatest hits, and an unreleased track by Carlile. Between these solo and duo performances, the two stars will engage in an intimate sit-down conversation on stage that promises to "pull back the curtain on their 20-year friendship, the journey behind their latest collaboration and share intimate footage from their process," according to the press release. Additionally, throughout the evening, those closest to the stars -- who are both LGBTQ icons -- will pay tribute to the artists' careers. John and Carlile are also set to be the musical guests on NBC's Saturday Night Live on Apr. 5 in an episode hosted by Jack Black. It will be John's fourth time on SNL, after musical performances in 1981 and 1992 and a hosting/performing double stint in 2011. - Billboard, 3/20/25...... Bobby WeirIn an interview with Rolling Stone, the Grateful Dead's Bobby Weir suggested it's possible for the GD to reunite as a trio following the 2024 passing of bass player Phil Lesh. Lesh died in October, at the age of 84, and before his passing, Weir, 77, and bandmates Bill Kreutzmann, 78, and Mickey Hart, 81, had been planning a 60th anniversary reunion tour with Lesh. But should the band reunite, Weir admits he couldn't replace his beloved bandmate. "I think when Phil checked out, so did that notion, because we don't have a bass player who's been playing with us for 60 years now," he said. "And that was the intriguing prospect. I think you need somebody holding down the bottom. Phil had all kinds of ideas that were pretty much unique to him. I grew up with Phil holding down the bottom in his unique way." Asked about reuniting as a three-piece, he added: "I suppose I could go back out. I wouldn't put anybody in his place, so it would be a trio at this point. It'd be me and two drummers. I'd have to think about that. I haven't thought about it -- it's just now occurring to me that it's a possibility that we could do that, since you asked. I guess we'll just see what the three of us can pull together." In Dec. 2024, the trio turned up with Lesh's son, Grahame, to be honoured by then-Pres. Joe Biden at the Kennedy Center Honors. In 2015, Weir, Lesh, Kreutzmann, and Hart reunited for a "farewell tour," in which they claimed the five shows would be their last together. - Music-News.com, 3/21/25...... Stevie Wonder will headline the UK's BST Hyde Park festival for the third time when he performs on the Great Oak Stage on July 12. The R&B legend will join an already packed roster of BST Hyde Park 2025 headliners that includes the likes of Olivia Rodrigo, Zach Bryan, Sabrina Carpenter, Neil Young and the Chrome Hearts, Yusuf/Cat Stevens, Van Morrison, Jeff Lynne's ELO, the Doobie Brothers, Stevie Winwood and Dhani Harrison during various evenings from June 28-July 13. Wonder's U.K. tour will kick off his "Love, Light & Song" U.K. tour with a July 3 show at the Lytham Festival in Lancashire, followed by a July 5 gig at Co-Op Live in Manchester, a July 7 stop at Utilita Arena in Birmingham and a July 9 gig at Blackweir Field in Cardiff. Wonder was recently on hand at a memorial for Roberta Flack at the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, N.Y. - Billboard, 3/17/25...... Alice Cooper is coming out for British heavy metal legends Iron Maiden to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Cooper, who was inducted into the RRHOF himself in 2011, shouted out the band -- who are set to head out on the road this summer with their "Run For Your Lives" tour of the UK and Europe -- during a Q&A session on the Rock Legends Cruise in February. When the "School's Out" singer was asked which artists he'd like to see inducted into the Rock Hall, Cooper mentioned Maiden, saying: "I mean, come on -- Iron Maiden. How can you diss Iron Maiden? They have their own army out there." Alice also commented on the Rock Hall's pivot to include non-rock acts. "It's really hard for me to put somebody, let's say, like Missy Elliott in with The Who," he admitted. "I was in there going, 'Come on. It's rock and roll bands - that's what rock is. But then I kind of loosened up that idea. Even Dolly Parton said, 'I don't belong in the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame,' but then she made a rock record. I don't think anybody begrudges her that, but I would still I would prefer to see an Iron Maiden in there before I would see some of these other ones." Iron Maiden have been eligible to join the RRHOF since 2004, although they've only been nominated twice, in 2021 and 2023. Cooper meanwhile has confirmed two upcoming shows for the UK later this summer, marking his only performances in Scotland and Wales for 2025. - NME, 3/17/25...... The BeatlesA Vancouver, B.C. record store owner has discovered he that he bought, unbeknownst to himself, a rare and unknown Beatles recording from 1962. A few years ago, Rob Frith of Neptoon Records bought a reel-to-reel tape labelled "Beatles demo." But he didn't bother to actually listen to it; he just assumed someone had put a Beatles bootleg on the tape. Recently as he was transferring some tapes at broadcaster Larry Hennessey's recording studio and brought along the Beatles tape. "All of a sudden, it was like the Beatles are in the room playing," he said, a sense of astonishment still in his voice. "The quality was that good." Turns out, it really was a Beatles demo -- a legendary session they recorded on Jan. 1, 1962, for Decca Records. Decca rejected the band, which is arguably the biggest mistake in music history. Instead, EMI signed the Beatles a few months later and they became a worldwide sensation. The tape features the Beatles' original drummer Pete Best, not Ringo Starr. Most of the songs are covers like "Money," "To Know Him is to Love Him" and "The Sheik of Araby." But there are three original songs by John Lennon and Paul McCartney: "Like Dreamers Do," "Hello Little Girl," and "Love of the Loved." Not all 15 recordings in the Decca session have been officially released, although it's been widely bootlegged. Five songs from the session were officially released on the Beatles Anthology I in 1995. Whoever sold the Beatles tape probably didn't know what it was: they didn't hype it to Frith. "I actually can't remember who I bought it from," Frith said. "I think it was an engineer that worked in Vancouver for years and years that was moving." Frith won't be able to legally reproduce the music on the tape for copyright reasons. But it has value as an artifact: a copy of the Decca sessions that once belonged to Beatles manager Brian Epstein, which had only half the recordings, sold for 62,500 pounds (about CDN$117,000) in 2019. - Canoe.com, 3/19/25...... Marty Callner, an acclaimed TV and music video director responsible for numerous music videos, concert specials, and stand-up performances, passed away at his home in Malibu from natural causes on Mar. 17. He was 