Friday, March 27, 2020

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on April 1st, 2020



An all-star "living room" concert organized by Elton John on Mar. 29 has raised nearly $8 million to battle the coronavirus. Sir Elton, along with such top performers as Tim McGraw, Dave Grohl, Mariah Carey, and Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong performed from their homes for the hourlong event that aired on Fox and iHeartMedia radio stations. John, looking dapper in a royal navy jacket and matching blue shirt, kicked off the live broadcast with an uplifting message to viewers. "Here we are, all together at home. You've got your family and loved ones, and I've got mine close too... We're taking care of each other through this crisis," the five-time Grammy winner said. "Let me tell you what's going to keep us together: All the goodness that's happening in the world. There's doctors, nurses and scientists on the front lines. They're living proof that most superheroes don't wear capes," explained John. "And since we're all hunkered down together, until those days greet us again, we thought we'd put together a little show for you... For the next hour, we'll do what we can to lift your spirits... say hi and tell you we love you," he added. Proceeds from the concert, which took place during the time slot that was to belong to the iHeartRadio Music Awards, will go to Feeding America and First Responders Children's Foundation. YouTube is currently streaming the concert on iHeartRadio's YouTube Channel. - AP/Billboard, 3/31/20...... George HarrisonThe Material World Foundation, the charity set up by late Beatles guitarist/singer/songwriter George Harrison in 1973, has donated $500,000 to a series of charities providing much needed aid and care during this coronavirus pandemic. On Mar. 26, the foundation announced that it donated the funds to the MusiCares COVID-19 Relief Fund, Save the Children, and Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders). The Beatles official YouTube page shared the following lyrics from the band's 1968 non-album single "The Inner Light": "Without going out of my door, I can know all things of earth/ Without looking out of my window, I could know the ways of heaven." George's widow, Olivia Harrison, noted that the lyrics "are a positive reminder to all of us who are isolating, quarantined or respecting the request to stay in our homes." "Let's get and stay connected at this difficult time. There are things we can do to help and we invite you to share your Inner Light," Olivia added. She then issued an "Inner Light Challenge," saying the Material World Foundation will donate a further $1 (up to $100,000) for every person who shares their own "Inner Light" moment on social media using the hashtag #innerlight2020. "This can be a verse, a chorus, or a line from the song, sing it, play it, hum it, strum it, paint it, knit it, chant it, plant it, pray or meditate and post it to social media," the statement revealed. George and Olivia's son, Dhani Harrison, also shared his own "Inner Light" moment on YouTube. - New Musical Express, 3/28/20...... Meanwhile in other Beatles-related news, a London municipal crew has repainted the Abbey Road crossing made famous by the cover of the Beatles' 1969 album of the same name, while the city is under lockdown to stem the spread of coronavirus. The pedestrian crossing was designated a site of national importance by the British government in 2010. This means it can only be altered with the approval of the local authorities which would make a decision based on the site s historic significance, function and condition, according to Reuters. - New Musical Express, 3/28/20...... Elsewhere on the Fab Four front, John Lennon's son Julian Lennon has told Observer magazine that he felt "cast aside" when his dad embarked on a relationship with Yoko Ono in the late Sixties. "He and Yoko Ono were deeply and publicly in love. And I felt as if my mum and I had been cast aside," said Julian, now 56. But Julian felt grateful that his dad's bandmate, Paul McCartney, didn't "forget" about him. "Not everyone forgot about us, though. Paul wrote 'Hey Jules' after dropping in to check how my mum and I were doing. (Obviously, the title of the song changed to Hey Jude)." Lennon said that "maybe 10 years passed during which my dad and I barely spoke. I was very angry about how he left the family" but that his mother, Cynthia Lennon helped him to have conversations with his dad. "She was such a gentle soul, never vindictive in any way, shape or form. She always wanted me to have a relationship with him." Julian said he still strives for "forgiveness and understanding" towards his late father and holds his memory "dear," though he can't "forget" John's behavior towards Cynthia. He said: "I try to remember my dad as fondly as possible. I strive for forgiveness and understanding in that area of my life, for the difficult times he put my mum and me through. I loved her more than anything and can't forget how poorly he treated her.... Even now, almost 40 years after he died, I hold my father's memory dear." - Music-News.com, 3/30/20...... Brian MayQueen + Adam Lambert announced on Mar. 31 they the upcoming European leg of Queen's Rhapsody Tour would be postponed until summer 2021 due to the continued spread of the coronavirus throughout the world. Queen guitarist Brian May said it was a difficult decision, but added that he was glad to see that fans would still get to see the show they paid for, just one year later. "In the present crazy state of the world, it cannot be a surprise to our fans. Those incredible scenes at our concerts just over a month ago now seem like an impossibly distant dream," he said. "The good news is that we do now have a Plan B ready to roll. If you hold on to your tickets they will be valid for the rescheduled shows. God willing, we will be there with bells on!," May added. Queen's tour had been set to launch May 24 in Italy, stretching through the summer and ending July 7-8 with two shows in Madrid. In other Queen-related news, the English prog-rockers' famous 1975 track "Bohemian Rhapsody" has been refashioned as "Coronavirus Rhapsody" with lyrics about the current state of our world. The track, with new lyrics by Dana Jay Bein and vocals by Adrian Grimes is just meant to be "some humor to see us through the COVID-19 crisis," according to the description of the video, which has been shared on YouTube. "Is this a fever?/ Is this just allergies?/ Caught in a lockdown/ No escape from the family..." the parody begins. - Billboard, 3/31/20...... As Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" is parodied, the UK's Official Charts Company has compiled the most popular coronavirus quarantine songs. Topping the list is Gerry and the Pacemakers track "You'll Never Walk Alone," which has become the unofficial anthem of solidarity through the current pandemic. The song has seen a 150% increase in streams, and was also played in tandem across a host of radio stations across the UK in the fourth week of March. Coming in second is the all-too-appropriate "Locked Up" by Akon, while The Police's "Don't Stand So Close To Me" is the third most popular. Also in the top 10 is "Reach" by S Club 7, while the R.E.M. tracks "Everybody Hurts" and "It's the End of the World as We Know It" also made the list, as did John Lennon's "Imagine." - New Musical Express, 3/30/20...... Dolly Parton announced on Apr. 1 that she is donating to $1 million to Nashville's Vanderbilt Hospital for ongoing research for a a coronavirus cure. The beloved country star shared on Twitter that her longtime friend and Vandy medical researcher Dr. Naji Abumrad informed her that his team has been "making some exciting advancements towards research of the coronavirus for a cure" and that she hopes her $1 million donation will "encourage people that can afford it to make donations." Dolly also recently announced that she'll be taking part in a new bedtime stories video series Goodnight With Dolly, where the country singer will read bedtime stories to viewers. Meanwhile, Parton's fellow country icon, singer/songwriter John Prine, remains in critical condition after being hospitalized on Mar. 26 with complications from coronavirus. Prine's wife, Fiona, says her 73-year-old husband's condition is "stable," however that was not the same as "improving." "This is hard news for us to share. But so many of you have loved and supported John over the years we wanted to let you know, and give you the chance to send on more of that love and support now," said Fiona. Prine has been on tour across the world recently, though had to cut short a recent Australian tour due to a hip injury. The pandemic has also forced Ozzy Osbourne to cancel his planned trip to Switzerland in early April to undergo the week when many Americans first self-quarantined and other non-essential outlets business closed across the country. "We had to cancel our trip to Switzerland. We were meant to go on the eighth of April for his treatment, but we had to cancel for his treatment," Ozzy's wife Sharon Osbourne said on Mar. 30 on CBS' The Talk. "We're just hanging in like everybody else, you know? Just trying to stay away and be quiet and just hold it in there. I honestly find this such frightening times. I just think it's a really, really frightening time to be alive." - Billboard/NME, 4/1/20...... Van MorrisonIn a new interview with the UK's The Independent newspaper, Van Morrison said he's been "getting a bit lazy" being at home during the coronavirus pandemic, but he's "trying to get back into writing" during the lockdown. "I was supposed to be doing six gigs in London, so I went from touring to basically just being at home. I am trying to get back into writing," said the 74-year-old Belfast native. Morrison will release a book of his lyrics, Keep 'Er Lit: New Selected Lyrics, on Apr. 14 and says that most of his back catalog of song lyrics is poetry. "Some of my works are just straight poetry, some could be a song or a poem and some are poetry with a music back-up, like 'On Hyndford Street', which was based on my early days, listening to my father's record collection and Radio Luxembourg," Morrison says. "I have a book of Cole Porter's songs and his lyrics are just poetry. I don't think there is a lot of difference," he added. - Music-News.com, 3/31/20...... According to Billboard, album sales