Saturday, June 17, 2017

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on June 22nd, 2017



Billy Joel's stream of consciousness 1980s hit "We Didn't Start the Fire" now has the historically accurate video it deserves, thanks a fan of Joel's. Since the original official video for the 1989 song from Joel's LP Storm Front leaves something to be desired for anyone trying to better understand all the historical events cited in the song, a new video called the "Historically Accurate Almanac" version features clips for the hit's more than 100 references. "Been meaning to get to this for my entire life," said the video's creator in the video description. - Billboard, 6/21/17...... Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards and his current wife Patti Hansen were among the mourners at his ex-girlfriend Anita Pallenberg's private funeral service in Chichester, England on June 21. Pallenberg, who died on June 13 at age 73, and the guitarist became lovers after he rescued her from an abusive relationship with his then-bandmate Brian Jones. Richards, who described her as "a most remarkable woman," and the couple had two sons, Marlon and Tara Jo Jo, and daughter Angela during their romance. Tara Jo Jo died from sudden infant death syndrome at the age of two months in 1976. Also attending the funeral was supermodel Kate Moss. - WENN.com, 6/22/17...... Bruce SpringsteenAccording to a report in the New York Post, Bruce Springsteen will mount an eight-week residency, with five shows per week, at Broadway's Walter Kerr Theatre likely beginning in November 2017, but dates have yet to be finalized. The Boss' set will reportedly be "a pared-down version of the set he usually performs in huge arenas and stadiums all over the world," according to the Post. The Walter Kerr Theatre seats 975 people and has been empty since the musical version of "Amlie" ended in May, and the venue's owner has apparently offered Springsteen use of the space for free. Meanwhile, a new musical based on Springsteen's 2016 memoir Born To Run could also be in the works after several producers have reportedly approached him with the idea, and he has reportedly shown interest in a stage adaptation. - New Musical Express, 6/17/17...... Paul McCartney announced on June 21 that he'll bring his One On One world tour to Australia and New Zealand in late 2017, his first tour Down Under in 24 years. The Beatle legend unveiled the five-date trek in a Facebook Live event hosted by musical comedy master Tim Minchin. With his touring band members Paul "Wix" Wickens (keyboards), Brian Ray (bass/guitar), Rusty Anderson (guitar) and Abe Laboriel Jr (drums), the tour will first stop in Perth on Dec. 2, followed by Melbourne (12/5), Brisbane (12/9), Sydney (12/11) and Auckland (12/16). Macca last toured the region on his 1993 New World Tour, and in 1964 the Beatles honored a commitment and made the long haul Down Under at the very peak of their fame. Meanwhile, Sir Paul has been promoted in Britain's hierarchy. On June 16, it was announced that Paul is being upgraded with a Companion of Honor award for services to music, after first being knighted by Queen Elizabeth II twenty years ago. "I'm very happy about this huge honor and with the news coming on my birthday weekend and Father's Day it makes it colossal!" McCartney said. Other luminaries promoted in the Queen's Birthday Honors list include Harry Potter novelist J.K. Rowling for her services to literature and philanthropy, and 100-year-old Gone With the Wind actress Olivia de Havilland, who will become a dame. In all, 1,109 people were on the queen's Birthday Honors list. - Billboard/AP, 6/21/17...... In other Beatles news, a lost song written by George Harrison has been found inside an old piano bench in the couples Oxforshire home by Harrison's widow Olivia Harrison. "There was a folder in George's piano bench and inside I found a typed lyric for [a song called] 'Hey, Ringo.' It think it dates from around 1970," Olivia Harrison said. She also said she believed he had recorded music for the track on a home cassette. Olivia says she gave a copy of the lyrics to Starr at a party in Los Angeles commemorating her husband's 74th