Thursday, January 16, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on January 16th, 2025

On Jan. 14 Bob Dylan created a TikTok account days before the popular social media platform could get banned in the US. "Explore the world of Bob Dylan, now on TikTok. #bobdylan," stated the caption of the first, and currently only, post which features a series of clips from various Dylan eras soundtracked to songs including "Like a Rolling Stone," "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," and "Hurricane." Dylan's move comes as TikTok has announced plans to cease operations in the US on Jan. 19 unless the Supreme Court blocks or delays its ban. This, however, would be a last resort if the Supreme Court decides to enforce laws that will force the Chinese-owned platform to sell to a third party and break ties with parent company ByteDance. ByteDance has said that it has no intentions to sell the app. Dylan's last-minute attempt to see what TikTok is about follows a pattern in his behavior. In 2024, Dylan started to use X (formerly Twitter) more than he did before, posting birthday wishes and general messages on top of his usual announcements, as new Twitter owner Elon Musk was driving people away from the platform. Meanwhile, actor Timothée Chalamet rode a Lime bike into London for the UK premiere of the Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown. Once he hit the red carpet, Chalamet got off the bike and ended his ride using his mobile phone before turning to get photographed. Dylan has praised Chalamet's performance in the film, describing him as a "brilliant actor" and saying he is "sure he's going to be completely believable as me. Or a younger me. Or some other me." The film will hit cinemas on Jan. 17 in the UK. - New Musical Express, 1/15/25...... Lisa Marie PresleyAs Elvis Presley fans recently celebrated what would have been the King of Rock & Roll's milestone 90th birthday on Jan. 8, Elvis' granddaughter Riley Keough says her late mother Lisa Marie Presley and Michael Jackson "were in love" when they were married in 1994. In a conversation with podcast host Alex Cooper on Cooper's Call Her Daddy show on Jan. 15, Keough, 35, shed some rare insight on her mom's romance with the King of Pop. "The one thing I know is that they were in love, and that their love for one another was genuine," Keough told Cooper. "Everything else I don't know, because I wasn't there for it." Lisa Marie -- Elvis' only child, who died at 54 years old in Jan. 2023 -- shared Riley and late son Benjamin Keough with first husband Danny Keough. Lisa Marie was later married to Jackson from 1994 to 1996, after which she wed Nicolas Cage (2002-04) followed by music producer Michael Lockwood (2006-21), with whom she shared twin daughters. Riley also reflected on how her childhood changed with Jackson -- who died in 2009 -- entered the picture. "Our life wasn't crazier," she said candidly. "That already existed: the press, the crazy, the paparazzi and all that. I think when she saw Michael's life, there were things he had that she didn't have," continued the Daisy Jones & The Six actress. "Before that, she was with my dad, and their life was very simple. She didn't have 10 million assistants. She didn't need all that, and I think that changed." Keough's full Call Her Daddy interview can be heard on Spotify.com. Meanwhile, Elvis' ex-wife and Riley's mom Priscilla Presley paid tribute to Lisa Marie on Jan. 12, the second anniversary of her late daughter's death. Next to an Instagram post featuring a picture of Lisa Marie crouching down, with a slight smile on her face, Priscilla wrote, "I miss you more than words can say. I wish I could hold you, talk to you, see your smile just one more time. I wish you could see how much you are still loved, how deeply you are missed by all of us who carry you in our hearts." The message cued to a lilting instrumental version of the 1972 Elvis hit "Always on My Mind" and signed "Mom," was a poignant memorial for the late singer who died of a heart attack in Jan. 2023 at age 54. - Billboard, 1/15/25...... The Sex Pistols have announced the upcoming release of three live albums from their raucous 1978 US tour. For the first time, fans will be able to relive the punk legends' ferocious concerts that led to their demise at their final concert at the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco on Jan. 14, 1978 -- before they reformed in 1996. The sets were recorded at South East Music in Atlanta, Ga., on Jan. 5, Longhorns Ballroom in Dallas, Tex., on Jan. 10, and the finale at Winterland Ballroom. The first vinyl, available in red, from the Atlanta gig will be available from Feb. 28. The white vinyl of the Dallas concert goes on sale on Mar. 28, and the San Francisco vinyl, in blue, on Apr. 25. All three shows will also be available digitally and on CD. - Music-News.com, 1/14/25.The EaglesThe Eagles announced on Jan. 15 that they are pledging $2.5 million to FireAid, the benefit concert for Los Angeles wildfire victims set for Jan. 30 at the Intuit Dome. There is no word whether the Eagles, who are currently in the middle of a residency at Sphere in Las Vegas, will play the show, and no acts have been announced for the benefit yet. The event, billed as "an evening of music and solidarity" and produced by longtime Eagles manager Irving Azoff and his family alongside concert promoters Live Nation and AEG Presents, with proceeds donated toward an organization created to rebuild Los Angeles infrastructure, as well as support displaced families and advance fire prevention technologies and strategies. The timing works in their favor to take advantage of artists in town for the Grammys, which are slated for Feb. 2. An estimated 1,000+ people in the music community in Los Angeles are also being supported by MusiCares -- the non-for-profit arm of The Grammys and Recording Academy. MusiCares says scores of people had been in touch since they launched their "Fire Relief Effort" on Jan. 8. The series of wildfires, which began on Jan. 7, have led to the confirmed deaths of 24 people, the evacuation of more than 180,000 residents and an estimated 12,000 buildings destroyed. It has been confirmed that the 2025 Grammys will proceed as planned and raise funds for those hit by the LA wildfires. - Billboard/New Musical Express, 1/15/25...... In related news, Ringo Starr has announced he is taping special L.A. wildfire relief concerts at Nashville's historic Ryman Auditorium on Jan. 14 and 15 to give a little help to his friends in the West. The former Beatle's upcoming concert special will air this spring on CBS and Paramount+, with some of the proceeds benefiting wildfire relief amid the ongoing crisis in the Los Angeles area. Titled "Ringo & Friends at the Ryman," the two-hour special will find Starr performing songs from his new country album, Look Up, which arrived Jan. 10. He'll be joined by a star-studded list of friends on stage, including Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle -- both of whom collaborated on the drummer's new LP -- as well as Sheryl Crow, Rodney Crowell, Mickey Guyton, Emmylou Harris, Sarah Jarosz, Jamey Johnson, Brenda Lee, Larkin Poe, The War and Treaty, and Jack White. Ringo will also delve into his life and career as his guest stars reflect on their own personal memories of his influence in the special. Proceeds from the show will go toward the American Red Cross supporting people affected by the fires devastating L.A. County. Meanwhile, Starr has revealed that he and Elton John's mum left one of the Rocket Man's gigs due to not knowing any of his songs. Speaking to The Sunday Times about an Elton concert that he attended at London's Wembley Stadium, Starr said: "He came on and said, 'I'm only going to do the new album.' Me and his mother left after three tracks because we didn't know them." Addressing why he no longer introduces new songs during his All-Starr Band shows, the drummer said: "The band sounds great. We have a fun time and we just do it. In the late '90s I would put in, like, two or three from the new album, and you could feel the room empty. It happens to everybody." Elsewhere in the chat, Ringo also addressed his vocals, admitting that he is not a fan of his voice. "I can hold a tune, as long as it's in my key," he told the paper. "And it just worked out with the Beatles because John and Paul were great writers. That's what made us. I'd get one song. And a couple of them were really good, you know, 'With a Little Help from My Friends' and 'Yellow Submarine.' They're still huge and I still do them on tour. They wrote me a lot of really nice songs." - Billboard/NME, 1/14/25...... David BowieDavid Bowie lieutenants Tony Visconti and Woody Woodmansey have announced details of a new 8-city UK Bowie tribute tour for 2025, which will see them celebrating the music and life of the late rock superstar. Visconti was Bowie's long-time producer and friend, as well as the bass player on his early LP The Man Who Sold The World, while Woodmansey was one of the Spiders From Mars and the artist's drummer from between 1970 and 1973. They will perform live renditions of some of Bowie's best known songs as part of the supergroup Holy Holy. The tour launches on May 15 in London at the O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire, followed by dates in Leeds (15/5), Birmingham (16/5), Manchester (18/5), Newcastle (21/5), Oxford (29/5) and Bristol (30/5) before wrapping at Liverpool's O2 Academy on May 31. Bowie passed away in Jan. 2016 at the age of 69. - NME, 1/14/25...... In a new interview with the Speaking with Podpakas podcast, original AC/DC singer Dave Evans revealed the story behind how the hard-rocking Aussies came up with their name. Evans recalled how the members were writing music together as part of an unnamed band, when Alan Kissacks, a man involved with putting the band together, told them that they had secured a New Year's Eve slot at Australia's Chequers nightclub. "We had to get a name because it was only in a few weeks. So we started tossing names around between us, but no one could agree," Evans explained. "I had some really great names, but they didn't like them. What we said was that, [in time for] the next rehearsal, we'd all come with three names each, put them in a hat and we'd pick one out. And whatever it was, that was what we were gonna call ourselves," he added. According to Evans, he arrived with three potential names the following day, but the band decided to scrap the idea after being suggested the name "AC/DC" by a relative. "When we all arrived together, Malcolm Young said to us, 'Look, my sister-in-law' [wife of his older brother, George] has suggested a name AC/DC'. And I thought it's an easy name to remember and it was on the side of a lot of electrical appliances," Evans told Podpokas. AC/DC means alternate current and direct current [and] a lot of appliances were AC/DC. I thought: 'Free advertising free advertising on the side of all these appliances, and it's easy to say, and it means power.' It all went through my head very quickly. And I said yes." Concluding, he recalled: "Malcolm looked at us and said, 'Well, shall we call ourselves AC/DC?' And we all put our hands up. It was unanimous. We all shook hands and we were AC/DC those three names [I came up with], I went home and threw them away." According to Evans, he arrived with three potential names the following day, but the band decided to scrap the idea after being suggested the name "AC/DC" by a relative. "When we all arrived together, Malcolm Young said to us, 'Look, my sister-in-law' [wife of his older brother, George] has suggested a name AC/DC'. And I thought it's an easy name to remember and it was on the side of a lot of electrical appliances," Evans told Podpokas. "AC/DC means alternate current and direct current [and] a lot of appliances were AC/DC. I thought: 'Free advertising free advertising on the side of all these appliances, and it's easy to say, and it means power.' It all went through my head very quickly. And I said yes." Concluding, he recalled: "Malcolm looked at us and said, 'Well, shall we call ourselves AC/DC?' And we all put our hands up. It was unanimous. We all shook hands and we were AC/DC those three names [I came up with], I went home and threw them away." AC/DC is set to play 13 stadium shows across the US and Canada throughout April and May. The band wrapped up the 2024 UK and European leg of the trek in Dublin's Croke Park on Aug. 17. Their ongoing "Power Up" tour is in support of AC/DC's 17th and latest studio album of the same name, which was released in 2020. - NME, 1/13/25...... Village PeopleAfter a tumultuous relationship with incoming president Donald Trump over the use of their songs at his political rallies, the Village People took to Facebook on Jan. 13 to announce that they have "accepted an invitation from President Elect Trump's campaign to participate in inaugural activities, including at least one event with President Elect Trump." The post continued: "We know this won't make some of you happy to hear however we believe that music is to be performed without regard to politics. Our song Y.M.C.A. is a global anthem that hopefully helps bring the country together after a tumultuous and divided campaign where our preferred candidate lost. Therefore, we believe it's now time to bring the country together with music which is why VILLAGE PEOPLE will be performing at various events as part of the 2025 Inauguration of Donald J. Trump." According to TheHill.com, the group will perform at Trump's "victory rally" at Capital One Arena in Washington, and at the Liberty Inaugural Ball. "Y.M.C.A.," along with "Macho Man," were popular song choices at Trump campaign rallies during his 2020 and 2024 campaign rallies. In December, Village People frontman Victor Willis doubled down on why he chose to let the president-elect play "Y.M.C.A." at rallies and events, saying he "didn't have the heart" to block the usage -- despite originally asking Trump to stop in 2020 -- upon realizing that the politician seemed to "genuinely like" and was "having a lot of fun" with "Y.M.C.A." Plus, as Willis noted, the dance tune has only "benefited greatly" in terms of chart placements and sales for the group since the twice-impeached Trump incorporated it into his campaign. - Billboard, 1/13/25...... Rod Stewart and wife Penny Lancaster have been appointed ambassadors for The King's Foundation. The couple have come on board as King Charles III celebrates 35 years of his charity, which focuses on practical education and training programs aimed at building stronger communities and transforming lives. Stewart, who just turned 80, and Lancaster, 53, join other celebrity ambassadors including Sienna Miller, David Beckham and Naomi Campbell. "We are so pleased to be coming on board as ambassadors for The King's Foundation and look forward to lending our support to this worthwhile cause, particularly during such a significant year for the charity," the "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy" singer said. Penny added, "As a volunteer special constable, the Foundation's approach to building communities -- and how access to green spaces can help build better, healthier places -- is particularly important to me. It's an honour to be working with the Foundation and I can't wait to meet more of the inspiring people who both learn with and work for the organisation." The couple are set to visit the charity's headquarters, Dumfries House in Ayrshire, Scotland, later in January. During the visit, they will meet staff at the health and wellbeing centre to learn more about their perimenopause programs and support services. Stewart has been a long-time supporter of King Charles' other charities, including the Prince's Trust (now the King's Trust) which helps disadvantaged young people access business opportunities that may not be available to them in their everyday lives. Stewart will play the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Atlantic City on Feb. 23. - Music-News.com, 1/14/25...... AerosmithSpeaking with Boston radio station WBUR, Aerosmith bassist Tom Hamilton revealed that he and his former bandmates "could do something" in the future if frontman Steven Tyler was willing. Hamilton said that while Tyler is well underway with his "healing process" after seriously injuring his voice during a gig in 2024, the chances of the band making any new announcements are slim. "Steven's healing process is going really, really well, but it goes at its own pace," he said. "Maybe Aerosmith will do something in the future, but it's a big 'if', and the last thing I want to be doing is to try and push Steven in that direction. If we do anything in the future, it would come from him." The comments come after the bassist was asked last summer how hopeful he is, on a scale of one to 10, that the band will reunite. "On the hope scale, I'm somewhere between seven and nine. We won't be doing any tours from now on, but I'll always have hope that other types of opportunities will come along," he told AARP magazine. "This isn't the first time black clouds have been on our horizon -- and somehow the sun managed to come out. Time and hope are all we have at the moment," he added, while also dismissing hopes for a Las Vegas residency. Aerosmith's final live show, at UBS Arena in Elmont, NY in Sept. 2023, was held as part of their "Peace Out" tour, which began earlier that year but only saw the band play three nights, before rescheduling the rest of the dates after Tyler injured his larynx. Hamilton said in 2024 he "can't imagine" the band continuing with a new singer, and added: "I'm sure all of us have music in our future and it will manifest itself in ways that we haven't planned yet. I've been playing in a band with some good friends. We have a bunch of really good songs and we hope to be putting them out soon and hopefully doing some gigs." Shortly afterwards, the bassist announced details of his first shows with a new band called Close Enemies. - NME, 1/13/25...... Remembering late legendary soul singer Sam Moore of Sam & Dave who passed away on Jan. 10 at age 89, Bruce Springsteen shared a heartfelt message on Instagram on Jan. 11. "Over on E Street, we are heartbroken to hear of the death of Sam Moore, one of America's greatest soul voices. There simply isn't another sound like Sam's soulful tenor in American music," the Boss wrote. He continued, "Having had the honor to work with Sam on several occasions, he was a sweet and funny man. He was filled with stores of the halcyon days of soul music, and to the end had the edge of deep authenticity in his voice I could only wonder at." The two friends shared both the stage and studio over the years. Moore contributed backing vocals to several tracks on Springsteen's 1992 album, Human Touch, while Springsteen reciprocated on Moore's 2006 song "Better to Have and Not Need." One of Springsteen and Moore's most memorable live performances took place at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 25th anniversary concert in New York in Oct. 2009, where they joined the E Street Band to perform "Soul Man" and "Hold On, I'm Comin'." Moore passed away in Coral Gables, Fla. The cause of death was complications from surgery. - Billboard, 1/11/25.