have fallen to their lowest in 60 years in the US as the coronavirus pandemic continues to affect the music industry. The equivalent of 1.52 million albums were sold during the week of Mar. 19 according to the music trade publication, which is the lowest album sales have dropped since the mid-1960s. Physical sales of albums have been impacted by the closure of record shops to co-operate with lockdown and social distancing measures, although many are still selling stock online. Amazon has also stopped stocking vinyl to make room for more essential products. Meanwhile, the annual Record Store Day, which traditionally provides a boost of sales to the music industry, has been postponed from April 18 to June 20 because of coronavirus. The global crisis has also seen drops in streaming numbers, with analytics provider Alpha Data revealing figures that show a 7.6 percent drop in streams in the US in the week of Mar. 13-19, the week when many Americans first self-quarantined and other non-essential outlets business closed across the country. - NME, 3/28/20...... David Byrne has written an opinion piece on the coronavirus pandemic on his "Reasons To Be Cheerful" website, calling it an "opportunity to learn how to change our behavior." "It's ironic that as the pandemic forces us into our separate corners, it's also showing us how intricately we are all connected," the former Talking Heads frontman wrote. "It's revealing the many ways that our lives intersect almost without our noticing. And it's showing us just how tenuous our existence becomes when we try to abandon those connections and distance from one another. Health care, housing, race, inequality, the climate... we're all in the same leaky boat," he added. Byrne said that "What is happening now is an opportunity to learn how to change our behaviour," he continued. "For many of us, our belief in the value of the collective good has eroded in recent decades. But in an emergency that can change quickly.... We might be too far down the road to test every asymptomatic person, but a change in our mindsets, in how we view our neighbours, could lay the groundwork for the collective action we ll need to deal with other global crises. The time to see how connected we all are is now." - New Musical Express, 3/28/20...... Art GarfunkelIn a new interview with Mojo magazine, Art Garfunkel said he has always worried that his voice is "too feminine." "I worry that it's too damn sensitive. It's too fragile," the former Simon & Garfunkel star admitted. "What's a man doing being so... feminine, so perfect, gilding the lily on all those notes. Is that manly?" Garfunkel added: "I never knew how to take this joy of singing in the alleyways at seven, nine, 12 years old and see it vocationally. I was never able to go there. I was sure that I'd have to ultimately find a profession; I'm going to be a teacher or something." Garfunkel also said he was attracted to how well his former partner Paul Simon played guitar: "I knew I could sing, but if Paul is available to tilt the singing in to all these harmonies, it's more interesting. And then he played guitar magnificently, never forget that. I was very attracted to how good Paul plays acoustic guitar. He's wonderful - rhythm and subtleties and accents. Charlestons and syncopations fall into place." - Music-News.com, 3/27/20...... Alan Merrill, the co-writer and singer of the original version of the rollicking song "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" later made famous by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, died on Mar. 29 from COVID-19, according to his daughter Laura. He was 69. The New York native spent time in Japan and the U.K. throughout his music career before forming the Arrows in 1974 in London. They released singles including "Touch Too Much," "My Last Night With You" and "I Love Rock 'N' Roll," which he wrote with guitarist Jake Hooker in 1975. Merrill was lead vocalist on the Arrows' original "I Love Rock 'N' Roll," but the song went on to be recorded and released by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, the version that climbed to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart in 1982. Although the Arrows split in the '70s, Merrill later joined the band Runner and worked with such artists as Rick Derringer and Meat Loaf. He released several albums as a solo artist, with 2019's Radio Zero being the most recent, and was playing live shows in New York up through March of this year. - Billboard, 3/29/20.

Def Leppard released a 5-disc compilation of their original albums from 1979-1981, The Early Years 79-81, in remastered versions with rarities and re-mix versions, on Mar. 20. Vocalist Joe Elliot and bassist Rick Savage say they assembled the collection to celebrate the 40th anniversary of their major-label debut, 1980's On Through the Night. In addition to featuring remasters of that album and 1981's High 'n' Dry, the set includes the group's first studio recording, alternate song takes, B-sides and live recordings. "The bottom part of an Apollo rocket gets you off the ground and moves you into another stratosphere, but then it just pulls away and it's gone," Joe Elliot noted about the band's motivation for compiling the new set. "Music's not like that because people can always go and revisit your history. So we dressed it all up in a physical box with a book and included things people never have heard before," he added. Def Leppard is hoping to treat their fans to several tracks from the collection with a stadium tour with Motley Crue with guests Poison and Joan Jett that is tentatively set to begin on June 18 in Jacksonville, Fla. - Billboard, 3/27/20...... Jackson BrowneJackson Browne revealed to Rolling Stone magazine on Mar. 24 that he has tested positive for the coronavirus. Browne, 71, said he immediately sought out testing when he developed a cough and started running a fever. Browne did test positive, however he downplayed the severity of his illness. "My symptoms are really pretty mild, so I don't require any kind of medication and certainly not hospitalization or anything like that," he said. Browne said he is pretty certain he picked up the virus on his recent trip to New York for the Love Rocks NYC benefit, which moved forward on Mar. 12 as planned but, for the first time, live-streamed and with no audience because of early coronavirus cautions. "Now I wish I hadn't gone to New York and done this benefit," he admitted. The 2004 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee also encouraged young people to take part in the global response to stop the spread by avoiding unnecessary contact with people. "So many people that have it aren't going to be tested," he said. "They don't have symptoms, but they might have it and might be able to pass it on... you have to assume you have it." - Billboard, 3/24/20...... In related news, Bruce Springsteen is offering hope for those suffering from COVID-19, especially in his native New Jersey, by supporting the launch of New Jersey's Pandemic Relief Fund. "These are uncertain times," Springsteen says in a new video posted on YouTube announcing the fund on Mar. 24. "What is for certain is the pain, the fear, and the real needs of many of our neighbors, our friends, and certainly all of those who are on the front lines of this pandemic." The Boss also confirmed he and his family have been doing their part to stop the spread of the virus: "We are practicing social distancing; we are staying at home." Also appearing in the video are Jon Bon Jovi, Danny DeVite, Whoopi Goldbert, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, among others. - Billboard, 3/24/20...... Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks says that pop sensation Harry Styles is inspiring her to write new music as she listens to his new album, Fine Line, to get through the pandemic crisis. Nicks posted a message to her fans on Mar. 23 urging them to remain positive as coronavirus continues to spread: "Dear Everyone, I know you are doing everything you can to help the situation we are all in. I am staying in with my Goddaughters and my assistant Karen and all our dogs -- Lily, Luna and Mana -- trying to think of creative things to do. I am getting all my paintings and drawings out listening to music (mostly Harry Styles 'Fine Line') and being inspired by him to write some new songs and poetry. Way to go H. it is your 'Rumours'." Nicks added: "My advice for all this free time and terrible news is just dance, this will pass, love will find a way, it always does." - New Musical Express, 3/23/20...... Organizers of the 2020 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony announced on Mar. 24 that the ceremony has been moved from May 2 to Nov. 7 due to the coronavirus. The annual ceremony will still take place in Cleveland and honor acts including the Doobie Brothers, T. Rex, Nine Inch Nails, Depeche Mode, Notorious B.I.G. and Whitney Houston. The event will broadcast live from the city's Public Auditorium at 8 p.m. ET on HBO, marking the first time the ceremony will be broadcast in real time on the network. - Billboard, 3/24/20...... Lionel RichieFormer The Commodores member and '80s solo hitmaker Lionel Richie says he's considering a new version of "We Are The World" to raise money for the fight against coronavirus. Although Richie said he wasn't expecting to mark the 35th anniversary of the charity track which raised over $63 million in humanitarian aid for Africa in 1985, he now believes that the pandemic has made WATW's message "so clear" once again. "Two weeks ago, we said we didn't want to do too much [about the song] because this is not the time to sell an anniversary, he said... But the message is so clear," Richie explained. He also singled out the significance of WATW's chorus line: "There's a choice we're making, we're saving our own lives." Richie added that he is currently at home, self-isolating with his own family. "We are all hunkered down. Family is the key to this. It is the soother," he explained. Meanwhile, the estate of Michael Jackson, who contributed to the original WATW song, has announced that the Jackson estate will be donating $300,000 (£252,000) to coronavirus response efforts. The donation will be split between the Recording Academy's MusicCares charity, the Three Square Food Bank in Las Vegas, Nevada, and New York's Broadway Cares initiative, with each receiving $100,000 (£84,000). Jackson estate co-executors John Branca and John McClain said the recent death of Cameroonian musician Manu Dibango, whose work helped inspire Jackson's hit "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'," prompted them to make the donation on behalf of the late King of Pop. "Michael's spirit of generosity and helping others during his lifetime is legendary," the executors added. "These donations are inspired by him." - New Musical Express, 3/23/20...... Elton John announced on Mar. 25 that he will host an all-star benefit special aimed at providing some relief and entertainment for Americans locked down in their homes during the coronavirus pandemic. Fox Presents the iHeart Living Room Concert For America will be a one-hour, commercial-free special airing in the slot originally intended for the 2020 iHeartRadio Music Awards on Mar. 29 from 9-10 p.m. EST -- and on iHeartMedia radio stations nationwide, as well as on the IHeartRadio app. Joining Elton in celebrating the nation's resilience in fighting the COVID-19 virus will be the likes of Billie Eilish, Alicia Keys, Green Day's Billie Joe Armstrong, Mariah Carey, Tim McGraw and Backstreet Boys, among others. The performances will be filmed on the singers' personal cell phones, cameras and audio equipment in order to ensure the health and safety of the participants in this period of social isolation. Fox will offer the event across all its linear and digital platforms, with additional details and performers to be announced soon. - Billboard, 3/25/20...... Doug FiegerBerton AverrePrescott NilesTwo surviving members of '70s New Wave icons The Knack have provided a new take on their No. 1 1979 hit single "My Sharona" by uploading a video to YouTube on Mar. 25 called "Bye Corona." "Some people have asked whether we were going to get around to doing our own 'Sharona' corona parody song, because apparently, there aren't enough of them," Knack lead guitarist Berton Averre mused about the catchy hit that has inspired countless parodies and sung by late Knack frontman Doug Fieger (who died in 2010 after a battle with cancer). "Sadly, our lead singer is no longer with us and trust me, you don't want to hear me croak it out," said Averre, who added he had a better idea and decided to show fans a close-up "instruction video" of the song's guitar solo. Averre masterfully delivers the solo, before Knack bassist Prescott Niles joins him (virtually) for the chorus, where they proclaim: "Bye, corona!" The Knack said they will be donating the recent bump-up of "My Sharona" digital streaming royalties to the Music Heath Alliance (MusicHeathAlliance.com). - Billboard, 3/25/20...... Queen guitarist Brian May has been teaching fans how to play a number of the band's classic tracks on guitar via live-stream from his home. May launched a series he dubbed "MicroConcerto" earlier in March as many continue to self-isolate amid the ongoing coronavirus crisis, writing: "In my living room at home where else?! I seem to have most all my usual channels to entertain you & so maybe here on [Instagram] is the place to perform micro concerts across the ether. Is that a good plan? Responding to fans' requests for tracks, May then offered up tutorials on how to play "Bohemian Rhapsody" and most recently "Keep Yourself Alive." Speaking of his own experience of tackling the current crisis, May said: "I'm taking the whole self-isolation thing very seriously as I think you have to. I think everybody has to cut down on their social interactions as much as they can in order for us to stand a chance of keeping this virus in check.... Be safe and let's be grateful we have a chance here... let's still try to enjoy each day we're given." - NME, 3/25/20...... Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood is also sharing advice for recovering addicts who are self-isolating during the coronavirus crisis. In a post on Twitter, Wood -- who has been sober since 2010 -- has given advice to any recovering addicts unable to make rehab meetings or keep good practices going while self-isolating at home. In the video, Wood holds up the book Keep It Simple: Daily Meditations for Twelve-Step Beginnings and Renewal, which he calls "one of my books that help me get through every day and proceeds to read a passage from." "I will share my hope for the future with myself, my higher power, and my friends," Wood read. "I will also share this with someone who has lost hope. Now, if anything, we have tended to be people who have wanted it all now. To hope is not to demand. Maybe we were a bit demanding. Maybe we were a bit impatient. Maybe that's why we had such little hope. Hope is believing good will come, even in bad times; hope is knowing that this too shall pass," he added. The Rolling Stones recently announced they were forced to postpone their upcoming "No Filter" tour dates due to the pandemic. - NME, 3/25/20...... Bob DylanBob Dylan shared a previously unreleased song he composed about the assasination of Pres. John F. Kennedy. The rock bard shared "Murder Most Foul" on YouTube on Mar. 27, a powerful retelling of JFK's last moments on earth, his gruesome assassination and the complicated world of the early '60s. In the almost 17-minute track, Dylan sings: It was a dark day in Dallas, November '63. The day that will live on in infamy. President Kennedy was a-riding high, good day to be living and good day to die." The rock icon seems to currently be in a sharing mood, also adding a message to the new track: "Greetings to my fans and followers with gratitude for all your support and loyalty over the years. This is an unreleased song we recorded a while back that you might find interesting. Stay safe, stay observant and may God be with you." - Billboard, 3/27/20...... As Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler celebrated his 72nd birthday on Mar. 26, his fellow rocker Alice Cooper wished him a happy birthday in shock-rock fashion by posting a message on Twitterf linging knives at a printed picture of Tyler's face while his own song "Go to Hell" track plays in the background. Throwing knives is Alice's well-known pre-show ritual, and his precision only zeroes in on his affection for Tyler. "Please help me wish a very happy birthday to the Demon of Screamin' - @IamStevenT!," Cooper captioned the 20-second clip on Twitter. Tyler retweeted all his idiosyncratic birthday well wishes, including those from Slash, Def Leppard, Bon Jovi lead guitarist Phil X, and others. - Billboard, 3/26/20...... The Eagles have rescheduled their "Hotel California" tour dates due to the oronavirus outbreak. The band will resume the tour in September with a two-night stand at the Pepsi Center in Denver on Sept. 18 and 19, followed by three nights in L.A. at the Forum (9/25, 26, 29); two nights in San Francisco (10/2, 3); two nights in St. Paul, Minn. (10/16, 17); one night in Dallas on Oct. 21, and wrapping with two nights in Phoenix on Oct. 24 and 25. The band will play the entirety of their 1976 hit album Hotel California with an accompanying orchestra and choir. The performances will also include an additional set of the band's greatest hits. - Billboard, 3/26/20...... David Byrne announced on Mar. 24 that he is adapting his stage play "American Utopia" for the printed page. The former Talking Heads frontman says he's collaborating with the author and illustrator Maira Kalman, who worked on the Broadway show. The book, also called American Utopia, will be published Sept. 8 by Bloomsbury. "Here is the hope and joy that I believe emanates from this show turned into something you can hold in your hand," Bynre said in a statement. - AP, 3/24/20...... Victor WillisGlen CampbellThe Library of Congress announced on Mar. 25 that songs and albums from '70s artists Village People ("Y.M.C.A"), Glen Campbell ("Wichita Lineman"), Tina Turner (Private Dancer, album) and Cheap Trick (Cheap Trick at Budokan, album) will be among 25 aural treasures as worthy of preservation in the National Recording Registry. The new slate of 25 recordings spans 1920-2008 and brings to 550 the total number of titles preserved under terms of the National Recording Preservation Act of 2000 in conjunction with the Library's Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation to ensure availability for future generations. Under the terms of the National Recording Preservation Act of 2000, the Librarian, with advice from the Library of Congress' National Recording Preservation Board, is tasked each year with selecting 25 titles that are "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" and at least 10 years old. - Billboard, 3/25/20...... The writers of The Simpsons say that Paul McCartney always checks that Lisa Simpson is still a vegetarian every time they run into him, after it became a key condition of his guest appearance on the show in 1995. Sir Paul, with then wife and staunch vegetarian Linda McCartney, guested on The Simpsons in the episode "The Vegetarian," In a new interview with the UK's Radio Times, show consultant David Mirkin -- who is also a vegetarian -- said he was "happy to comply with McCartney's request," but admitted that every time he bumps into the former Beatle, Macca always checks. "And he's always surrounded by nine or ten lawyers so it's quite frightening," Mirkin says. This comes as The Simpsons arrives on Disney+ this week, as the streaming service launches in the UK. The Walt Disney Company is also set to release a new Beatles documentary from Lord of Rings director Peter Jackson, The Beatles: Get Back. - New Musical Express, 3/24/20...... Bill Rieflin, the current drummer of prog-rockers King Crimson has passed away at the age of 59, following a long battle with cancer. King Crimson frontman Robert Fripp announced the news on his Facebook profile and said himself and his wife Toyah Wilcox -- who Bill worked with on her project The Humans -- received a phone call from the late star's wife Tracy from their home in Seattle to let them know he had sadly lost his fight with the disease. In a touching tribute, the 73-year-old Fripp said his life was made "immeasurably richer" for knowing Rieflin. As well as King Crimson, Rieflin had most recently played with R.E.M and Ministry, whilst in the 90s he worked for the late Chris Cornell, Nine Inch Nails, and many more. In 2012, the versatile musician played drums on Robbie Williams' LP Take The Crown. - Music-News.com, 3/25/20.