78. Helming specials featuring Robert Klein, Redd Foxx, Robin Williams and Myron Cohen, Callner also directed 1981's The Pee-Wee Herman Show, having discovered comedian Paul Reubens at The Groundlings in Los Angeles. Callner shifted his focus towards music with names such as Diana Ross, Paul Simon and Liza Minnelli, before rising to prominence as an unsung hero of the entertainment world through his prolific career directing music videos. Alongside videos for beloved names such as Stevie Nicks, Pat Benatar, Heart and The Bangles, Callner was responsible for some of the most memorable music videos in history. His impressive resum includes Cher,'s "If I Could Turn Back Time," Twisted Sister,'s "We're Not Gonna Take It" and "I Wanna Rock," Whitesnake,'s "Here I Go Again" and "Is This Love," Poison,'s "Every Rose Has Its Thorn," and numerous clips for Aerosmith,, including "Livin' on the Edge," "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)," and "Love in an Elevator." His career would also boast numerous live concert specials, including a number of famed pop stars of the '90s and '00s, including Madonna, Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake and NSYNC. - Billboard, 3/20/25...... Former heavyweight boxing champion George Foreman, known as much for his gregarious personality as his vicious right hook, died on Mar. 21. He was 76 years old. A two-time heavyweight champion, he also won gold at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics and later saw success, in his post-boxing career, pitching the now-omnipresent countertop grill that bears his name. Foreman's family announced his death in a post on Instagram, and they provided no cause of death. "A humanitarian, an Olympian, and two-time heavyweight champion of the world, He was deeply respected -- a force for good, a man of discipline, conviction, and a protector of his legacy, fighting tirelessly to preserve his good name -- for his family," it reads. Born Jan. 10, 1949, Foreman was the fifth of seven children and grew up "in the toughest neighborhood in Houston," he wrote in his book George Foreman's Guide To Life: How to Get Up Off the Canvas When Life Knocks You Down, which was published in 2003. "I didn't have a lot to look forward to in life," he wrote. "At least I didn't think I did. I was hungry all the time; I dropped out of school in the eighth grade; I relied on my size and my fists to make my way." At the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, Foreman, then 19, had already developed what ESPN would go on to call his "wrecking ball fists," and defeated Soviet opponent Jonas Cepulis. The referee had to stop the fight before the end of the second round. Foreman won his first heavyweight title at just 24 with a stunning knockout of the then-undefeated world champion Joe Frazier in 1973. Billed as "The Rumble in the Jungle," Foreman's most famous fight ended in his first professional loss to Muhammad Ali in Oct. 1974. He surrendered the heavyweight title in the knockout loss. But he would regain the belt after a 10-year retirement in a fight in 1994 against Michael Moorer at 45 years old. In the pivot to entrepreneur, Foreman saw success in the 1990s promoting the "George Foreman Lean Mean Fat Reducing Grilling Machine," a staple on TV infomercials and home-shopping channels, which was known for its ridged and slanted cooking surface that was designed to allow fat to slide off the grill. There's hardly a single lesson I've learned in life that didn't come the hard way... Everyone in life goes through a hard time sometime, but you can't let that define who you are," he wrote in his 2003 book. "What defines you is how you come back from those troubles and what you find in life to smile about." - ABC News, 3/21/25...... Jesse Colin YoungJesse Colin Young, the co-founder and vocalist for late '60s folk-rockers The Youngbloods, passed away at his Aiken, S.C. home on Mar. 16, according to his wife/manager Connie Young. He was 83. Born Perry Miller in New York City in 1941, Mr. Young grew up in a musical household and was encouraged by his parents to learn piano from a young age. Attending Massachusetts' Phillips Academy on a scholarship, Mr. Young studied guitar but was expelled, later enrolling in Ohio State University after high school before transferring to New York University. Deciding to become a full-time musician in the early '60s, he adopted the Jesse Colin Young moniker from famed western outlaws Jesse James and Cole Younger, and Formula One innovator Colin Chapman. Mr. Young issued his debut album, The Soul of a City Boy, in 1964 via Capitol Records, before following it up with Young Blood on Mercury in 1965. That same year, Mr. Young teamed up with guitarist and folk singer Jerry Corbitt with whom he would form The Youngbloods, named for his recently-released album. The band's second single, "Grizzly Bear," from their 1967 self-titled debut album, gave them their first success when it reached No. 52 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. The album also featured a version of the Chet Powers-penned "Get Together." The single would only hit No. 62 on the Hot 100 upon its release, but was reissued in 1969 where it went to No. 5, ultimately going Gold, and defining the musical sound that accompanied the peace-loving attitudes of the '60s. "As the frontman of The Youngbloods, he immortalized the ideals of the Woodstock generation with 'Get Together,' an international hit that called for peace and brotherhood during the turbulent 1960s," a statement released following Young's passing noted. "During the decades that followed, Young expanded both his audience and his artistic range, releasing a string of solo albums that mixed socially conscious lyrics with top-tier guitar skills and gorgeous vocals." The Youngbloods would split in 1972 following five albums, though would later reform in late 1984 for a brief tour. Mr. Young returned to his career as a solo musician upon the band's initial breakup, with his most successful record, 1975's Songbird, peaking at No. 26 on the Billboard Hot 200 albums chart upon its release. In 2012, Mr. Young retired from performing following a diagnosis of chronic Lyme disease, though he returned to the stage in 2016, with Dreamers arriving as his final album in 2019. "An acclaimed songwriter, singer, instrumentalist, producer, label owner, podcast host, and longtime social/environmental activist, [Young] has established a permanent place in America's musical landscape -- while continuing to make modern music that's every bit as vital as his work during the counterculture era," the statement issued upon Mr. Young's passing concluded. Mr. Young is survived by his wife and manager, Connie; their children Tristan and Jazzie Young; and two children from his first marriage, Juli and Cheyenne Young. - Billboard, 3/17/25...... Lenny Schultz, a