Monday, January 6, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on January 11th, 2025

Billy Joel took to Instagram on Dec. 10 to announce a one-off summer 2025 concert with Rod Stewart at New York's Yankee Stadium on July 18. The event is part of Joel's ongoing string of stadium shows with A-list guests, which have also included Stevie Nicks and Sting, John Mayer, Jason Bonham and Trey Anastasio. On Jan. 17, the Piano Man will kick off his 2025 touring schedule with a gig at Hard Rock Live in Hollywood, Fla., followed by a team-up with Sting at Indianapolis' Lucas Oil Stadium on Feb. 8. Sting will also join Joel in Syracuse on Apr.11, Milwaukee on Apr. 26, Charlotte on May 10 and Salt Lake City on May 23. Nicks will share the stage with him on Mar.h 29 at Ford Field in Detroit and the last scheduled date so far this year, an Aug. 8 show at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ. Stewart will also be on hand for a gig at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh on July 5 in a prelude to the Yankee Stadium gig. - Billboard, 1/10/25...... Ringo StarrRingo Starr released his new country & western-themed album, Look Up, on Jan. 10 via Lost Highway/UMG Nashville. Produced by T Bone Burnett, the set is Starr's first full-length album in six years after releasing a series of EPs. "I did love country music before I was in the band," says the former Beatles drummer, who tried to move to Texas when he was 18 because of his fondness for country and blues music. "We got plenty of it in Liverpool, because the lads who were in the merchant navy would bring not only rock and roll over, but country -- and when country bands went on tour in England, they always played Liverpool." With Ringo singing lead, the Fab Four famously remade such country hits as Buck Owens' "Act Naturally" and Carl Perkins' "Honey Don't," and in 1970, Starr's second solo LP, Beaucoups of Blues, was a country album he recorded in Nashville with noted country producer/musician Pete Drake, famous for his work with Tammy Wynette, Bob Dylan and Charlie Rich. Burnett recruited leading Americana, folk and bluegrass music artists including Alison Krauss, Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle, Larkin Poe and Lucius to appear on Look Up, many on multiple tracks. Look Up's first single, "Time on My Hands," features classic country elements of heartbreak and lost love over an aching pedal steel, but like many Ringo songs -- and as reflected in the album's title -- it ends on a positive note. "If you listen to a lot of my songs, not only the country but the pop songs, the last verse is always an up," Starr says. "That's what I want to present -- there's a break in the clouds and the light comes through." - Billboard, 1/10/25...... Elton John's 2017 greatest hits collection Diamonds has finally hit No. 1 on the UK's Official Albums Chart in its 374th week on the tally (Jan. 10). Featuring a number of the Rocket Man's biggest hits, including "Your Song," "Tiny Dancer, "Rocket Man" and "Candle in the Wind," the compilation has surged to the top to dethrone Ed Sheeran at No. 1. When first released in 2017, Diamonds reached No. 5 and peaked at No. 2 following Elton's Glastonbury headline set in June 2023. The Official Charts Company reports that it hasn't left the top 100 since its release and has spent more weeks on the chart than any of John's other LPs. Meanwhile, Elton announced on Instagram on Jan. 7 that rising country singer Chappell Roan will perform at his annual Oscars viewing party in March. Joining Elton and his husband David Furnish as co-hosts for the event will be the likes of Jean Smart, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka to raise funds for AIDS research and to quell the negative stigma surrounding AIDS in the LGBTQ community. "David and I are thrilled to gather with friends and supporters once again, and we're honoured to welcome the bold and authentic Chappell Roan as this year's performer, whose artistry embodies the power of music to inspire change," John told Rolling Stone magazine. Other confirmed attendees at the event include Mick Jagger, Sean Penn, Sharon Stone, Megan Thee Stallion and Hozier. - Billboard/New Musical Express, 1/10/25...... TotoActor Rob Lowe has used a recent episode of his Literally! With Rob Lowe podcast to reflect on how he almost embarked upon a music career thanks to the L.A.-based hitmakers Toto. During a chat with journalist, author, and fellow podcaster Bill Simmons, the pair switched their focus to the world of '80s music and the recent Yacht Rock genre documentary Yacht Rock: A Dockumentary. Lowe responded to Simmons' praise about Toto's success at the 1983 Grammy Awards (in which they won three awards, with group leader David Paich winning two additional awards) by recalling how he once had a brush with the Los Angeles rockers. "I got one for ya," Lowe said. "There was a minute in the '80s where I was definitely doing too much Bolivian marching powder and just being a f--king lunatic," Lowe remembered. "And [it was] also coming at the time in a young actor's career where they're too old to play the roles they've been playing, but they're too young to play the roles that will last you the rest of your life, which are really the great ones. And you can kind of feel it. I love music so much, as evidenced by this talk and all of that, that I got it into my head that maybe I should think more about music and I cut a demo with Toto." Lowe did not elaborate on the track further, and it's unclear what happened to the demo that he recorded with Toto, or if it may ever see a potential release - ideally on a future sequel to the Yacht Rock documentary. Lowe's full chat with Simmons can be viewed on YouTube. - Billboard, 1/9/25...... Appearing on ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live! on Jan. 8, Cher reflected on her partnership with her late singing partner and ex-husband Sonny Bono, shared the story behind her iconic driver's license, and revealed unexpected anecdotes from her legendary journey. "Doing the show kept us together because on the show we had so much fun," she told host Jimmy Kimmel. "We were equal. That was...I mean, I loved it. We worked so well together, and it really kept us closer longer than I really wanted." Starting with their breakthrough hit "I Got You Babe" in 1965, Sonny & Cher became one of the defining musical acts of their era. The duo's humor and chemistry later transitioned seamlessly into television, making The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour a staple of 1970s entertainment, even as their personal relationship faced challenges. in a lighter moment, Cher discussed the process of obtaining a driver's license that features only her first name. "I don't have a last name, so it just says Cher on my driver's license," she explained. "You have to prove that someone could know you, like the populace could know you by that name. It's not easy." As Cher fans eagerly anticipate the follow-up to her new memoir, Cher: The Memoir, Part One, Cher joked that she "hasn't even started" the second volume yet. At the end of the interview, Cher left the audience laughing as she told Kimmel, "You're a lot nicer and funnier than I thought you would be." - Billboard, 1/8/25...... Bob Dylan has been rolling "like a rolling stone" on the streaming charts in the wake of the new Timothée Chalamet-starring Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown. During the week ending Dec. 26, one day after the release of A Complete Unknown in the US, Dylan's catalog earned 11.6 million U.S. on-demand streams, according to Luminate, leaping to 20.2 million streams the following week (ending Jan. 2), in the first full tracking week since the film's wide release. Compared to Dylan's streaming numbers from one month earlier, in which his catalog earned 8.1 million streams in the week ending Dec. 5, A Complete Unknown has helped the legend's weekly streaming numbers grow by roughly 150%. Meanwhile, some of Dylan's early classic songs (which Chalamet sings himself in the film) have gotten replayed since its release, with listeners wanting to either revisit or discover the original versions. "Like a Rolling Stone" earned 1.64 million streams in the week ending Jan. 2, a 232% increase from its streaming total five weeks ago (494,000 during the week ending Nov. 28). Meanwhile, "Blowin' in the Wind" and "The Times They Are a-Changin' posted streaming jumps of 215% and 174%, respectively, from their weekly totals during the last full tracking week of November. With the announcement of the Academy Awards nominations set for Jan. 17, and the Oscars ceremony scheduled for Mar. 2, these streaming numbers may stay boosted -- or keep climbing -- for a few more months. - Billboard, 1/8/25...... Diane WarrenIn related news, as multiple devastating wildfires continue to spread through the greater Los Angeles region, music and music-related events -- including several tied to the current film awards season in the city -- are being canceled or postponed out of both safety concerns and respect for the unfolding situation. An A Complete Unknown screening and dinner set for Jan. 9 is among the events canceled. As dangerous wildfires continue to rapidly spread across Los Angeles County, a number of famous residents are among the thousands of people whose homes were affected by the tragedy. Grammy-winning songwriter Diane Warren took to Instagram on Jan. 8 to reveal that her beach home was one of the properties that was burned down. "This is the last pic I took of [my late friend] Leah's rock from my beach house," Warren posted. "I've had this house for almost 30 years. It looks like it was lost in the fire last nite. There's a rainbow shining on it which I'm taking as a sign of hope for all creatures who have been affected by this tragedy. The animals and the rescue ranch are OK tho which is the most important thing. Stay safe everyone." The west-side Palisades Fire, fanned by strong winds, has caused 30,000 people to evacuate as it has burned at least 28,000 acres and claimed 16 lives as of Jan. 11. Meanwhile, a benefit concert for victims of the LA wildfires has been announced. Dubbed FireAid, the show has been described as an "evening of music and solidarity," and will take place at LA's Intuit Dome on Jan. 30. Proceeds from the concert will help to rebuild the communities lost by the wildfires that began on Jan. 7, supporting displaced families and advancing fire prevention technologies to ensure that, in the future, the city is better prepared for fire emergencies. - Billboard/NME, 1/8/25...... As former President Jimmy Carter, who passed away on Jan. 29 at age 100, was memorialized at the Washington National Cathedral on Jan. 9, country stars Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood paid tribute to the nation's 39th commander-in-chief with a moving cover of John Lennon's 1971 homage to peace, "Imagine." Brooks played the song's iconic melody on an acoustic guitar, singing, "Imagine there's no heaven/ It's easy if you try/ No hell below us/ Above us, only sky," his voice echoing through the majestic 188-year-old Washington National Cathedral, which has hosted the funeral and memorial services for almost all of the 21 Presidents who've died since Congress approved its charter in 1893. The deliberate pace of the performance -- and the addition of a piano accompaniment -- appeared to move many of the dignitaries on hand, which included all the former living Presidents. Soon-to-be-ex-President Joe Biden bowed his head at one point as his successor, former President Donald Trump seemed to close his eyes briefly during the performance. "You may say I'm a dreamer/ But I'm not the only one," Brooks sang as wife Yearwood joined in, matching his vocals on the lines, "I hope someday you'll join us/ And the world will live as one." That final line was delivered as the couple looked into each other's eyes and held the moment for a beat, with Brooks leaning in to give Yearwood, his wife since 2006, a kiss on the cheek. In addition to the Brooks/Yearwood performance and a number of other moving tributes from Carter's family, the funeral included a eulogy by Biden, who is less than two weeks away from the end of his term, after which he will be replaced by twice-impeached former President Trump. After the funeral, Pres. Carter's body will be flown back to Georgia for a private family funeral before he is buried on the grounds of his home in Plains next to his late wife of 77 years, Rosalynn Carter. Footage of the "Imagine" performance has been shared on YouTube. - Billboard, 1/9/25...... The official trailer for the upcoming Led Zeppelin biopic, Becoming Led Zeppelin, has been shared on YouTube. The film, powered by awe-inspiring, psychedelic, never-before-seen footage, performances, and music by the seminal heavy metal band, will be screened in IMAX theaters on beginning Feb. 7. The film is told in Led Zeppelin's own words and is the first officially sanctioned film on the group. - Music-News.com, 1/10/25...... AC-DCAn Australian construction company has issued an apology following the demolition of a Sydney home that once housed future AC/DC members Angus Young and his brother Malcolm Young. The house, which had been located at 4 Burleigh Street in the Western Sydney suburb of Burwood, was reportedly razed in late 2024 following a sale in Feb. 2023 for AUD $5.8 million. The Young family moved to the Burleigh Street address in 1965 after time spent at other houses in the suburb, with brothers Angus and Malcolm honing their musical talents while living there. In 1973, the pair would co-found AC/DC, who have since become one of Australia's most successful rock exports of all time. The legacy and importance of the address to the Sydney community had been recognized numerous times over the years. In 2013, the house was listed on the National Trust Register of Historic Houses, and in 2024 the local Burwood Council commissioned a mural of Angus and Malcolm by artist Claire Foxton which is still visible on the side of 12 Burleigh Street. News broke of the house's demolition in late December, with outrage from both fans and the local community reaching the Burwood Council, who defended the demolition despite the presence of the address on the National Trust. In a statement from Burwood Square general manager Leon Kmita, the company has shared their regret for the demolition, claiming they were unaware of the cultural importance held by the house. "We regret that the previous long-term owner did not share this vital part of the property's background with us," Kmita said. "Learning about this connection after our plans were already underway has shocked us. We are genuinely sorry for this oversight." According to Kmita, the Burwood Square team are in the process of attempting to salvage materials so they can create a "special space" for fans of AC/DC to "gather to celebrate the band's enduring legacy." "While we cannot change the past, we are dedicated to celebrating this significant part of their story," he added. "To the global fanbase of AC/DC, please know that we hear you, appreciate your deep admiration for this legendary band, and are devoted to making this right." - Billboard, 1/7/25...... KISS principals Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley have reached a settlement to end a wrongful termination lawsuit accusing them of firing their longtime hairstylist after he complained about "unsafe working conditions" amid the COVID-19 pandemic. With a jury trial set to get underway later in January, attorneys for both sides told a Los Angeles judge on Jan. 7 that they had "resolved" the case, in which David Mathews claimed that he had been abruptly terminated in 2022 after serving as the band's hairstylist for 30 years. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed in court filings and neither side immediately returned requests for comment. Mathews sued the iconic rock band in 2023, alleging he had been fired in retaliation after he repeatedly raised concerns about the band's allegedly lax approach to the pandemic. Among other allegations, he said he was forced to work in close proximity to band members like Simmons even when they were sick. "He was coughing and blowing his nose in the dressing room while still insisting that he felt fine," Mathews wrote of one encounter with Simmons. "Once again, Mr. Mathews was required to be in Mr. Simmons presence to perform his job duties." Mathews isn't the only person to sue over Kiss over the band's COVID-19 protocols. The band is also facing a wrongful death lawsuit from the family of Francis S. Stueber, a longtime guitar tech who died in Oct. 2021 while quarantining in a hotel room. The suit claims that the band ignored their own safety rules and failed to arrange medical aid to Stueber after he fell ill. - Billboard, 1/7/25...... Rush have reflected on their 2015 farewell tour, saying that they "let our British and European fans down" by not giving them the chance to say goodbye. The Canadian band played 35 headline shows across North America almost 10 years ago, having formed over four decades prior. Drummer Neil Peart died from brain cancer in early 2020, aged 67. During a new interview with ClassicRock.com, bassist/vocalist Geddy Lee and guitarist Alex Lifeson recalled how they had initially wanted to visit more countries as part of the trek -- but said Peart didn't want to head out on the road at all. "I'd pushed really hard to get more gigs so that we could do those extra shows and I was unsuccessful," Lee said of the trio's "R40 Live" tour. "I really felt like I let our British and European fans down. It felt to me incorrect that we didn't do it, but Neil [Peart] was adamant that he would only do 30 shows and that was it." He continued: "That to him was a huge compromise because he didn't want to do any shows. He didn't want to do one show. So, in his mind, he'd compromised already. He said, 'I'll do 30 gigs, don't ask me for any more'. I just kind of felt I owed an explanation to them, the audience. It's part of why I went into the detail I did about Neil's passing in the book [Lee's memoir, My Effin' Life], was to let fans in on what went down. That it wasn't a straight line." Elsewhere, Rush paid tribute to their former producer Peter Collins in summer 2024 following his death aged 73. - NME, 1/7/25...... Peter YarrowFolk singer Peter Yarrow of the beloved 1960s trio Peter, Paul & Mary died on Jan. 7 at his home on the Upper West Side of Manhattan following a four-year battle with bladder cancer. He was 86. With his high tenor melding seamlessly with baritone Paul Stookey and contralto Mary Travers, Mr. Yarrow and this singing partners produced some of the most beloved songs of the 1960s, taking the lead on classics "Puff the Magic Dragon," "The Great Mandala" and "Day Is Done," all of which he wrote or co-wrote. Perhaps the group's most well-known track, "Puff the Magic Dragon," was penned by Mr. Yarrow based on a poem by fellow Cornell grad and author Leonard Lipton about a magical dragon name Puff and his human friend, child Jackie Paper, who take off on adventures in the magical land of Honalee. Fans of the 1963 song -- which was later turned into a beloved 1978 animated special and two follow-up sequels -- were convinced that it was larded with secret drug references, tagging it as a trojan horse ditty about smoking weed, a claim both Lipton and Mr. Yarrow repeatedly denied. The song was one of the group's most successful on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 2 on the tally in May 1963. Following Mr. Yarrow's death and Travers' passing in 2009 at age 72, Stookey, 87, is the group's last living member. "Our fearless dragon is tired and has entered the last chapter of his magnificent life. The world knows Peter Yarrow the iconic folk activist, but the human being behind the legend is every bit as generous, creative, passionate, playful, and wise as his lyrics suggest," daughter Bethany Yarrow said in a statement. Born in Manhattan on May 31, 1938, Mr. Yarrow began performing in New York's burgeoning Greenwich Village folk scene after graduation from Cornell University in the late 1950s. After a performance at the Newport Folk Festival, he met the event's founder and famed music manager Albert Grossman, who shared his idea for putting together a vocal group in the vein of The Weavers, a harmony quartet from the 1940s and 50s that sang traditional folk and labor songs as well as children's tunes and gospel; it originally featured beloved folk singer/songwriter Pete Seeger. It was Bob Dylan manager Grossman's idea to put Mr. Yarrow and Travers together, with the latter later suggesting the addition of Stookey, who both had performed with on the folk scene. After signing to Warner Brothers Records, they debuted in 1962 with the song "Lemon Tree," which peaked at No. 35 on the Hot 100. Quickly establishing their folk credentials, they followed up with the 1949 Seeger/Lee Hayes-penned protest anthem "If I Had a Hammer," which won them two Grammy Awards in 1962 for best folk recording and best performance by a vocal group; they were also nominated for best new artist that year. They picked up two more Grammys the next year in the same categories for their cover of Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" and a fifth one in 1969 (best recording for children) for the Peter, Paul and Mommy LP, which peaked at No. 12 on the album chart. Among their string of hits on the Billboard Hot 100 were their 1969 No. 1 cover of John Denver's "Leavin' on a Jet Plane," as well as the No. 9 charting "I Dig Rock and Roll Music" and the No. 21 hit "Day Is Done." They were also well-known for their charting covers of such Dylan classics as "Blowin' in the Wind" (No. 2, 1963) and "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" (No. 9, 1963), scoring a total of five top 10 albums on the Billboard 200 chart. Two of those albums, a self-titled collection from 1962 and 1963's In the Wind, reached No. 1. In keeping with the tenor of the era, the group were also notable for their strong, progressive political stance in song ("The Cruel War," "Day Is Done") and in practice. They participated Martin Luther King Jr.'s March on Washington in 1963, performing Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" (and "If I Had a Hammer") on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, helping to cement that song's place as a civil rights anthem. It was around that time that Mr. Yarrow was accused of taking "immoral and indecent liberties" with a 14-year old girl, Barbara Winter, after she and her older sister came to his hotel room for an autograph and he answered the door naked and forced her to perform a sex act on herself. The singer was indicted and sentenced to one to three years in prison, and ended up serving just three months. He later apologized for the incident and was granted a presidential pardon by Jimmy Carter in Jan. 1981, just before the late president's final day in office. Mr. Yarrow was also an indefatigable anti-war protester, helping to organize the anti-Vietnam National Mobilization to End the War protest in 1969 in Washington that drew nearly 500,000 fellow anti-war activists, as well as 1978's anti-nuclear benefit show Survival Sunday at the Hollywood Bowl, which featured appearances by Jackson Browne, Graham Nash and Gil Scott-Heron, among others. In 2000, he founded Operation Respect, a non-profit that aimed to tackle the mental health effects of school bullying. Following solo ventures by all three, the trio reunited several times over the ensuing years, including for a 1972 concert to support George McGovern's failed presidential campaign, his 1978 Survival Sunday anti-nukes show and a summer reunion tour that same year. By 1981 they were back together for good, performing and releasing five more albums before Travers' death. - Billboard, 1/7/25...... Grammy-nominated singer and controversial anti-gay rights activist Anita Bryant has died at age 84. The news was shared by The New York Times, which reported that Ms. Byrant died from cancer on Dec. 16 while at her home in Edmond, Oklahoma. Local newspaper, The Oklahoman, also made the announcement and shared a statement from the singer's family which read: "May Anita's memory and her faith in eternal life through Christ comfort all who embraced her." Born in Oklahoma in 1940, Ms. Bryant first began singing at age six and went on to make various television and radio appearances throughout her childhood. She was given her own show, The Anita Bryant Show, aged just 12-years-old. As a teenager, she took home the trophy at the Miss Oklahoma beauty pageant and came second runner-up in the 1959 Miss America pageant, also going on to share her debut album that same year. As she centred her efforts on her music career, she performed at both Republican and Democratic national conventions and also made her way into the US charts with songs "Till There Was You," "Paper Roses" and "In My Little Corner Of The World." Towards the end of the '60s, she became a spokesperson for Florida Citrus, although was later dropped from the role after becoming a vocal opponent of gay rights. The late '70s saw her lead an anti-LGBTQ+ raly that tried to repeal a Florida ordinance that prohibited discrimination based on sexual orientation. The "Save Our Children" rally was successful, although it damaged her image and led to a nationwide boycott of the juice from the state. In solidarity with the LGBTQ+ community, bars also stopped serving screwdriver cocktails. Later, she would reveal in an interview that she lost roughly $500,000 in concert bookings as well as a deal to host her own television show. She also became one of the first people to be hit in the face with a pie as a form of protest in 1977. She was dropped by Florida Citrus in 1980 and her split from husband Bob Green also saw her lose support from conservatives. She later married Charles Dry, although never succeeded in reviving her career. In 2019, a biopic about her life starring Ashley Judd was reported as being in the works, and before then she was the subject for both the 2016 play Anita Bryant's Playboy Interview and the 2018 musical "The Loneliest Girl In The World." - NME, 1/10/25...... Anita Bryant and Sam MooreLegendary soul singer Sam Moore, half of the seminal duo Sam & Dave, died on Jan. 10 in Coral Gables, Fla., due to complications from surgery. He was 89. Mr. Moore, who was revered by artists including Bruce Springsteen, Phil Collins, Garth Brooks and Jon Bon Jovi, had an instantly recognizable tenor, first heard on such call-and-response classics as Sam & Dave's 1960s hits "Hold On, I'm Coming" and the Grammy-winning "Soul Man," both of which reached No. 1 on Billboard's Hot R&B Singles chart, as well as "I Thank You" and "When Something Is Wrong with My Baby." The duo, who performed at Martin Luther King Jr.'s memorial concert at Madison Square Garden following his assassination in 1968, was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992 by Billy Joel. Mr. Moore, who grew up in Miami, began singing in church and drew the attention of another legendary Sam, Sam Cooke, who wanted Mr. Moore to replace him in his gospel group The Soul Stirrers. However, after seeing Jackie Wilson perform, Mr. Moore shifted from gospel to pop and was performing at the King O'Hearts Club when he met Dave Prater and the two formed Sam & Dave. Legendary Atlantic Records executives Ahmet Ertegun, Tom Dowd and Jerry Wexler saw the pair at the King O'Hearts Club and signed them to the label in 1965. Wexler passed them to Atlantic's southern partner, Stax Records, where Isaac Hayes and David Porter took them under their wing and produced their iconic hits. Following Sam & Dave's breakup in 1970, Mr. Moore signed to Atlantic as a solo artist. He recorded a solo album produced by King Curtis featuring Donny Hathaway and Aretha Franklin. However, after Curtis was murdered in 1971, the album was shelved. He reunited with Dave for a few years, but spiraled into heroin addiction, which was chronicled in the DA Pennebaker/Chris Hegedus documentary Only the Strong Survive. Interest in the duo was greatly revived by 1980's The Blues Brothers movie, starring John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd. The pair's main theme was their boisterous version of "Soul Man." In the early '80s, Mr. Moore became sober with the help of Joyce McRae, whom he married in 1982 and who became his manager. Mr. Moore went on to perform for six U.S. presidents -- Jimmy Carter, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump -- and was a frequent performer at the Kennedy Center Honors. Springsteen invited Mr. Moore to perform on his 1992 Human Touch album, as well as Only the Strong Survive, his 2023 album of soul covers. At the time of his death, Mr. Moore was working on a gospel album with Rudy Perez. He is survived by Joyce, daughter Michelle and grandchildren Tash and Misha. - Billboard, 1/11/25...... Cult psychedelic folk musician and painter Ed Askew has died at age 84. Mr. Askew was born in Connecticut in 1940 and began his career as a painter, graduating from Yale School Of Art in 1963, before making the shift to become a musician. He released his debut album Ask The Unicorn in 1968, and went on to gradually develop a cult following in the '80s after moving to New York City and developing a unique style of acid and folk. Ask The Unicorn was later re-released by Drag City Records in 2015 as a resurgence of interest in Mr. Askew's work arose, and throughout his career the songwriter shared 11 studio albums. One of his most listened-to releases was the 2013 album For The World. Released via Tin Angel, it included musical collaborations with Sharon Van Etten, Mary Lattimore, Marc Ribot, and more. Aside from the full studio albums, Mr. Askew also self-released hundreds of songs on cassettes and later on his Bandcamp page. - NME, 1/7/25.