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on March 22nd, 2020



Country star Dolly Parton has shared a tearful message on Twitter following the death of her "true friend" and collaborator Kenny Rogers on Mar. 20 at the age of 81. "Well, I couldn't believe it this morning when I got up and turned on the TV, checking to see what the Coronavirus was doing," she says in the clip she shared on Saturday morning. "And they told me that my friend and singing partner, Kenny Rogers, had passed away. I know that we all know that Kenny is in a better place than we are today, but I'm pretty sure he's going to be talking to God some time today, if he ain't already, and he's going to be asking him to spread some light on a bunch of this darkness going on here." The pair first teamed up on 1983's smash (and Billboard Hot 100 No. 1) "Islands in the Stream," and proceeded to record several duets together, their last being 2013's "You Can't Make Old Friends." "I loved Kenny with all my heart," she continues. "And my heart is broken. A big ol' chunk of it has gone with him today. I think that I can speak for all his family, his friends and fans, when I say that I will always love you." Don HenleyAlso remembering his good friend -- and fellow Texas native -- is Eagles co-founder Don Henley. In a statement provided to Billboard, Henley reflected on how Rogers was "a wise mentor to so many of us," and the impact he had on his own musical journey. "Fifty years ago, The Gambler took a gamble on me and my first band from small-town Texas, and his big-hearted support launched many careers, including mine," he wrote. "He also gave me some of the best career advice I ever got: 'You'd better be nice to the people you meet on the way up, because you're going to meet those same people on the way back down.'" Henley concluded that "He fought the good fight for as long as he could, but he was tired, and he was ready to make his exit. I'm just grateful that I got visit with him in the hospital, about six weeks ago, and convey my gratitude to him for all he did for me. RIP, my friend. Thanks for all the gladness you gave us." Before Henley rose to fame with the Eagles, he was in a band called Shiloh. Rogers not only signed the act (to Amos Records) shortly after meeting them in 1969, but produced its first album and brought them to Los Angeles, where Henley met Glenn Frey and his future bandmates. - Billboard, 3/21/2020...... In a newly published John Entwistle biography from rock journalists Paul Rees and Thomas Judd, the late The Who bassist recalls how the Beatles used to sing explicit lyrics live as their fans' deafening screams drowned them out during the heyday of Beatlemania. "It became apparent that The Beatles had figured that since the screaming couldn't be stopped and no one out front in the audience could possibly hear a thing, then they might as well have some fun," Entwistle is quoted in The Ox: The Last of the Great Rock Stars. "Soon, the four of us were crying with laughter at words they were singing and which only we were able to pick up on, 'It's been a hard day's c**k...' 'I wanna hold your c***...'," he added. The Who once opened for the Beatles in Blackpool in 1964. Meanwhile, surviving Who members Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend have announced that their UK and Ireland tour will now take place in March 2021, after it was delayed by coronavirus. The Who were due to begin their latest arena tour on Mar. 16 at the Manchester Arena, including a special gig at London's Royal Albert Hall on Mar. 28 as part of the annual Teenage Cancer Trust shows. The shows will now take place in March 2021, and original tickets will still be valid. - Music-News.com/NME, 3/20/20...... Neil DiamondWith his extremely nosy pup by his side, Neil Diamond performed a fireside digital sing-along of his 1969 hit "Sweet Caroline" to help comfort those concerned about the coronavirus pandemic on the evening of Mar. 21. "I know we're going through a rough time right now, but I love ya," the singer/songwriter said, as he shared the performance on Twitter. "I think, maybe if we sing together, well, we'll just feel a little bit better. Give it a try, okay?" Diamond then played "Sweet Caroline," giving its beloved lyrics a new twist encouraging safety precautions and social distancing. Instead of "hands, touching hands," Diamond sang "hands, washing hands," and "reaching out / Touching me, touching you" then became "reaching out / Don't touch me, I won't touch you." One refrain stayed the same, though: "Good times never seemed so good." - Billboard, 3/22/20...... Meanwhile, director Baz Luhrmann posted on Twitter on Mar. 20 that he plans on suspending production of his new Elvis Presley biopic indefinitely due to the global pandemic. "All going well, we have a passionate conviction to be back here on the Gold Coast, picking up where we left off as soon as the time is right," Luhrmann wrote. "In fact, we are not even taking our sets down, simply locking up the creative space over the next few days. We all agree that right now this is the right time for people all over the world, from all walks of life, to be at home, indoors, with their loved ones (washing our hands five times a day)," he added. Principal photography on the movie, which stars newcomer Austin Butler as Presley, Maggie Gyllenhaal as Presley's mother Gladys, and Tom Hanks as Presley's manager Col. Tom Parker, was due to start in late March. Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson posted on Instagram on Mar. 11 that they have tested positive for coronavirus and will remain "isolated for as long as public health and safety requires." - Billboard, 3/20/20...... In related news, Wonder Woman actress Gal Gadot has led a star-studded rendition of John Lennon's "Imagine" as coronavirus continues to spread across the globe. In a video posted to Instagram, Gadot began singing Lennon's seminal track, before the likes of Will Ferrell, Natalie Portman, Lynda Carter, Norah Jones, Jimmy Fallon, Maya Rudolph and Jamie Dornan joined in to lift spirits. Gadot explained that she had been in isolation for six days, and that the global spread of the disease had left her feeling "philosophical." She added that she was inspired by a viral video from Italy -- which remains in lockdown -- showing a man playing Imagine on his trumpet while his neighbors sang along from the safety of their homes. She captioned the video: "We are in this together, we will get through it together." Gadot's rendition of "Imagine" comes as radio stations across Europe including the BBC have joined forces to simultaneously to play Gerry & The Pacemakers's stirring 1963 song "You'll Never Walk Alone" in a show of solidarity against the virus. The song also was broadcast at the same time, 7:45 am GMT on Mar. 20, on hundreds of radio stations in countries across Europe including Luxembourg, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Finland, Latvia, Slovakia, Romania and Spain. - New Musical Express, 3/18/20...... ZZ TopTwo classics from ZZ Top have reached the Billboard Hot Rock Songs chart dated Mar. 21 following the release of a new ZZ Top documentary, ZZ Top: That Little Ol' Band from Texas. The Texas trio's "La Grange" collected debuted at No. 12 with 1.4 million U.S. streams, up 16%, and sold 2,000 downloads, a boost of 85%, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. Additionally, "Sharp Dressed Man" bowed on the same chart at No. 14, with 1.6 million streams, up 13%, and 1,000 sold, up 42%. The track hit No. 8 on the Mainstream Rock Songs airplay chart and No. 56 on the Hot 100 in 1983. Originally premiered in a limited theater run in 2019 (the 50th anniversary of the band's founding), ZZ Top: That Little Ol' Band from Texas received a home video and digital release on Feb. 28, including on Netflix. - Billboard, 3/19/20...... Posting on his own social media profiles on Mar. 18, Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger says the band is "raring to get back on stage" when it's safe to do so. "To everyone who has got tickets to the No Filter Tour, I'm sorry the shows have to be postponed but staying healthy is everyone's priority right now," Sir Mick posted. "We are raring to get back on the stage and as soon as that's possible we will be there! Keep your eyes on RollingStones.com for the latest updates. Stay safe, Mick," he added. The legendary group were due to kick off the the US leg of the tour on May 8 at San Diego's SDCCU Stadium, and conclude at Atlanta's Mercedes-Benz Stadium on July 9. - Music-News.com, 3/18/20...... David Crosby has been keeping busy during the coronavirus outbreak by taking to social media to rate his fans' attemps at rolling a joint. Earlier in March, Crosby tweeted Jeffrey Guterman, telling him "Jeff & I need to show you how to roll a joint after Guterman posted a picture of one of his efforts." Following this, fans from all around the world responded by sending the Byrds and Crosby, Stills & Nash legend pictures of their own creations and soon after, Crosby started to review the attempts. "Looks like a snake who swallowed a bowling ball, and "crumbled and puny," he tweeted to one fan. "Nice work, I would smoke that," he said to another. "It's a calling, Crosby later said of his online reviews system before adding: "I was born to do it." - New Musical Express, 3/19/20...... Bruce SpringsteenAlso helping to keep his fans entertained during the coronavirus self-isolation is Bruce Springsteen, who shared his London Calling: Live In Hyde Park show in its entirety for free at bspringsteen.lnk on Mar. 17. "Stream 'London Calling: Live In Hyde Park' from the comfort of your own home, now on YouTube & Apple Music in its entirety for the 1st time!," the Boss wrote, before directing fans to a link to the show. The London Springsteen and the E Street Band gig took place on June 28, 2009 as part of the Hard Rock Calling festival at London's Hyde Park. A DVD of the gig was released the following year. - New Musical Express, 3/18/20...... Actor Stuart Whitman, whose Hollywood career spanned five decades, passed away on Mar. 16 in Montecito, Calif. He was 92. Known for his rugged roles and handsome charm, Mr. Whitman was famous for starring in several Westerns alongside John Wayne. He was nominated for an Oscar in 1962 for his leading role in The Mark, and on the small screen starred in the Cimarron Strip Western series as well as having roles on Knots Landing and Murder, She Wrote. Mr. Whitman had reportedly been in and out of the hospital lately due to skin cancer that seeped into his bloodstream. Mr. Whitman, who was married three times, is survived by his current wife, Julia Vadimovna Paradi, and five children from previous marriages. - PageSix.com, 3/17/20.

Kenny RogersCountry/pop superstar Kenny Rogers, who charted two pop No. 1's and 20 country chart toppers in the 1970s and 1980s, died of natural causes under the care of hospice in Georgia on Mar. 20. He was 81. "Kenny passed away peacefully at home from natural causes under the care of hospice and surrounded by his family," a representative for the singer said in a statement. Mr. Rogers, who earned three Grammys with a string of sleekly tailored hits with his appealing, sometimes gritty voice, was also inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2013 and received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Country Music Association the same year. Born in 1938 and raised in Houston, Mr. Rogers was the fourth of eight children in a poor family and as a teen would sometimes perform with another aspiring local musician, Mickey Gilley. While in high school, he formed a rockabilly group, the Scholars, who recorded for the local Carlton Records label. After a brief stint at the University of Houston, he played bass with the jazz groups of Bobby Doyle and Kirby Stone. After moving to Los Angeles in 1966, he joined the folk-pop unit the New Christy Minstrels, then he and three members (Mike Settle, Terry Williams and Thelma Camacho) founded the rock-leaning group The First Edition in 1967. That group charted two top-10 pop hits: "Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)" (No. 5, 1968), a version of Mickey Newbury's slice of pop psychedelia, and "Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town" (No. 6, No. 1 U.K., 1969), Mel Tillis' downbeat song about the faithless wife of a crippled Vietnam vet. As The First Edition's fortunes began to wane, Mr. Rogers signed a solo deal with United Artists Records in 1976 and had almost immediate success with "Lucille," about a barroom encounter with a disillusioned woman and her estranged husband. The number became Mr. Rogers' first No. 1 country hit and reached No. 5 on the national pop chart. It also scored Mr. Rogers his first Grammy, for best male country vocal performance. He notched five more No. 1 solo country singles by the end of the decade. Kenny RogersThe biggest of these were the Grammy-winning "The Gambler" (also No. 16 pop in 1978) and Mr. Rogers' biggest hit, the backwoods narrative "Coward of the County" (also No. 3 pop in 1979). They pushed the albums The Gambler and Kenny to No. 12 and No. 5, respectively, on the pop album charts. Each inspired a popular TV movie in which Mr. Rogers portrayed Brady Hawkes, protagonist of The Gambler, in a series of five telepics that ran through 1994. On the heels of a No. 1 greatest hits set in 1980, Mr. Rogers moved increasingly into pop terrain and focusing on romantic balladry, with "Lady" and "Islands in the Stream" (the latter one of many duets with frequent partner Dolly Parton) solidifying his standing as country's biggest crossover artist. As the "countrypolitan" style began to fall out of favor, "Make No Mistake, She's Mine," a duet with fellow country star Ronnie Milsap, became Mr. Rogers' next-to-last No. 1 country single in 1987. It also scored a Grammy for best country vocal duet performance. Mr. Rogers had sporadic releases on Capitol Nashville and Warner Bros. Nashville in the new millennium, but produced no major hits. However he maintained a busy touring schedule and increasingly turned his attention to various entrepreneurial enterprises, opening a chain of fast-food chicken outlets, Kenny Rogers Roasters, and a Sprint car manufacturing firm, Gamblers Chassis. In 2012, Mr. Rogers released a memoir, Luck or Something Like It, and announced his retirement in Sept. 2015, not long after a widely aired commercial for Geico insurance saw him reprising "The Gambler" for comedic effect. Married five times, Mr. Rogers is survived by his last wife Wanda and five children. Due to the national COVID-19 emergency, the family announced that it is planning a small private service at this time with a public memorial planned for a later date. - Variety.com, 3/21/20.

