Monday, December 15, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on December 16th, 2025

Rob ReinerThe Hollywood community is in shock over the news of the untimely death of revered actor/director/activist Rob Reiner, who with his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, were found dead on the evening of Nov. 14 at their home in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. Authorities are investigating the deaths of Reiner, 78, and Michele, 70, as "apparent homicides" and have arrested one of the couple's three children, 32-year-old Nick Reiner, as a suspect and who is being held without bail. According to witnesses, Rob and Nick, who had a history of addiction problems and temporary homelessness, were arguing earlier in the evening at a Christmas party thrown by Conan O'Brien, causing the Reiners to leave the party early. Their fatally stabbed bodies were later discovered at home by their daughter, Romy Reiner. The son of late comedy giant Carl Reiner, Rob went on to become one, himself, as one of the preeminent filmmakers of his generation with movies such as The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally... and This Is Spinal Tap. Born in the Bronx on Mar. 6, 1947, Rob quickly set out to follow his father into entertainment. He studied at the University of California, Los Angeles film school and, in the 1960s, began appearing in small parts in various television shows, including The Andy Griffith Show. After starting out as a writer for The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, Reiner's breakthrough came when he was, at age 23, cast in producer Norman Lear's All in the Family as Archie Bunker's liberal son-in-law, Michael "Meathead" Stivic. On All in the Family, Reiner served as a pivotal foil to Carroll O'Connor's bigoted, conservative Archie Bunker. Reiner was five times nominated for an Emmy for his performance on the show, winning in 1974 and 1978. In Lear, Reiner also found a mentor. He called him "a second father." But by the 1980s, Reiner struck out on his own as a feature film director, churning out some of the most beloved films of that, or any, era. His first film, the largely improvised 1984 cult classic This Is Spinal Tap, remains the definitive "mockumentary." Rob ReinerAfter the 1985 John Cusack-starred summer comedy, The Sure Thing, Reiner made Stand By Me (1986), The Princess Bride (1987) and When Harry Met Sally... (1989), a four-year stretch that resulted in a trio of American classics, all of them among the most often quoted movies of the 20th century (it was Reiner's mother who delivered the immortal quip "I'll have what she's having" in When Harry Met Sally..., as Meg Ryan faked an orgasm during a date with Billy Crystal). For the next four decades, Reiner, a warm and gregarious presence on screen and an outspoken liberal advocate off it, remained a constant fixture in Hollywood. The production company he co-founded, Castle Rock Entertainment, launched an enviable string of hits, including TV's Seinfeld and the acclaimed prison drama The Shawshank Redemption. By the turn of the century, its success rate had fallen considerably, but Reiner revived it earlier this decade. This fall, Reiner and Castle Rock released the long-in-coming sequel Spinal Tap II: The End Continues. All the while, Reiner was one of the film industry's most passionate Democratic activists, regularly hosting fundraisers and campaigning for liberal issues. He was co-founder of the American Foundation for Equal Rights, which challenged in court California's ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8. He also chaired the campaign for Prop 10, a California initiative to fund early childhood development services with a tax on tobacco products. Reiner was also a critic of Pres. Donald Trump, who posted a typical hostile reaction to the iconic liberal's death which has drawn criticism from both sides of the political aisle. By the late '90s, Reiner's films (1996's Ghosts of Mississippi, 2007's The Bucket List) no longer had the same success rate. But he remained a frequent actor, often memorably enlivening films like Sleepless in Seattle (1993) and The Wolf of Wall Street (2013). In 2023, he directed the documentary Albert Brooks: Defending My Life. In an interview earlier in 2025 with Seth Rogen, Reiner suggested everything in his career boiled down to one thing. "All I've ever done is say, 'Is this something that is an extension of me?' For 'Stand by Me,' I didn't know if it was going to be successful or not. Rob ReinerAll I thought was, 'I like this because I know what it feels like." The sudden deaths of Reiner and his wife are being moured by high-profile figures from the worlds of entertainment and politics, including Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, Elijah Wood, James Woods, John Cusack, Kevin Nealon, Eric Idle, Kamala Harris and Paul McCartney, who made an appearance in Reiner's final film, Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, which was released in September this year. Alongside a photo from the film's shoot, Sir Paul wrote on Instagram: "What a tragedy the death of Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele, is. It is so shocking in many ways but for me especially so, because over the last year I had been working with him. He directed me in Spinal Tap II: The End Continues. He was such an upbeat, lovable man. Life can be so unfair and this tragedy proves it." He continued: "His father, Carl Reiner, was a great humourist before him and Rob followed in his dad's footsteps doing a terrific job making many great films. I will always have fond memories of Rob and the idea that he and his wife will no longer be in the world with us is heartbreaking. Thanks for all the humour, Rob. Rest in Peace. Love Paul." - AP/NME, 12/15/25.

After the release of a deluxe 50th anniversary edition of their chart-topping 1975 album Wish You Were Here on Dec. 12, Pink Floyd are on course to take the Christmas UK Number 1 album in 2025. Dropping on digital platforms and available on 3LP, 2CD, Blu-ray and box set formats, the release includes six previously unreleased alternate versions and demos, presenting Floyd's eighth studio album in a brand-new way. In 1979, Pink Floyd scored the UK Official Christmas Number 1 single with "Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2." - New Musical Express, 12/15/25...... On Dec. 15 Cliff Richard revealed he is undergoing treatment for prostate cancer, and has described the screening process is "absolutely ridiculous." Sir Cliff, 85, said the cancer was discovered when he had a check-up ahead of a recent tour, but that it had been caught early and had not spread. "I was going to Australia and to New Zealand, and the promoter said, 'Well, we need your insurance, so you need to be checked up for something'. They found that I had prostate cancer," the "Devil Woman" hitmaker said during an appearance on ITV's Good Morning Britain. "But the good fortune was that it was not very old, and the other thing is that it had not metastasised. It hadn't moved, nothing into bones or anything like that. And the cancer's gone at the moment," he added. Sir Cliff said he wants to work with King Charles to improve cancer screening for men across the country, after the King spoke recently about his own cancer treatment and stressed the importance of routine checks to catch cancer at an early stage. Richard went on to describe the current lack of a national screening programme in England was "absolutely ridiculous." "We all deserve to have the same ability to have a test and then start the treatments really early," he said. "It seems to me -- I've only been for one year now in touch with cancer, but every time I've talked with anybody, this has come up, and so I think our government must listen to us." - NME, 12/15/25...... Brian MayQueen's Brian May has gifted Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi with a version of his homemade left-handed Red Special guitar. May's original Red Special was assembled from scratch in the early 1960s by May with his father Harold, as he was unable to afford a major brand. Built with mahogany from an old fireplace mantle and an oak fingerboard with mother-of-pearl buttons, it remained May's primary guitar on stage throughout Queen's success in the '70s and '80s and became synonymous with the band's sound. Now in an Instagram post on Dec. 9, Iommi revealed that May has presented him with a customized left-handed replica of the model. Alongside photos of himself playing the instrument, Iommi wrote: "Huge thanks to my best friend @brianmayforreal and master builder Andrew Guyton @guyton_guitars for this incredible left-handed Red Special replica. Andrew personally delivered it last week - a true gift from Brian, two years in the making. Christmas came early!" Guyton added: "It's built with the exact vintage construction of Brian May's original Red Special, but shaped to match Tony's iconic Jaydee Old Boy neck. Features a built-in treble booster and authentic vintage-style pots and pickups to replicate the classic tone." Earlier in 2025, May teamed up with Gibson to launch a new limited-edition 12-string acoustic guitar, the Brian May SJ-200. Only 100 were made available, with a design including AAA rosewood back and sides, a AAA Sitka spruce top and a two-piece AAA maple neck. Meanwhile, May's wife Anita Dobson has revealed the possible future of Queen after her 78-year-old husband suffered a "minor stroke" in September which initially left him without any control over one of his arms, and which he has since regained control of. "They will do little bits and bobs, but they won't do those big tours," Dobson told The Mirror paper. May recently told Rolling Stone, "I don't think we're done. And I don't think we're going to say a final farewell tour. Because it never is, is it?," and Queen drummer Roger Taylor has also suggested they weren't done touring yet. Queen has recently been in the studio with their current frontman, Adam Lambert. In other Queen news, Part 2 of the Freddie Mercury video mini series celebrating the 40th anniversary vinyl rerelease of his 1985 solo album Mr. Bad Guy has revealed how Freddie's emotions dictated his approach to songwriting and from where he drew his inspiration. Freddie reveals that "the actual structure of the melody comes easy to meet's the lyrical content I find hard." He continues: "I like to write a nice little tune, but the lyrical content is difficult, I have to work on that part of it," he furthers, before candidly admitting "I'm not a poet and I hate writing lyrics anyway. I wish somebody else could do it." Mischievously, he adds, "I wish I had a Bernie Taupin, but I'm not like that. I like to do it all myself, I'm a greedy bitch." - NME/Music-News.com, 12/14/25...... Paul SimonIn an Instagram post on Dec. 12, Paul Simon announced details of an "A Quiet Celebration" UK and European tour, set to kick off in 2026. The new dates come as an extension to the tour that the iconic singer-songwriter aunched in the US earlier in summer 2025 -- his comeback after seven years of being retired. The tour kicks off with three nights at the Congress Centre in Prague on Apr. 9, 10 and 12, before continuing with two stops in Berlin on Apr. 15 and 16 and two stops in Copenhagen on Apr. 18 and 19. From there, Simon will play three nights in Amsterdam (Apr. 22, 24, 25) and three nights in Brussels (Apr. 27, 28, 30). In May, Simon will make two back-to-back appearances at the Grand Rex in Paris on May 3 and 4, before kicking off the UK and Ireland dates. These include a show at Liverpool's M&S Bank Arena, followed by two gigs in Glasgow on May 9 and 10. Two nights are lined up for London's Royal Albert Hall on May 13 and 14, before the tour wraps up in Dublin shortly after on May 20. Each night will open with a full rendition of his 33-minute, Grammy-nominated composition, "Seven Psalms," which he released in 2023, and followed by an assortment of classics and rarities. - NME, 12/12/25...... During a recent appearance on the CNN program The Story Is With Elex Michaelson, Sammy Hagar said his Las Vegas residency is "a dream come true for an elderly rock star." Hagar, 78, debuted his "The Best Of All Worlds" show in the spring at the Park MGM resort and now he's bringing the production back to Sin City for two more runs in 2026 -- and he's confessed he loves playing in Vegas because he gets to enjoy the fun of touring without all the travel. "It's the packing up and moving into hotels, travel, travel, travel, running around. You get to the show late. Some days you don't even have time to have a good meal," he told host Elex Michaelson. "But with the residency, you get a good night's sleep. They give you the best rooms on the planet. Great food - Vegas has got the best restaurants in the world; they're all in Las Vegas now. And it's just so much easier..." He added: "To me, it's a dream come true. It's extending my touring life. Otherwise, I don't know if I'd go on tour again and do a major tour. I mean, I could go out and do a few shows here and there. But anyway, Vegas, yes. Residency. Thank you." "The Best Of All Worlds" returns to Dolby Live at the Park MGM for 11 performances between Mar. 11-21 before the show returns for another stint from Sept. 18-Sept. 26. Hagar's band features his former Van Halen bassist bandmate Michael Anthony as well as guitarist Joe Satriani, drummer Kenny Aronoff and Rai Thistlethwayte. - Music-News.com, 12/15/25...... Smokey Robinson has claimed that one of his rape accusers broke into his storage unit, video footage of which her lawyer has said could be an "AI fabrication." In March, four women claimed that the 85-year-old Motown icon committed sexual battery, assault, false imprisonment, gender violence and created a hostile work environment during their time working as housekeepers between 2007 to April 2024. These original claims saw both Smokey and his wife Frances sued for a total of $50 million in damages, and through his lawyer, Christopher Frost, Robinson denied all claims as "vile," "false" and "an ugly method of trying to extract money." Now, one of the women who is suing the singer for sexual assault has denied she is the one allegedly caught on "blurry" footage video raiding Robinson's southern California storage unit. Robinson and Frances have accused the woman, identified in court filings as "Jane Doe 4," of accessing their unit without permission in November and stealing multiple boxes in a burglary supposedly caught on video. During a hearing on Dec. 11, the Robinsons' lawyer told a judge that Frances had looked over footage, identified the culprit as Jane Doe 4, filed a police report, and