Appearing alongside his recent "Never Too Late" collaborator Brandi Carlile as a presenter at the 2025 Golden Globes cereminy in Los Angeles on Jan. 5, Elton John joked about his recent eyesight issues as the pair announced Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross as winners of the best original score category. "It's a very special night for me to be here because, I don't know if you know, but there's been stories going around about my regressive eyesight," John said. "I just want to reassure everybody -- it's not as bad as it seems. I'm so pleased to be here with my co-host, Rihanna," he said, pointing to Carlile. When Carlile announced that the Nine Inch Nails duo had won, John raised both fists into the air and let out a huge cheer. Elton opened up about his eyesight problems in November during a Good Morning America interview: "I unfortunately lost my eyesight in my right eye in July because I had an infection in the South of France," he said. "It's been four months now since I haven't been able to see. And my left eye is not the greatest." - Billboard, 1/5/25...... Debbie HarrySpeaking to the UK paper The Times, Blondie frontwoman Debbie Harry reflected on turning 80 later in 2025 and the "beauty of aging." "I don't walk around thinking every minute, 'Oh God, I'm going be 80' - but that's sort of how I feel," said Harry, who reaches her milestone decade on July 1. Harry continued: "My mother used to say in her head she was 25 and I'm the same. But thinking about it all the time could be your downfall. And I don't really want the same kind of life I did when I was younger. I've done that! That's the beauty of ageing -- you know what it's about. You have it in your heart and soul and your memory bank or does that sound like an excuse? Should I go out and party every night?" The "Call Me" singer also opened up about the prospect of dating in her advanced years. When asked whether she was currently in a relationship, she responded: "No! God forbid! I'm terrified. No, I'm kidding, but I don't think [being in a relationship] is possible. Do you?" Harry, who was once in a relationship with Blondie co-founder Chris Stein, explained that she wasn't "in the right position to be dating online," before being told about the celebrity dating app Raya.com. "OK, OK, I'll do it!" she replied. "And I'm going to get back in touch and let you know how it went. I'm definitely not so adventurous as I was, but I'm still curious. I like the way the world spins." Additionally, Harry revealed that she likes to flirt in the local hardware store. "Home Depot is where I do all my flirting... There are some big, strong men there." She remembered: "I found somebody there I thought was really sexy. He was working in the garden department. But he was busy. We just sort of looked at each other and did that [look]." Elsewhere in the interview, the frontwoman recalled how she was once surrounded onstage by a group of Hell's Angels. Blondie are due to release a new album later in 2025, helmed by in demand Grammy-winning producer John Congleton (St. Vincent, Phoebe Bridgers, The War On Drugs). It'll be the follow-up to 2017's Pollinator. - New Musical Express, 1/6/25...... In a new interview with the UK publication The Guardian, John Lennon's eldest son Julian Lennon says he's "not part of The Beatles' "inner circle." With the recent resurgence of the legendary quartet's work, including Peter Jackson's Get Back (2021), David Tedeschi and Martin Scorsese's Beatles '64 (2024), and the 2024 restoration of Michael Lindsay-Hogg's 1970 film, Let it Be, Julian said he's often the last to know about any activity with the Fab Four's camp. "It's news to me half the time. I'm not part of the inner circle -- I never have been," he admitted. "You have to realise that when Dad left, when I was between three and five (it was a bit of a process), it was just mum and me, and we had nothing to do with the Beatles or Dad. I visited him on the odd occasion but we were very much on the outside. I'm thankful that Sean and I get on like a house on fire -- we're best buddies and he tells me what he can, but things are pretty secret on the Beatles front." He continued: "[It's] extraordinarily strange but I'm not upset about it. I'd rather be excited and impressed by what they did and continue to do. As a fan, I'm just as curious as anybody else, although I do find myself going, 'how is it possible that there's another Beatles film?'" Julian also spoke about his photography work and his newest release, the coffee table book Life's Fragile Moments. Alongside discussions of how new music isn't on the cards just yet (a failed attempt to hit the late-night talk show circuit in 2024 left him "heartbroken"), Julian said he continues to "build up a body of work, a foundation that I can stand on, that nobody can take away from me." "And I continue to do so," he said. "It's not to show off, it's just to prove to myself that I can actually do this stuff. I'm not interested in fighting other people's opinions." Lennon recently took to social media in December to urge his followers to undergo regular doctor visits following an emergency surgery after a second skin cancer diagnosis. Just before the end of the year, on Dec. 30, Lennon updated his followers that he had received "the 'all clear'" from his doctors. - Billboard, 1/5/25...... Rory GallagherA statue of legendary Irish guitarist Rory Gallagher was unveiled in Belfast city centre on Jan. 4. Gallagher, a County Donegal native, often played the Northern Ireland capital over his three-decade career and now has been immortalised with a bronze statue outside the city's Ulster Hall on Bedford Street, with a ceremony being held to mark its unveiling. "He's finally here!" announced the venue on X on Jan. 4. "Today we're celebrating the legacy of Rory Gallagher with the unveiling of a new statue of the legendary guitarist outside Ulster Hall." Members of Gallagher's family were joined by fans and local signatories for the unveiling, with the Lord Mayor of Belfast Mickey Murray commending Gallagher's authenticity and talent. The statue itself was created by Anto Brennan, Jessica Checkley and David O'Brien of Bronze Art Ireland, with the design being inspired by a photograph that first featured on the cover of a Jan. 1972 issue of Melody Maker magazine. Gallagher, who is often cited by the likes of Eric Clapton, The Edge and Brian May as one of the greatest players of all time, has sold over 30 million records worldwide. His most celebrated albums include his self-titled solo debut in 1971, Deuce later the same year and the live albums Live! In Europe (1972) and Irish Tour '74 (1974). In 2011, his "lost" live album Notes from San Francisco was released 33 years after its recording. Ulster Hall also screened a documentary film inspired by the latter album to mark the occasion. Gallagher had a number of health problems, before being admitted to hospital in London in 1995 for liver failure. After contracting a hospital superbug known as MRSA, he passed away later that year at the age of 47. - NME, 1/4/25...... After less than two weeks in release, the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown has already ranked among the top-grossing music biopics of all time. According to BoxOfficeMojo.com, the film has grossed $41.7 million worldwide since its Dec. 25 release, securing a position between No. 18 Notorious (a 2009 Notorious B.I.G. biopic) and at No. 20, the 1993 Tina Turner biopic What's Love Got To Do With It. Timothée Chalamet stars in the film, which follows Dylan from Jan. 1961, when he moved from Minnesota to New York City, to July 1965, when he caused an uproar among fans by "going electric" at the Newport Folk Festival. Still riding high among the all-time top-grossing musicals are the 2018 Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody ($910.8 milloin worldwide gross), followed by Elvis (2022, $288.7 million); Straight Outta Compton (2015, $210.6 million), and Rocketman (2019, $195.3 million). - Billboard, 1/5/25...... The Temptations are commemorating 60 years in show business with a 14-day Mexican Riviera Voyage on the Discovery Princess cruise ship in Dec. 2025. Serving as host for the cruise on the Discovery Princess, which is known as "The Love Boat" and is also celebrating its 60th anniversary, will be Jill Whelan, who portrayed the character Vicki Stubing on The Love Boat television series. Whelan, and The Tempts, were on hand on Jan. 4 on board the Discovery Princess to announce the special sailing. Prior to the performance, Whelan described the upcoming voyage as a "trip down memory lane" as she recalled that the iconic R&B group appeared as themselves on an episode of The Love Boat 40 years ago. During that episode, the group premiered its No. 2 R&B hit, "Treat Her Like a Lady." Of the group's timeless legacy, she added, "The Temptations have also been responsible for spreading messages of love over 60 years. And what is better than that." The Tempts also performed their classic hit "My Girl," which was released 60 years ago. The Royal Princess will depart from the Port of Los Angeles on Dec. 6 with an itinerary including two overnight stays in Cabo San Lucas and Puerto Vallarta, as well as visits to Loreto, Manzanilla and Mazatlan. Additional music and other special guests plus various anniversary festivities will be announced soon. - Billboard, 1/5/25...... Carlos Santana has been forced to postpone his return to Las Vegas' House of Blues at Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino later in January due to a minor injury to his finger. The venue announced on its website Friday (Jan. 3) the postponement of the eight shows between Jan. 22 to Feb. 2, noting that ticket holders will receive refunds. In a statement to Variety, Michael Vrionis, president of Universal Tone Management, revealed that the guitarist suffered a fall that left him with a broken finger. "I am sorry to say that Carlos was out taking a walk at his vacation home in Kauai," he explained. "He took a hard fall, and he broke his little finger on his left hand. He had to have pins inserted in the finger. Unfortunately, he won't be able to play guitar for approximately six weeks. Doctors do say that he will recuperate fully." The statement continued: "Carlos is doing well and is anxious to be back on stage soon. He just needs to heal. Santana profoundly regrets these postponements of his upcoming performances, but accidents happen, and his health is our number one concern. He is looking forward to seeing all of his fans very soon." While the new dates are yet to be announced, Santana is set to return to the venue for nine shows starting on May 14 and wrapping up on May 25. He's also scheduled to go on a small Oneness Tour starting on Apr. 16. - Billboard, 1/3/25...... Neil YoungThe latest in a seemingly endless stream of "lost" Neil Young albums, Oceanside Countryside, will be released on Feb. 14 via Reprise Records. "This analog original album was recorded in 1977 and unreleased. These songs are the original mixes done at the time of the recordings in the order I planned for the album," Young said in a statement about the latest release in his Analog Original Series (AOS). Oceanside Countryside was originally recorded from May-Dec. 1977, just before the release of his 1978 folk/country album Comes a Time, which featured such beloved songs as the title track, "Lotta Love," "Human Highway," "Field of Opportunity" and "Four Strong Winds." "I sang the vocals and played the instruments on Oceanside in Florida at Triad studios and Malibu at Indigo studio," Young aded. "I sang the vocals and recorded with my great band of friends, Ben Keith [steel guitar], Joe Osborn [bass], Karl T. Himmel [drums], and Rufus Thibodeaux [fiddle] at Crazy Mama's in Nashville on Countryside. I hope you enjoy this treasure of an Analog Original recording, recorded by Tim Mulligan, as much as I do. Listening to it now, I think I should have put it out back then." All the songs on Oceanside are performed solo by Young, with a group of friends joining him on Countryside, including Keith, Thibodeaux, Himmel and Osborne, with Tim Drummond on bass for "The Old Homestead," which also features The Band's Levon Helm on drums. Young noted that the tracklist for the upcoming album -- which was recorded on tape -- reflects how he originally planned to release the LP, which will be available in analog and on vinyl for the first time ever with the original mixes done at the time of the recording. - Billboard, 1/3/25...... In other Neil Young news, the singer has announced that he will be headlining the UK's Glastonbury Festival in June, just days after he said that he would withdraw from the festival and called it a "corporate turn-off." On Jan. 1, Young posted to his website: "The Chrome Hearts and I were looking forward to playing Glastonbury, one of my all time favorite outdoor gigs," Young wrote in the brief update. "We were told that BBC was now a partner in Glastonbury and wanted us to do a lot of things in a way we were not interested in. It seems Glastonbury is now under corporate control and is not the way I remember it being. We will not be playing Glastonbury on this tour because it is a corporate turn-off, and not for me like it used to be. Hope to see you at one of the other venues on the tour." On Jan. 3, Young gave this update: "Due to an error in the information received, I had decided to not play the Glastonbury festival, which I always have loved. Happily, the festival is now back on our itinerary and we look forward to playing! Hope to see you there!" Glastonbury will take place at Worthy Farm, Somerset in England on June 25-29, and he will perform with his new band The Chrome Hearts. Young previously topped the bill in June 2009. - Billboard, 1/3/25...... As he spends time hanging around the set for an upcoming biopic of himself, Bruce Springsteen says so far he's very impressed with the movie's star, Jeremy Allen White. White, best known for playing perpetually harried chef Carmy Berzatto on the streaming TV series The Bear, has been filming the movie, titled Deliver Me From Nowhere, that will tell the story behind the making of the Boss' stark 1982 album Nebraska. In a recent chat with SiriusXM E Street Radio's Jim Rotolo, Springsteen, 75, talked about whether it's been strange to be on set as he watches Allen portray a thirtysomething version of him. "A little bit at first, but you get over that pretty quick and Jeremy is such a terrific actor that you just fall right into it," Springsteen said. "He's got an interpretation of me that I think the fans will deeply recognize and he's just done a great job, so I've had a lot of fun. I've had a lot of fun being on the set when I can get there." Springsteen continued: " [White] sings very well. You know, and Jeremy Strong [as Springsteen's longtime manager Jon Landau] and Odessa Young [as then-girlfriend Faye], you know, it's a tremendous cast of people. They cast the film beautifully, so it's very exciting." Directed and written by Scott Cooper and adapted from Warren Zanes' book of the same name, the movie has gotten full support from Springsteen. In the same