birthday in February. She said: "He'd never seen this song before. He said 'What is this?' He was so surprised." The lyrics will be reproduced in an updated illustrated biography about Harrison, entitled I Me Mine. - New Musical Express, 6/17/17...... In a speech at the North Minneapolis Conference on Peace on June 17, Stevie Wonder spoke out about the Black Lives Matter movement and youth gun violence, saying "you cannot say 'Black Lives Matter' and then kill yourselves." "It is in your hands to stop all of the killing and the shooting wherever it might be," Wonder said, adding "Because you know we've mattered long before it was said, but the way we show that we matter, the way that we show all the various people of color matter is by loving each other and doing something about it. Not just talking about it, not just waiting to see the media and press come when there's a horrible thing." The Motown legend also highlighted the fatal shooting of Philando Castile during a 2016 traffic stop by former Minnesota police officer Jeronimo Yanez. On June 16, Yanez was acquitted of all charges by a jury. Several hundred people attended the conference, which focused on violence on city streets and also included an appearance by civil rights leader Benjamin Chavis. After speaking, Wonder closed the event by performing his hits "Love's in Need of Love Today" and "Higher Ground." - Billboard, 6/20/17...... Brian WilsonA new Brian Wilson solo anthology of 18 studio and live recordings celebrating the Beach Boys principal's 30-year solo career is due Sept. 22 via Rhino Records. Playback: The Brian Wilson Anthology will include two unreleased songs: "Run James Run," which Wilson wrote and recorded specifically for this project, and "Some Sweet Day," which he wrote with frequent collaborator Andy Paley for an unfinished project in the early '90s. It will also feature classic photographs and liner notes by critic David Wild. - Stereogum.com, 6/21/17...... Queen guitarist Brian May has revealed that there are unheard recordings by his band and David Bowie, with whom they famously teamed up with for Queen's 1981 hit "Under Pressure." According to Britain's Radio X, May says that Bowie and Queen frontman Freddie Mercury "locked horns" during the 'Under Pressure' sessions and that further material was recorded. "It wasn't easy because we were all precocious boys and David was very| forceful, yes," May recalls. "Freddie and David locked horns, without a doubt. But those are the things that happen in a studio, that's when the sparks fly and that's why it turned out so great." May went on: "And not all of what we did in those sessions has ever come to light, so there's a thought." Meanwhile, May has criticized British Airways over their seating arrangements in their on-board first class compartment, which can deny some passengers a seat by the window. In a June 14 internet post, May explained how he normally likes to enjoy the view out of the window while flying: "as soon as I'm up there above the clouds, I feel lucky and excited -- like a kid on a treat." However, May then took issue with BA's seating arrangement, which purportedly prevented him from enjoying the views from his first-class seat (which, for a one-way ticket to LA, should cost around £10,300). "I wonder if I am the only person left in the world who likes to relax in a comfortable seat and dreamily turn my head to the window and get lost in the ever-changing wonders of the planet, as they drift by?" May wrote. "I wonder this because I'm not aware of anyone except me complaining about the new way the seats are configured in BA First Class. I hate it. It costs an arm and a leg to travel this way and I feel that we no longer get our money's worth." - NME, 6/19/17...... On June 19 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame president and CEO Greg Harris announced that the Cleveland-based hall and museum will establish a permanent presence in Tokyo, Japan, in the coming years, following the opening of a short-term exhibit there in September. "Japan is the second-largest music market in the world, making it the perfect place for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame's first international expansion," Harris said. The Cleveland museum, on the shores of Lake Erie, first opened in 1995 and has drawn and estimated 10 million visitors since its launch. - AP, 6/19/17..... Ronnie Van ZantSteve GainesArtimus PyleThe heirs of late Lynyrd Skynyrd members Ronnie Van Zant and Steve Gaines, who tragically perished in a 1977 plane crash, are seeking to production and distribution of a film entitled Street Survivor: The True Story of the Lynyrd Skynyrd Plane Crash. On June 16, a lawsuit filed by the heirs, along with a few other surviving Lynyrd Skynyrd members, was revealed when a judge rejected a bid for a preliminary injunction. The dispute emanates from a "blood oath" taken upon the plane crash that befell the 1970s band which helped popularize Southern rock. As described in newly unsealed court papers, in which the survivors agreed in 1987 "never to use the name Lynyrd Skynyrd again in an effort not to capitalize on the tragedy that had befallen the group." Artimus Pyle, who joined the band as a drummer in 1974, is described as a signatory to the Consent Order, although he evidently attempted to sign it "under protest." Nevertheless, suing Lynyrd Skynyrd parties maintain he is restrained through agreement and court order from authorizing or participating in any story that purports to be a history of the band. Also being sued is the film division of Cleopatra Records. Cleopatra points out that Pyle has been interviewed about the subject on numerous occasions without objection. Cleopatra also draws attention to how Lynyrd Skynyrd has been on tour since February, suggesting that the plaintiffs may also be in violation of the Consent Order. U.S. District Court judge Robert Sweet has scheduled a trial for July 11-12. - The Hollywood Reporter, 6/19/17...... Ann Wilson says she's "definitely working on" new solo material and has plans for a solo tour, with Heart on hiatus indefinitely. "The tour's over in the late fall, and when we get back, I'll go into my home studio and we will do it, 'cause there is stuff coming." Wilson released her first solo album, Hope & Glory, in 2007. She's also released a pair of EPs as the Ann Wilson Thing, in 2015 and 2016. Wilson says her new music will likely speak to today's social and political climate, as evidenced by the covers she's been playing on her tour. "Just being out in the world, you see so many things, and every day you experience so many concepts and different people and their coolness and weirdness," she says. "It's a feast of ideas." As for the return of Heart, Wilson says there's no guarantee. "I really don't know at this moment. But I do know for sure it will never be the way it was before. It will be something out of the box, moving forward and evolved -- if it ever happens again." - Billboard, 6/19/17...... Michelle Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas has decided to put her vintage 1970 Mercedes 250C coupe up for auction at a RM Sotheby's Santa Monica sale on June 24. The two-tone, silver and black luxury vehicle, which Phillips traded a Jaguar XKE for because transporting her newborn daughter Chyna Phillips around in the XKE "wasn't working out," is estimated to bring in between $20,000 and $30,000. - Billboard, 6/19/17...... David Crosby, who once casually alleged that "rap isn't music," is featured in a new Twitter ad where users users all over the globe recommend songs that Chance the Rapper should play at his shows. The Byrds/CSNY figurehead is a standout among the twentysomethings who are featured in the same ad campaign, and suggests that Chance play "anything with real instruments" and, more unrealistically, volunteers a collaboration with the rapper ("I could up your game"). - Billboard, 6/19/17...... Peter CrissCo-founding former Kiss drummer Peter Criss has announced he is retiring from live performing, and will play what he says is his last U.S. concert at The Cutting Room, an intimate venue in Manhattan, on June 24. "I want to leave the stage happy," says Criss, who is the co-author and featured vocalist on the hit Kiss single "Beth." "I got onto the stage not thinking about making a buck," Criss says. "It was just pure: Play