Thursday, March 12, 2020

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on March 17th, 2020



The Rolling Stones announced on Mar. 17 that they're canceling their 15-date North American No Filter Tour due to the global coronavirus pandemic. In a statement, the band said that they are "hugely disappointed" and "sorry to all the fans who were looking forward to it as much as we were, but the health and safety of everyone has to take priority," adding that "we will all get through this together -- and we'll see you very soon. The tour had been set to launch on May 8 in San Diego and wrap on July 9 in Atlanta. Meanwhile, the previous day Elton John postponed the U.S. leg his Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour, with shows from Mar. 26-May 2 have been pushed to 2021. David Lee Roth announced the same day he's postponing the last six shows of his Las Vegas residency, with Alice Cooper postponing his planned spring 2020 headlining North American tour that was slated to run from Mar. 31-Apr. 22 until the fall. On Mar. 12 Styx said they were rescheduling concerts from Mar. 13 to Mar. 28, and the Allman Betts Band canceled the rest of their scheduled shows in March. Saying she was "heartbroken... but the health of my fans comes first," Cher said on Mar. 12 will be postponing the remainder of her ABBA-inspired "Here We Go Again Tour" with new dates from September to December, and organizers of the 2020 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Cleveland announced they will be postponing the ceremony until a later date. Also, the 2020 Record Store Day in the U.K. in which hundreds of vinyl and cassette releases were to be sold exclusively through independent record shops for one day only (Apr. 18) has been postponed, which will affect up to 230 independent record shops. - Billboard/NME, 3/17/20...... Gloria GaynorIn related news, '70s disco queen Gloria Gaynor has shared a clip on Instagram calling on people to wash their hands to her classic 1978 break up anthem "I Will Survive" in a bid to combat coronavirus. Gaynor took to Tik Tok to inspire others to properly wash their hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds by indulging in the action herself. "It only takes 20 seconds to SURVIVE!," she captioned her video, which has already gone viral. Gaynor's clip prompted several Instagram users to post their own clips of themselves washing their hands to the track, which Gaynor has commented on by writing: "I love that people are taking part in the #iwillsurvivechallenge to #washyourhands and are duetting with me on @tiktok. Stay safe and healthy everyone! Wash your hands often every day for 20 seconds or more." - New Musical Express, 3/13/20...... Meanwhile, Neil Young is doing his part to help entertain homebound fans during the emergency by streaming a series of shows filmed by his wife, actress Daryl Hannah. "Because we are all at home and not many are venturing out, we will try to do a stream from my fireplace with my lovely wife filming," Young posted on his Neil Young Archives site. "It will be a down-home production, a few songs, a little time together... we will be soon be announcing the first one right here at NYA in the Times." Young has yet to reveal when the series will begin, but in the meantime, he's also streaming a massive list of premieres of archival films for his NYA subscribers, including Shut It Down, a documentary on the making of his Colorado LP, on Mar. 17. Other debuts are slated on a daily basis through the end of March. Also, Young and My Morning Jacket singer Jim James took part in a digital rally for Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders on Mar. 16. The online-only Bernie 2020 Digital Rally came one day ahead of voters going to the polls in Arizona, Florida and Illinois. - Billboard, 3/17/20...... While the coronavirus outbreak might have put a damper on Ozzy Osbourne's touring plans in 2020, he and his wife Sharon Osbourne are set to appear in the Mar. 17 episode of ABC's sitcom The Conners. In the episode, titled "Beards, Thrupples and Robots," Ozzy and Sharon guest as themselves alongside leading stars John Goodman, Laurie Metcalf, Sara Gilbert, Lecy Goranson and Michael Fishman. It is said that Sara Gilbert's relationship with Sharon from their time co-starring on the morning show The Talk could lead to some cheeky inside jokes. - Billboard, 3/12/20...... Bjorn UlvaeusABBA member Bjorn Ulvaeus has told the Financial Times newspaper that the quartet's forthcoming "comeback tracks" were actually recorded back in 2018. "We recorded them quite some time ago, actually one-and-a-half years ago," Ulvaeus says. Ulvaeus, 74, partnered with a new software program called "Session," which registers contributions to recordings in real time and as a result, it can be used to resolve issues relating to music rights. However, Ulvaeus says "Session" wasn't used for recording the upcoming ABBA songs "because it wasn't quite ready." In February, the group announced they were "aiming" for a September 2020 release for their first new tracks in 35 years. In a clip shared by fan site ABBA Talk, ABBA's Benny Andersson was asked what has happened to the songs that have been promised for such a long time. In his native Swedish, he replied: "They're coming. They're coming this year. I'm guessing after the summer. But I can only guess, because I'm not really sure. But I would think so." Asked if they will be out in 2020, he added: "One shouldn't promise anything but if I were to decide myself, it would be September... I can't make that decision alone. But that's what we're aiming for." - Music-News.com, 3/15/20...... Sales and streams of Talking Heads music have seen a bump after the band's former frontman David Byrne performed on the Feb. 29 episode of NBC's Saturday Night Live. In all, the band's songs drew 5.7 million U.S. on-demand streams in the tracking week ending Mar. 5, a boost of 36%, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. Additionally, Talking Heads earned 6,000 equivalent album units, a boost of 50%, with 2,000 of those via album sales. And on the digital download side, it racked up 7,000 song downloads, up 245%. Leading the way on a song level with 2,000 downloads was "Once in a Lifetime," which Byrne performed on SNL while promoting his "American Utopia" show, which after a multi-city tour also enjoyed a Broadway run that will continue this fall. "Psycho Killer" also saw gains, though its rise also came concurrent with its appearance in a trailer for Amazon Video's new series Hunters. With 1,000 downloads, the song debuted at No. 21 on Billboard Rock Digital Song Sales. - Billboard, 3/13/20...... A builder in the U.K. could be about to secure a £2,000 payday after finding the sketches Paul McCartney commissioned for his "psychedelic" piano in a dumpster. Oldham resident Andy Clyne, 54, says he was leading a team at a mill near Manchester in 1999 when he noticed the papers had been thrown out with other waste. After taking them out of the skip, Andy stored the papers in his loft for 20 years before recently deciding to get them valued. The sketches of the Sir Paul's "psychedelic" piano, which was designed in 1967 and he still plays in concert to this day, will now go under the hammer at Omega Auctions on Mar. 24, where they are expected to reach £2,000. "I've had them for 20-odd years. You put things away and forget about them and then something triggers your mind," Clyne said. "I haven't planned what I'll do with the money yet but I was surprised about the value... I Googled 'Paul McCartney's piano' and when I looked at the drawing it was very similar." Meanwhile, a sidewalk performer in London says McCartney tipped her guitar case while she was performing in the city on Mar. 11. Charlotte Campbell says she was performing outside Charing Cross station in the center of the capital when the Beatles legend approached her and tossed some coins her way. "I was absolutely speechless," Campbell told the Evening Standard, when Sir Paul approached her, but she nevertheless managed to thank Macca as he walked away. "When he looked up it was Paul McCartney, like actually Paul McCartney and I was so shocked because I am such a huge fan of the Beatles," Campbell says. "They are such an inspiration I think to any musician ever -- the Beatles are the ultimate -- and to see Paul McCartney and for him to be putting money in my guitar case I was so speechless." - New Musical Express, 3/16/20...... Lyle WaggonerLyle Waggoner, best known as a member of Carol Burnett's comedic troupe in The Carol Burnett Show in the late Sixties and early Seventies, died at his home in Los Angeles on Mar. 17 after battling an illness. He was 84. The handsome, tall Mr. Waggoner began as an announcer on Burnett's show in 1967, and stayed on with the sketch show through 1974. Some of his most notable sketches include being interrogated by a Nazi and his finger puppet and playing a love-lorn man in "As The Stomach Turns," a slave master in "The Oldest Man," Olympian Mark Spitz to Burnett's Charo, and an alien known as the Jolly Green Thing, in addition to be regularly gushed over by Burnett during her Q&A segments at the beginning of the show. His very first TV role was in Gunsmoke in 1966, and also guested on such series as Lost in Space, Marcus Welby, M.D., The Barbara Eden Show and Maude. Mr. Waggoner also made history by being the first male centerfold in Playgirl magazine, in 1973. After Burnett's show, Mr. Waggoner portrayed Colonel Steve Trevor, Jr. on the 1975 Wonder Woman series, on which he starred for four years, then appeared on such series as Charlie's Angels, Happy Days, Mork & Mindy and The Golden Girls. In 2017, he appeared on CBS' 50th anniversary special for The Carol Burnett Show. In the late 1970s, while still very active as an actor, he launched Star Waggons out of Sylmar, Calif., a company that specializes in leasing custom trailers to studios and production companies for location work. - Variety.com, 3/17/20...... Keith Olsen, a legendary rock producer known for working with a number of rock music icons including the Grateful Dead, Santana, Pat Benatar, Whitesnake, Rick Springfield, Ozzy Osbourne and the Scorpions, among others, died on Mar. 9 at his home in Genoa, Nev., it was announced on Mar. 13. He was 74. Most notably, Olsen produced Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham's 1973 collection Buckingham Nicks. After Olsen played one of the songs for Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood, Nicks and Buckingham were soon asked to join Fleetwood Mac. Olsen then produced the band's self-titled, chart-topping 1975 album, which included classics like "Rhiannon," "Say You Love Me" and "Landslide." - Billboard, 3/13/20.