former stand-up comic and star of Laugh-In, died on Mar. 16 at his home in Delray Beach, Fla. He was 91. A frequent guest on late night shows in the 1970s and 1980s, Mr. Schultz was a pioneer among a crop of comedians that embraced wacky and "out-there" comedy. People in the audiences of shows he starred in like Laugh-In would chant "Go crazy Lenny," in order to get him to bust out some of his zanier bits. When he wasn't playing weird characters like the Bionic Chicken, part of what Mr. Schutlz did so well was adding sound effects to his stand-up bits. In his his classic 1977 bit "It Started with a Bang," Mr. Schutlz recounted the formation of the solar system, with an incredible bit that anthropomorphized various explosions as well as the planets themselves. Even though his stand-up career was thriving, Mr. Schultz stuck with his job -- for more than a decade -- as a gym teacher, leaving clubs early when it was a school night. "The next day I'm in a smelly gym with kids! It was crazy!" he noted. In his stand-up act, he often was assisted by his second wife, Helen, who helped him with his sound cues and myriad props (they were married from 1965 until their 1982 divorce). She said he endured two bouts with COVID in his later years. The humble, funny, and delightfully weird Mr. Schutlz was often praised by such comedic legends as Jerry Seinfeld, Billy Crystal, John Stewart and David Letterman. His legacy lives on in the wide world of physical comedy, and anytime a comedian dares to step outside of anything remotely normal. - Men's Journal, 3/18/25.

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on March 17th, 2025

On Mar. 13 KISS co-founder Gene Simmons joined L.A. TV station Fox 11 to deliver a weather report with numerous KISS references, a quick rap and even tap dancing. Appearing alongsite meteorologist Adam Krueger, Simmons told Krueger that he looks "much better in real life than you do on TV," before going on to discuss the weather. Krueger dropped in a few Kiss references throughout the forecast such as: "There's been a lot of rain lately, and the rain you drive us wild, we'll drive you crazy talking about this rain," Recognizing the reference to "Rock and Roll All Nite," Simmons responded: "Hey, I wrote that. I like that." At the end of the forecast, Krueger told Simmons that it was time to wrap, but the bassist mistook the cue and began rapping "If you go to 7/11, go to heaven" before receiving a round of applause and laughter from the crew in the studio, adding in a quick tap dance. Simmons' debut stint as a weatherman can be viewed on YouTube. - New Musical Express, 3/17/25..... RushSpeaking to NYC radio station Q104.3 on Mar. 16, Rush guitarist Alex Lifeson revealed that several drummers reached out to his band to audition for late Rush drummer Neal Peart's job after Peart passed away in Jan. 2020 of brain cancer at age 67. Lifeson was asked if he and bassist Geddy Lee have considered reforming the band with a new drummer. "Oh, well, yeah, of course, because we're bombarded by it all the time," Lifeson said. "After Neil passed, it didn't take more than a few minutes before we started getting e-mails from all kinds of drummers who wanted to audition for the band, thinking that we were just gonna replace somebody that we played with for 40 years who wrote all the lyrics for our music." He continued: "I don't know what some of these people were thinking. So, yeah, we've had the conversation, because we can't avoid it." Rush last performed together for a farewell tour in 2015 playing 35 headline shows across North America. In 2022, Lifeson and Geddy Lee reunited in public to perform as part of the tribute shows in Los Angeles and London for late Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins. The pair also participated in a Peart tribute concert in Los Angeles in Sept. 2020. Peart's full interview can be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 3/17/25...... Taking a cue from The Cure's Robert Smith, Neil Young has taken to his Neil Young Archives website to walk back his "Platinum" ticket option, in which Ticketmaster introduced high priced Platinum tickets to the areas where scalpers were buying the most tickets for resale. "I have decided to let the people work this out," Young said. "Buy aggressively when the tickets come out or tickets will cost a lot more in a secondary market," he added. In Oct. 2024, Robert Smith told the London Times that he was "shocked by how much profit is made [by ticketing]." "I thought, 'We don't need to make all this money.' My fights with the label have all been about how we can price things lower. The only reason you'd charge more for a gig is if you were worried that it was the last time you would be able to sell a T-shirt," he said. Young's upcoming tour will see him accompanied on all shows by his new Chrome Hearts band, who released the grungy anthem "Big Change" in January and have an album tentatively scheduled for release in April. - Billboard, 3/16/25...... ZZ Top issued a statement on Instagram on Mar. 14 saying that their co-founding drummer Frank Beard will be taking time off of their tour to undergo a "health procedure." Beard will be replaced on the tour, which kicked off on Mar. 5, by the band's "fellow Texan and longtime tech member, percussionist and drummer" John Douglas, who they say has a "close relationship" with the group and previously filled in when Beard underwent an emergency appendectomy in Paris in 2002. The statement concluded by saying Beard is "looking forward to a speedy recovery." Beard has served as ZZ Top's drummer for over 55 years, after taking over from founding drummer Dan Mitchell who played on the band's first single "Salt Lick." Their most recent LP was the live album Raw in 2022, which followed the death of ZZ Top bassist, Dusty Hill, the previous year. Raw was an 11-track LP recorded for the trio's 2019 Netflix documentary, That Little Ol' Band From Texas. - NME, 3/16/25...... Jim MorrisonA new documentary claims that The Doors frontman Jim Morrison could still be alive. In Before the End, a new film created by Doors superfan Jeff Finn, conspiracy theories will be examined that suggest Morrison may have faked his own death after becoming disillusioned with the fame and attention his success had brought him. It will examine the "evidence" of the theories that Morrison may still be alive, including one revolving around a man named "Frank X," who works in maintenance in Syracuse, N.Y., but who some believe is actually Morrison in disguise. Morrison was found dead in the bathtub of his apartment in Paris by his girlfriend Pamela Courson on July 3, 1971. He was 27 years old at the time, with the official cause of death listed as heart failure. The trailer for Before The End has been shared on YouTube, and streaming options for the film can be found at www.zmachine.net. - NME, 