was now seeking an emergency restraining order. "It's blurry, like security tapes are, but it's clear to Mrs Robinson who it was," Frost said during a hearing. "You have to know the code, and you have to have a key to the lock. The only person who had that code and that key was Jane Doe 4." Her lawyer denied the claim, saying: "Our client has flatly denied any sort of involvement with this alleged burglary," and added that Frost was yet to produce the video. "It's completely and patently false." Los Angeles County Judge Kevin C. Brazile declined to issue a restraining order against the woman and the case continues. - NME, 12/12/25...... As the sole surviving The Monkees member Micky Dolenz prepares to hit the road in 2026 marking six decades of the iconic '60 pop group, he says he doesn't want to dwell on being the last surviving member following the death of Mike Nesmith aged 78 in 2021. "I feel it's time to take off the black armband and just celebrate the whole Monkees project," Dolenz told Billboard. "The show's not gonna be a memorial. It's not going to be heavily tributed. I'm just gonna sing the songs and tell the stories." Micky revealed the show -- currently set to run from February to November 2026 -- will include "videos from the original episodes" of The Monkees TV series, as some people still don't understand the band's formation and journey. He said: "I'll be focusing more on the chronology and on the TV show, using videos from the original episodes. I still have people ask, 'So what was it like when the group got the TV show?' I'm like, 'Omigod, have you ever heard of a thing called Wikipedia?' [laugh]. There's still a lot of people who are surprised when I explain how it came to be, that it was a musical comedy sitcom on NBC with us cast in it, not a band in the traditional sense." Dolenz added that "Even at the time, frankly, people didn't get it because it was the first time anything like that had happened. It's happened many times since -- Glee, for instance. They create the act and then have the acts go out. I want people to understand how the Monkees came about, so I'll be focusing on that, as well as the songs." - Billboard, 12/11/25...... Anthony GearyActor Anthony Geary, an eight-time Daytime Emmy winner who joined the cast of the long running soap opera General Hospital in 1978, died on Dec. 14 from complications following a scheduled operation. He was 78. Geary joined General Hospital for what was supposed to be a 13-week run, but audiences loved his pairing with Genie Francis' Laura so much that producers kept him on. The wedding episode between the two characters drew in 30 million viewers, making it the highest-rated episode in soap opera history. "In the beginning Luke Spencer was a complete bastard," Geary told People in 1980 of his character's introduction which found Luke raping Laura. "He was a cheap little punk who managed a disco and was a doper runner for the Mafia. He was a real killer." But Luke changed as he and Laura fell in love. The fictional couple split in 2001, and moved on with other relationships. "If you look at the way it started, it was sort of fated to end badly," he told ABC News in 2015. Following his retirement from General Hospital in 2015, Geary's character was killed off in 2022 after 44 years, as Luke's widow Tracy Quartermaine (Jane Elliott), told his former flame Laura, that Spencer was killed in a cable car "accident" in Austria. The role earned Geary a record eight Daytime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama. In a statement shared to Instagram, General Hospital executive producer Frank Valentini said the "entire General Hospital family is heartbroken" over the news. "Tony was a brilliant actor and set the bar that we continue to strive for," Valentini wrote. "His legacy, and that of Luke Spencer's, will live on through the generations of GH cast members who have followed in his footsteps. We send our sincerest sympathies to his husband, Claudio, family, and friends. May he rest in peace." Rocker and former General Hospital cast member Rick Springfield also offered a fond tribute to his friend. "He was already a big star when I came on the show [and] when my star started to rise, Tony never gave me any trouble with it or anything. He was always just really a sweet guy... You think of soaps, you think of Tony as one of the first. He had a great life... But it's always sad when someone leaves before their time," he said. - Canoe.com, 12/15/25...... It has been revealed that Joseph Byrd, the composer and leader of the trailblazing '60s psychedelic rock band The United States Of America, passed away suddenly on Nov. 2 at his home in Medford, Ore. He was 87 and no cause of death has been provided. Mr. Byrd was the central architect of the highly influential group, who were formed in Los Angeles in 1967 and were credited with incorporating electronics, musique concrète and experimentation into psych rock. Their sole album, which was self-titled and released in 1968, made use of early synthesisers and tape manipulation and is representative of the West Coast anti-commercial counterculture movement. It has been referenced by the likes of Stereolab, Julian Cope and Broadcast as a key influence and is remembered for pushing the boundaries of rock music, predicting later developments in experimental composition. Born on Dec. 19, 1937 in Louisville, Ky., Mr. Byrd studied with the avant-garde composers John Cage and LaMonte Young. His first live performance was at Yoko Ono's New York loft and he was part of Cage's Fluxus movement of radical live performances. He founded The United States of America with his then-girlfriend Dorothy Moskowitz after relocating from New York to Los Angeles, but they broke up after one record. Mr. Byrd recorded another influential record The American Metaphysical Circus in 1969 under the name Joe Byrd And The Field Hippies, and later became a professor of American music at Cal-State Fullerton. Among his work in later life was the creation of the robot sounds in the 1972 sci-fi classic Silent Running, which were largely credited for inspiring the Star Wars character R2-D2, and he also scored feature films from arthouse directors including Agnes Varda and Robert Altman. He is survived by his daughter Clarissa, two grandsons and his brother. - NME, 12/13/25...... Joseph Byrd and Carl CarltonCarl Carlton, the Detroit-bred R&B/soul star best known for his 1981 funk hit "She's a Bad Mama Jama (She's Built, She's Stacked)," died on Dec. 14 at age 72. Carlton, who reportedly suffered a stroke six years ago, was born in the Motor City on May 21, 1953 and began performing at a young age under the name "Little Carl" Carlton. By 1964 he'd released his first singles for Lando Records, "I Think of How I Love Her" and "I Love True Love," scoring local hits the next year with the songs "So What" and "Don't You Need a Boy Like Me." After gaining attention with the first few songs, in 1968, Carlton signed to Back Beat Records, relocating to Houston to be closer to label founder Don Robey to release "Competition Ain't Nothing," which topped out at No. 36 on the R&B chart and quickly became a beloved hit on the U.K.'s Northern Soul scene. Already a budding singing star, Carlton graduated from Detroit's Murray Wight High School in 1970 and scored his first national hit in 1971 with "I Can Feel It." After Robey sold his label to ABC Records, the latter released a compilation of Carlton's early singles, You Can't Stop a Man in Love. Carlton finally broke through in 1974 with his biggest hit, a cover of Robert Knight's "Everlasting Love," a dreamy, yearning disco-tinged soul burner that became his highest-charting, most enduring hit, peaking at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in Nov. 1974. The singer bounced around to a few labels in the late 1970s, landing at 20th Century Records in the early 1980s and releasing his most well-known hit, the lascivious, Leon Haywood-penned R&B jam "She's a Bad Mama Jama (She's Built, She's Stacked)," which earned Carlton a 1982 Grammy nomination for best R&B vocal performance, male. The song peaked at No. 22 on the Billboard Hot 100 in Oct. 1981 and No. 2 on the Billboard R&B chart. The singer's son, Carlton Hudgens II, reported the news on his Facebook page on Dec. 14, writing, "RIP Dad, Legend Carl Carlton singer of 'She's a Bad Mama Jama.' Long hard fight in life and you will be missed." - Billboard, 12/15/25.

Friday, December 5, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on December 11th, 2025

In a lawsuit contesting royalties for two late members of The Jimi Hendrix Experience, a UK court has been told that Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell "died in relative poverty", while record labels continue to profit from their work. The estates of bassist Redding, who died in 2003 aged 57, and drummer Mitchell, who died aged 62 in 2008 are suing Sony Music Entertainment UK, alleging that they have been consistently excluded from a share of the revenue relating to their contributions to albums by The Jimi Hendrix Experience -- the band which they formed with the guitar icon back in 1966. The albums in question are 1967's debut album Are You Experienced and its followup, second album Axis: Bold As Lovewhich arrived later that year, and their third and final record, Electric Ladyland which was released in 1968. Representing both estates in a hearing on Dec. 9, Simon Malynicz KC alleged that the two late musicians were "excluded early on in their lifetimes" and "died in relative poverty," also claimng this occurred despite them being in "one of the most commercially successful acts of its era." Malynicz also told the court that the late drummer and late bassist had been let down "by a major multinational which refuses to recognise or remunerate their copyright and performers' right," and asked that the court ensures "justice is done is done to the memory of Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell." "It can also give effect to James Marshall Hendrix's wishes," he added. "For surely, he would have wanted his fellow musicians to receive everything to which they are entitled." Sony Music Entertainment UK is refuting the claims, with their lawyer contending the original recording copyright belonged to the albums' producers, not the musicians. He also cited claims made by both Mitchell and Redding in the 1970s, which led to them being paid $247,500 (£185,900) and $100,000 (£75,100) respectively. - New Musical Express, 12/10/25...... Gene SimmonsTestifying before the United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Intellectual Property on Dec. 9, KISS bassist/vocalist Gene Simmons claimed musicians are treated "worse than slaves" because of unpaid radio play. Simmons -- one of several music industry professionals who weighed in on the bill at the gathering on Capitol Hill -- spoke to the "injustice" of U.S. broadcast radio stations freely playing sound recordings without having to pay the performers who created them, a yearslong precedent that the AMFA would reverse if passed by Congress. "If you are against this bill, you are un-American," he said. "You cannot let this injustice continue," he continued. "It looks like a small issue... But our emissaries to the world are Elvis [Presley] and Frank Sinatra. And when [other countries] find out we're not treating our stars right -- in other words, worse than slaves. Slaves get food and water. Elvis and Bing Crosby and Sinatra got nothing for their performance." Currently, radio stations license the music they play over the air from rights organizations such as ASCAP and BMI -- but they are not required to pay record labels or performing artists for the use of their tracks. Songwriters do receive royalties for radio airplay, but the artists who performed on the recordings do not. Simmons' testimony can be viewed on YouTube. Meanwhile, Simmons -- known for his bombastic, no-filter statements -- has issued a rare apology after ruffling some feathers by claiming that "bad decisions" caused the recenty deceased KISS guitarist Ace Frehley's death at 74 in October. "He refused [advice] from people that cared about him - including yours truly - to try to change his lifestyle. In and out of bad decisions. Falling down the stairs -- I'm not a doctor -- doesn't kill you. There may have been other issues, and it breaks my heart," Simmons reportedly told The New York Post following Frehley's death, which was attributed to injuries suffered during a fall the month prior. At the time, Simmons appeared to suggest that Frehley's death was possibly tied to the guitarist's long struggle with alcoholism, despite Ace reportedly being sober for more than 20 years before his death. "The saddest thing -- you reap what you shall sow unfortunately," he said at the time. Now following some backlash from fans, Simmons has walked back his earlier statements. "My hand to God I didn't intend to hurt Ace or his legacy but upon rereading my words, I see how it hurt everyone," Simmons posted on X/Twitter on Dec. 10. "Again, I apologize. I've always loved Ace. Always." On Dec. 6, Simmons was presented a medal for being one of Pres. Donald Trump's 2025 Kennedy Center Honorees in the Oval Office of the White House. Dressed in a tuxedo, the president awarded gold-and-navy medallions to KISS, along with Rocky star Sylvester Stallone, "I Will Survive" singer Gloria Gaynor, country singer George Strait, and actor-singer Michael Crawford. Trump, the first sitting president to ever host the awards, said "This is perhaps the most accomplished and renowned class of Kennedy Centre Honorees ever assembled." While the awards are primarily given to individuals, they have occasionally been given to duos or musical groups, musicals and TV shows. The 48th edition of the annual gala was taped and will be broadcast on CBS (select Paramount+ customers will also be able to stream the show) on Dec. 23 at 8 p.m. ET/PT. - Billboard/NME/Music-News.com, 12/10/25...... Appearing on British newscaster Piers Morgan's podcast on Dec. 9, Ozzy Osbourne's widow Sharon Osbourne revealed the touching final words that Ozzy said to her before he passed away. Sharon shared that Ozzy "was up and down to the bathroom all night" and asked her to "wake up" at around 4 am. It was then that she spoke to him for the last time. "I said, 'I'm already bloody awake, you've woken me up'," she said, going on to recall his final words: "And he said, 'Kiss me', and then he said, 'Hug me tight'." She then said that he then "went downstairs, worked out for 20 minutes and passed away," adding that she felt a sense of regret that the discussion ended up being their last. "I can't help wondering if