interview with Rotolo, Springsteen also confirmed a late 2024 press release teasing that this year will bring a new collection that will "look back at Springsteen's storied recording career, featuring never-before-heard material." The full interview can be heard on YouTube. - Billboard, 1/3/25...... Billy JoelBilly Joel teamed up with drummer Jason Bonham for a rendition of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love" during a New Year's Eve concert at Long Island's UBS Arena on Dec. 31. Joel's end-of-year spectacular was a special for numerous reasons: not only was the night preceded by Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Evening as the opener, but the lengthy set saw the veteran musician roll out plenty of fan favorites for the night, along with a few rarer tracks from his extensive back catalog. While the seldom-heard 1982's "A Room of Our Own" from The Nylon Curtain LP got a look-in, rarer still was a performance of 1974's "Souvenir," from his album Streetlife Serenade, which received only its 13th showing from across the past 40 years. However, one of the most notable songs from the evening was one that wasn't Joel's own. Just over a third of the way through the set, Joel switched his focus to welcome Bonham and his band to the stage for a rendition of 1969's "Whole Lotta Love." "We're going to bring a guest onstage and do this next song," Joel said to the crowd. "We have fun playing this, especially with this guy. Please welcome Jason Bonham. You all know this song. It's not a piano song." With Bonham performing drums on the song his father helped make famous more than five decades ago, Joel's longtime guitarist and vocalist Mike DelGuidice sang lead on the track, relegating Joel to the background somewhat. The show also featured renditions of The Rolling Stones' "Start Me Up," and Derek and the Dominos' "Layla," which was used to fill time ahead of the midnight countdown. The concert also wrapped up a big year for Joel, who not only concluded his record-breaking 10-year Madison Square Garden residency (earning $266.7 million from 1.9 million ticket sales to 104 shows), but also released "Turn the Lights Back On" -- his first new lyrical single in nearly 20 years. - Billboard, 1/1/25...... John Sykes, the chairman of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, has said the institution will not be renamed, despite pressure from some artists. In recent years, there has been discussion whether the Hall should still use the "Rock and Roll" moniker after inducting a number of artists from outside traditional rock music, including Eminem, A Tribe Called Quest, Mary J. Blige, Dolly Parton and Missy Elliott, however Sykes recently told Vulture magazine that he has no plans to change the name, stating that instead he will "communicate that rock and roll is open to all." "I think it's because some people don't understand the meaning of rock and roll," Sykes explained. "If you go back to the original sound in the '50s, it was everything. As Missy Elliott calls it, it was a gumbo. It just became known as rock and roll. So when I hear people say, 'You should just change it to the Music Hall of Fame,' rock and roll has pretty much covered all of that territory. Rather than throwing the name out, it's doing a better job of communicating to people where rock and roll came from and what it's truly about. Once they hear it that way, they understand." Sykes went on to explain what he believes are the true criteria that should qualify artists for the Hall. "It's music that has spirit to it, like a youth spirit," he said. "I think rock 'n' roll should have a very, very broad sense. I think there's room for a lot of different genres." - NME, 1/2/25...... Former Motörhead drummer Mikkey Dee says he's "lucky to be alive" following a sepsis diagnosis over the holiday period. Posting on Facebook on Dec. 2, the Swedish percussionist shared news of his health scare, explaining that he had been hospitalized following a blood infection he described as "very serious." "I was admitted for three weeks but now I am home fighting this bastard bacteria," he shared. "Thankfully, I have received fantastic care at the Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, my hometown. So thanks a million to all the Doctors and Nurses that have been giving me the most excellent care. After several operations, I am now back home and the numbers are all going in the right direction. Still lots of recovery and rehab in front of me," he added. In a strange coincidence, Dee's brush with death occurred almost nine years to the day since his Motörhead bandmate Lemmy Kilmister passed away, on Dec. 28, 2015. Notably, his health scare also took place mere weeks after he took to social media to refute premature reports of his death. - Billboard, 1/2/25...... Two Maine businessmen have purchased radio station WKIT-FM from best-selling horror author and Maine resident Stephen King after he announced that the station and two others he owns would go silent after New Year's Eve. The buyers are the Maine-based duo Greg Hawes and Jeff Solari, who formed Rock Lobster Radio Group to run the station. "WKIT is the most legendary station in the region. It has tremendous history. We couldn't let it die," they said in a statement. King is a lifelong rocker and performed with the Rock Bottom Remainders, a band that featured literary icons performing for charity. He announced late last year that at age 77 he thought it was time to say goodbye to the radio stations. "I'm sorry as hell to be closing down WKIT and its sister stations," King posted earlier this month on social media. "I held off the suits for as long as I could." Since getting into the terrestrial radio business in 1983, King has written over 50 novels, including well-known works such as It, Misery, The Dark Tower series, Pet Sematary, Under the Dome, Skeleton Crew, The Green Mile and 11/22/63, among many others. - AP/Billboard, 1/1/25...... Wayne OsmondWayne Osmond, the second-oldest of the legendary teen idol group The Osmond Brothers (later simply The Osmonds), died on Jan. 1 after suffering a "massive stroke," according to his brother Merrill Osmond. He was 73. The singer and guitarist's family confirmed the news of his death in a statement to Salt Lake City news station, KSL TV. "Wayne Osmond, beloved husband and father, passed away peacefully last night surrounded by his loving wife and five children," the statement reads. "His legacy of faith, music, love, and laughter have influenced the lives of many people around the world. He would want everyone to know that the gospel of Jesus Christ is true, that families are forever, and that banana splits are the best dessert. We love him and will miss him dearly." Following the news of his death, a number of Wayne's family members took to social media to honor him, including Donny Osmond who posted on X: "Wayne brought so much light, laughter, and love to everyone who knew him, especially me. He was the ultimate optimist and was loved by everyone. I'm sure I speak on behalf of every one of us siblings when I state that we were fortunate to have Wayne as a brother." Wayne, one of nine Osmond siblings, started a barbershop quartet in 1958 alongside his brothers Merrill, Alan and Jay Osmond. After getting discovered from a Disneyland performance, the boys were cast over a seven-year period on NBC's The Andy Williams Show beginning in 1962. When brothers Donny and Jimmy Osmond joined the group, they became known as The Osmonds and were the standout teen idols throughout the 1970s. The Osmonds had four top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart -- "One Bad Apple" (No. 1 in 1971), "Yo Yo" (No. 3 in 1971), "Down by the Lazy River" (No. 4 in 1972) and "Love Me For a Reason" (No. 10 in 1974). Alan and Merrill Osmond co-wrote "Down by the Lazy River," making it the group's biggest self-penned hit. The group's top-charting album on the Billboard Hot 200 LP chart was Phase-III, which reached No. 10 in 1972. The Osmond family was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2003. Wayne is survived by his wife Kathlyn Louise White and their five children. - Billboard, 1/2/25.

Friday, December 27, 2024

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on January 1st, 2025

When the Grammy Awards' Recording Academy nominated The Beatles for two awards -- Record of the Year and Best Rock Performance -- for their "final" single "Now and Then," fans of the band were pleased. However only the two surviving Beatles -- Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr -- will be eligible to receive a Grammy because due to Recording Academy rules the two deceased Beatles -- John Lennon and George Harrison -- have each been dead for more than five years and cannot meet the test for "new recordings" -- "material that has been recorded within five years of the release date." There is precedent for this. Nat "King" Cole was not nominated when daughter Natalie Cole won Record of the Year and Best Traditional Pop Performance in 1992 for their studio-created duet "Unforgettable." He had died in 1965. Furthermore, Lennon was not included the last time the Fab Four were nominated, 28 years ago, for Best Pop Performance and Best Music Video, short-form, both for "Free as a Bird," and Best Music Video, long-form for The Beatles Anthology. McCartney co-produced "Now and Then" with Giles Martin, the son of legendary Beatles producer George Martin. Both McCartney and Giles Martin are nominated for Record of the Year as producers of the single, as are eight engineer/mixers and a mastering engineer -- but not John and George. If "Now and Then" wins Record of the Year, McCartney will complete his sweep of the Big Four awards, though it will have taken him longer to do so than any other act in Grammy history. He won Best New Artist in 1965 (with The Beatles), Song of the Year in 1967 for "Michelle" (in tandem with Lennon) and album of the year in 1968 for The Beatles' landmark Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. The winners of the 68th Grammy Awards are set to be revealed at a ceremony on Feb. 2, 2025 at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. - Billboard, 12/31/24...... Sammy HagarFormer Van Halen frontman Sammy Hagar has labeled VH drummer Alex Van Halen's oversight of the "Van Hagar" era in his recent memoir Brothers as "blasphemy." Hagar, who fronted VH from 1985 to 1996, and again from 2003 to 2005, criticized Alex for effectively stopping the VH story after the departure of vocalist David Lee Roth, and overlooking not only Hagar's time as vocalist, but the temporary lineup featuring Gary Cherone, and their ultimate reunion with Roth. Sharing a photo of himself and guitarist Eddie Van Halen from 1991 on Instagram, Hagar began responding to comments on the post, including one who opined that "most purists believe VH ended with DLR." "It could have [ended], my friend, but instead we went on to sell over 50 million records for [a] No. 1 album [then] sold out every building and stadium in the world for a whole decade," Hagar responded. "That never happened again." VH experienced some of their biggest successes with their album 1984, which featured the No. 1 single "Jump," and peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 200 album chart and become their highest charting release of the Roth era. The follow-up, 1986's 5150, was their first released with Hagar on vocals, and was the first of four consecutive No. 1 albums released with Hagar at the helm. Continuing his response, Hagar contended that Alex was doing both the band and his late brother a disservice by leaving the era out of the memoir. "Alex is not doing his brother's musical legacy justice by not acknowledging all the No. 1 albums and some great music Eddie and I wrote together -- not Alex -- but Eddie and I wrote together," Hagar continued. "To not acknowledge [those] 10 years of music is blasphemy to his brother's musicianship, songwriting and legacy." However, Hagar recently told Rolling Stone that he still hopes that he and his former bandmate are able to make peace at some point. "I understand he probably couldn't have done the whole era in one book. It would've been the Bible, the dictionary, so maybe he's got plans for a Volume 2. Who knows?" said Hagar. "I want to be friends, though. I don't want to play in a band with Al. I'm not asking for that. I can see that he's not capable of doing that. If he was, I'd be happy to play with him, but it's not what I'm looking for. I just want to friends again." - Billboard, 12/31/24...... Elvis Presley's The Classic Christmas Album has topped Billboard Top Rock Albums for the first time, rising two places to No. 1 on the Jan. 4, 2025-dated survey. In the week ending Dec. 26, the set earned 40,000 equivalent album units, a jump of 59%, according to Luminate. The Classic Christmas Album was released in 2012 and features 17 holiday-themed hits from Presley's catalog, including "Blue Christmas" and "Here Comes Santa Claus (Right Down Santa Claus Lane)." "Blue Christmas" was the album's top performer in streaming last week. It ranks at No. 2 on Rock Steaming Songs with 27.1 million official U.S. streams (up 61%). "Here Comes Santa Claus (Right Down Santa Claus Lane)" also appears on the tally, at No. 11 (8.1 million, up 43%). The collection, which previously reached a No. 2 best on Top Rock Albums over the 2020 holiday season, is Presley's second No. 1 on the chart, which began in 2006, after Elvis Presley Forever led for a week in 2015. That album accompanied a "forever" postage stamp issued by the U.S. Postal Service that year. "Blue Christmas" was the set's top radio track, with 9 million in audience (up 33%). Meanwhile, Elton John has scored his 60th Billboard Top 40 hit with his 2021 collaboration with Ed Sheeran, "Merry Christmas." The holiday song rose four places to No. 38, marking its first week in the chart's top 40 -- and John's milestone 60th top 40 hit and Sheeran's likewise landmark 25th. The collab, which Sheeran and John co-wrote, was released in 2021 and first peaked at No. 42 a year later. Presley is currently at No. 4 on the list of artists with the most Top 100 hits, behind Drake, Taylor Swift and Lil Wayne, while John is tied with Beyoncé in ninth place with 60 each. - Billboard, 12/31/24...... The Doobie BrothersThe Doobie Brothers shared details of a new album in 2025 in a Facebook post on Dec. 30. "It's hard to believe another year just shot by like a rocket!" the band wrote in their year-end wrap-up. "We're currently celebrating almost 56 years together as a band. 55 years since we released our very first self titled album The Doobie Brothers. It's been a long winding road since those early days but we're still working together, doing our best to remain creative, and looking forward to bringing our music to you folks out there again next year." They went on to write: "We have 10 new songs sung by Tom [Johnston], Michael [McDonald], and Pat [Simmons]. The three of us wrote songs and collaborated together. We had a lot of fun recording it and we feel very proud of the results. John McFee added his incredible musical talents as well. Once more we turned to