drums, have a good time, meet girls, travel and get out of Brooklyn." Criss, 71, formed Kiss with Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons and Ace Frehley in 1973, and the band went on to become one of the premier live acts of the decade. But drugs and alcohol helped cut short Criss and Frehley's tenure with the band until a 1996 reunion that was the year's highest-grossing tour. Criss last played with Kiss on a co-headlining tour with Aerosmith in 2003, and even the band's induction into the Rock Hall in 2014 couldn't end on a harmonious note. "I wanted to play so bad that night, and I know Ace did," Criss said. "And we didn't ... I didn't get to end my career the way I wanted to end it. So now I'm doing it my way, kind of like Sinatra." Criss holds out the possibility of similar farewell one-offs in other countries, following a successful show in Melbourne, Australia in May. He says he's also working on a solo rock album, a jazz album, a children's book, and even a comedy screenplay he hopes will interest actor Ben Stiller. - AP, 6/19/17...... An autopsy report issued by the Los Angeles coroner's office on June 19 reveals that Star Wars actress Carrie Fisher had cocaine, ecstasy and heroin in her system when she became ill on a London to Los Angeles flight in December. The reports states it is difficult to pinpoint when the drugs were taken and their impact on Fisher's Dec. 27, 2016 death, which was caused by sleep apnea and other undetermined factors, the report states. The report states Fisher may have taken cocaine three days before the Dec. 23 flight on which she became ill. She died four days later. It also found traces of heroin, other opiates and MDMA, which is also known as ecstasy, but that they could not determine when Fisher had taken those drugs. The findings were based on toxicology screenings done on samples taken when Fisher arrived at a Los Angeles hospital. Fisher long battled drug addiction and mental illness. She said she smoked pot at 13, used LSD by 21 and was diagnosed with bipolar disorder at 24. She was treated with electroshock therapy and medication. Fisher's brother Todd Fisher said that cigarette smoking also likely contributed to his sister's death. "If you want to know what killed her, it's all of it," he said. - AP, 6/19/17...... Actor Stephen Furst, known as Flounder on Animal House and Dr. Axelrod on St. Elsewhere, passed away on June 16 due to complications from diabetes. He was 63. He also appeared as Ambassador Vir Cotto on Babylon 5. - The Los Angeles Times, 6/17/17...... Bill DanaComedian/actor/screenwriter Bill Dana, who created and starred as the earnest character at the center of the "My Name...Jose Jimenez" routine that made him one of America's most beloved comic performers of the 1960s, died on June 15 at his home in Nashville, Tenn. He was 92. Born William Szathmary on Oct. 5, 1924, Mr. Dana first appeared as Jimenez on The Steve Allen Plymouth Show in Nov. 1959, where he also worked as an Emmy-nominated head writer. Mr. Dana contrived the trademark "Would You Believe?" line of jokes that Don Adams employed as a standup and on the '60s sitcom Get Smart and penned one of the funniest episodes in All in the Family history -- the one from 1972 in which Sammy Davis Jr. plants a kiss on Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor). "I said, 'My name...Jose Jimenez,' and the [live] audience laughed," Mr. Dana, a Massachusetts native of Hungarian-Jewish descent, recalled in a 2007 interview with the Archive of American Television. "I remember thinking, 'This guy just said his name and everybody [went crazy]...' Mr. Dana said he got the idea for the character and the accent after talking with a Puerto Rican local while on vacation years earlier. A few months later, Jimenez showed up as an elevator operator on CBS' The Danny Thomas Show. A handful of episodes on that sitcom led to NBC's The Bill Dana Show, in which the character worked as a bellhop at a ritzy New York hotel. Jimenez was so popular, NBC ordered 39 episodes without even shooting a pilot. The series lasted two seasons, with Adams coming aboard as hotel detective Byron Glick the second year. - MSN.com, 6/19/17.