"How Long," a classic No. 3 song from 1975 by the British band Ace, has finally topped a Billboard chart thanks to its use in a new ad for Amazon Prime. "How Long" entered the music industry magazine's Rock Digital Song Sales chart for the week ending Mar. 14 after selling 4,000 downloads, a surge of 2,059%. "How Long" also garnered 831,000 U.S. streams (up 30%) and has placed No. 19 on Billboard's Hot Rock Songs tally. Written and sung by versatile Ace vocalist Paul Carrack, the song was taken from Ace's 1975 LP Five-A-Side (an Ace album). Formed in 1972, Ace released three albums in the mid-'70s prior to disbanding in 1977. Carrack later went on to subsequent success with both solo hits and collaborations with Squeeze and Mike + The Mechanics. - Billboard, 3/11/20...... Roger_DaltreyThe Who's Roger Daltrey issued a statement on Mar. 12 announcing the band would be postponing their upcoming UK tour dates following the global outbreak of coronavirus. "After serious consideration, it is with much regret that The Who have postponed their U.K. tour, due to start next Monday March 16 in Manchester at the Manchester Arena and finishing at Wembley SSE Arena on April 8," Daltrey wrote. "The dates will be rescheduled for later in the year. All tickets will be honoured. The fans safety is paramount and given the developing coronavirus concerns, the band felt that they had no option but to postpone the shows as a precaution," he added. Daltrey's bandmate Pete Townshend added that the Who "haven't reached this decision easily, but given the concerns about public gatherings, we couldn't go ahead." The band also said it will be canceling its Mar. 28 charity gig and London's Royal Albert Hall which benefits the Teenage Cancer Trust, with plans to reschedule that show also. A total of 11 shows will be affected by the postponement of the tour, which had been slated to kick off on Mar. 16 at The Arena in Manchester and wrap on Apr. 8 at Wembley Stadium in London. Meanwhile, Queen + Adam Lambert announced on Mar. 7 that they've been forced to reschedule a May 20 concert at the AccorHotels Arena in Paris, France, following a government decree to cancel all indoor events over 5,000 capacity until May 31 in an effort to contain the spread of the virus. Queen said they are "currently working with the promoter to try to reschedule the date" and urged fans to "please keep hold of your tickets, which would be valid for the new date." Although several major rock acts are postponing their concerts in the near future, organizers of the UK's Reading & Leeds Festival announced on Mar. 12 that their festival, set for Aug. 28-30, is still going ahead despite of the coronavirus outbreak. In a statement, they said that they're "closely monitoring official guidance from the World Health Organisation, Public Health England, UK Government, local public health authorities and are working with event promoters and organisers as information evolves." California's Coachella and Stagecoach festivals recently announced their festivals have officially been postponed as state officials take drastic measures to contain the coronavirus, delaying their festivals until mid and late October, respectively. The outbreak has also affected two of Hollywood's most beloved actors personally, as Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson posted on Instagram on Mar. 11 that they have been diagnosed with coronavirus. The couple apparently contracted the disease in Australia, where Hanks is currently filming director Baz Luhrmann's as yet titled Elvis Presley biopic. Hanks said he and Wilson "will be tested, observed, and isolated for as long as public health and safety requires. Not much more to it than a one-day-at-a-time approach, no?" - New Musical Express/Music-News.com/The Hollywood Reporter, 3/12/20...... In related news, disco legend Gloria Gaynor is (literally) taking virus prevention measures into her own hands to inspire TikTok users to efficiently wash their hands (scrubbing with soap and water for 20 seconds). Fittingly, Gaynor is using her 1979 hit, "I Will Survive" to help her do so. In a fresh new take on the already trending #iwillsurvivechallenge on TikTok, Gaynor is seen lip syncing to her song while washing her hands. "It only takes :20 seconds to 'SURVIVE!'" she wrote in the caption. - Billboard, 3/11/20...... Led Zeppelin has once again prevailed in a long-running copyright dispute over whether the band infringed Spirit's "Taurus" to create "Stairway to Heaven." On Sept. 9, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a trial court's decision of no copyright infringement after a jury in 2016 handed Led Zeppelin a win. The decision comes after the appellate court voted to re-do the trial only to have larger issues re-examined en banc, meaning before a wider panel of judges. A 54-page decision will likely become a new standard in copyright infringement cases and may be presented to the Supreme Court. Among other aspects of the decision, the Ninth Circuit determines it was not in error that the jury didn't get to hear the "Taurus" sound recording at trial. Furthermore, the appeals court elects to ditch the "inverse ratio rule," meaning the higher the degree of access to a work, the lower the bar for proving substantial similarity. - The Hollywood Reporter, 3/9/20...... Warren HaynesThe Allman Brothers Band staged a 50th anniversary reunion concert at Madison Square Garden on March 10. Billed as "The Brothers: Celebrating 50 Years of The Allman Brothers Band," the show featured the five surviving members of the ABB's last and longest lasting lineup, which played together from 2000 until their final show, at New York's Beacon Theater, on Oct. 28, 2014: guitarists Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks, bassist Oteil Burbridge, percussionist Marc Quinones and drummer Jaimoe, the only founding member on stage. (Dickey Betts is the only other survivor; he has not played with the band since 2000 and was not in New York.) The 4+-hour, 2 set gig had the band playing with urgency, intensity and creativity, with the absence of late ABB members Gregg Allman and Butch Trucks filled by Duane Trucks, Butch's nephew and Derek's brother; organist Reese Wynans; and pianist Chuck Leavell. They started the night with the first two songs on the Allman Brothers' 1969 debut, "Don't Want You No More" and "It's Not My Cross to Bear." Coming back for the encores, Jaimoe took the microphone and said a few words of thanks, before they closed out with "Midnight Rider" and "Whipping Post." A packed arena enjoyed the show, despite many attendees questioning their choice to attend due to the specter of the caronavirus threat, and word of a flood of cheap tickets online. - Billboard, 3/11/20...... Disney executive chairman Bob Iger announced on Mar. 11 that Disney has acquired the worldwide rights to director Peter Jackson's upcoming Beatles documentary, The Beatles: Get Back. The film, which takes a look back at the recording of the band's penultimate album Let It Be, "is a front-row seat to the inner workings of the genius of those creators," according to Iger, who announced the news during Disney's annual shareholder meeting in Raleigh, N.C. Jackson, who says he worked on the film with cooperation from Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono Lennon and Olivia Harrison, pulled from 55 hours of unreleased footage of the band filmed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg in 1969 and 140 hours of largely unheard audio recordings from the Let It Be album sessions. The Beatles: Get Back also will feature footage of the band's final live concert as a group, their rooftop performance on London's Savile Row. "Working on this project has been a joyous discovery," Jackson said in a statement. "I've been privileged to be a fly on the wall while the greatest band of all time works, plays and creates masterpieces. I'm thrilled that Disney have stepped up as our distributor. There's no one better to have our movie seen by the greatest number of people," he added. Lindsay-Hogg directed the original Let It Be film, which was shot in 1969 but not released until 1970, after the Beatles had officially broken up. Disney says a fully restored version of the original Let It Be film will be released at a later date. The Beatles: Get Back will be released in the US and Canada on Sept. 4. - The Hollywood Reporter, 3/11/20...... As Linda Ronstadt's Feb. 1980 album Mad Love turns 40 this year, Ronstadt says it was never the intention of her and her producer Peter Asher to put out a New Wave album to compete with the likes of Blondie and The Cars. "I don't think that's how we wanted it to sound like intentionally," Ronstadt said during a phone interview from her home in San Francisco. "I was just trying to find 10 or so songs to do. Back then, I was doing about an album a year, so Mad Love fell into that cycle." Asher noted that "Every Linda record is the same in that we were just looking for great songs that we really liked and Linda felt that she could really sing, and then framing them in the best way we could think of. In Linda's case, it's always been the songs that lead a particular movement or style on one of her records, regardless if it's a Nelson Riddle album with songs from the 1930s or Mad Love with songs from the late '70s. It's all the same for us." Ronstadt's drummer, Russ Kunkel, cited the singer's "uncanny ability to pick songs from the great songwriters, whether it was Lowell George, JD Souther, Jimmy Webb or Elvis Costello." "Her strength was her ability to choose great songs. And even though Mad Love gets its tag as being her foray into new wave, she really only kept true to her roots... it was simply a collection of songs from great songwriters," he added. - Billboard, 3/10/20...... Bob GeldofThe Boomtown Rats of "I Don't Like Mondays" fame have announced they will release Citizens of Boomtown, their first new album in 36 years, on Mar. 13. Frontman Bob Geldof says the long gap wasn't because the Rats broke up, just that "we paused for 36 years." "There's just a sense that the music we had done and that attitude that produced the music was necessary again," says Geldof, who's