the amazing John Shanks who produced, wrote, and played on the tracks with us. Fortunately we're back working with our friends at Warner Brothers/Rhino Records on this release. We'll probably debut a song soon after the first of the year and the full album will follow sometime in the Spring/Summer." The most notable takeaway from the band's update is the return of McDonald on an album of original music. Joining the band ahead of their Takin' It to the Streets LP in 1975, McDonald remained lead vocalist of the band until their 1982, overseeing some of their most popular releases, including 1978's Minute by Minute -- their only album to top the Billboard Hot 200. The last studio album of original material he recorded with the Doobies was 1980's One Step Closer, though he would feature on one song from 2010's World Gone Crazy, and feature on the band's 2014 covers/collaboration album Southbound. While McDonald rejoined the band as a full-time member in 2019, he was ultimately absent from their 2021 album, Liberté. - Billboard, 12/30/24...... Actress Monica Barbaro, who portrays Joan Baez in the new Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown, has revealed that Baez was "not fussed" about her portrayal in the film. "I struggled with this feeling of just so much gratitude for everything she's done and for being willing to speak to me and how much I admire her -- I tried to let that get out of the way and just have a conversation, but that's hard," Barbaro said in an interview with the UK paper The Guardian. Barbaro continued, sharing the research she did in preparation for the role: "Having studied her voice so closely -- her speaking voice, every interview in the 60s -- and then hearing Joan's voice now in her 80s, in real time, speaking to me, was an incredibly emotional experience: really cool and kind of mind-blowing." She added that Baez "was really not fussed" about her portrayal in the film. "I think I was more concerned on her behalf than she was for herself. I was sort of saying: you deserve your own biopic! So many biopics with different chapters of your life! And she said: 'I'm just sitting in my back yard watching the birds.' You know: I lived it, I did it." Starring Timothée Chalamet in the main role, A Complete Unknown premiered in US theaters on Christmas Day and will have its UK premiere on Jan. 17. - New Musical Express, 12/30/24...... Syd BarrettIn related news, the producer of A Complete Unkown has revealed he's attached for a new biopic on Pink Floyd founder Syd Barrett and is in talks with "Mama Cass" Elliot's estate for a new film about the late The Mamas and the Papas singer. Peter Jaysen owns the company, Veritas Entertainment, that was involved in securing the rights to Dylan's musical archive and life story for A Complete Unknown. In an appearance on the podcast The Town With Matthew Belloni, he revealed that more big-name projects were in motion. "Due to our involvement with Bob [Dylan] doing A Complete Unknown, we've been fortunate enough that right now we're working on, with Wash Westmoreland, the great writer-director, a Syd Barrett movie, one of the founders of Pink Floyd," he confirmed. "We have had multiple Zooms with the estate of Mama Cass Elliot and met with her daughter, Owen, and are close to acquiring the rights to her book, My Mama Cass." Jaysen didn't mention release dates for either biopic nor give any timelines for their production. Barrett founded Pink Floyd in 1965 as their frontman and principal songwriter before leaving in 1968 over issues with his drug use and mental health. He spent the rest of his life out of the spotlight in Cambridge until he passed away in 2006. Meanwhile, Elliot, better known as Mama Cass, rose to fame as a member of The Mamas and the Papas in the 1960s. She died in 1974 at the age of 32. - NME, 12/27/24...... In a newly released fan capture of former Deep Purple members Glenn Hughes and David Coverdale participating in a Q&A event in Sydney, Australia on Oct. 3, Hughes revealed that his experience attending the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony of his former band Deep Purple was "f--king uncomfortable." "There was no, 'How are you tonight?' None of that," he said of his cold treatment by the other DP inductees -- Ian Gillan, Roger Glover and Ian Paice. "There was no family vibe, there was no hugging, there was no handshaking, there was no, 'How're you doing, pal?' None of that. And it was f--king uncomfortable. Let me tell you, it was uncomfortable." Hughes continued, saying that at the end of the event, he wanted to congratulate Gillan with a hug, but Gillan had put his arm out "'cause he did not want me to get near him." Hughes added that the incident "really upset me to the point of tears." "So I grabbed him and said to him, 'Oh shit.' I can't tell you what I said, but I thought it was very f--king stupid to do it on live TV where you have to show resentment or whatever you wanna call it. I was really upset. It didn't make me angry. It really hurt my feelings. Why did he do that? I don't know." Hughes added: "I've had my fair share of crappy, weird things happen. I wasn't the nicest guy when I was drunk. But to do that to a family member whilst I was thanking and congratulating him on his award He didn't wanna know it, didn't wanna fucking know. That was really rude." In 2024, Deep Purple embarked on their "=1 More Time" tour in support of their latest album =1, which included a performance at Montreux Jazz Festival. - NME, 12/30/24...... Neil Young has dug into his archives again for the latest addition to his "Fireside Sessions," pulling out "Pardon My Heart" for its first performance in over 50 years. The live rendition was shared to his Neil Young Archives website as part of his "Fireside Sessions" series, which in late December resulted in a rare performance of the track "Silver and Gold" on Dec. 25. Now, the second entry in the series has gone even deeper, resulting in an exceedingly-rare version of "Pardon My Heart." Originally released on Neil Young & Crazy Horse's Zuma album in Nov. 1975, the track had only ever been played twice previously, and not at all since its official release. Its debut performance took place at the Bottom Line in New York on May 16, 1974, when Young performed a surprirse set following a Ry Cooder show. Appearing as the penultimate song of the set, Young prefaced its debut by describing it as "a love song I learned recently." "I wrote it too," he added. "This is a love song. It's one of the saddest love songs I've ever heard." Just three months later, the track received its final live appearance when it was performed during Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's reunion tour in New York on Aug. 15. "Pardon My Heart" was penned by Young about the disolution of his relationship with Carrie Snodgress, who also inspired much of his Homegrown album. Despite being recorded throughout 1974 and 1975, Homegrown did not see a release until 2020. Though it currently remains to be seen whether more Fireside Sessions performances will arrive, Young also used his first entry in the series to announce that he would be releasing a new album titled Talking to the Trees, which will be accompanied by a North American and European tour with his new band, the Chrome Hearts. - Billboard, 12/29/24...... The DoorsThe former Morrison Hotel, immortalized by The Doors and their 1970 album of the same name, was significantly damaged by a fire that erupted in downtown Los Angeles on Dec. 26. The four-story building, which has been vacant more than a decade, burned for nearly two hours before more than 100 firefighters brought the flames under control, according to the L.A. Fire Department. The Morrison Hotel was featured on the cover of The Doors' fifth album. Celebrated L.A.-based music photographer Henry Diltz made the image in 1969 and said years later that it took a little trickery to pull it off. A hotel clerk told the band they weren't allowed to take photos inside, but when the clerk stepped away, the group ran into the lobby and Diltz quickly got the photo looking through the window, with legendary frontman Jim Morrison in the middle. "It was a great old wooden building with many small rooms upstairs where transients and drinkers could sleep it off on a cot for $2.50 a night!" Diltz says. "I think the beautiful front window with "Morrison Hotel" in red letters was the best part of it! So did The Doors!" The album was viewed as a comeback to their roots for the band, coming on the heels of Morrison's on-stage arrest at a Miami concert that saw him convicted of indecent exposure and profanity. Los Angeles firefighters who first arrived at the blaze found heavy flames on the building's top floor. Several people who were in the building escaped without injuries, including three people rescued by firefighters from the third floor, according to the department. The building's roof collapsed, leaving its structural integrity in doubt, the department said. The building in recent years had been used as a training site for firefighters. Morrison and The Doors would release one final album, L.A. Woman, before he was found dead in a Paris bathtub on July 3, 1971. - Billboard, 12/28/24...... Marvin Gaye III, the eldest son of legendary singer Marvin Gaye, is being accused of assault, battery, false imprisonment and more in a new lawsuit. According to court documents obtained by Us Weekly, the accuser, referred to as Jane Doe, claims she was called to Gaye's home in Jan. 2023 to mediate an argument between him and his then-wife Wendy. She states that her intention was to assist in "diffusing the situation," but events "escalated into a series of violent and threatening acts" perpetrated by Gaye including physical assault, verbal threats of death and the retrieval of a firearm. In court documents, the accuser claims that Gaye physically attacked her, pointed a gun at her and Wendy, and threatened to kill them. Gaye is further accused of orchestrating "acts of intimidation," including tampering with her vehicle by cutting the brakes, and arranging for his associates to surveil her home. As a direct result of Gaye's alleged conduct, the woman claims in court paperwork that she has suffered severe emotional distress including anxiety, depression, panic attacks, insomnia and weight loss. She is asking the court for an undisclosed amount of damages. Gaye denied the accusations to Us Weekly: "No way did that happen. It's all bullshit. I wouldn't do that. These are false claims." - Music-News.com, 12/31/24...... Legendary BBC Radio 2 broadcaster Johnnie Walker died on New Year's Eve at the age of 79, just two months after drawing his 58-year career to a close. The news was confirmed live on air on the station on Dec. 31 by his friend and colleague Bob Harris, who had taken over Walker's Sounds Of The 70s show after his recent retirement. Walker had the lung condition pulmonary fibrosis and stepped down from his shows, which also included The Rock Show on Radio 2, at the end of October. Walker's wife Tiggy said she "couldn't be more proud" of her husband for "how he kept broadcasting almost to the end and with what dignity and grace he coped with his debilitating lung disease." "He remained his charming, humorous self to the end, what a strong amazing man. It has been a rollercoaster ride from start to finish," she said. "And if I may say -- what a day to go. He'll be celebrating New Year's Eve with a stash of great musicians in heaven. One year on from his last live show. God bless that extraordinary husband of mine who is now in a place of peace." Walker was born on Mar. 30, 1945 and started his radio career in 1966 on pirate station Swinging Radio England before moving to the legendary Radio Caroline. He joined BBC Radio 1 in 1969 and helmed the lunchtime show from 1971, where he promoted emerging artists such as Lou Reed, Steve Harley and Steely Dan. After a stint on US radio, he presented shows on BBC Radio 5 Live and GLR before joining Radio 2 in 1997, where he presented Drive from 1998 to 2006. He had presented Sounds Of The 70s since 2009 and The Rock Show since 2018 before bowing out of both programmes in late October to tend to his poor health. His final words on his final show were: "Walk into the future with our heads held high, and happiness in our hearts." The BBC's director general Tim Davie has paid tribute to Walker, describing him as a "pop radio pioneer and champion of great music," while Radio 2 boss Helen Thomas added: "Everyone at Radio 2 is heartbroken about the passing of Johnnie, a much loved broadcasting legend." The BBC have said that a collection of programmes showcasing Walker's life and career will be available on BBC Sounds shortly. - NME, 12/31/24...... Linda LavinActress Linda Lavin, star of the long-running CBS sitcom Alice and a Tony winner for Neil Simon's play "Broadway Bound," died on Dec. 29. She was 87. A representative for Ms. Lavin confirmed the actress died unexpectedly due to complications from lung cancer that had been recently discovered. As recently as Dec. 4 Ms. Lavin attended the premiere of Netflix's dark comedy series No Good Deed at the streamer's Tudum Theater in Hollywood. Ms. Lavin established herself as a beloved character actor with her decade-long stint on Alice, the CBS comedy series adapted from Martin Scorsese's 1974 film Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, with Ellen Burstyn in the title role. The series, which ran from 1976-85, starred Ms. Lavin as Alice Hyatt, a widow with a young son (played by Philip McKeon) who starts life again in Arizona, where she works at Mel's Diner (whose eponymous owner was played by Vic Tayback), alongside fellow waitresses Flo (Polly Holliday) and Vera (Beth Howland). Ms. Lavin was Emmy nominated for her work on the series in 1979, and won the Golden Globe for actress in a comedy or music for Alice in 1979 and 1980 and was nommed again in 1981. Alice was a top-30 show throughout its first eight seasons, finishing the 1979-80 season at No. 4, before finally dropping off in its last season. The series subsequently appeared in syndication. In 2015 she appeared in the comedy The Intern, starring Robert De Niro and Anne Hathaway, and also kept busy with roles on such series as Netflix's No Good Deedand CBS' Elsbeth as well as the CBS comedy 9JKL. Other TV credits include appearances in B Positive, Being the Ricardos, Madame Secretary, Mom, The Good Wife, The Sopranos, Room 104 and more. Though Lavin made appearances on television after Alice, she was actually more of a stage actress and was Tony-nominated six times for roles in "Last of the Red Hot Lovers," "Broadway Bound," "The Diary of Anne Frank," "The Tale of the Allergist's Wife," "Collected Stories" and "The Lyons." Born in Portland, Maine, Ms. Lavin first took the stage at the age of 5. She graduated from the College of William and Mary in 1959 with a degree in theater. The actress made her Broadway debut in 1962 in the Harold Prince-directed musical comedy "A Family Affair," followed by "The Riot Act" the next year. She made her television debut in a 1963 episode of The Doctors and Nurses and appeared in a 1969 segment of CBS Playhouse