Interviewed on Sirius XM radio's new Beatles channel on June 12, Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam revealed that Paul McCartney once accidentally punched him in the face at a Seattle hotel bar while getting excited telling a story. "He kind of was illustrating how he hit this guy, and when he did that, he shot out his left arm as if he was hitting this guy, and I was standing right there, and I got hit," Vedder said. "It was a great, incredible personal story and I caught the end of it, but as I was listening I was just thinking, Paul McCartney just hit me in the face. And it hurt!," said Vedder, who added that his face hurt for days after the incident. "A great time in my life to be hit by Paul McCartney," Vedder said. Adding that after the pain and swelling subsided, he "kind of missed it." Meanwhile, in a recent appearance on Conan O'Brien's TBS talk show, director Judd Apatow said Sir Paul rebuffed him once when Apatow asked McCartney for his phone number. Apatow said that McCartney used to attend his stand-up routines, and he thought he might ask McCartney out to lunch after the two met a few times after the performances. "He was very nice but he instinctively said no. He found a nice way to do it," Apatow said. - New York Post/Billboard, 6/13/17...... In other Beatles news, Yoko Ono is to be credited as co-writer of her late husband John Lennon's "Imagine" more than 45 years after the song was released, in accordance with John's wishes. "Imagine" was recently named the recipient of the 2017 Centennial Song Award by the US National Music Publishers Association, and while collecting the award on Lennon's behalf in New York on June 14, Ono was informed that she will soon receive a songwriting credit on the pop classic. A clip of a 1980 interview with John as shown, in which the late Beatle said Ono deserved a co-writing credit because of her "influence and inspiration" on the song. Since the song debuted in 1971, the writing of "Imagine" has been credited solely to Lennon, though Ono and Phil Spector are listed as co-producers. - New Musical Express, 6/15/17...... Dhani HarrisonElsewhere on the Fab Four front, George Harrison's son Dhani Harrison has announced he is prepping his first solo album and has booked his debut solo gigs for July. Harrison, 38, has signed a solo deal with BMG Records and is working on an album slated for release later this fall. Dhani has previously released three full-length albums and two EPs with his group Thenewno2, and has collaborated with such artists as Eric Clapton, Wu-Tang Clan, Prince, Pearl Jam, Jakob Dylan and Ben Harper He has also composed music for films, including 2014's Learning to Drive, and the TV series The Divide, Good Girls Revolt and Outsiders. - Billboard, 6/16/17...... John Lennon, Paul McCartney, David Bowie and John Peel were among many music stars honoured with blue plaques for BBC Music Day on June 15. To mark the occasion, the BBC's local radio stations unveiled 47 blues plaques across the country, signifying "locations that played a major role in our musical heritage." Lennon and McCartney were be honoured with a plaque at the venue that they played their only gig as a duo, billed as The Nerk Twins, at the Fox and Hounds in Caversham, Berkshire. Bowie received two plaques -- one in Soho in London to mark where the artist recorded his albums Hunky Dory and The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and one in Kent to mark the formation of his early band The Manish Boys. Bowie's backing band, the Spiders from Mars, meanwhile got a blue plaque in Hull. - NME, 6/14/17...... Sting was honored with a Polar Music Prize during a gala at the Stockholm Concert Hall on June 15. After performances of Sting tunes by Annie Lennox ("Fragile") and Jose Feliciano ("Every Breath You Take"), Sting gave an acceptance speech. The Swedish prize was founded by ABBA manager Stig Anderson celebrates "the power and importance of music" and winners receive 1 million Swedish crowns. Also receiving a Polar Music Prize was jazz artist Wayne Shorter. - Stereogum.com, 6/16/17...... Gene SimmonsOn June 9, Gene Simmons of Kiss filed an application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office that, if approved, would grand him trademark of the "thwip" hand gesture originally made famous by the superhero character Spider-Man -- the curling of one's middle and ring fingers while the pinky, index, and thumb remain extended. Simmons says that the gesture became an iconic part of Kiss's act during its 1974 Hotter Than Hell tour. According to Simmons application, he's seeking to trademark the symbol for all things relating to "entertainment, namely, live performances by a musical artist; personal appearances by a musical artist." The obvious issue at hand is whether or not Simmons will be able to make a solid enough argument that the gesture is so strongly tied to his brand in peoples minds that he should own it. The gesture also happens to