3/13/25...... On Mar. 14 Journey suddenly halted their Texas concert at NRG Stadium during the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo following an electrical fire. Journey had performed just five songs when, during their 1981 hit "Don't Stop Believin'," they were forced to leave the stage after the sound cut out and the projector screens went dark. As the audience continued singing along to their 1981 hit, unaware of the issue, members of Journey's crew were reportedly seen rushing to the stage with fire extinguishers. Shortly after, the crowd was informed that the concert would not continue and that everyone needed to evacuate, according to Houston station KHOU. No injuries were reported. The livestock organization later posted on Facebook that they regretted the incident and apologized to fans, and "will provide updates regarding rescheduling options and refunds as soon as possible." Fan-captured video from the event can be viewed on X. - Billboard, 3/15/25...... Former Ozzy Osbourne bassist Rudy Sarzo says he is "honored" to have been invited to play at the upcoming final concert ever by Ozzy and Black Sabbath. Sabbath has announced they will return for one last concert at Villa Park in their hometown of Birmingham on July 5. The upcoming show will see the group's most iconic line-up -- comprising frontman Osbourne, guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Ward -- play live together for the first time in two decades. Sarzo, who played bass for Osbourne for a year in the '80s, said during an intervew with radio station WDHA 105.5 that last fall that he received a text from Sabbath show co-organizer Tom Morello that said, basically, "Hi, Rudy. [It's] Tom. Sharon and Ozzy asked me to see if you were available and wanted to participate in this event." Reflecting on the significance of the show to him personally, Sarzo said: "At that moment, for so many reasons, it was like time stood still and brought me back, like, 40 years. So after I got out that trance, I immediately said, 'Yes. Of course.'" Osbourne, who last performed a full set in 2018, recently said in a SiriusXM interview that due to his health issues he isn't planning on doing a full set with Black Sabbath, but "little bits and pieces with them... I am doing what I can, where I feel comfortable." - NME, 3/14/25...... '70s funk-rock icon George Clinton has filed a $100 million copyright lawsuit against his former business partner Armen Boladian and his Bridgeport Music company over ownership of his music. The Parliament-Funkadelic musician -- who is set to be be inducted into the Songwriters Hall Of Fame later in 2025 -- has alleged that Boladian fraudulently obtained copyrights to approximately 90 per cent of his catalogue. In a lawsuit on Mar. 11 in Florida District Court, Clinton alleged Boladian and Bridgeport, as well as Westbound Records, Nine Records, Southfield Music and Eastbound Records, have unlawfully profited from his music. He went on to hold a press conference outside of the Apollo Theatre to announce the suit alongside his attorney Ben Crump, stating that he aimed to reclaim ownership of his catalogue to provide for his family. Richard Busch, Boladian's lawyer, told Variety that "This is just the latest in a series of lawsuits that Mr. Clinton has filed against Bridgeport and Armen Boladian over the last 30 years raising the same exact issues. He has lost each and every time, including in the very courthouse in which he has filed this latest lawsuit. We will obviously therefore be moving to dismiss this lawsuit and will be seeking sanctions." Parliament-Funkadelic released their last album Medicaid Fraud Dog in 2018, marking their first new music in 38 years. Shortly after, Clinton announced his retirement from the road in 2019 and played his final shows in 2022 after they were delayed by the pandemic. - NME, 3/14/25...... Anne MurrayCanadian pop music legend Anne Murray will be honoured with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2025 Junos in Vancouver, B.C. on Mar. 30. Nova Scotia native Murray, the most Juno-awarded artist in the history of Canada's national music honours, has won 25 Juno Awards. "Canada's National Arts Centre has been honoured to support countless Canadian performing artists from the beginning of their careers to the international stage, including this year's honouree, Anne Murray," says Christopher Deacon, President and CEO of the National Arts Centre. Presented by the National Arts Centre/Centre National des Arts, Murray will be the first performer to receive the recognition since it was awarded to Pierre Juneau in 1989. Murray, the singer behind such classics as "Snowbird" and others has sold over 55 million albums and has won four Grammy Awards, including best female pop vocal performance in 1978 for "You Needed Me." Her debut hit "What About Me" launched her career in 1968. - Canoe.com, 3/13/25...... Actress Amanda Seyfried has denied that her appearance on The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon earlier in March in which she performed an impromptu cover of Joni Mitchell's 1971 classic "California" was an audition for Cameron Crowe's forthcoming Joni Mitchell biopic. Speaking with Variety's Just For Variety podcast, Seyfried said she never meant for the cover to be taken as an audition: "It was not an audition. In fact, I didn't even consider that, which is funny. What I know about that project is that I'm very, very much aged-out of [playing] young Joni." Crowe first announced his Mitchell project in 2023, and a cast has yet to be announced though it was reported that Oscar-winning actress Meryl Streep -- a close friend of Mitchell's -- was in talks to portray an older version of the singer-songwriter in the biopic. - NME, 3/14/25...... A longtime dream of R&B/soul legend Otis Redding has finally come true as the Otis Redding Foundation has announced that the Otis Redding Center for the Arts (ORCA) will celebrate its grand opening in Redding's hometown of Macon, Ga., on Mar. 22. Following her husband's untimely death in 1967, ORCA president founder Zelma Redding has remained committed to fulfilling their vision of giving back to the community by enriching young people through the arts. "This is a dream that my husband and I shared," she said in a statement. "And being able to turn that dream into a reality with the help of my children, grandchildren and all of those who support us, means more to me than words can express." The Otis Redding Center for the Arts is a state-of-the-art, 15,000 square-foot facility housing seven creative labs, five private lesson rooms, an amphitheater and the O3 Recording Studio. The latter is named after the Reddings' son, Otis Redding III, who died in April 2023. The famed Otis Redding statue, previously located in Gateway Park, now stands outside of ORCA at the corner of Cotton