I should have, could I have? If only I'd have told him I loved him more. If only I'd have held him tighter," she told Morgan. Osbourne died on July 22 at his family home in Buckinghamshire. He passed away due to a heart attack, but was in poor health beforehand as he suffered from coronary artery disease and Parkinson's. Sharon's Piers Morgan Uncensored interview has been shared on X/Twitter. - NME, 12/10/25...... Diana RossDiana Ross will be among the headiners ringing in 2026 on Dec. 31 with a live Times Square NYC performance on Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve with Ryan Seacrest. The Motown legend, 80, will help anchor one of the most musically diverse telecasts in the show's 54-year history, with a 39-artist roster including the likes of Rick Springfield, New Kids on the Block, 4 Non Blondes, Goo Goo Dolls, Chappell Roan, Post Malone, Leon Thomas and Charlie Puth. Ross is set to perform a medley of her hits including "I'm Coming Out" and "Upside Down." "Together we begin a new year," the singer said in a statement. "Let's embrace a new beginning, new opportunities, new joy -- a celebration of love, where we all come together as we begin 2026." The 2025 edition will mark the longest telecast in the show's history, including an additional 90 minutes of programming compared to last year, with more than 85 songs set to be performed. - Billboard, 12/10/25...... Elton John has hit back at claims his house is "dirty" in a humorous manner after previously showing off a "dirty" oven door in an Instagram Reel. After taking heat from fans after sharing a peek of the door accompanied by snippets of his 1974 hit, "Step into Christmas," Sir Elton, 78, took to social media once again in a comedic bid to rescue his reputation. "Hello people, it's Elton John here," the Rocket Man began. "A couple of weeks ago, I did some videos in this kitchen about how crazy 'Step Into Christmas' was driving me, and it got an incredible response, which I was quite startled about." John went on to describe his shock at fans' reactions to his oven door. "A lot of the response was kind of negative about how dirty my oven was," Elton explained. "My oven door, my oven window. And I can assure you, I don't have anything dirty in this house. I've never had anything dirty. I'm not a dirty person!" Donning a pair of bright pink, feather-trimmed rubber gloves, Elton declared he would redeem himself. "To prove I don't have anything that's dirty, I'm going to do something to show you," he announced. The video was quickly followed by a sequel, captioned simply, "Don't think your comments go unnoticed," in which Elton sprayed cleaner onto his oven door and gave it a scrub. Before slamming the oven door shut, he concluded: "Look, I've got the cleanest oven window in Windsor." - Music-News.com, 12/9/25...... It has been revealed that ABBA's Voyage show has contributed a staggering £2.06 billion to the UK economy. The ambitious virtual show, which features CGI reincarnations (or 'ABBA-tars') of the Swedish pop band, began in 2022 at the purpose-built ABBA Arena in east London. It is currently taking bookings until June 2026. Now, an analysis report has revealed ABBA Voyage's cumulative social and economic impact across the capital and the UK. The document was compiled and assessed by global music, culture and creative economy consultancy Sound Diplomacy. The analysis shows that Voyage has had a significant and positive economic and social impact, not only on London and the local area (comprising the boroughs of Newham, Hackney, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest), but on the wider UK by contributing £2.06 billion in turnover to the UK economy between May 2022 - May 2025, and 1.14 billion in GVA (Gross Value Added). It has been seen over three million visitors, of whom almost a fifth (18%) travelled from outside the UK. "ABBA Voyage has been an absolute sensation, redefining the possibilities of a music concert and delivering a tremendous boost to our economy," London Mayor Sadiq Khan said in a statement. - NME, 12/10/25...... Bob Dylan announced on Dec. 8 that he's extending his "Rough and Rowdy Ways" tour into 2026 with a 27-date U.S. run, this time hitting smaller markets beginning on Mar. 2 at The Orpheum in Omaha, Neb., then South Dakota, Illinois, Kentucky, South Carolina and Georgia in late winter/early spring. Dylan, 84, will also visit his native Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana before winding down on May 1 with a show at the Abilene Auditorium in Abilene, Tex. The rock bard has mostly been serving up songs from his 39th studio album on the past "Rough and Rowdy" tours, mixed in with some reworkings of classics from his catalog, only taking brief breaks from the 37-year-old road show commonly referred to the Never Ending Tour. In 2024, for the second year in a row, the musician briefly stepped away from his tour to appear alongside fellow touring star Willie Nelson at the Outlaw Music Festival. Dylan's most recent album was 2023's Shadow Kingdom, which featured fresh recordings of songs from the early years of his now nearly 70-year-career. - Billboard, 12/8/25...... David Byrne has announced he is adding more European shows to his summer 2026 world tour behind his latest album, Who Is The Sky?. The former Talking Heads frontman, who finished the first leg of his "Who Is The Sky" tour earlier in December, has also announced new North American dates to come after his already-announced January shows in Australia and New Zealand and February and March shows in Europe. After wrapping up his first European leg in Paris on March 19, Byrne will head to North America. Among the new North American dates are shows in Vancouver, Portland, Las Vegas, Nashville and Baltimore, to go alongside his headline slot at Big Ears Festival in Knoxville, Tenn., and a show at Coachella, among other gigs. Meanwhile, Byrne has shared a 32-track playlist, titled "David Byrne Radio Presents: Christmas Music for People Who Hate Christmas Music," on Spotify.com with a message explaining its eclectic sound. "This playlist is not about the solstice, nor does it have some Pagan agenda," he told fans. "It's rowdy, fun songs that gently poke at and refer to the holidays. Enjoy!" - NME, 12/8/25..... Elvis PresleyUniversal Pictures has released the official teaser trailer for the latest Elvis Presley project from director Baz Luhrmann, EPiC: Elvis Presley In Concert. The trailer gives fans a dynamic glimpse into Luhrmann's distinctive, high-energy style, suggesting a blend of archival footage and innovative cinematic techniques to bring Presley's legendary stage presence to life. Known for his maximalist approach in films like Moulin Rouge! and the ELVIS biopic, Luhrmann is set to "reimagine the concert film genre, delivering an immersive experience that highlights the global icon's musical genius and personal narrative," according to a press release. EPiC: Elvis Presley In Concert is set to hit cinemas worldwide beginning Feb. 27. The film will debut with a special one-week IMAX exclusive run starting Feb. 20. Fans can watch the full teaser trailer on YouTube and across Universal Pictures UK's official social media channels, including YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok, using the hashtag #EPiCMovie to join the conversation. - Music-News.com, 12/10/25...... Smokey Robinson has claimed one of his civil lawsuit accusers recently raided his storage unit in a new court filing. In May, four former female housekeepers sued the R&B and soul icon and his wife Frances for $50 million, alleging they were subjected to sexual battery, assault, and false imprisonment from 2012 to 2024. Robinson, 85, denied all allegations, and a short time later, filed a $500 million counter-complaint against the anonymous women accusing them of slander, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and financial elder abuse. In an update to the case, Robinson's lawyers filed a motion in a Los Angeles court on Dec. 8 in which they alleged the plaintiff known as "Jane Doe 4" kept a key to the family's storage unit and accessed it in on Nov. 22 without prior permission. In addition, Robinson's attorney, Christopher Frost, alleged the plaintiff took "thousands of dollars' worth of personal property" from the unit and that it was a "brazenly criminal act," and they are seeking a restraining order against her. Responding to the filing, a lawyer acting for the plaintiffs, John W. Harris, denied that Jane Doe 4 "ever visited" the unit since ending her employment for the Robinsons. In November, two further employees, a man who served as a car valet and a female housekeeper, also joined the original lawsuit. Meanwhile, a criminal investigation into the allegations is being undertaken by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, though no charges have yet been filed. - Music-News.com, 12/10/25...... Guitarist Dave Hill, the 79-year-old the former guitarist with the '70s English hard rock band Slade, has joined forces with the son of his former bandmate, Slade frontman Noddy Holder, on Hill's debut solo album. Holder, who left Slade in 1992 after 26 years fronting the band -- was the one who suggested his son Django Holder produce Hill's new LP Dirtyfoot Lane, which is autobiographical and named after a place in his hometown of Wolverhampton. Hill has also paid tribute to his original Slade bandmates -- singer Noddy, 79, bassist Jim Lea, 76, and drummer Don Powell, 79 -- on a track on the LP. "I've done a solo album, a very important solo album," Hill told ContactMusic.com. "It's true stories, slightly country, not Slade, but it has rock in there. There's songs written about my mother, I've written a song for Slade. It's a thank you to Noddy, Jim and Don, it's called Thanks For The Good Times, it's a great song. Noddy Holder's son, Django Holder, produces the album. He's 30 years of age, he's a fantastic guy, very calm, very talented. Noddy recommended him, so I thought, 'I'm going to try him.' He was just great to be with. The album is called Dirtyfoot Lane. That's a real place, I use to take my kids down and they used to play in haystacks. I've also written a song called 'Dirtyfoot Lane', it has a chorus like Paul McCartney's 'Mull of Kintyre'." Dave Hill's Slade are currently on a 12-city UK tour in December playing all of the band's biggest hits, including the 1973 yuletide hit "Merry Christmas Everybody." - Music-News.com, 12/10/25...... Speaking of legendary '70s rockers, Foghat has announced a new "Twang and Bang Tour" that will kick off on Jan. 9 in Fort McDowell, Ariz., and will include includes a number of international dates in Finland and Sweden in addition to their U.S. stops. As Foghat founding members "Lonesome" Dave Peverett and Rod Price both died in the early 2000s, Foghat's current lineup features original drummer Roger Earl, guitarist Bryan Bassett, singer Scott Holt and bassist Rodney O'Quinn. "2025 is coming to a close, and what a year it's been!" the band said in a statement. "We can't wait to hit the road for the 2026 Twang and Bang Tour! Check out the dates we've already lined up, with plenty more on the way." In September of this year, Foghat released an expanded 50th anniversary edition of 1975's Fool for the City with a never-before-heard concert from their earlier years, while their 2023 album Sonic Mojo spent over 30 weeks in the Top 10 of the Billboard blues album chart. According to Louder.com, the unusual name of Foghat was invented by Peverett during a game of Scrabble with his brother years before the band formed. It came back up later when the band members were all giving each other nicknames. "It was after a show, we'd all had a few beers and decided we should all have pseudonyms," Earl explained. "Dave had his name, 'Lonesome' Dave. I was Skins Willy, for some unknown reason. Kim, I think, was the Incredible Gnome, and Dave decided that Chris Youldon [vocalist] should be Luther Foghat. Chris couldn't quite see that, though." Since Youldon didn't want to go by Foghat, it was decided that the nonsense word would serve as the band's name. "When we told them our new name, the record label looked at us like we'd grown a new head," Earl admitted. - Parade, 12/4/25...... Dick Van DykeAs Dick Van Dyke reaches his milestone 100th birthday on Dec. 13, the beloved American entertainer has shared his secrets for a long, happy life in a People cover story. "People say, 'What did you do right?' I don't know. I'm rather lazy," he says. "I've always thought that anger is one thing that eats up a person's insides -- and hate -- and I never really was able to work up a feeling of hate. I think that was one of the chief things that kept me going." Asked how he's feeling these days, he said: "I have no pain, no discomfort. Short-term memory problems, it's true. I can't remember what I had for breakfast, so I have my wife (Arlene Silver, 54) here, who is in possession of my memory bank. But my long-term memory's pretty good." Van Dyke also credits Arlene for "keeping me in the moment and alive every day...Thank God for that." Asked what he'd like to be remembered for, the Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and Mary Poppins star responded, "What I've left in the way of children's entertainment and children's music. That's my legacy." And what would he hope to hear at the pearly gates? "Come on in. I hope I make it to the pearly gates and not the other one. I've been a good boy." - People, 12/8/25...... Phil Upchurch, an iconic guitarist and session musician who collaborated with Michael Jackson, Donny Hathaway and countless other music legends, passed away on Nov. 23 in Los Angeles, according to his wife, Sonya Maddox-Upchurch. He was 84. A cause of death was not revealed. Over a remarkable career, Mr. Upchurch recorded nearly 30 albums and appeared on more than 1,000 recordings. Notable contributions include Chaka Khan's 1978 hit "I'm Every Woman," which topped Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart for three weeks, and Jackson's "Workin' Day and Night," from his 1979 solo album, Off the Wall. Mr. Upchurch was also featured on all of Hathaway's solo studio and live albums, as well as Curtis Mayfield's soundtracks for the films Superfly, Claudine, Let's Do It Again and Sparkle, the latter featuring Aretha Franklin. The Chicago-born musician also performed or recorded with other music legends, including George Benson, Bob Dylan, Quincy Jones, Luther Vandross, B.B. King, Dizzy Gillespie, John Lee Hooker and Stan Getz. Beyond performing, Mr. Upchurch authored two instructional music books and completed an autobiography, which is set to be released posthumously. - Billboard, 12/6/25.