released several solo albums during the interim. "The only thing I said was 'I'm not gonna do nostalgia.' This has to be about now, about today... There's nothing really for us to prove," he added. Formed during the mid-70s in Dublin and subsequently relocated to London, the Rats notched five Top 10 U.K. singles, hitting No. 1 with "Rat Trap" and "I Don't Like Mondays," the latter of which was also the group's biggest U.S. hit. The Rats released their last album, Long Grass, in 1984. Geldof is also publishing a lyric book, Tales of Boomtown Glory, that will include an introduction and 28 song stories, on Mar. 13. The Rats begin a U.K. tour behind the new LP on Mar. 14 in Zagreb, with 11 dates wrapping up May 2 in Newcastle, however a U.S. tour is not in the cards. "I don't think we could get arrested in the States," Geldof says. - Billboard, 3/11/20...... Former Sex Pistols drummer Paul Cook says a future live reunion of the legendary U.K. punk band is doubtful. "I've hung up my go-between hat. I don't get involved much any more," Cook told the U.K. publication Daily Record. I'm still close to [Sex Pistols guitarist] Steve Jones, but that's as far as it goes. I can't see it happening again for the Pistols and I don t think anyone wants it to." The iconic punk band originally split in 1978 following the departure of frontman Johnny Rotten. Bassist Sid Vicious died the year after, but the Sex Pistols have since reformed on three separate occasions: 1996-2001, 2002-2003 and most recently from 2007-8. Cook went on to cite rifts between the former bandmates as the reason for a reunion not taking place. Explaining that although he's attempted to prompt a reconciliation in the past, he said it's now not "worth the aggravation." "It's not just Steve and Johnny. There's so much water under the bridge and so much history, I don't think it would work out." Cook added that Glen Matlock still "feels aggrieved at being kicked out," with the musician having been fired ahead of Never Mind the Bollocks... being recorded. Matlock is, however, credited on 10 of its tracks. In 2017, Steve Jones said that the likelihood of any Sex Pistols return seemed slim -- especially as he and Rotten no longer speak, despite both living in Los Angeles. Jones, a beloved L.A. radio station host widely known as just Jonesy, abruptly disappeared from the airwaves late last year after being hit with a sudden bout of Bell's palsy that paralyzed half of his face and left his speech compromised. Midway through last December, he made a quiet return to Los Angeles airwaves, moving out of the studio and into a weekly residency at the famed Viper Room in West Hollywood, where "Jonesy's Jukebox" broadcasts live on Meruelo Media's 95.5 KLOS before a studio audience every Friday at noon. - NME/Billboard, 3/12/20...... Neil Young has posted a lengthy endorsement of Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders on his Neil Young Archives website. "I support Bernie Sanders because I listen to what he says. Every point he makes is what I believe in. Every one," Young wrote, adding "In 2016, if Bernie had run instead of Hillary Clinton, I think we would not have the incompetent mess we have now." Young, a frequent and verbal critic of Pres. Donald Trump, also took issue with the Democratic National Committee, saying they "pull[ed] every string" to stop Sanders during the last election in favor of Clinton, suggesting that the same is happening again in the battle between Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden. Young, who recently became a naturalized American citizen, said he's endorsing a presidential candidate for the first time. While he waits for his turn to vote in November's general election, Young has said he's planning to tour North American arenas with his longtime backing band Crazy Horse. - Billboard, 3/10/20...... Randy BachmanBurton CummingsFounding The Guess Who members Burton Cummings and Randy Bachman have announced they're reuniting for a summer 2020 tour for 24 dates, beginning on June 13 in Huber Heights, Oh. The tour will then play six Midwest U.S. dates before heading north of the border on June 11 in Windsor, Ontario, for the rest of the tour, finishing Aug. 8 in Grand Forks, B.C. The June 27 show in the Guess Who's hometown of Winnipeg will be part of historical celebrations for both the city and the province of Manitoba. will also be releasing The Bachman-Cummings Collection in June via Sony Music Entertainment, a seven-disc box set that features the Guess Who albums Bachman played on as well as subsequent material by Bachman and Cummings. The tour comes alongside the 55th anniversary of the Guess Who's first hit single, a cover of Johnny Kidd & the Pirates' "Shakin' All Over," and the 50th anniversary of the iconic "American Woman". "The timing for this seems right for both of us," Bachman says. "And as time goes by, I find that to me and Burton and all the fans, the songs mean more and more and more. The songs seem more relevant to about four or five decades of fans, from teenage kids to people in their seventies and eighties. That's an amazing thing." The fact that it's Bachman and Cummings singing them makes a difference as well, the duo contends. "There are one or two fake Guess Who bands out there," Cummings notes. "There have been a couple of different aggregations of BTO without Randy. I think it's nice the real guys are going out now." But the duo say they have no plans to write or record any new music -- "There's no record industry or radio anymore," Bachman notes -- and Cummings doesn't view that as a negative in any way. "I'm very content to sing the famous songs for the rest of my career," he says. "Do you know how hard it was to get those hit records? What's wrong with singing them for the rest of your life? There's nothing wrong with that." - Billboard, 3/9/20...... With his latest album American Standard, James Taylor has become the first act in the history of the Billboard pop charts to earn a top 10 album in each of the last six decades. American Standard, which sees the folk-rock icon taking on standards from the American songbook, entered the Billboard Hot 200 at No. 4 with 82,000 equivalent album units earned in the U.S. in the week ending Mar. 5. It also gives Fantasy Records its highest charting album since 1970, when Creedence Clearwater Revival's Cosmo's Factory spent nine weeks at No. 1. With American Standard, Taylor becomes the first act with top 10 albums in each of the last six decades: the 1970s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s and '20s, first peaking in the 1970's with Sweet Baby James in 1970. - Billboard, 3/8/20...... As Dolly Parton prepares to hit her milestone age of 75 in Jan. 2021, the "Jolene" hitmaker says she'd love to be on the cover of Playboy magazine one more time. Speaking to 60 Minutes Australia, Parton said: "I don't plan to retire. I just turned 74 and I plan to be on the cover of Playboy magazine again. See, I did Playboy magazine years ago and I thought it'd be such a hoot -- if they'll go for it, I don't know if they will -- if I could be on the cover again when I'm 75." When Dolly appeared on the cover in 1978 -- aged 32 -- she posed in a Playboy bunny costume complete with a black bustier and bunny ears, and she'd be up for wearing the same outfit 45 years later. She laughed: "Maybe! I could probably use it. Boobs are still the same." She added: "The good part with me though, I have my own look. I look kind of cartoonish and cartoons don't really age that much. Even when I'm 90, I'll still probably look about the same way -- just with thicker make-up and bigger hair." Meanwhile, Playboy announced on Mar. 11 that it was ending its "Playmate of the Year" title after 60 years. Speaking to the New York Post's gossip column "Page Six," a representative for the magazine confirmed it will be replaced by "Playmates of the Year," which will "celebrate all twelve diverse Playmates of the Month" from the previous year. "The point of this change was to not exclude anyone and instead of honouring one Playmate they're honouring all 12 diverse Playmates of the Year for each of their unique contributions to the brand," they said. Since 1960, the publication, founded by the late Hugh Hefner, has handed out the award to its favourite "Playmate of the Month" from the previous year, with Jenny McCarthy, Anna Nicole Smith and Victoria Silvstedt all receiving the honour. - Music-News.com/WENN-Canoe.com, 3/9/20...... Max Von SydowVeteran actor Max Von Sydow, the tall, tragic-faced Swedish actor whose name was virtually synonymous with the films of Ingmar Bergman, died on Mar. 8 at the age of 90. Mr. Von Sydow, who became Bergman's symbol for the modern man in such films as The Passion of Anna and Shame after making his Bergman debut as the errant knight in The Seventh Seal, also had an unusually prolific career in Hollywood and international films. He made his American debut in the role of Jesus Christ in George Stevens' turgid 1965 epic The Greatest Story Ever Told and went on to make strong impressions with audiences in such films as The Exorcist, Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters, David Lynch's Dune, Three Days of the Condor, Hawaii, Conan the Barbarian and Awakenings. Mr. Von Sydow worked for other Scandinavian directors as well, drawing an Oscar nomination for his role in Bille August's Pelle the Conqueror and starring in Jan Troell's acclaimed two-part epic The Emigrants and The New Land. Most recently, the actor starred in Game of Thrones as the Three-Eyed Raven. He also appeared in Kursk: The Last Mission (2018) and Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2017). In 2014 he was cast in J.J. Abrams' continuation of the Star Wars saga, Episode VII -- The Force Awakens as Lor San Tekka. In 1990, he was nominated for an Emmy in 1990 for his role in the HBO thriller Red King, White Knight. Mr. Von Sydow was married twice, to actress Kerstin Olin in 1951 and to French filmmaker Catherine Brelet in 1997. He is survived by Brelet; his two sons by Olin, Claes and Henrik (who appeared with the actor in the film Hawaii); and two sons, Cedric and Yvan, by Brelet. - Variety.com, 3/9/20.