Avenue and Cherry Street. Also nearby is the Otis Redding Museum at 339 Cotton Avenue. Otis Redding, nicknamed "The King of Soul," died on Dec. 10, 1967, in a plane crash near Madison, Wisc., at age 26. - Billboard, 3/13/25...... Joan Baez will appear with an electic panel of fellow guests on the season debut of John Mulaney's new Netflix series Everybody's Live With John Mulaney. In a prelude to a story about Martin Luther King Jr., Baez said she needed to "set the context" for what is going on in our country at the moment. "You said I could say anything I want out here," Baez said to Mulaney. "We're all here to be silly and have fun, and as long as we recognize the fact that our democracy is going up in flames we're being run by a bunch of really incompetent billionaires." Baez did not specifically note who said billionaires are, but it appeared she was talking about Pres. Donald Trump and DOGE boss Elon Musk, who have been deeply slashing the federal government workforce over the past two months in their attempt to cut government spending in a manner that has raised alarms about the impact on the environment, American's health and safety of the LGBTQ+ community. After Mulaney joked about the thought of Baez driving a Tesla, the singer noted that she actually used to own one of Musk's all-electric cars after her assistant suggested she try one, but that she now has serious buyer's remorse. "I hated that thing," Baez, 84, said. "But I thought I was supposed to like it. So I drove off in it. Within 45 minutes I had smashed it into an oak tree on my property I was thinking, 'That's a sign.'" While Baez said the crash was not on purpose, the joke came amid a national, and international, backlash against Musk's chainsaw-like slashing of federal programs that has seen Tesla vehicles and showrooms vandalized. "I hated it," Baez repeated about the car without specifying when she owned it. "It was too big I sold it and got one-half the amount of money I paid for." Baez's appearance on the Mulaney show can be streamed on X. - Billboard, 3/13/25...... Spinal TapTime to "turn it up to 11" once again. The highly anticipated sequel of the 1984 comedy, This Is Spinal Tap, officially has a release date. Spinal Tap II: The End Continues will hit theaters on Sept. 12 with Bleeker Street Studios gaining the U.S. distribution rights, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Rob Reiner is returning as director, and also reprising his role as documentarian Martin "Marty" DiBergi. "This Is Spinal Tap isn't just a movie -- it's a cultural touchstone that pioneered the mockumentary genre and left an indelible mark on both film and music," Bleeker Street CEO said in a statement. "Returning to this world through Spinal Tap II is an extraordinary chance to celebrate its legacy while creating something fresh for both new and devoted audiences." The original film -- in which most of the dialogue was improvised -- follows the rockers on a 1982 U.S. tour to promote their Smell the Glove album. Though the film did modestly at the box office at the time, it has since blossomed into a must-see movie with a cult following, even making it onto the Library of Congress' list of culturally significant artifacts. Spinal Tap II will reunite the band after a 15-year break for one last concert. Christopher Guest, Michael McKean and Harry Shearer will be returning in the sequel as the fictional English band Spinal Tap, while Fran Drescher will also be reprising her role as publicist Bobbi Flekman. Chad Smith, Lars Ulrich, Elton John, Paul McCartney, Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood are all set to make cameos in the upcoming film. - Billboard, 3/12/25...... The first trailer for the upcoming John Lennon and Yoko Ono documentary One to One has been shared on YouTube. The two-minute clip opens with audio of Lennon calling someone named Howard, in which the woman on the other end begins to spell out the singer's name only to realize who she's talking to. "You're a member of the Beatles?" she asks. "That's right, yeah," Lennon answers nonchalantly. From there, the footage explodes into a collage of images of bombs falling in the Vietnam war and the couple preparing for a charity show as Lennon says, "good morning, folks. Have you had your breakfast yet?," accompanied by footage of the former Beatle having his bowl of morning cereal. The movie, directed by Oscar-winning director Kevin Macdonald, is a chronicle of the couple's new life in New York post-Beatles in 1972, following them as they move into an apartment in Greenwich Village and prepare for their "One to One" concerts, a two-show all-star charity event for children with special needs that they threw at Madison Square Garden in Aug. 1972. It was the only full-length performance by Lennon in the wake of the Fab Four's split two years earlier and in addition to the Plastic Ono Band it featured sets by Stevie Wonder, Sha Na Na and Roberta Flack, among others. - Billboard, 3/13/25...... Willie Nelson took to Instagram on Mar. 12 to formally announce his 154th studio album, Oh What a Beautiful World, will drop on Apr. 25. Like past albums, Oh What A Beautiful World sees Nelson dedicate an entire album to interpreting the works of notable songwriters. This time, he's focusing on songs written by Rodney Crowell. Nelson has released the title track as the record's first single, and it can be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 3/13/25...... Mike CampbellTom Petty and the Heartbreakers guitarist Mike Campbell has told Guitar Player magazine that his "conscience is clear" and he "doesn't torture himself" over his bandleader Tom Petty's 2017 death from an accidental drug overdose. Petty's death at age 66 sent shockwaves through the rock community, especially after a coroner's report determined that a mix of opioids -- including fentanyl and oxycodone -- in his system contributed to a fatal "mixed drug toxicity." The rock legend had gone through periods of drug use throughout his life, but famously got clean in 1999 when his future wife, Dana York, convinced him to go to rehab. Campbell, 75, explained that while he recognized Petty was no longer sober near the end of his life, he felt it was impossible to get through to his longtime bandmate of over 40 years. "With Tom it was like, 'Your private life is yours, and mine is mine. I can see what you're doing, but out of respect for you, I'll trust you'll do the right thing. If you need me, call me,'" he recalled. "I could have gone to him and said, 'Hey, you've got to cut this s--- out,' which I kind of did once to the manager. But the thing with Tom was, you could say that and he would just look at you like, 'But I'm Tom Petty. I'm going to do whatever I f---ing want. Get out of my face.'" Campbell, who will release a memoir about his career with Petty called Heartbreaker on Mar. 18, suggested that "the sides of [Petty's] personality" always made it challenging to get close to the musician he worked with for more than 40 years. "He was intimidating, but there was love there. I think one reason we stayed together is because we kept our private lives separate. We didn't socialize that much off tour," he insisted. The last time the pair worked together was only a week before Petty's death, when they concluded their 40th Anniversary Tour at the Hollywood Bowl in Sept. 2017. When Campbell was pressed on why he didn't "get in [Petty's] face" about his noticeable decline, the musician replied: "I don't torture myself. My conscious is clear because Tom knew that I knew, and Tom knew that I wasn't forcing him and getting in his face about it." Since Petty's death in 2017, Campbell and Crowded House's Neil Finn have joined Fleetwood Mac as replacements for Lindsey Buckingham following the latter guitarist's acrimonious departure from the group. - US Weekly, 3/13/25.