Pink Floyd is celebrating the 50th anniversary of their 1975 LP Wish You Were Here with several pop-up stores across the UK, Europe and America. The pop-up stores are hosted in collaboration with Sony Music and News & Coffee, the independent magazine retailer and coffee roaster. They will open at kiosks in London, Barcelona, Los Angeles and Paris. Each location will stock an exclusive Wish You Were Here 50 edition of the Brain Damage Floyd fanzine -- a revival of the editorial project originally founded and produced by Glenn Povey, with five editions available worldwide. Also available is an exclusive limited anniversary vinyl pressing of Wish You Were Here 50, and a selection of strictly limited edition commemorative merchandise. - New Musical Express 12/4/25...... '70s disco icons The Village People were among the headlining music acts at the 2026 FIFA World Cup Final Draw on in Washington, D.C, on Dec. 5. The splashy affair took place at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and the "YMCA" hitmakers closed 2025 in the same city they performed in for several events around Pres. Donald Trump's second inauguration. The Village People performed hit "YMCA," as Pres. Trump danced merrily along in the audience to the group's 1979 hit, which has become one of his favorite songs. The Final Draw will reveal the group-stage matchups for the 48-team World Cup, which will unfold between June 11-July 19, 2026 Three nations will jointly host the upcoming tournament for the first time; the US is the main host, while Canada and Mexico will co-host. - Music-News.com, 12/4/25...... 'The Beatles' CastMore key cast inner circle roles have been announced in director Sam Mendes' upcoming four-part Beatles biopics, including John Lennon's aunt, the Fab Four's press officer, Paul McCartney's dad, Beatles manager Brian Epstein and record producer George Martin. Lennon's beloved Aunt Mimi Smith, his guardian as a child, will be portrayed by Leanne Best (Line of Duty, Star Wars: The Force Awakens who has a Beatles connection herself -- she's the niece of original Beatles drummer Pete Best. In addition, The Walking Dead's David Morrissey will portray Paul McCartney's father, Jim McCartney; James Norton (Bob Marley: One Love) will play manager Brian Epstein; and Harry Lloyd (Game of Thrones) has been confirmed as "fifth Beatle," producer George Martin. Bobby Schofield (Cherry) has been tapped to portray the band's road manager and McCartney and George Harrison's lifelong pal music biz executive Neil Aspinall; Daniel Hoffman-Gill will step into the shoes of road manager and personal assistant Mal Evans; Arthur Darvill (And Mrs) is on board as journalist/publicist and producer Derek Taylor; and Adam Pally (Sonic the Hedgehog 3) is slated to play the band's quarrelsome music manager, Allen Klein. The thespians join the previously announced main cast -- Paul Mescal (McCartney), Harris Dickinson (Lennon), Barry Keoghan (Starr) and Joseph Quinn (Harrison) -- as well as the actresses portraying their wives: Saoirse Ronan (Lady Bird) as McCartney's wife Linda McCartney, Shogun's Anna Sawai as Lennon's wife Yoko Ono, The White Lotus' Aimee Lou Wood as Harrison's wife Pattie Boyd and How to Have Sex's Mia McKenna-Bruce as Starr's wife, Maureen Starkey. The announcement of the latest cast additions can be viewed on Instagram. The four films are currently in production with all of them slated to hit theaters at the same time in Apr. 2028. - Billboard, 12/5/25...... In other Beatles news, the BBC has acquired the six-part documentary series Hamburg Days, a drama series that tells the story of the band's early days as a scrappy band trying to make a name for themselves in the German city's smoke-filled clubs. The series is based on the autobiography of Beatles lieutenant Klaus Voormann, the musician and producer who lived with the group in a London flat in the early 1960s, designed the cover of the Revolve album and performed on solo albums by Lennon, Harrison and Starr in the 1970s following the band's break-up. According to a press release by the BBC, Voormann, 87, was a consultant on the series, which is set in the early 1960s, in the "smoke-filled clubs of Hamburg's St. Pauli's red-light district, [where] an inexperienced young rock 'n' roll band from Liverpool collide with two young artists, Klaus Voormann and [early Beatles photographer] Astrid Kirchherr. Together they help spark a transformation that turns a scrappy group of teenagers into the greatest music phenomenon the world has ever known: The Beatles." A cast has yet to be announced, however the showrunner will be The Crown director Christian Schwochow, who will be joined by director Mat Whitecross (Oasis: Supersonic, Coldplay: A Head Full of Dreams) and composer David Holmes (Ocean's Thirteen, Good Vibrations). The story of the band's early years playing Hamburg clubs was previously covered in the 1994 movie Backbeat, which focused on the same period and the relationship between early bassist Stu Sutcliffe and Lennon. - Billboard, 12/4/25...... Elsewhere on the Fab Four front, the Beatles archival Anthology series of albums is back on the Billboard charts, 30 years after the project launched in 1995 with Anthology 1. The new album, Anthology 4, has debuted in the top 10 on five Billboard charts, all dated Dec. 6: Top Album Sales (No. 9), Top Current Album Sales (No. 9), Top Rock & Alternative Albums (No. 7), Top Rock Albums (No. 6) and Indie Store Album Sales (No. 3). The 36-track Anthology 4 features 13 previously unreleased tracks from The Beatles' vault. The rest of the cuts on the album were available on previous reissues. Anthology 4 was issued on vinyl, CD, as a digital download and via streaming services, and launches with nearly 17,000 equivalent album units earned in the United States in the week ending Nov. 27, according to Luminate. Of that sum, traditional album sales (purchases of physical copies and digital downloads of the album) numbered 13,000. - Billboard, 12/4/25...... It has been revealed that Jimmy Buffett was present at his posthumous 2024 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction, and more than just in spirit. In a new interview on The Howard Stern Show on Dec. 2, country singer Kenny Chesney -- who helped induct the late Parrothead In Chief alongside James Taylor and guitarist Mac McAnally in 2024 -- revealed that some of Buffett's ashes were smuggled into the venue with some help from daughter Savannah Buffett. "We were sitting back there warming up, trying to figure out our parts and stuff, and Mac comes up to me and he goes, 'Look at this,'" the country star told Stern. "And it was a small urn," Chesney continued. "He had Jimmy's ashes in his coat pocket. So Jimmy's ashes were in Mac McAnally's coat pocket on stage with us as [Jimmy] was getting inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Apparently, Savannah was all for the idea, because she was the one who handed off her dad's ashes to McAnally before the ceremony. So even after he passed, Jimmy found a way to join the party," Chesney added. Buffett died at the age of 76 in Sept. 2023. Chesney's full Stern Show interview can be viewed on YouTube. - Billboard, 12/4/25...... Paul RodgersPaul Rodgers has revealed that he "dodged a bullet" by skipping Bad Company's recent induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Rodgers and Simon Kirke, the two surviving members of the original Bad Company lineup, had been due to perform together for the first time in six years at the Rock Roll Hall Of Fame induction ceremony at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on November 8, but Rodgers didn't part due to health issues which prevented him from travelling -- and he's now told Rolling Stone that he has no regrets about missing the big monent. "About a week prior to leaving for rehearsals for the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction and TV show, my blood pressure was very high and I started to have chest pains and heart palpitations," Rodgers, 75, said. "I saw my doctor, who absolutely forbid me to get on a plane. He recommended that I stay home, rest and remain calm, and I feel that I dodged a bullet by doing that. I am in the zen phase of my life and enjoy being immersed in a peaceful and calm life. I can sing again and play daily to a crowd of one," he added. The singer had previously confirmed he would not be attending in a post on Instagram, writing: "My hope was to be at the Rock Roll Hall Of Fame induction ceremony and to perform for the fans, but at this time I have to prioritize my health. I have no problem singing, it's the stress of everything else. Thanks for understanding. Simon along with some outstanding musicians will be stepping in for me -- guaranteed to rock." Bad Company's frontman Rodgers, drummer Kirke, late guitarist Mick Ralphs and late bassit Boz Burrell were among the acts saluted at the annual ceremony on Nov. 8. Ralphs died in June at the age of 81 while Burrell passed away in 2006. The band's former vocalist Brian Howe died in 2020 at the age of 66. - Music-News, 12/5/25...... Six months after his death, Ozzy Osbourne has been posthumously with Birmingham's Lord Mayor's Award on what would have been the heavy metal icon's 77th birthday. The prestigious annual honor presented to an individual (group or organization) for "outstanding achievement or exceptional service to the city and people of Birmingham" was an especially fitting tribute to the late rocker given his love for him hometown. In an X/Twitter video message from daughter Kelly Osbourne, she said, "I just want to take a second to thank the people of Birmingham for not only showing my family so much love, but for showing up for my father in a way that made him the happiest man on the planet." Kelly was on hand to receive the honor alongside her mother, Sharon Osbourne, and the family were also gifted with the book of condolences featuring what Kelly said were "hundreds of thousands" of tributes from fellow Birmingham citizens. The one thing my father was most proud of is that he was a Brummie," said Kelly, using the popular nickname for people from Birmingham. And Birmingham has done him proud." Meanwhile, Ozzy fans are continuing to call for Birmingham UK Airport to be renamed after Osbourne, despite hopes being nixed by its CEO. Fans have started a Change.org petition campaign headed by Dan Hudson, co-host of the A Gay And A Nongay podcast, who suggested that Birmingham International Airport have a rebrand in honour of the Prince Of Darkness. "Birmingham, amazingly, has an extraordinary list of fantastically influential people, going from historic people like Charles Darwin, as well as Robert Plant and Sir Lenny Henry but the answer is no," airport CEO Nick Barton told BBC Radio WM. "The airport name is so important for our future development of what we've got, which is a fantastic airport, but yet to grow significantly, which we will do on the back of its name." Barton did add that progress was being made on a different project to honour Ozzy's legacy at the airport, saying: "It'll be like a mural recognition of Ozzy and other greats in the area." Lastly in Ozzy news, the musician's merch store has shared a new t-shirt design that takes aim at former Pink Floyd