called "Sadbird." There were a few TV movies and guest appearances on Rhoda and Harry O before she did a one-season run from 1975-76 on ABC's hit police comedy Barney Miller as Det. Janice Wentworth. After starting Alice in 1976 she continued guested on other shows, including Phyllis and Family. Ms. Lavin was inducted into the American Theatre Hall of Fame in 2011. She was thrice married, the first time to actor Ron Liebman from 1969-81, the second time to actor Kip Niven from 1982-92. She is survived by her third husband, actor-drummer Bakunas. - Variety, 12/30/24...... Jimmy CarterJimmy Carter, the Georgia peanut farmer who won the presidency in 1976 in the wake of the Watergate scandal and Vietnam War, endured humbling defeat after one tumultuous term and then redefined life after the White House as a global humanitarian, died on Dec. 29 at the age of 100. The longest-lived American president, Pres. Carter died more than a year after entering hospice care, at his home in the small town of Plains, Ga., where he and his wife, Rosalynn Carter, who preceded him in death in Nov. 2023 at age 96, spent most of their lives, The Carter Center said. "Our founder, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, passed away this afternoon in Plains, Georgia," the center said in posting about his death on the social media platform X. It added in a statement that he died peacefully, surrounded by his family. Businessman, Navy officer, evangelist, politician, negotiator, author, woodworker, citizen of the world, Pres. Carter forged a path that still challenges political assumptions and stands out among the 45 men who reached the nation's highest office. The 39th president leveraged his ambition with a keen intellect, deep religious faith and prodigious work ethic, conducting diplomatic missions into his 80s and building houses for the poor well into his 90s. "My faith demands -- this is not optional -- my faith demands that I do whatever I can, wherever I am, whenever I can, for as long as I can, with whatever I have to try to make a difference," he once said. A moderate Democrat, Carter entered the 1976 presidential race as a little-known Georgia governor with a broad smile, outspoken Baptist mores and technocratic plans reflecting his education as an engineer. His no-frills campaign depended on public financing, and his promise not to deceive the American people resonated after Richard Nixon's disgrace and U.S. defeat in southeast Asia. Pres. Carter governed amid Cold War pressures, turbulent oil markets and social upheaval over racism, women's rights and America's global role. His most acclaimed achievement in office was a Mideast peace deal that he brokered by keeping Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin at the bargaining table for 13 days in 1978. That Camp David experience inspired the post-presidential center where Pres. Carter would establish so much of his legacy. Yet his electoral coalition splintered under double-digit inflation, gasoline lines and the 444-day hostage crisis in Iran. His bleakest hour came when eight Americans died in a failed hostage rescue in Apr. 1980, helping to ensure his landslide defeat to Republican Ronald Reagan. He won a state Senate seat in 1962 but wasn't long for the General Assembly and its back-slapping, deal-cutting ways. He ran for governor in 1966 -- losing to arch-segregationist Lester Maddox -- and then immediately focused on the next campaign. In 1970, he ran for governor again as the more conservative Democrat against Carl Sanders, a wealthy businessman he mocked as "Cufflinks Carl." Sanders never forgave him for anonymous, race-baiting flyers, which Mr. Carter disavowed. Ultimately, Mr. Carter won his races by attracting both Black voters and culturally conservative whites. A self-declared "born-again Christian," Pres. Carter drew snickers by referring to Scripture in a Playboy magazine interview, saying he "had looked on many women with lust. I've committed adultery in my heart many times." The remarks gave Ford a new foothold and television comedians pounced -- including NBC's new Saturday Night Live show. But voters weary of cynicism in politics found it endearing. After he admitted the exiled Shah of Iran to the U.S. for medical treatment, the American Embassy in Tehran was overrun in 1979 by followers of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Negotiations to free the hostages broke down repeatedly ahead of the failed rescue attempt. He campaigned sparingly for reelection because of the hostage crisis, instead sending Rosalynn as Sen. Edward M. Kennedy challenged him for the Democratic nomination. Carter famously said he'd "kick his ass," but was hobbled by Kennedy as Reagan rallied a broad coalition with "make America great again" appeals and asking voters whether they were "better off than you were four years ago." The same year, Carter signed SALT II, the new strategic arms treaty with Leonid Brezhnev of the Soviet Union, only to pull it back, impose trade sanctions and order a U.S. boycott of the Moscow Olympics after the Soviets invaded Afghanistan. Hoping to instill optimism, he delivered what the media dubbed his "malaise" speech, although he didn't use that word. He declared the nation was suffering "a crisis of confidence." By then, many Americans had lost confidence in the president, not themselves. At 56, Pres. Carter returned to Georgia with "no idea what I would do with the rest of my life," and eventually founded The Carter Center. Among the center's many public health initiatives, Carter vowed to eradicate the guinea worm parasite during his lifetime, and nearly achieved it: Cases dropped from millions in the 1980s to nearly a handful. With hardhats and hammers, the Carters also built homes with Habitat for Humanity. The Nobel committee's 2002 Peace Prize cited his "untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development." Carter should have won it alongside Sadat and Begin in 1978, the chairman added. Four decades after launching The Carter Center, he still talked of unfinished business. "I thought when we got into politics we would have resolved everything," hetold the AP in 2021. "But it's turned out to be much more long-lasting and insidious than I had thought it was. I think in general, the world itself is much more divided than in previous years." Still, he affirmed what he said when he underwent treatment for a cancer diagnosis in his 10th decade of life. "I'm perfectly at ease with whatever comes," he said in 2015. "I've had a wonderful life. I've had thousands of friends, I've had an exciting, adventurous and gratifying existence." "When I look at Jimmy Carter, I see a man not only for our times, but for all times," Pres. Joe Biden said in a tribute on X. "A man who embodied the most fundamental human values we can never let slip away. And while we may never see his likes again, we would all do well to try to be a little more like Jimmy Carter." Pres. Biden has declared Jan. 9 a national day of mourning for the late president, who will be honored with a state funeral in Washington, D.C. before being buried in his native Plains, Ga. - AP/Billboard, 12/29/24.

REO Speedwagon played their final gigs under the REO Speedwagon moniker with gigs on Dec. 20 and 21 at Las Vegas' Venetian Theatre. At the Dec. 21 show, frontman Kevin Cronin said during a parting speech (shared on YouTube): "The REO Speedwagon name is being retired tonight. But the music, the spirit, the songs of REO Speedwagon will live on with this band and with me under the name Kevin Cronin. We hope you join us on that adventure." The band split their 19-song set into two portions: the first half saw them perform their 1980 No. 1 LP Hi Infidelity in full, while the second half saw them play an assortment of career hits. Cronin has announced will make his solo debut in January, and hopes to continue on with REO's current touring roster -- which includes Matt Bissonette, Dave Amato, Bryan Hitt and Derek Hilland -- albeit under a different name. Cronin has also suggested that he can see a case in which longtime REO bassist Bruce Hall joins the bands for select shows here and there, but doesn't consider Hall's return as a full-time member "as an option." In September, the announced that though "heartbroken" to do so, they will cease touring at the end of 2024, bringing an end to the popular Midwestern rock band due to "irreconcilable differences" between Cronin and Hall. - NME,12/23/24...... Gene SimmonsGene Simmons of KISS announced on X on Dec. 24 that he'll hit the road with his Gene Simmons Band in the spring of 2025, with the tour kicking off at the Graton Resort & Casino in Rohnert Park, Calif. on Apr. 5. After five dates in Florida cities from Apr. 25-30, the tour will resume in Beaver Dam, Ky., on May 3, then move northeast with gigs in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, and Ontario before hitting Nashville, Ind., on May 20 and wrap with three Texas dates in Dallas, San Antonio and Houston on May 22, 23 and 24, respectively. KISS, meanwhile, are working on their upcoming avatar show, which band co-founder Paul Stanley has described as "Cirque Du Soleil meets Star Wars and a KISS concert." The production is being overseen by the company behind ABBA's Voyage show, in which the Swedish pop quartet were represented by holographic virtual avatars on stage. - NME, 12/24/24...... Speaking to podcast host Leona Graham on her Leona Graham Podcast, Queen's Brian May discussed such topics as potential new Queen music and how he "still get chills up the spine" when he hears classic tracks by Buddy Holly. "I think Roger (Taylor) and I both put stuff down from time to time," May said when asked about talk of new Queen music. "We do. And sometimes we get together and go, what you got? You know? So that kind of stuff happens and maybe there will be a point where we where we actually make the decision to do it." May said there's a "feeling of almost rebirth" because "selling (their copyrights) out to Sony.... means is they own the copyrights in all the past, but we will own the copyrights in the future. So in a way that's a kind of invitation to create something. And I think we may be able to rise to that challenge in some way." Reflecting on his biggest musical inspirations, May said most of all it was Holly and his band The Crickets: "I was just blown away, I still am, I still get chills up the spine when I hear like 'Maybe Baby'. It was so breathtakingly new, but also had this haunting beauty with those harmonies. And I've done my own versions of some of those songs, but they're always there inside me. Buddy Holly had a very short career. He had like two and a half years of of being a rock star. But the melodies he delivered during that time and the whole vibe of this rock music was, to me, immortal. And it's definitely still part of what I do." The full B side and first 3 episodes of The Leona Graham Podcast are now available to stream now free on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and YouTube. - Music-News.com, 12/24/24...... Speaking of new music, Paul McCartney has revealed that one of his 2025 New Year's resolutions is to finish an album. The former Beatles, who has just wrapped his 2024 "Got Back" tour, published a Q and A on his official website, answering end-of-year questions from fans. Topics ranged from his plans for the holiday season and what he is most grateful for. One fan asked McCartney if he has any New Year's resolutions for 2025. "Here's one: finish an album!," he responded. "I've been working on a lot of songs, and have had to put it to the side because of the tour. So, I'm hoping to get back into that and finish up a lot of these songs. So, how's about that? My New Year's resolution is to finish a new album! How about that for a teaser?" His last solo album was 2020's McCartney III, the long-awaited follow-up to 1970's McCartney and 1980's McCartney II While Sir Paul has no more scheduled shows for 2025, he ended his final London show on Dec. 19 by bringing out former bandmate Ringo Starr and saying "See you next time." - NME, 12/23/24...... After the acclaimed new Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unkown debuted in the US on Christmas Day, the BBC4 is preparing fans for its UK premiere on Jan. 17 by unveiling plans to run a series of programmes that will dive into the career of the musician beginning Jan. 10 at 10:20pm GMT with a broadcast of the 2005 Dylan documentary Bob Dylan: No Direction Home. Afterwards, BBC4 will air Bob Dylan: Shadow Kingdom, a live concert film shot in California in 2021, while Dylan's "Never Ending Tour" was halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Timotheé Chalamet-starred A Complete Unknown charts the music great's transition from acoustic folk idol to electric rock star in the mid-'60s. Chalamet stars alongside Edward Norton (Pete Seeger) and Elle Fanning (Sylvie Russo, a fictionalised version of Dylan's first New York girlfriend Suze Rotolo, who died in 2011). The film s based on Elijah Wald's 2015 book Dylan Goes Electric! Newport, Seeger, Dylan, And The Night That Split The Sixties. Meanwhile, clothing giant Levi Strauss & Co. has announced a new clothing line inspired by Chalamet's depiction of Dylan in A Complete Unknown. Levi's has launched "Levi's Vintage Clothing x A Complete Unknown," a collection that includes a jacket and a pair of jeans that are directly inspired by Chalamet's look in the film, which itself was closely modelled on original outfits donned by Dylan in the '60s. Among the options are a yellow tan, 100% leather jacket for $1200 (£955), which comes with sheet music for "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall," a replica cue card from the "Subterranean Homesick Blues"' video, special costume lining notes and a still photo of Chalamet wearing the same jacket. Also available are a $495 (£395) pair of jeans with a D-shaped buckle belt and sheet music for "Girl From The North Country" and a liner note quoting Dylan: "I'll let you be in my dreams / If I can be in yours." Levi's announced the clothing line in an Instagram post on Dec. 22. - NME, 12/23/24...... Lindsey BuckinghamOn Dec. 20 former Fleetwood Mac member Lindsey Buckingham was granted a permanent restraining order by a judge in Los Angeles against an alleged female stalker who showed up at his house. During the hearing Buckingham, 75, testified as part of his plea for protection against a 53-year-old woman named Michelle. The court previously granted the rockstar a temporary restraining order but now Buckingham was awarded a full five-years of protection. Buckingham showed the judge the picture that Michelle left at his house when she showed up, and he also played an "unmarked audio clip" as evidence. The judge determined Buckingham had presented enough evidence to warrant a permanent order and ordered Michelle, who did not appear for the hearing despite being served with notice, to stay 100 yards away from Lindsey, his wife Kristen Buckingham and his son William Buckingham. The woman was also ordered to not contact, harass or threaten Buckingham in any manner. The restraining order will expire in Dec. 2029. In his