be the sign for "I love you" in American Sign Language for the deaf. - Gizmodo.com, 6/14/17...... Bob Seger made the surprise move of bringing his "old time rock n' roll" into the digital realm on June 16, after a long time of running "against the wind" of the streaming music market. Seger is now streaming 13 of his titles -- eight studio albums, three compilations and two live sets -- via Amazon Music, Spotify, Apple Music, iHeartRadio, Napster and Slacker Radio. The albums will also be available for digital download. It marks the long-awaited arrival of Seger's music after a lengthy holdout during which fans have campaigned on social media for the material to become available. "Bob Seger is an amazing artist with songs and albums that stand the test of time, and we're thrilled he is now making his catalog available to stream on Amazon Music," said Amazon Music VP Steve Boom. Seger was also late to releasing his catalog titles on compact disc, only releasing them in earnest beginning in 1989, and he only arrived on iTunes in 2011. The streaming move comes as Seger and his Silver Bullet Band are preparing for their Runaway Train Tour, which kicks off Aug. 24 in Toledo, and amidst reports of Seger working on a new album in Nashville, though no release details have been announced yet. - Billboard, 6/16/17...... Glen Campbell released his final studio album, Adiós, on June 9, and his daughter Ashley Campbell says the recording was therapeutic for him as well. "We definitely were seeing a decline, so we wanted him to be able to do this, while he still could," Ashley said of her dad, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2011 after signs of memory loss. "So definitely we didn't think there was going to be another album." Adiós features songs that Campbell has loved to sing, but never recorded, including songs made famous by the likes of Bob Dylan, Linda Ronstadt and Johnny Cash. His longtime banjo player Carl Jackson produced the album, which includes guest vocals from Willie Nelson, Vince Gill as well as his daughter, who is also a musician and singer. Ashley says her 81-year-old dad is "doing so much better than a lot of other people in his position... Instead of being scared and confused all the time, he is just happy and loves being around people. And enjoys his desserts and all that. It's nice to know that we have some kind of bright side in this dark situation." - AP, 6/15/17...... Rod StewartRod Stewart became the latest rocker to ignore requests to boycott Israel when he performed in Tel Aviv on June 14. Stewart, who last played in Israel in 2010, hit the stage at Park Hayarkon despite calls for him to cancel the concert from a consortium of musicians keen to keep top acts from performing in Israel to protest the nation's ongoing spat with Palestine. Stewart performed all his hits and gave his Israel return a local touch when he invited singer Rita Yahan-Farouzto join him onstage for a rendition of his ballad "Sailing." The band Radiohead also is going ahead with plans to perform in Israel despite the boycott. - WENN.com, 6/16/17...... Stevie Nicks has composed and recorded a new song called "You Hand I Will Never Let It Go" that appears in the forthcoming movie The Book of Henry.The film follows a single mother named Susan (played by Naomi Watts) who waits tables at a diner alongside her friend (Sarah Silverman). Susan finds herself in the middle of some troubling small town drama, and the story unfolds from there. Nicks is embarking on a solo tour that includes a huge show with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers in London's Hyde Park on July 9. In other Fleetwood Mac-related news, Christine McVie and Lindsey Buckingham are currently promoting their self-titled joint album, which dropped on June 9, and appeared on NBC's The Tonight Show on June 12, where they performed the FM classic "Don't Stop." Fleetwood Mac are due to play a huge new festival in L.A. and New York this summer, and McVie recently revealed that the entire band is "going to start rehearsing in March 2018" for a "global tour" than will begin next June. - Stereogum.com/New Musical Express, 6/14/17...... Less than a month after co-founder Gregg Allman died at age 69, organizers of his Laid Back Festival have announced that the food and music event will hit the road for a three-city swing in September with an all-star collection of rock icons paying tribute to the late Allman Brothers Band leader. Jackson Browne, Steve Winwood, Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul, Peter Wolf and Jaimoe's Jasssz Band will headline the event, which was first launched in 2015 as a one-off show curated by the singer/keyboardist before expanding in 2016. 