member Roger Waters, who shortly after Ozzy's death said in a podcast: "Ozzy Osbourne, who just died, bless him, in his, whatever that state that he was in his whole life, we'll never know. Although, he was all over the TV for hundreds of years with his idiocy and nonsense. The music, I have no idea, I couldn't give a f---. I don't care about Black Sabbath, I never did, I have no interest in [] biting the heads off chickens or whatever they do. I couldn't care less." The new t-shirt was first announced on the late metal legend's Instagram page on Dec.1 In the Instagram reel, a cartoon version of Ozzy was depicted as urinating a rainbow onto a wall that resembles the cover of the iconic Pink Floyd album, The Wall. Over the top, text read: "Another Prick in the Wall Tee available for 48 hours only!", making a nod to the famous three-part composition by Pink Floyd, 'Another Brick In The Wall'." The shirt is currently available on Ozzy's merch store. - Billboard/NME, 12/4/25...... Freddie MercuryIn April 1985, Freddie Mercury released his first solo album outside of Queen, Mr. Bad Guy. The album went on to achieve a gold disc and UK Top 10 success by spawning four hit singles in Britain, "I Was Born To Love You", "Made In Heaven", "Love Me Like There's No Tomorrow" and the UK No.1.charting single "Living On My Own." On Dec. 5, a new 40th anniversary special edition 80g translucent green vinyl and picture disc LP and accompanying CD were released, and Mercury's official YouTube is marking the occasion with a new three-part Mr Bad Guy video series, which has been shared on Vimeo.com. Along with clips from the videos promoting the record's single releases, each of the three episodes presents an excerpt from a classic interview the iconic Queen frontman gave in 1985 in support of Mr. Bad Guy's initial release. As Freddie was famously wary of journalists, the interview was conducted by one of the few he trusted, the highly-respected showbiz reporter David Wigg, resulting in a candid, witty and insightful chat, during which Mercury opens up on what prompted him to take a break from Queen and decide to make a solo record at this moment in time. Responding with the assertion that he believes "the time and place is right" for a solo record, Freddie declares that "It's something in me that I wanted to do. I wanted to write a batch of songs that came out under the name Freddie Mercury, so why not?" More highlights from the classic interview in the second episode of this three-part series celebrating Freddie Mercury's Mr. Bad Guy will follow in the coming weeks. - Music-News.com, 12/5/25...... A federal judge has sided with Cher in the singer's four-year royalties war with the widow of Cher's ex-husband Sonny Bono, issuing a final judgment that grants the diva almost everything she sought. US District Judge John A Kronstadt formally lodged his prior ruling that found Mary Bono, the head of her late husband's estate, was barred from using the federal Copyright Act to reclaim the 50 per cent share of Sonny's composition royalties granted to Cher in her 1978 divorce agreement with Sonny. Mary had tried to terminate those rights -- for hit songs including "I Got You Babe" and "The Beat Goes On" -- along with Cher's 50% share of the musical recordings. The judge ruled that California contract law, which governed the divorce agreement, trumped the copyright termination power of the federal Copyright Act. The judgment includes the payment of substantial legal costs. Mary Bono's lawyer says she plans to appeal the decision. Cher, who will turn 80 in 2026, rose to fame alongside Sonny as Sonny & Cher in the 1960s before building a decades-long solo career. - Music-News.com, 12/3/25...... The National Enquirer is reporting that Elvis Presley's late daughter Lisa Marie Presley ended her marriage to Michael Jackson after finding out that Jackson disappeared on a European Disneyland vacation with two young brothers, Frank and Eddie Cascio (then 14 and 11), in 1996 without telling the bride he married in 1996. Insiders say a furious Lisa Marie, then 27, sought a divorce lawyer immediately after photos emerged of the 37-year-old hitmaker on a balcony with the two boys. According to an insider, Lisa Marie told a close friend at the time, "This marriage was a crazy mistake. It's over." The insider added that the union was a farce -- and that the "Billie Jean" singer was motivated by getting his hands on Elvis' music catalog and "changing the narrative" after he was hit with a civil suit alleging child molestation in 1993. "Michael got what he wanted out of Lisa, which was good publicity," the insider says. "Lisa told me they hardly spent any time together when they were married." Frank Cascio, now 44, and his family -- who were once considered MJ's longtime close friends -- are reportedly seeking a $213 million settlement to end their lawsuit alleging that Frank and other siblings were molested by the "Bad" Grammy winner. A lawyer for the Jackson estate is refuting those accusations, pointing out that the Cascio family had steadfastly "proclaimed Michael Jackson's innocence for years" and described the settlement bid as an "extortion" scheme. Lisa Marie died in Jan. 2023 at age 54 after going into cardiac arrest related to a complication from an earlier weight loss surgery. Jackson suffered a fatal overdose of the anesthetic propofol in 2009 at age 50. - The National Enquirer, 12/3/25...... Australian rock legend Warren Williams died on Nov. 29 after succumbing to a lengthy illness. He was 85. "Yesterday was a very sad day with the loss of my father Warren Williams," the musician's son, Warren Williams Jr., wrote on Facebook. "A most humble, kind and quiet man who taught me so much about being a good human. One of the greatest singers and performers of his time. The memories of growing up by his side will always be there. RIP Dad, we will all miss you." Mr. Williams' career took off after he was invited to be on the Australian Broadcast Company's music variety show Six O'Clock Rock in the 1960s. The Sydney native was credited with being one of his country's first rock singers. - PennLive.com, 12/2/25...... Steve CropperLegendary guitarist Steve Cropper, who played on seminal recordings by the likes of Otis Redding, Booker T & the M.G.'s, Wilson Pickett and many more, died on Dec. 3 in Nashville. He was 84. Mr. Cropper's son confirmed his father's death on Facebook. "It's with the heaviest of hearts that I share the news that my amazing Dad passed away this morning," Stephen Cropper posted. "He certainly lived an incredible life and enjoyed every minute of entertaining you all. Please lift prayers of comfort for my family." As the guitarist for Booker T & the M.G.'s, which served as Stax Records' house band during the 1960s, Mr. Cropper was an architect of the sound, with his ringing, often spare guitar work and deft touch heard on R&B and pop classics including Redding's "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay," Eddie Floyd's "Knock on Wood," Pickett's "In the Midnight Hour" and Sam & Dave's "Soul Man" (Sam Moore immortalized Mr. Cropper with his "Play It, Steve," ad lib on "Soul Man"). Mr. Cropper, who was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992 as a member of Booker T & the M.G.'s, and the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2005, was also a noted producer, telling The New York Times in 2018 that he finished producing "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" under great duress following Redding's death in a plane crash in 1967. "If I had a week to work on it, it probably would have been overembellished," he said. Instead, he finished it in less than 24 hours. The song earned Mr. Cropper one his two Grammys, winning for best rhythm & blues song at the 1969 ceremony. Mr. Cropper was nominated for nine Grammys, including most recently in 2024 for best contemporary blues album for his set, Friendlytown. In addition to "Dock of the Bay," he won at the 1995 ceremony for best pop instrumental performance for the Booker T. & the M.G.'s track "Cruisin'." Mr. Cropper experienced a renaissance in 1979 when The Blues Brothers emerged. He got a phone call from John Belushi, who was half of the fictional blues duo Jake and Elwood Blues, with his "brother," Dan Aykroyd, and recorded with the pair and made a suggestion that was golden. "What they wanted to do probably would have made it anyway, I don't know, was basically all slow, kind of medium-tempo blues songs. Nothing wrong with blues songs, but there was nothing in there commercial to dance to," Mr. Cropper recalled in an interview for the Musicians Hall of Fame & Museum in 2019. "Steve Cropper's offerings to American music are significant but his contribution to soul and R&B music are immeasurable," Soulsville Foundation CEO Pat Mitchell Worley -- which includes the Stax Museum, Stax Music Academy, and Stax Charter School -- said in a statement. Survivors include wife Angel Cropper and children Andrea, Cameron, Stephen and Ashley. - Billboard, 12/3/25.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on December 1st, 2025

Aerosmith has achieved a new Top 10 record in the Billboard Hot 200 album chart with their collaboration with English singer/actor Yungblud. Yungblud's album One More Time has debuted at No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 200 for the week dated Dec. 6, making Aerosmith the second group -- and fifth act overall -- with a newly-charting Top 10 in each of the last six decades (1970s through 2020s). Aerosmith notched its first top 10 on the Hot 200 in 1976 (and only Top 10 of the '70s) with Rocks (peaking at No. 3). The band then scored one top 10 in the '80s (1989's No. 5-peaking Pump), three in the '90s (Get a Grip, No. 1; Big Ones, No. 6 and Nine Lives, No. 1), three in the 2000s (Just Push Play, No. 2; O, Yeah! Ultimate Aerosmith Hits, No. 2 and Honkin' On Bobo, No. 5), one in the '10s (Music From Another Dimension!, No. 5) and now one in the '20s with One More Time. The Yungblud/Aerosmith first single from One More Time, "My Only Angel," blasted to the top of Billboard's Hot Hard Rock Songs chart dated Oct. 4. Aerosmith is the second group, following The Rolling Stones, with at least one newly-charting top 10 in every decade from the 1970s through the 2020s. Among all acts, there are just five with a new Top 10 in each decade in that span: Aerosmith, The Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen and James Taylor. - Billboard, 11/30/25...... Eric ClaptonEric Clapton has announced a huge one-off show in the UK at The Sandringham Estate in Norfolk in August 2026. Slowhand's Aug. 23 gig is the first show to be revealed for the 2026 Sandringham summer series, which will run between Aug. 20-23. The show will see the guitar icon break out classics including "Layla" and "Wonderful Tonight," as well as newer tracks from his most recent album, Meanwhile, which dropped in 2024. "Eric Clapton is one of the greatest musicians of all time and it's a dream come true for all of us at HeritageLive Festivals to have him play at The Sandringham Estate for us next August," said Giles Cooper of HeritageLive Festivals. "It's going to be such a special and unique event -- one of those gigs where you say in years to come 'I was there!'