petition for the restraining order, Buckingham accused accused Michelle of harassing his family since 2021 and claimed she accused him of being his father, which he said was not true. He said it all started when Michelle found his wife's business cell phone number. He said Michelle started calling Kristen, "sometimes, leaving long drawn-out messages that included the claim that she was my child and threats to kill me and my family." He said, "She also blamed me for facial deformities she apparently suffered as a child and demanded money." "I do not know [Michelle] and I am not her father," he told the court. The "Trouble" singer said police instructed Michelle to stop contacting Lindsey and his family in 2022. He said he believed it all stopped so he decided not to take any legal action, but then Michelle reappeared in 2024 when she showed up to his house to leave a collage of photos of her face with his face. He said two weeks later after Michelle made false reports to the police about his son being in danger in the house, police showed up at his home and conducted a search for 20 minutes, "leaving me outside in the cold handcuffed... and shaken" until they realized it was a false report. The court granted the petition in full at the hearing. - InTouchWeekly.com, 12/23/24...... On Dec. 25 Neil Young shared an Instagram video of him performing the title track of his 2000 album Silver and Gold for the first time in almost two decades. Written in 1981, "Silver and Gold" has rarely been performed live, and the last time the Canadian-born folk/rock legend sang it before a live audience was 2007. Interviewed in 2000, Young said he "tried [the song] several ways... I think, a total of 11 times with different people in all kinds of different configurations." He went on to say: "And we got 'em all, none of them are worth listening to. But this one here finally just got back to the roots of it and just sat down with my guitar and played it and said, 'That's it.' Because I love the song and I feel the song now and it means something to me now." In the video Young is shown playing guitar and softly singing while sitting by a fire. As it cuts off at the end, he can be heard saying: "Is that our first fireside session?" - New Musical Express, 12/26/24...... A cover of the Grateful Dead song "Ripple" by rising country music singer-songwriter and actor Sturgill Simpson during the GD's Kennedy Center Honors ceremony in Washington on Dec. 8 has been shared on YouTube. The GD were among the honorees in Pres. Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris' final Kennedy Center Honors hosting. Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart and Bob Weir were in attendance at the ceremony, while bassist and co-founding member Phil Lesh, who died in October at age 84, was represented by his son Grahame. Former frontman Jerry Garcia, who died in 1995, was represented by daughter Trixie Garcia. During the ceremony, Simpson performed a cover "Ripple," though footage of the performance hadn't been shared until Dec. 22, when the ceremony was broadcast to public. Elsewhere during the ceremony, Pres. Biden said of the band: "In the San Francisco Bay at an inflexion point in history, the Grateful Dead have long since transcended 1960s counterculture." He went on to say: "Look, there's still a lot of Deadheads around," before pointing at himself, and adding: "No two performances even the same, but their spirit and joy is enduring. Tonight we honour Bobby, Bill and Mickey." The band's current touring ensemble, Dead & Co., has announced it will reprise its wildly successful "Dead Forever" residency at Las Vegas' Sphere in 2025 in celebration of its 60th anniversary. - NME, 12/23/24...... Classic rock fans can finally watch the 2024 Rock & Roll Induction Ceremony that went down in October on ABC on Jan. 1 at 8:00 p.m./9:00 central. The long-overlooked Cher, Ozzy Osbourne, Peter Frampton, Foreigner, Kool & the Gang, A Tribe Called Quest, Mary J. Blige and Dave Matthews Band were all inducted. Matthews said of the honored musicans: "We are swimming in deep water here." But the best moments, of course, revolved around the musical performances, of which there were many. Highlights include Cher and Dua Lipa belting out "Believe"; Kelly Clarkson, Demi Lovato, Chad Smith, Slash and Sammy Hagar banding together to salute Foreigner; Jennifer Hudson crooning alongside Dionne Warwick; and Dave Matthews Band "Burning Down the House" with a Talking Heads tribute at the end of the night. - TV Guide, 12/30/24...... The StylisticsLegendary Philly soul group The Stylistics have announced their first new album in nearly two decades, with the likes of Shania Twain, KISS's Gene Simmons, ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons, the Rolling Stones' Ronnie Wood, The Darkness' Justin Hawkins and the Tower of Power Rhythm Section all set to feature. Now, 56 years after their original formation and a full 17 years since their last full-length album That Same Way, the vocal group have announced a brand new album, Falling In Love With My Girl. Dropping on Feb. 21, the LP will be previewed by its lead single "Yes, I Will," a song co-written and co-performed by Twain, which will be available on Feb. 14. Stylistics singer Airrion Love has spoken about working alongside Twain on the track: "I fell in love with Shania Twain the first time I heard 'You're Still the One' -- a great song that I still love. When we heard there might be a chance to do something with her we said, "Hell yeah!" Twain said of the track, "It's a special song that came together on one special day at my home where I was hanging out with some friends and musicians. So I think it turned out great and I'm just really excited to share it with the whole world." The Stylistics recently completed a UK tour and are set to play a handful of shows in the US in January. - NME, 12/22/24...... Hard rock icons Alice Cooper and Judas Priest frontman Rob Halford have released "My Christmas List," a kid-friendly holiday song. The wholesome song is a collaboration with the charity Rock For Children, and is set to benefit Cooper's Solid Rock Teen Centers organisation, a non-profit that provides teenagers with after-school training in sound engineering, staging, lighting and video production. "My Christmas List," which can be streamed on YouTube, involves the singers telling Santa Claus of the things on their Christmas list, including a "rock balloon that can fly to the moon" and a "12-string can I can play in a band," while they also let Santa know to enjoy his trademark milk and cookies. In a spoken word section, Cooper suggests other things a child could ask for, telling them: "Seriously kid, always remember to never stop dreaming of the impossible, and believe in the magic of your imagination." A boy replies: "Thanks, Mr. Cooper! If I don't end up with those things from my list, then what I want for Christmas is this," as he holds up a scroll with the words "kindness and love" written on it. The track first appeared on the Rock For Children compilation Solid Rock Revival, released on Aug. 30.E arlier in December, meanwhile, Judas Priest announced two new UK headline shows in July as part of their 2025 European tour, including a co-headline show with Cooper. In May, Cooper is set to play the inaugural edition of Boardwalk Rock Festival in Ocean City, Maryland, alongside headliners Def Leppard, Mötley Crüe, Nickelback and Shinedown. - NME, 12/20/24...... Alfa Anderson, the singer on some of Chic's biggest hits, has died aged 78. Anderson's bandmate Nile Rodgers confirmed the news on Dec. 17 via Instagram. No cause of death has been given. Though initially she was studying to become a teacher, the Augusta, Ga.-born Anderson began recording background vocals for the likes of Dionne Warwick and Roy Buchanan, as well as on the Quincy Jones-produced 1978 soundtrack for The Wiz. During her time working on the film's soundtrack in 1977, she met Luther Vandross, who encouraged her to audition for Chic. At the time the band were recording their debut self-titled album, which Anderson wound up singing backing vocals on. Following the departure of Norma Jean Wright in 1978, she went on to become the group's lead vocalist. She then began to feature prominently on Chic's music, including their biggest albums: 1978's C'est Chic and 1979's Risque. Her voice can be heard on some of their most recognizable hits, including "Le Freak," "Good Times" and "My Forbidden Lover." Chic dissolved in 1983, and Anderson went on to become a frequent guest on Soul Train and the UK's Top of the Pops. She also sang on Chic-produced albums like Sister Sledge's We Are Family and Diana, by Diana Ross, and reunited with Vandross to tour internationally in the mid-1980s. The next two decades saw her appear on albums by Bryan Adams, Mick Jagger, Teddy Pendergrass, Jennifer Holliday, Billy Squier, Sheena Easton and Bryan Ferry, among others. n 2015, she reunited with Chic to serve as one of the lead vocalists on "I'll Be There," their first single in nearly 25 years. That same year, Chic's "Le Freak" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, and, three years later, was added to the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry. - NME, 12/22/24...... Actor Michael Cole, who died Dec. 10 at 84, was a high school dropout who reportedly slept under Hollywood freeways before his big break as Pete Cochran, part of ABC's hip undercover series The Mod Squad (1968-73), alongside Peggy Lipton and Clarence Williams III. Cole initially turned down the role that made him a star because, as he once told legendary producer Aaron Spelling, "I'm not going to take part of a guy who finks on his friends." He relented after realizing their job was to take down the adults exploiting kids. Befitting his character, Mr. Cole embraced the '60s hippie movement: "Isn't it interesting that a society would want to outcast somebody who wants to advocate love?" All three Mod Squad members reprised their roles in 1979's TV movie, The Return of the Mod Squad. - TV Guide, 12/30/24...... Richard PerryRichard Perry, one of the great record producers of the 1970s and '80s whose greatest hits include the likes of No. 1 singles "Without You" by Nilsson and "Your So Vain" by Carly Simon, died on Dec. 24 of cardiac arrest in a Los Angeles hospital, according to his friend Daphna Kastner. He was 82. Mr. Perry produced more than 30 top 20 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, including Barbra Streisand's dynamic version of Laura Nyro's "Stoney End," in which one the legendary star dove into contemporary pop music for the first time; and a long string of hits by The Pointer Sisters, including the exhilarating "I'm So Excited" and "Jump (for My Love)." Other hits that have the unmistakable immaculate, powerful and precise Perry stamp include Leo Sayer's "When I Need You" (also a No. 1 on the Hot 100) and Burton Cummings' stately "Stand Tall" (a top 10 hit on the Hot 100 in 1977). Mr. Perry also received back-to-back Grammy nods for producer of the year, non-classical in 1977 and 1978. He had a 42-year span of top 10 albums on the Billboard Hot 200. He first made the top 10 in July 1968 with a very unlikely project, an album by pop-culture phenomenon Tiny Tim. He produced back-to-back No. 1 hits on the Hot 100 by two different artists -- Ringo Starr ("Photograph" and "You're Sixteen" in 1973-74) and Sayer ("You Make Me Feel Like Dancing" and "When I Need You, both in 1977)." The Starr smashes were historic -- the first and only time that a former Beatle had back-to-back singles that reached No. 1 on the Hot 100. Although very much a pop producer, Mr. Perry's music touched other genres, too. He produced Julio Iglesias & Willie Nelson's "To All the Girls I've Loved Before," which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in 1984 and won single of the year at the Academy of Country Music Awards and was nominated in that category at the Country Music Association Awards. Mr. Perry also had No. 1 hits on the R&B and dance charts. He was born Richard Van Perry in Brooklyn, New York, on June 18, 1942, to Mack and Sylvia Perry, who manufactured and sold musical instruments and also served as music teachers. After graduating from the University of Michigan in 1964 with a degree in music and theater, Mr. Perry returned to New York. He formed his own independent record production company, Cloud Nine Productions, in June 1965. In March 1967, he moved to Los Angeles. His first album production job was Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band's debut, Safe as Milk, which he co-produced with Bob Krasnow. The album was released in June 1967. That November, Perry was hired by Warner Bros. Records as a staff producer. His first assignment was recording Tiny Tim, who had become a novelty sensation on Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, the runaway No. 1 show on TV. The ukelele-playing falsetto singer's debut album, God Bless Tiny Tim, rose to No. 7 on the Billboard 200, boosted by a remake of the 1920s novelty tune "Tip-Toe Thru' the Tulips With Me," which became a top 20 hit on the Hot 100. Mr. Perry also recorded albums with legendary stars Fats Domino (Fats Is Back) and Ella Fitzgerald (Ella), both of which cracked the Billboard 200. Mr. Perry left Warner Bros. in 1970 and almost immediately became one of the most in-demand producers in pop. In 1973, Mr. Perry produced Starr's album Ringo. John Lennon wrote the opening track, "I'm the Greatest," which constituted the closest thing to a Beatles reunion in the decade between the band's breakup in 1970 and Lennon's death in 1980. Starr, Lennon and George Harrison all played on the track (along with Billy Preston and Klaus Voormann). Paul McCartney wasn't involved in the track, but he and Linda McCartney contributed another song, "Six O'Clock," which they appeared on. The album reached No. 2 on the Billboard 200, kept out the top spot by Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. In Jan. 1974, Rolling Stone named Mr. Perry "Producer of the Year" for 1973 in its Rolling Stone Music Awards "for his work with Carly Simon (with session drop-in Mick Jagger) and with Starr (with visitors Lennon, Harrison and McCartney)." In 1978, Mr. Perry played a record producer in American Hot Wax, a film about DJ Alan Freed. (In 1955, at age 12, Mr. Perry had been a regular at Freed's live shows at the Brooklyn Paramount Theater.) Mr. Perry and Carly Simon reunited in 2004 for the standards collection Moonlight Serenade, which reached No. 7 on the Billboard 200 and received a Grammy nod for best traditional pop vocal album. His last album project to make the top 10 was Rod Stewart's "Fly Me to The Moon" from The Great American Songbook, Vol. 5 in Nov. 2010. In Apr. 2020, he published his memoir, Cloud Nine: Memoirs of a Record Producer. His death was mourned by Rod Stewart and Barbra Streisand, among others, on Instagram. He is survived by his younger brothers Roger, Fred and Andrew. His marriages to Linda Goldner and Rebecca Broussard ended in divorce. Mr. Perry was in a relationship with actress and activist Jane Fonda from 2009 to 2017. - Billboard, 12/25/24.