Billy Joel announced on Mar. 11 that he's postponing his current North American spring tour for four months due to an undisclosed medical condition. Joel, 75, underwent surgery recently, and says he'll use the time to recover and undergo physical therapy. "While I regret postponing any shows, my health must come first," Joel, 75, said in a statement posted to Instagram. "I look forward to getting back on stage and sharing the joy of live music with our amazing fans. Thank you for your understanding." He's expected to make a full recovery, with the tour resuming at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh on July 5. The stadium tour, which includes Joel often pairing with fellow legends Stevie Nicks, Sting or Rod Stewart, had been slated to get underway Mar. 15 in Toronto. It is unknown if the surgery was related to the spill the Piano Man took on stage Feb. 22 during a show at the Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Conn., while tossing his microphone during "It's Still Rock and Roll to Me." Joel quickly recovered from the fall, seemingly uninjured, and finished the show. The delay will not affect Joel's three New York City-area summer shows. He'll play Yankee Stadium in the Bronx on July 18; Metlife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., on Aug. 8; and Citi Field, in Queens, N.Y., on Aug. 21, making him the first artist to play all three NYC-area stadiums in one summer. Stewart will join him July 18, Nicks on Aug. 8 and Sting on Aug. 21. - Billboard, 3/11/25...... Peter WolfFormer J. Geils Band frontman Peter Wolf has just released a new book, Waiting on the Moon: Artists, Poets, Drifters, Grifters, and Goddesses, and though it tracks Wolf's childhood to relatively recently, it isn't a standard, linear memoir. Rather, it's a collection of stories -- and a fascinating, good-humored one at that -- as the New York-born Wolf regales readers with his Forrest Gump-like life of encounters with such famous stars as Marilyn Monroe, who once literally fell asleep on him as a 10-year-old while both attended a screening of a film at a local movie theater. Also included are recollections of his interactions and relationships with blues heroes such as Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and John Lee Hooker, as well as his fellow rockers Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, the Rolling Stones, John Lennon and Harry Nilsson, Sly Stone, Aretha Franklin and more. "My goal was to make a book of short stories, treat each chapter like its own short story," explains Wolf, who was an art student and radio DJ in Boston as well as a musician," says Wolf, who joined the J. Geils Band in 1967 and fronted them to multi-platinum fame in 1981 with the chart-topping album Freeze-Frame and its No. 1 smash "Centerfold." Other subjects include his actress former wife Faye Dunaway, to whom he was wed from 1974-79, and the J. Geils Band, which asked him to leave the group in 1983. "I didn't want this to be a kiss-and-tell book; I just wanted to write about these incredible people that I had the privilege to meet and to get to know to certain degrees and capture that," he says. Wolf has recorded an audio version of Waiting On the Moon and has a handful of author appearances planned throughout March, including bookstores in Cambridge, Mass. (3/11), New York City (3/12), Ridgewood, N.J. (3/13), Portsmouth, N.H. (3/18), and Philadelphia (3/27), with an Apr. 8 stop in Madison, Conn. He's also "about 80 percent" finished with his new solo album, which will be his first since 2016's A Cure For Loneliness. "I think if the book connects with people it would even put the wind beneath my wings to finish the record and put it out," he says. A reissue of the J. Geils Band's classic 1972 concert album "Live" Full House is also slated for this year, according to Wolf. - Billboard, 3/11/25...... Such R&B/pop icons as Stevie Wonder, Valerie Simpson, Phylicia Rashad, Dionne Warwick, Alicia Keys, India.Arie and Peabo Bryson were among those lifting up their voices in tribute to the late pioneering singer-songwriter-musician Roberta Flack at a jam-packed celebration at New York's Abyssinian Baptist Church on Mar. 10. Also making unexpected appearances were Ms. Lauryn Hill and Wyclef Jean, with Hill delivering a beautiful and measured take on the Flack classic "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" as emotional Hill sniffled her way through reflections about her late idol. "The artistry of Ms. Roberta Flack was beyond trailblazing.... Roberta Flack is a legend," Hill said in part. Stevie Wonder performed "If It's Magic," a track from his 1976 platinum album Songs in the Key of Life, and a tune that he wrote for Flack, "I Can See the Sun." Noted Wonder at the end, "She spread love all over this world." Also in attendance was a diverse range of artists and industry personages such as Clive Davis ("There will never be another Roberta Flack"), Oprah Winfrey and Flack's former Dakota apartment building neighbor, Yoko Ono. The celebration program also noted that donations in Flack's memory can be sent to the RobertaFlackFoundation.org. Flack died on Feb. 24 at age 88. - Billboard, 3/10/25...... Jerry GarciaA first-of-its-kind jazz and super club in Chicago's West Loop built and designed in honor of legendary Grateful Dead frontman Jerry Garcia was announced on Mar. 10 by venue impressario Peter Shapiro. Shapiro has long collaborated with original members of the iconic 1960s band through projects like the "Fare Thee Well" concerts honoring the band's 50th anniversary, and also worked as the long-time promoter for late GD founding member Phil Lesh. For the new club, he has enlisted the help of Garcia's family members, including his daughter Trixie Garcia, who said the inspiration for Garcia's was "a live music club with a comfortable atmosphere for artists and