2017 shows will take place at Holmdel, New Jersey's PNC Bank Arts Center (Sept. 21), Hartford, Connecticut's XFINITY Theatre (Sept. 23) and Wantagh, New York's Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater (Sept. 24). - Billboard, 6/13/17...... Alice CooperAlice Cooper has announced that he and his original Alice Cooper Band lineup are reuniting for a UK tour that's set to kick off on Nov. 11 in Leeds. Cooper was joined onstage in Nashville in May by original band members Dennis Dunaway (bass), Michael Bruce (guitar) and Neal Smith (drums). They performed a five song mini-set accompanied by current Alice Cooper band member Ryan Roxie on guitar. "When the original band broke up in 1975, there was no bad blood," Cooper says. "There were no lawsuits -- we had just burned out the creative process. We were never out of sight of each other for 10 years. Everybody just went their own way. Neal, Dennis and I always stayed in touch. Mike disappeared for a while and Glen Buxton passed away in 1997, which was a big blow." Alice and the band will also play Glasgow (Nov. 12), Birmingham (Nov. 14), Manchester (Nov. 14) and London (Nov. 16). Tickets for all shows are on sale now. - New Musical Express, 6/14/17...... Neil Young's ex-wife Pegi Young posted a message on the offical Bridge School website on June 14 stating that the popular Bridge School Benefit concert that Neil Young has hosted for the past 30 years will not take place in 2017, and its future remains unclear. "The Bridge School Benefit Concert, traditionally held at Shoreline Amphitheatre, will not be held in 2017," reads Pegi Young's letter. "We want to express our sincere and profound thanks to all of you for your love and support, demonstrated by way of your attendance at 30 years of Bridge School Benefit Concerts. They have been truly memorable events and we have great appreciation for everyone who has been involved beginning, of course, with Neil Young and including all the many artists who have been so generous with their time and talent; the production people who have made it all possible." Neil Young also issued a statement on the school website, citing "personal reasons" for no longer hosting the event beginning this year. "Although I will continue in fund raising efforts, for personal reasons beginning this year I will no longer be hosting The Bridge School Concert," he wrote. "I wish everyone the best as the school heads into the future." The annual BSB concert was founded in 1986, and in addition to Neil Young has been headline by such acts as David Bowie, R.E.M., Pearl Jam, Bruce Springsteen, The Who, Brian Wilson, Patti Smith, Arcade Fire, My Morning Jacket and many more. The school was co-founded by Pegi Young in 1986 for children with severe speech and physical impairments after she and Neil Young had trouble finding a suitable school for their non-verbal son, Ben Young, who has cerebral palsy. She is currently the president of the board of directors. - Billboard, 6/14/17...... Robin Trower will release a new studio album, Time and Emotion, on Aug. 4 in the UK. "I can honestly say I don't know when I have been happier with an album," says the 72-year-old guitar god. "I feel Time and Emotion contains some of my very best work." To promote the new LP, Trower and his band will perform his only concert in the UK this year at London's Islington Assembly Hall on Nov. 29. - Noble PR, 6/16/17...... Anita PallenbergActress and model Anita Pallenberg, the former girlfriend of Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards, died of as yet unannounced causes on June 13, according to a post on social media by her friend Stella Schanabel. She was 73. "I have never met a woman quite like you Anita," Schanabel's post stated. Pallenberg, born in Rome to German parents, spent time with Andy Warhol's Factory crowd in New York City before meeting the Rolling Stones in Munich in 1965. She was romantically involved with band member Brian Jones for around two years, but became better known for her long-term relationship with Richards. Though they never married, Pallenberg and Richards were in a relationship for around 12 years -- from 1967 to 1980 -- and had three children together, with the third tragically dying of cot death at just 10 weeks old. Pallenberg sang backing vocals on the classic Stones hit "Sympathy For The Devil" and has been acknowledged as a significant influence on the band. Jo Bergman, the band's assistant in the late '60s and early '70s, once said: "Anita is a Rolling Stone. She, Mick, Keith and Brian were the Rolling Stones. Her influence has been profound. She keeps things crazy." Pallenberg's acting career included appearances in the controversial Mick Jagger film Performance (1970) and a supporting role in the 1968 cult classic Barbarella. She later appeared in Harmony Korine's 2007 film Mister Lonely, and appeared alongside Marianne Faithfull in a classic episode of Absolutely Fabulous, playing The Devil to Faithfull's God. The actress/model battled drug addiction for much of her life but said in 2014 that she had been sober from drugs for 14 years. She is survived by two children and five grandchildren. - NME, 6/14/17.

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