. We just can't wait!" Clapton headlined a US tour earlier in 2025 behind the new album, his 22nd studio effort which included contributions from the likes of Van Morrison, Bradley Walker, Judith Hill and the late Jeff Beck. Before the US tour kicked off in September, MTV confirmed details of a feature-length special about the former Yardbirds member, titled Eric Clapton Unplugged Over 30 Years Later, and the three-time Rock'n'Roll Hall of Fame inductee also made a cameo alongside Shania Twain in Spinal Tap's "final" concert movie, Stone Henge: The Final Finale. - New Musical Express, 11/27/25...... DEVO and The B-52s will showcase their unique brand of eccentricities with a two huge co-headlining shows in the UK next June. On Nov. 28, the two New Wave legends announced a gig at London's O2 on June 20, 2026, followed the next evening with a show at Manchester's AO Arena. Both bands have previously embarked on their respective farewell tours in the past few years, but later decided to keep playing live after joining forces on Saturday Night Live and reigniting demand from fans. The two UK dates come as an extension to their "Cosmic De-Evolution Tour," which has already seen them take to stages across the US and Canada. For The B-52s, it will be their first time performing live in the UK since 2019, and for DEVO, it comes after the alt icons headed out on their "50 Years of De-Evolution Tour" in 2023. Joining the two bands at the London and Manchester shows will be Scottish punk legends The Rezillos and fellow New Wave artist Lene Lovich. - NME, 11/28/25...... The L.A.-based duo Sparks have announced details of a new gig taking place at London's Royal Hospital Chelsea in 2026. The new live show takes place as part of the Live At Chelsea concert series, which is returning in 2026 for its first edition in four years. Brothers Ron and Russel Mael will be taking to the stage on June 12, after dropping their acclaimed 28th studio album MAD! and companion EP "MADDER!" in 2024. The duo first broke onto the charts in 1974 with their UK hit "This Town Ain't Big Enough For Both of Us." Sparks are the third artist confirmed to be headlining the outdoor shows at Royal Hospital Chelsea in 2026, following The Proclaimers (on June 13) and The Beach Boys (June 14). - NME, 12/1/25..... In a new interview with Vulture.com, David Byrne revealed he is considering making another concert movie. Asked if he was considering adapting his new "Who Is The Sky?" tour for Broadway and hiring a noted director to film it -- as he did with Spike Lee for 2020's acclaimed production "American Utopia -- Byrne said: "I'm thinking about that, so we'll see what happens there. Because, yes, it's a very extensive tour and it's not going to last forever." The former Talking Heads frontman has been involved in several groundbreaking concert movies, both with his former band and solo. 1984's Stop Making Sense was filmed by Oscar-winning director Jonathan Demme, who filmed Talking Heads during four nights at the Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles. Capturing the band at the peak of their creativity, the combination of Byrne's staging and Demme's cinematic artistry led it to be considered one of the greatest concert movies ever made. A24 released a 4K restoration of the film in 2024. - NME, 11/28/25...... Speaking to Variety, Elton John has shared some grave news about the current state of his eyesight. Sir Elton, who first opened up in 2024 about how an infection left him blind in one eye and with poor vision in the other, says the loss of his vision has left him "devastated." "Because I lost my right eye and my left eye's not so good, the last 15 months have been challenging for me because I haven't been able to see anything, watch anything, read anything," John explained, adding that he still has "hope" that the situation will get better. "I've had the most incredible life, and there is hope. I've just gotta be patient that someday science will help me with this one. Once they help me with this one, I'll be fine," he said. "It's exactly like the AIDS situation. You mustn't give up hope, you must be stoic, you must be strong and you must always try and batter the door down to try and improve things," he added. The latest comments come following Elton opening up last year about other health issues he has been facing, and told fans in Oct. 2024 that "there's not much of me left" following multiple surgeries. "I don't have tonsils, adenoids or an appendix. I don't have a prostate, I don't have a right hip or a left knee or a right knee," he said at the premiere of his career-spanning documentary Elton John: Never Too Late. "In fact, the only thing left to me is my left hip. But I'm still here." Given the recent struggles, the Rocket Man confirmed to Varietythat he would "not be going on tour again" once his extensive "Farewell Yellow Brick Road"' tour ended in July 2023. However, he later said he would perform "the odd show," giving fans hope they would be able to see the music icon once more, and he was recently confirmed as the first headliner for the Rock in Rio 2026 festival in Brazil on Sept. 7, 2026. - NME, 11/27/25...... Johnny CashThe estate of late Country legend Johnny Cash has launched legal action against Coca-Cola, accusing the company of unlawfully imitating the late country icon's voice in a recent advertisement. The suit was filed in Nashville on Nov. 25 under Tennessee's newly enacted ELVIS Act, which safeguards artists' voices from unauthorized commercial use. The Cash estate argues that a Coca-Cola jingle aired during college football broadcasts since August features vocals that sound "strikingly" like Cash, performed by tribute artist Shawn Barker. While the Cash estate has previously licensed the musician's songs for advertising -- including "Ragged Old Flag" and "Personal Jesus" during Super Bowl telecasts -- they claim Coca-Cola bypassed the proper channels this time. "The trust brings this lawsuit to protect the voice of Johnny Cash -- and to send a message that protects the voice of all of the artists whose music enriches our lives," said estate attorney Tim Warnock. he lawsuit seeks an injunction to pull the ad from circulation, alongside financial damages for alleged violations of Cash's publicity rights, federal false endorsement laws, and Tennessee's consumer protection statute. Coca-Cola has yet to respond publicly to the claims. Barker himself, who has toured globally for more than two decades with his tribute show "The Man in Black: A Tribute to Johnny Cash," is not named in the suit. - Music-News.com, 11/27/25...... Mick Jagger has led tributes to the recently deceased British playwright Tom Stoppard, who died "peacefully" on Nov. 29 at age 88 at his Dorset home surrounded by family. "Tom Stoppard was my favourite playwright," the Rolling Stones frontman posted to X/Twitter on Nov. 29. "He leaves us with a majestic body of intellectual and amusing work. I will always miss him," he added. Over a long career, Mr. Stoppard won five Tony Awards for his work in theatre, with his most celebrated plays including "Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead," "Jumpers," "Arcadia" and "The Real Thing." He also worked regularly in cinema, writing the first draft of the screenplay for Steven Spielberg's Empire Of The Sun and the final re-write of Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade. He also contributed to Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge Of The Sith, was nominated for an Oscar for co-writing Terry Gilliam's Brazil and won Best Original Screenplay for Shakespeare In Love. "He will be remembered for his works, for their brilliance and humanity, and for his wit, his irreverence, his generosity of spirit and his profound love of the English language," a statement from his family read. Also posting tributes to the Czechoslovakian-born playwright were Michael McKean, Sean Ono Lennon, Gloria Mann and Piers Morgan. The adjective "Stoppardian' has been added to the English dictionary, to describe writing that combines wit, linguistic flair and philosophical complexity. Meanwhile, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards have payed tribute to late reggae and soul legend Jimmy Cliff, who passed away on Nov. 24 aged 81, caused by "a seizure followed by pneumonia." Sir Mick shared a photo of the pair on X/Twitter laughing and drinking together at Cliff's 1981 performance at New York's Ritz Hotel. "So sad to lose the beautiful voice of Jamaica, Jimmy Cliff," Jagger wrote. The two were once reportedly neighbors in London during the time Cliff was becoming an actor in the 1970s -- eventually landing his role for The Harder They Come, for which he would also write its pivotal soundtrack. Richards also took to social media to share his memories of Cliff, writing: "Farewell Jimmy, I was in Jamaica when 'The Harder They Come' was in every cinema on the island. You could feel the pride and the love for Jimmy everywhere," the guitarist posted to X. "The sweetest voice, the sweetest soul. His music will live with us forever! Heartfelt condolences to his family! One love, Keith." - NME, 11/29/25...... In related news, Bob Dylan has paid tribute to late The Pogues frontman Shane MacGowan with a live cover of The Pogues' "A Rainy Night In Soho." Dylan's version of the band's 1986 song closed out his Nov. 25 show at the 3Arena in Dublin. It marked the cover's first appearance on Dylan's 2025 "Rough And Rowdy Ways" UK and European tour, which wrapped up in the Irish capital. He previously debuted the track in May, during his performance at Willie Nelson's US "Outlaw Music Festival Tour." MacGowan's widow, Victoria Mary Clarke, took to X/Twitter following Dylan's gig in Dublin. "I'm so grateful to Bob Dylan for honouring Shane MacGowan tonight at the 3Arena Dublin with a most exquisite cover of 'Rainy Night In Soho' on the eve of our wedding anniversary," she wrote. Dylan's cover of "A Rainy Night In Soho" can be viewed on YouTube. - NME, 11/27/25...... Jackson BrowneJackson Browne shared a statement on his Facebook page on Nov. 26 announcing the death of his 52-year-old actor/musician son, Ethan Browne. "It is with deep sorrow that we share that on the morning of November 25, 2025, Ethan Browne, the son of Jackson Browne and Phyllis Major, was found unresponsive in his home and has passed away. We ask for privacy and respect for the family during this difficult time. No further details are available at this moment," reads the post. Ethan Browne was born Nov. 2, 1973. He was known as a model, musician and an actor, with roles in the films Raising Helen (alongside actress/singer Kate Hudson), Hackers, and the television series Birds of Prey. As a musician, Browne also teamed with Cat Colbert to form the duo Alain Zane. They released the 2022 album Right Before Your Eyes and released songs including "CA State of Mind" and "Kite." In 1974, just six months after he was born, Ethan appeared with his father on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. Phyllis Major and Jackson Browne were wed in 1975; the following year, Major died at age 30 due to an overdose. Jackson wed Lynne Sweeney in 1981 and they welcomed son Ryan in 1982; the couple divorced in 1983. - Billboard, 11/26/25.