guests... A place where Jerry could get his musical fix without going on the road." The 300-capacity concert venue will feature a full bar and restaurant, according to Shapiro, adding that the concept for Garcia's comes from iconic old supper and jazz clubs of yesteryear, including New York's Birdland, Harlem's esteemed Bill's Place or the Spotted Cat on Frenchmen Street in New Orleans. A full list of shows at the new venue can be found at GarciasChicago.live. - Billboard, 3/10/25...... A two-hour Ringo Starr special, Ringo & Friends at the Ryman, is currently streaming on-demand on the Paramount+ channel for Paramount+ with Showtime subscribers. The special, which premiered on Mar. 10 on the CBS network, celebrates the music and legacy of Starr through the lens of country music. The Beatles drummer brought his love of country to life with two concerts taped at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium on Jan. 14-15. In an exclusive clip from Billboard on YouTube, Starr, with a little help from friends like Jack White, performs the Carl Perkins rockabilly classic "Matchbox," which the Beatles covered in 1964. Other "friends" in the special include Sheryl Crow, Emmylou Harris, Mickey Guyton, Jamey Johnson, Rodney Crowell, the War and Treaty, and Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle, both of whom appear on Ringo's new album Look Up, a current country Top 10 LP. - Billboard, 3/10/25...... In other Beatles-related news, Lady Gaga has revealed that the late John Lennon would be her dream collaborator. During a fan-led presser for her new album Mayhem, Gaga was asked by a fan was about her dream collaborator, dead or alive. "I think it would have been John Lennon. I think he had such a beautiful heart and I think that's one of my favorite things in like the history of music is when you don't just remember an artist for their music but you remember them for their heart," she said. In 2012, the "Born This Way"' hitmaker was awarded the Lennonono Grant For Peace by Lennon's widow Yoko Ono. She also performed a cover of "Imagine" at the opening of the inaugural European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan back in 2015. Mayhem, Gaga's highly anticipated seventh album, arrived on Mar. 7. - New Musical Express, 3/7/25...... '80s pop star Rick Springfield, who released his first album in the U.S., Comic Book Heroes, in 1974, has revealed in a new People interview that he has brain damage from a bad stage fall he took in 2000. Springfield, 75, said that after getting a whole-body MRI scan he was told that he still has lasting brain damage from an on-stage tumble during a Las Vegas show 25 years ago. "I fell 25 feet, hit my head and then wood came down and hit my head, and then my head hit the stage again," Springfield said of the nasty fall. "I thought I had just broken my wrist, but on the scan I found out I have some brain damage from the fall, so I'm working on trying to repair that." Despite being halfway through his seventh decade, the "Jessie's Girl" singer said he's still feeling like he's in his 20s in his head thanks to daily exercise, a mostly pescatarian diet and the dialing back of his alcohol intake a few years ago, which has also had a positive impact on his lifelong battle with depression. Springfield released his Big Hits: Rick Springfield's Greatest Hits, Volume 2 in December, and is slated to hit the road on the" I Want My 80s Tour" this summer alongside such fellow 1980s stars as John Waite, Wang Chung, Paul Young and John Cafferty. Details can be found in his Instagram page. - Billboard, 3/10/25...... Rick Springfield and Tommy JamesIn other pop idol news, '60s hitmaker Tommy James was forced to end a recent concert in Las Vegas an hour into the performance after suffering from exhaustion. James, 77, was singing "Do Something to Me" at the Golden Nugget casino on Mar. 7 when he was forced to stop the performance and take a breather before he could finish the 90-minute set. His rep said the reason was that he had been up early for his five-hour flight to Sin City. The rep confirmed the "Draggin' the Line" singer was back in New Jersey and doing "fine working on his Sirius XM radio show Gettin Together with Tommy James." James and his band The Shondells are next due onstage on Mar. 15 in Tulsa, Okla. The musician is best known as the frontman of the rock band, who had a string of hits in the '60s with "Mony Mony," "Crimson and Clover" and "I Think We're Alone Now." James is a prolific artist, having released 12 solo studio albums and eight albums with the Shondells. More than 300 musicians have recorded renditions of his songs with three of the covers reaching the Top 10 on the hit parade in the 1980s: Joan Jett's "Crimson and Clover," Tiffany's "I Think We're Alone Now," and Billy Idol's "Mony Mony." - Music-News.com, 3/10/25...... Michael Jackson's eldest son Prince Jackson attended the Sydney, Australia opening night of "MJ: The Musical" at Lyric Theatre, Star City on Mar. 8. This isn't the first time Prince has shown his support for the production, which debuted on Broadway in 2022 and has since expanded globally. In Mar. 2024, he attended the London preview night alongside his siblings, Paris Jackson and Bigi Jackson, continuing their tradition of honoring their father's legacy. Two years prior, he and Paris made an appearance at the 2022 Tony Awards, where "MJ: The Musical" was nominated for multiple awards, including Best Musical. The siblings introduced the cast's performance of "Smooth Criminal "that night, with Prince reflecting on their father's deep love for musicals. "A lot of people seem to think our dad Michael Jackson changed popular music forever. And who are we to disagree?" he said during the awards show. "But what people may not know is that he loved musicals, on film and on the stage." Following its success in New York, the musical has expanded to London's West End, a U.S. national tour, and now Australia, where it will run in Sydney before moving to other cities. The four-time Tony Award-winning production transports audiences back to 1992, inside the high-stakes creative process of Jackson's "Dangerous World Tour." Through the lens of an MTV documentary crew, the musical explores not just Jackson's signature moves and music, but his relentless artistic vision and the challenges behind the scenes. Tickets for "MJ: The Musical" are available now at mjthemusical.com.au. - Billboard, 3/10/25...... Legendary KISS bassist Gene Simmons is giving fans the chance to live out their dreams of rock stardom by letting them be his roadie for a day with his Gene Simmons Band -- but it comes with a hefty price tag. As Simmons prepares to mount a tour with his band in April, the rocker has launched a handful of "Experiences" in which fans can purchase ahead of the upcoming dates. One of them is the "Gene Simmons Bass