As the 2025 Black Friday Record Store Day approaches on Nov. 28, several '70s musicians are dropping notable projects for this year's event. Rhino Records has liberated the live portion of Fleetwood Mac's 2022 deluxe edition of the band's self-titled 1975 LP as its own standalone title. Fleetwood Mac: Live 1975 is culled from a pair of Oct. '75 dates at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, N.J., and the Jorgensen Auditorium at the University of Connecticut. This double LP -- making its vinyl debut -- finds the band in peak form as it runs though its hits of the day -- "Rhiannon" and "Landslide" -- along with new lineup versions of such early Mac classics as "Oh Well," "Station Man" and "The Green Manalishi (with the Two Pronged Crown)." Also worth digging for is the original version of Bob Dylan's iconic second album, The Original Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, an album that underwent a number of tracklist changes before it hit record shops on account of the sheer volume by which the Rock Bard was writing songs at the time. It's an interesting alternate look at a most iconic LP from His Bobness. The 3-LP Billy Joel live set, Live From Long Island, has been freed from the confines of Joel's 2023 box set The Vinyl Collection, Vol. 2. A standalone vinyl edition of Live From Long Island has been on the wish list for Billy Joel fans for, um, "The Longest Time." Lastly, Van Halen's Live at Wembley 1995 was recorded during the tour behind their tepid final full-length album with Sammy Hagar, Balance. This 8-song document recorded an London's Wembley Stadium sees the band tear through such David Lee Roth-era gems as "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love," The Kinks' "You Really Got Me" and "Jump" along with "Van Hagar" essentials such as "When It's Love" and "Right Now" to create a unique live recording longtime fans of both versions of the band can appreciate. - Billboard, 11/24/25...... Elton JohnIn an interview with Variety, Elton John calls out American politicians who are rolling back support for HIV/AIDS research. "I just am enraged by it," John said about what he sees as a lack of political support for cobatting the lethal epidemic. "It's very frustrating when you've got the tools in your hand to end it, and then you find that countries in Africa, Russia, the Middle East and Eastern Europe won't help." Although Elton praised the efforts of the current administration to bring an end to the war in Gaza, he simultaneously called them out for fumbling an issue as vital as ending HIV and AIDS. "There's another war with people who are suffering from HIV and AIDS that should be able to get their medicine but can't, because governments won't let them. It's inhumane," the Rocket Man said. "So my big beef at the moment is, yes, thank God, maybe there's peace, after more things are sorted out. But there are crimes against millions of other people that are happening because of governments and stigma and hate," he added. The administration of Pres. Donald Trump has halted funds originally intended for global programs aimed at HIV prevention and openly threatened federal funding for domestic programs aimed at helping those afflicted with the disease. John said if the president dedicated his efforts to helping end the AIDS epidemic, he could go down as "one of the greatest presidents in history." "If he ended AIDS, that would really be a feather in his cap," he added. In other Elton news, on Nov. 26 the music legend was unveiled as the first headliner for Rock in Rio 2026 -- despite his announcement in July 2023 that he woud be retiring from touring once his "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" tour ended. Elton, 78, however later said that he would perform "the odd show" occasionally. So far, these have included the 50th annual Candlelight Concert in the US in Dec. 2024 and the opening of the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center last summer. In 2023, John also played live at the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame ceremony, where he inducted his longtime songwriting partner Bernie Taupin. Back in October, John also played to the biggest crowd since he quit touring two years ago at the Singapore Grand Prix. Now after nearly a decade away from the Brazilian capital, the Rock In Rio festival announced on Instagram that the superstar will perform in Rio in 2026, headlining the Palco Mundo (World Stage) on Sept. 7, 2026. "I've always had a fantastic time whenever we've played in Brazil," Elton said in a statement. "I didn't manage to get to South America for the farewell tour, so when Rock In Rio asked me to play, I said 'yes' immediately." Also in the Variety interview, the musician has revealed he has seven new songs from his longtime collaborator Bernie Taupin that are ready to record. "I've got seven new lyrics from Bernie, and David (Furnish, husband) read them to me the other night, and they're really, really good, so I can't wait to go in the studio with Andrew (Watt, producer) and just write and see what happens," he said. "Music has been my whole life and has given me so much and takes me on journeys that I never thought I would ever go on - and it's still doing that. I just like doing the odd thing. It pays the rent very well, and it keeps me musical. I just can't wait to go into the studio now and write some new songs and go from there." - Billboard/New Musical Express/Music-News.com, 11/25/25...... The Beach Boys will be celebrating the 60th anniversary of their seminal 1966 album Pet Sounds with a headlining concert as part of the London Live At Chelsea concert series at the Royal Hospital Chelsea on June 14, 2026. It will be one of Beach Boys' first shows since the death of frontman Brian Wilson earlier this summer. News of his death was shared in June, and the 82-year-old was reported to have died due to "respiratory arrest," with sepsis and cystitis listed as contributing factors. Going forward, the gig will see the band fronted by co-founder and lyricist Mike Love, joined by longtime member Bruce Johnston along with Christian Love, Tim Bonhomme, Jon Bolton, Keith Hubacher, Randy Leago, John Wedemeyer and musical directorBrian Eichenberger. The Live At Chelsea concert series returns in 2026 for the first time in four years, and a portion of proceeds from the concerts, which will also feature The Proclaimers, supports the ongoing care of the Chelsea Pensioners. The announcement can be viewed on Instagram. - NME, 11/24/25...... Queen cofounders Brian May and Roger Taylor have hinted they'd like to participate in an ABBA Voyage-style hologram show. Speaking to BigIssue.com, May and Taylor addressed the chances of an original Queen line-up reunion of sorts with late vocalist Freddie Mercury and bassist John Deacon, who retired in 1997. Touching on "reuniting" with their former bandmates virtually, May said: "Freddie is still alive through the music that we listen to all the time. In a sense, John is still with us in the same way, but now we have so many other opportunities. I mean things that are immersive, like The Sphere in Las Vegas, it will be possible to give people the experience very closely of what things were like for us when we were Freddie, John, Brian and Roger. And that really appeals to me." May went on to compare their recent live shows to what can be done via holograms: "In our Queen shows for a very long time I've been doing 'Love of My Life'. And in the end, Freddie comes in and joins me as on video. It was just quite simply done, but it's a way of involving Freddie, and I think we can basically take that a lot further." Drummer Taylor then revealed that while he "had a good time" and "enjoyed" the ABBA Voyage show -- which debuted in 2022 -- he left a showing with mixed feelings: "I didn't find the actual projections that convincing. I do think technology now has come so much further since the ABBA show started, I think a lot more can be done." In 2024, speculation emerged that a Queen hologram show was in the works after Mercury Songs Limited -- the organization which has ownership over Mercury's solo works -- reportedly filed to trademark his moniker for virtual reality and 3D. May also said he'd be up for a Queen residency at the Las Vegas Sphere: I'm very keen on the Sphere. It's got my mind working," he said. - NME, 11/24/25...... Gordon LightfootGordon Lightfoot's 1976 hit "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" is finally a Billboard No. 1 after the famous shipwreck's 50 anniversary on Nov. 10. In the week ending Nov. 13, "Edmund Fitzgerald" drew 3.7 million official U.S. streams and sold 5,000 downloads, according to Luminate, marking increases of 140% and 328%, respectively, week over week. It returns to Billboard's Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart dated Nov. 22 at No. 15. The latter count pushes the song to No. 1 on Rock Digital Song Sales, marking its first placement atop any Billboard tally. It's Lightfoot's chart third leader on the list, after "If You Could Read My Mind" and "Sundown" in 2023, following Lightfoot's death at age 84 that May 1. Those two tracks also return to Rock Digital Song Sales, reflecting general interest in Lightfoot's catalog beyond "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"; "Sundown" ranks at No. 6 and "If You Could Read My Mind" at No. 10, each with 1,000 sold. In all, Lightfoot's catalog drew 9.1 million on-demand streams Nov. 7-13, a gain of 67%. It also sold 7,000 song downloads, a vault of 285%. The 50th anniversary of the wreck of the SS Edmund Fitzgerald was Nov. 10. As chronicled by Lightfoot, the 729-foot long freighter sank in Lake Superior during a sudden storm. All 29 crewmen aboard died. After Lightfoot wrote the track, he became close to several of the victims' family members. - Billboard, 11/20/25...... Brian Eno has hooked up with Bastille's Dan Smith, Leigh-Anne, Celeste and other artists to join the race for the UK's Christmas Number One single with their charity effort "Lullaby." The song comes from the same team behind the "Together For Palestine" charity show in September, which was organized by Eno, and featured performances from Smith, Paul Weller, Damon Albarn, Nadine Shaw, Cat Burns, Rachel Chinouriri, Yasiin Bey and more. Set for release on Dec. 12, every penny raised from "Lullaby" will go to Choose Love's "Together For Palestine Fund," which supports three Palestinian-led organizations: Taawon, Palestine Children's Relief Fund and Palestine Medical Relief Service. "This lullaby from our Palestinian musical heritage has been with me since early childhood," Eno said in a statement. Today, it returns at a much-needed time as a reminder of what Palestinians will never lose: hope, defiance, beauty, and dignity," shared Palestinian musician Barghouti." In a push to help get the song to Number One and to raise more funds for the three charities, fans are urged to pre-order the single which can be done here. - NME, 11/26/25...... Robert Plant has played a career-spanning set made up of a Led Zeppelin classic as well as some covers at National Public Radio's (NPR) intimate "Tiny Desk" program. The musician was joined by bandmates Suzi Dian (on vocals and accordion), Matt Worley (guitar, banjo, cuatro), Tony Kelsey (guitar), Barney Morse-Brown (cello) and Oli Jefferson (drums)."This is just like Live Aid," Plant joked. "I couldn't hear myself there either." His five-song setlist blended folk songs and covers, including an emotive rendition of Low's "Everybody's Song" and Moby Grape's "It's a Beautiful Day Today." Plant and Dian closed their set with "Gallows Pole," which Plant sang on 1970's Led Zeppelin III. Before taking on the track, Plant took a moment to pay homage to the American blues singer Lead Belly, who was his first introduction to the song. "His memory has lived on in all of the music that I've ever been near and been touched by," Plant said. The "Tiny Desk" gig comes ahead of Plant and Saving Grace gearing up to wrap their current leg of US concerts, with the final date happening on Nov. 23 in Valley Center, Calif. Following that, they'll head back to the UK or a run of shows that will run until Dec. 23. Plant's "Tiny Desk" set can be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 11/22/25...... The Sex Pistols featuring Frank Carter have announced a series of 50th anniversary shows for 2026. The iconic punk band -- which has been fronted by former Gallows vocalist Carter since 2024 -- will celebrate five decades since their earlier legendary Lesser Free Trade Hall gigs at the Manchester venue on June 4 and July 20 in 1976. The group have announced a series of four huge shows next summer to mark the occasion, with The Undertones as the main support. Carter is joined by longstanding members Glen Matlock, Paul Cook and Steve Jones. The run will kick off with a headline gig for K Maxx Presents Live at The Piece Hall in Halifax on July 11, before the Pretty Vacant hitmakers play Manchester's Castlefield Bowl the following day. Then they'll move onto TK Maxx Presents Depot Live at Cardiff Castle on Aug. 1, before the tour ends the next night with TK Maxx Presents Scarborough Open Air Theatre. - Music-News.com, 11/25/25...... Don HenleyA malicious prosecution lawsuit brought against the Eagles' Don Henley and his longtime manager, Irving Azoff, has been dismissed. It follows a previous case against three collectables experts in March, after Glenn Horowitz, Edward Kosinski and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame curator Craig Inciardi were accused of attempting to sell handwritten notes and lyrics from the classic 1977 single "Hotel California," as well as its follow-up "Life In The Fast Lane," back in 2022. Officials estimated at the time that the documents were worth over $1 million in total, with the defendants maintaining that they had legally obtained the lyric sheets from author Ed Sanders, who was hired to write a biography for The Eagles in the late '70s. Sanders sold the notepad to Horowitz -- a rare book dealer -- for $50,000 back in 2005. However, the judge dropped the case midway after concluding that Henley had "manipulated" prosecutors by withholding evidence, saying at the time that Henley, Azoff, and their lawyers had "used the privilege to obfuscate and hide information that they believed would be damaging to their position that the lyric sheets were stolen," Henley has since maintained that the documents were stolen. In February, this prompted Horowitz to sue both Henley and Azoff for malicious prosecution. He alleged the pair had manipulated New York prosecutors into charging him and two other innocent men. Henley and Azoff say they did nothing wrong and pointed to the collapse of the criminal case as being based on a technicality. Now a judge in a New York court has sided with the duo and dismissed the malicious prosecution claims as legally deficient. Henley's attorney Dan Petrocelli said: "The only malicious prosecution was Horowitz's own lawsuit, which the court promptly and rightly dismissed." Horowitz's lawyer, Caitlin Robin, said that they will appeal Justice Waterman-Marshall's decision. - NME, 11/22/25...... On Nov. 21 Neil Young took to Instagram to announce an outdoor UK tour for 2026 with his band Chrome Hearts. The tour will see them play multiple outdoor shows across the UK, kicking off with a night at Manchester's Heaton Park on June 19, and continue on June 27 with the headline slot at the inaugural State Fayre Festival in Chelmsford. On June 29, the will head over to Scotland for a slot at the Glasgow Summer Sessions at Bellahouston Park, and on July 3, they will perform at Blenheim Palace Festival 2026. Finally, on July 5 Young will perform at the Blackweir Fields in Cardiff. The new tour dates for 2026 come a Young and his band released their new album Talking To The Trees over the summer, and were praised for their timeless slot on Glastonbury's Pyramid Stage. Young is also on the bill for the new State Fayre festival, set for June 26-28 at the Hylands Park in Chelmsford, Essex. - NME, 11/21/25...... Joni Mitchell will be honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2026 JUNO Awards. The legendary songwriter, 82, will be celebrated with one of Canada's highest artistic distinctions at the ceremony in Hamilton, Ont., on Mar. 29. The National Arts Centre will present the accolade in recognition of her unparalleled influence on music and culture across generations. Mitchell, whose career spans more than five decades, has shaped the soundscape of modern songwriting with timeless works such as Blue and Court and Spark. Her artistry has not only defined eras but continues to inspire musicians worldwide. - Music-News.com, 11/25/25...... Michael Jackson's daughter Paris Jackson filed a lawsuit at a Los Angeles court on Nov. 18 claiming that her inheritance from her late dad has been "mismanaged," and executors have pocketed $10 million. Paris, 27, claims that roughly $464 million has still not yet been invested by co-executors John Branca and John McClain, with it having a gain of under 0.1 per cent. If it were invested properly, she claims, that money could have generated profits of $41 million. She also accuses the two executors of using the estate as a "vehicle for John Branca to enrich and aggrandize himself, rather than serve the beneficiaries"- - also claiming that 2021 alone saw the two of them pocket more than $10 million in compensation. That sum is allegedly over "double the amount distributed to any beneficiary." The filing also alleges that the total compensation pocketed by Branca and McClain that year could be up to $148.2 million, which "dwarfs" the amount shared with Jackson's children. Paris is one of the music icon's three children with second wife Debbie Rowe, with siblings Prince (28) and Bigi (formerly Blanket, aged 23). The singer died in 2009, aged 50, and his estate was managed by executors given that his kids were children at the time. - NME, 11/21/25...... After announcing his retirement from music earlier in November, former Deep Purple and Whitesnake singer David Coverdale waved a poignant, emotional goodbye in Whitesnakes's final video for a string-laden remix of its track "Forevermore." The remix of the title track from the band's 2011 album, Forevermore, was produced by Coverdale and features a new orchestral arrangement from the Hook City Strings. Directed by Payton Murphy, the video is a trip down memory lane, featuring shots of a grey-haired Coverdale, famous for his flowing blonde hair, singing the tune's nostalgic lyrics amid shots of his family and wife of 28 years Cindy Barker. "Looking back across the years/ The good times and the bad/ All echo in my mind," Coverdale sings plaintively from a room festooned with candles and draped in white curtains, lamenting the mix of "sweet and bitter memories" he's left behind. The "Forevermore" remix video has been shared on YouTube. - Billboard, 11/21/25...... Rick WakemanFormer Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman is reportedly "recuperating at home" after undergoing major brain surgery. In September, the musician announced that he would be postponing a string of planned concerts as he was due to undergo an operation to treat Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus (NPH) -- a neurological disorder characterised by the build-up of cerebrospinal fluid in the skull. In a statement posted to his official website, Wakeman revealed he had undergone a corrective "shunt" surgery earlier in November and the procedure was "very successful." "I had the necessary corrective 'shunt' brain surgery last week which I am pleased to say was very successful and I am now recuperating at home being cared for by my lovely wife and our wonderful furry healing animals!" he wrote. "I have to take things easy for a while but have been told by my surgeon that I will be perfectly fine to travel to America for the tour with my son Oliver in March (2026) and will be fine for all future engagements after that." Wakeman went on to note that he plans to appear at two charity concerts in Norwich and Ipswich, England on Dec. 19 and 20. Elsewhere in the post, the musician insisted the surgery hasn't impacted his ability to play the piano. "I am also pleased to say that it doesn't seem to have affected my piano playing in any way as I still seem to be very capable of hitting the odd wrong note here and there when I lose my concentration!" the 76-year-old continued. "Once again, I'd like to thank everybody who wished me well over the last few months for a speedy recovery, as it really did mean a lot to me." Wakeman has faced many health issues over the years, and in 2023, he shared that he had macular degeneration in his left eye and arthritis in his hands, legs, and feet. - Music-News.com, 11/26/25...... In a new interview with the London Telegraph, Squeeze frontman Glenn Tilbrook revealed that he was abused when he was a teenager. Tilbrook, 68, claimed that an older man abused him when he was 13 at the first gig he ever went to. "It was in a scout hut in Eltham, and it was the Irish band Tír na nÓg, who I really liked. I went by myself. I would have been just early 13, and that's where I met, not this guy, Ron, but another guy. And so this guy just says, 'Come over to our squat.' And that's where I met Ron actually, at that squat." Speaking about the alleged abuse, he went on: "I don't feel angry. [But] as I've got older, I've realised things that haven't been OK, in certain ways that I behave." Tilbrook described his childhood as "quite dysfunctional". He said: "There was no parental control. I was taking drugs and having sex at 13, which perhaps wasn't so great." Elsewhere, former Squeeze drummer Gilson Lavis died earlier this month, aged 74. Since then the band announced on Instagram that they're planning a UK arena tour for 2026, marking their biggest headline shows yet. The London band will hit the road for their "Tried, Tested And Trixies" trek next winter, with Billy Bragg joining them as a special guest opener. Before that, Squeeze are set to support Madness on their 2025 "Hit Parade" UK arena tour, which kicks off in December. - NME, 11/23/25...... German actor Udo Kier, who worked with such renowned filmmakers as Andy Warhol, Lars von Trier, Gus Van Sant and Werner Herzog, died on Nov. 23. He was 81. His partner, artist Delbert McBride, confirmed the news to Variety, and a cause of death was not provided. Mr. Kier became a cult film icon with his starring roles in the Warhol-produced (and Paul Morrissey-directed) movies Flesh for Frankenstein in 1973 and Blood for Dracula in 1974. In 1991 he appeared in Van Sant's My Own Private Idaho. He also had roles in a number of big-budget Hollywood films, including Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, Johnny Mnemonic, Armageddon and Blade. Overall he had a role in over 250 movies. He also worked with Madonna, appearing in her video for "Deeper and Deeper," as well as her coffee-table book, Sex. - PennLive.com, 11/24.25...... Jellybean Johnson, the Minneapolis musician and producer who was the drummer for the Prince-affiliated funk-rock group The Time, died on Nov. 21, according to a statement by his family. He was 69. Prince recruited Johnson (real name Garry George Johnson), who was self-taught on drums and guitar, in 1981 for The Time, an act born out of the city's Flyte Tyme. They'd known each other since their high school years in Minneapolis. As a member of The Time -- and later, Prince's The Family -- Johnson helped establish the funk-rock, new wave and synth-pop hybrid that became known as the Minneapolis Sound. He appeared as a fictionalized version of himself in 1984's Academy Award-winning Purple Rain and as himself in 1990's Graffiti Bridge. Johnson is also known for his work as a producer, with Janet Jackson's 1990 No. 1 hit "Black Cat" among his credits -- and he was an in-demand session musician. Johnson co-founded the non-profit Minneapolis Sound Museum in 2021, and the following year was awarded a Soul Train Lifetime Achievement Award with The Time. - Billboard, 11/22/25...... Jimmy CliffBeloved reggae singer and Jamaican musical icon Jimmy Cliff has died on the morning of Nov. 24. He was 81. The "Many Rivers to Cross" singer's wife, Latifah Chambers, announced the news in an Instagram post that read, "It's with profound sadness that I share that my husband, Jimmy Cliff, has crossed over due to a seizure followed by pneumonia. I am thankful for his family, friends, fellow artists and coworkers who have shared his journey with him. To all his fans around the world, please know that your support was his strength throughout his whole career. He really appreciated each and every fan for their love." Born James Chambers on Apr. 1, 1948 in the St. James parish of Jamaica near Montego Bay, Mr. Cliff's talent was spotted early on at the Somerton All Age School in the 1950. The eighth of nine children, Mr. Cliff's signature vocal tone, a high and mellifluous croon, immediately set him apart when he moved to Kingston at 14, adopted his more famous stage name and began cutting songs with an American R&B influence before making the connection that would change his life. Mr. Cliff's ska-tinged debut single, "Hurricane Hattie," was released on Beverley's Records, a label he formed with Kingston businessman Leslie Kong. It rose to the top of the Jamaican charts and was followed by a string of hits sung and written by the artist including "Miss Jamaica," "One-Eyed Jacks" and "King of Kings." In 1969 he hit No. 25 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart with "Wonderful World, Beautiful People," followed by the more urgent "Vietnam," a track about a friend who was drafted into the U.S. army and never recovered from his war-time PTSD that Bob Dylan has called the best protest song he ever heard. In the summer of 1970 Mr. Cliff had another hit with a cover of Cat Stevens' "Wild World," compiled on his 1969 Wonderful World, Beautiful People LP. The next year, director Perry Henzell Mr. Cliff, who had no acting experience, to star in The Harder They Come, a slow-burn hit that mixed the joy of the nation's music with clear-eyed depictions of social and economic conditions in what is still considered one of the greatest and most influential music films ever. Mr. Cliff is credited with almost single-handedly introducing the sound of reggae to the world via his masterful turn as country musician Ivan in The Harder They Come, in which the singer tries to break into Jamaica's corrupt music industry as an avatar for the aspiration of being uplifted by music amid the drug, violence and mayhem in Kingston's Trenchtown ghetto. He also contributed four indelible songs to the movie's soundtrack: the ebullient "You Can Get It If You Really Want," meditative "Sitting in Limbo," the beloved title track and the quasi-religious meditation "Many Rivers to Cross." Following the movie's success, Mr. Cliff signed to Warner Bros. Records and appeared as a musical guest during the first season of Saturday Night Live in 1976, but following his early rush of success, Mr. Cliff's music career remained steady, though his global impact was less pronounced than that of Bob Marley, who would quickly rise as the global avatar of reggae. Jimmy CliffMr. Cliff continued to release albums throughout the late 1970s and 1980s, earning praise and respect from his musical peers, including Bruce Springsteen, who regularly added the little-known Cliff song "Trapped" to his band's legendarily lengthy live sets; a live version of the song was included on the star-studded 1985 famine relief album We Are the World. A joyful ambassador of reggae, Mr. Cliff won a best reggae album Grammy in 1985 for Cliff Hanger the same year he appeared alongside E Street Band guitarist "Little" Steven Van Zandt on the anti-apartheid song "Sun City." After providing backing vocals on the Rolling Stones' 1986 album Dirty Work, Mr. Cliff was back on the big screen in the Robin Williams comedy Club Paradise, whose soundtrack featured his duet with Elvis Costello on "Seven Day Weekend." Following a long chart drought, Mr. Cliff's 1993 cover of Johnny Nash's "I Can See Clearly Now" from the soundtrack to the Jamaican bobsled team sports comedy Cool Runnings reached No. 18 on the Billboard Hot 100. He later teamed with South African producer/composer Lebo M on the single "Hakuna Matata," for the soundtrack to Disney's 1994 mega-hit The Lion King. Mr. Cliff was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2010 by the Fugees' Wyclef Jean. He released his final studio album, Refugees, in Aug. 2022 and was the subject of a 2023 off-Broadway stage musical, "The Harder They Come," with a book by Pulitzer Prize winner Suzan-Lori Parks. Before his death Mr. Cliff was the only living reggae artist to have earned Jamaica's Order of Merit, the highest honor the nation's government gives for achievements in the arts and sciences. - Billboard, 11/24/25.