Experience," which allows you (and three guests) the chance to meet Simmons after the stage. The other of these experiences (dubbed "The Ultimate Gene Simmons Experience"') allows the purchaser to become "Simmons' personal assistant & band roadie for the day." This package costs a total of $12,495 (in addition to the original ticket price), and also includes a bass guitar that had been used by Simmons during a KISS rehearsal. Only one experience per concert is available, with 26 dates currently scheduled across North America between April and August. More info can be found at www.genesimmonsaxe.com. - Billboard, 3/10/25...... Native Englishman and current Connecticut resident Keith Richards is being honoured with a new Connecticut residents award. Richards, who has been living in The Constitution State since 1985, was awarded the Connecticut Governor's Award of Excellence on Mar. 5, which recognizes creativity, passion and generosity in the area. The Rolling Stones guitarist is the first person to receive this award, and he was given a custom-designed medallion during a ceremony at The Westport Library in Westport, Conn. Gov. Ned Lamont, a self-professed Stones fan, praised the veteran musician for his music career and his contributions to local charitable causes. "Well, thank you very much. And thank you Connecticut," Richards while accepting the award. "You kind of get lost for words with something like this around your neck. All I gotta say is, you know, I've been here for 40 years, and it's been a great place for me. The family's had a great life, The kids grew up great and incredibly happy about everything." Meanwhile, the Stones have been reported to be scrapping their plans to tour across the UK and Europe in 2025. According to the UK paper The Times, in late January the group announced they have opted against a return to touring later in the year. This reportedly came following a proposed multi-million pound stop at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium being rejected, amid other shows across Europe. - NME, 3/9/25...... Ralf HutterKraftwerk kicked off the North American leg of their "Multimedia" world tour at Philadelphia's Franklin Music Hall on Mar. 6, then performed on Mar. 8 at the Pittsburgh venue Stage AE Outdoors and on Mar. 10 in Montreal. Some of the tracks played by the German electronic-pop pioneers include "Autobahn," "Airwaves," Spacelab," "Neon Lights," and "Radioactivity." The encore at the Philidelphia gig included "The Robots" and "Planet of Visions." Ralf Hütter & co. announced the tour back in December. In total, 27 dates have been lined up for March and April 2025, including March stops in Montreal, Boston, Brooklyn, New York, Washington, D.C., Charlotte, Orlando, Miami, Atlanta, New Orleans, Memphis, Nashville, Detroit, Chicago, Minneapolis, and Kansas City, Mo. In April, they'll visit Denver, Portland, Ore., Vancouver, B.C., Indio, Calif, Salt Lake City, Indio, Calif., and Austin, Tex., before wrapping in Dallas on Apr. 24. Some fan-captured footage from the opening gigs have been shared on Instagram. - NME, 3/8/25...... After having an Order of Canada and Polaris Music Prize rescinded, Canadian singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie has now had a Juno Award along with her induction into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame revoked after facing criticism and scrutiny following a 2023 CBC investigation that cast serious doubt on her claims of Indigenous identity. The Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (CARAS), the organization that administers the Junos, released a statement, writing that the singer-songwriter does not meet eligibility requirements following her confirmation that she is not Canadian -- similar criteria that the Polaris Prize cited. It was a "not a reflection of Ms. Sainte-Marie's artistic contributions," CARAS writes. CARAS says it made the decision following a thorough review and consultations with the CARAS Indigenous Music Advisory Committee. In January of this year, Sainte-Marie's Order of Canada was terminated. On Mar. 4, The Canadian Press reported Sainte-Marie issued a statement about the termination, saying that she returned the Order "with a good heart" and affirming that she is a U.S. citizen. "My Cree family adopted me forever and this will never change," she added. - Billboard, 3/7/25...... On Mar. 8 New Mexico authorities released a statement saying Oscar-winning actor Gene Hackman likely died of heart disease and Alzheimer's after his dead body and his wife Betsy Arakawa's corpse were found dead in his Santa Fe, N.M., home on Feb. 26. Hackman, 95, likely died about a week after Arakawa died due to hantavirus, a medical examiner said. Hackman died of cardiovascular disease, with Alzheimer's disease as a significant contributing factor, said Heather Jarrell, the chief medical examiner for the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator. Arakawa likely died about a week earlier, on Feb. 11, of hantavirus, a potentially fatal virus transmitted by mice. Both deaths fall under natural causes, which can include heart disease, stroke, cancer, respiratory failure, infections and age-related complications. Authorities said at the time they did not suspect foul play, and the investigation continues. - Variety, 3/8/25...... Brian JamesPunk rock pioneer Brian James, founding member of English band The Damned, died on Mar. 6. He was 70. The news of the guitarist's death was shared with fans via a post on James' Facebook page on the day of his death. "It is with great sadness that we announce the death of one of the true pioneers of music, guitarist, songwriter and true gentleman, Brian James," it read. The message added that the musician was surrounded by family when he "passed peacefully." James formed The Damned in 1976 with bandmates Captain Sensible, Dave Vanian and Rat Scabies. That year, they released what is considered the first-ever British punk single: "New Rose." The guitarist would work on two albums with the foursome before leaving the group: 1977's Damned Damned Damned and Music for Pleasure. Captain Sensible honored his late bandmate with a post on X on Mar. 6, sharing a photo of himself with James and writing, "We're shocked to hear that creator of @thedamned, our great chum Brian James has sadly gone." A lovely bloke that I feel so lucky to have met all those years ago and for some reason chose me to help in his quest for the music revolution that became known as punk," he added. "Cheers BJ!" After leaving The Damned, James would form short-lived group Tanz Der Youth before starting The Lords of the New Church with Stiv Bators. His career came full circle in 2022 when James reunited with The Damned for a string of U.K. live shows. He is survived by his wife, Minna, his son, Charlie, and his daughter-in-law, Alicia. - Billboard, 3/7/25.