Monday, March 2, 2020

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on March 7th, 2020



It was announced on Mar. 6 that Paul McCartney's 1970 solo album McCartney will be getting a special 50th anniversary release in time for Record Store Day on Apr. 18. Sir Paul released the LP back in 1970, one month before the Beatles' swansong effort Let It Be. McCartney wrote every song and played every instrument on the album, with backing vocals provided by his then-wife Linda McCartney, whom he was married to until her death in 1998. The 50th anniversary Record Store Day limited edition of McCartney was pressed from a master cut by Miles Showell at half speed using the original 1970 master tapes at Abbey Road Studios. It was made as a vinyl specific transfer in high resolution and without digital peak limiting for the best possible reproduction. Meanwhile, an exclusive David Bowie release is also set for Record Store Day. CHANGESNOWBOWIE, which has never been available on record, will be released in limited quantities on LP and CD on Apr. 18. - Music-News.com, 3/6/20...... Mick JaggerThe Burnt Orange Heresy, a new film featuring Mick Jagger as a devilish art collector who cunningly convinces an art journalist (Bang) to use a rare interview with a reclusive artist (Donald Sutherland) as an opportunity to steal one of his paintings, hit U.S. theaters on Mar. 6. The film Jagger's first since 2001's The Man From Elysian Fields, and, he says, it might be his last. "I wish I had done a lot more acting. I've just done bits and pieces here and there whenever I've been able to," Jagger said in an interview with AP. Then he chuckles, "You know, I have another job. I have several other jobs, really." Jagger added that his role as an art dealer "was in my grasp to do this character." "I thought it would be fun to do," the 76-year-old Rolling Stones frontman said. "He basically charms and threatens him to do what he wants. It's not a lot of screen time but he's the one who sets off the action." One of Jagger's first films remains one of his most celebrated: Nicolas Roeg's hallucinatory 1970 film Performance, in which he played a drug-addled, gender-bending rock star. Critically slammed upon release, it's steadily grown a cult following with Jagger's performance often ranking among the best by a musician in a film. Jagger acknowledges The Burnt Orange Heresy could be his big-screen swan song. "If I don't get offered another decent role, it might be," he says, then adding "It's not planned. If someone offered me something to do in the autumn, I'm sure I'd do it if it was a good part." - AP, 3/5/20...... Officials in Austin, Tex., announced during a press conference on Mar. 6 that the hugely popular South by Southwest Conference and Festival will be canceled this year due to concerns over the coronavirus threat. It is the first time the entire annual festival, which had been scheduled for Mar. 13-22, has been canceled in its 34-year history. "I am proud that we are making decisions that are data driven," Austin Mayor Steve Adler said, adding, "It is really unfortunate to be cancelling SXSW. It is really important to our city." Last November, it was revealed that Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters would be the keynote speaker for the 2020 SXSW festival, with Nile Rodgers of Chic and comedic actor Cheech Marin also among the featured speakers. Before the announcement, Ozzy Osbourne, Nine Inch Nails and Beastie Boys had already announced they were cancelling their appearance at this year's SXSW due to coronavirus fears. City officials have estimated that the 2019 SXSW had a $356 million economic impact on the city of Austin. The news came after another day of SXSW cancellations that included longtime presenter BMI, which said it was pulling out of the event this year "out of an abundance of caution." In addition to SXSW, several major live music events have been canceled in the wake of the spreading virus including Tomorrowland Winter in France, Ultra Abu Dhabi and the 21st edition of Ultra's flagship dance music festival in Miami. More than 98,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus worldwide, and nearly 3,400 people have died from contracting the virus, which has spread to 88 countries since the outbreak began at the end of 2019. - Billboard, 3/5/20...... Speaking of Ozzy Osbourne, the rocker has topped Billboard's Top Rock Albums chart and Hard Rock Albums chart for the first time in nearly a decade as his new album Ordinary Man moved 77,000 equivalent album units for the week ending Mar. 7. Osbourne last ruled both tallies on his own with Scream, which led Hard Rock Albums for two weeks and Top Rock Albums for one in July 2010. In between, he visited the top spot on both charts as the lead singer on Black Sabbath's 13, which led in June-July 2013. Osbourne, who was slated to promote his self-produced documentary Biography: The Nine Lives of Ozzy Osbourne at the 2020 South By Southwest festival, told the Good Morning Britain TV show on Mar. 3 that he "hopes to return to the stage soon." The 71-year-old musician recently cancelled his North American tour to undergo treatments for Parkinson's disease and injuries he sustained during in 2019. "My desire is to get back on stage," he said. "I'm not ready to hang up my mic yet-- that's what I live for. I exercise as much as I can: I have a trainer, I do pilates. But the best medication I can get is being in front of an audience, which is breaking my heart." - New Musical Express, 3/6/20...... AC-DCSome 4,000 AC/DC fans broke a Guinness World Record for air guitar playing on Mar. 1 during the Perth Festival in Australia. The festival, which this year included several tributes to AC/DC on the 40th anniversary of founding band member Bon Scott's death, opened with a Guinness World Record attempt for the largest air guitar ensemble. The impressive turn out saw the Guinness record broken as 3,722 fans smashed the record for the biggest air guitar gathering. Revellers strummed their hearts out to "Highway To Hell," led by air guitar champion Alex "Jinja Assassin" Roberts. The air guitar tribute can be streamed on YouTube. A stretch of Australian motorway in Western Australia, dubbed the "real life Highway To Hell" due to a series of fatal crashes along the stretch, hosted a rolling tribute gig in memory of Scott during the festival. Scott would travel down the Canning Highway, which was closed between Canning Bridge and Fremantle to play host to the world's longest festival stage, regularly in his youth. - New Musical Express, 3/6/20...... Dead & Company have landed the highest-grossing concert engagement so far in 2020 with their four-day "Playing in the Sand" annual event in Playa Del Carmen, Mexico. The Jan. 16-19 event grossed a massive $18.7 million from 6,127 tickets sold, an 8% improvement over their 2019 Playing in the Sand event. The Eagles came in at second on Billboard's Hot Tours recap ending Mar. 7, earning $8,871,615 during their early February run at State Farm Arena, Atlanta, Ga., with Aerosmith in third place earning $7,953,838 during its Jan. 29-Feb. 15 residency at the Park Theater in Las Vegas. - Billboard, 3/6/20...... Tom Jones is reportedly in talks to join the team working on a stage musical based on one of his most famous songs. The musical, titled "What's New Pussycat?, is based on Henry Fielding's 18th-century novel about a foundling, named Tom Jones, who leaves the West Country and ends up philandering and allowing himself to be seduced by an older woman as he makes his way through London society. Producer Chris Harper says the musical will add a modern twist to the classic tale. "In this version, Tom Jones becomes a famous popstar and is seduced by an older woman -- who in the Fielding tale would have been the Lady Bellaston character," he explained. Co-producer Flody Suarez says Jones has attended workshops for the show, and was pleased with the direction it was taking. "He came to one of the workshops with his son and daughter-in-law, and he told us that what he's happiest about is that it didn't try to take his life story. It's about the book and the songs," Suarez said, adding that the 79-year-old continues to be involved with the project. The musical, which will incorporate 16 of Jones' songs, will begin performances at Leeds Playhouse in England on Sept. 23. If successful, the show is expected to transfer to London in 2021. - Music-News.com, 3/6/20...... Paul Stanley of Kiss paid tribute to late L.A. Lakers great Kobe Bryant during Kiss' show at the Staples Center on Mar. 4 by donning a glittery No. 24 jersey, which was one of the team numbers made famous by Bryant. "None of us would be here if this place wasn't really like a memorial to somebody who was so much more than a basketball player, somebody who's been a role model," Stanley said to cheers from the hometown crowd. "And tonight, I think we dedicate this show not only to Kobe and his daughter Gigi, but to all the people who perished on that helicopter." Footage of Stanley performing in the jersey has been shared on YouTube. - Billboard, 3/5/20...... Mike RutherfordTony BanksPhil CollinsGenesis announced on Mar. 4 that they will reunite in 2020 for a UK tour, 13 years after they played their last gig. Genesis last performed together in 2007 to mark their 40th anniversary and since then have been in two minds about reuniting due to drummer/vocalist Phil Collins's medical issues. Prior to their reunion, Collins said during an interview that his medical conditions would mean that he wouldn't be able to play the drums for the band if they were to reunite and his son Nicholas, 18, would have to play in his place. He said: "I'm saying this to you... I haven't really said it to Tony [Banks] and Mike [Rutherford] did mention to Tony very quietly if we did anything again it would be with Nic on drums. He kind of didn't say no. But I'm not sure if he heard me or not." It's not believed original Genesis singer Peter Gabriel, 70, will join the trio for this set of shows when they hit the road in November and December to perform in arenas across the UK. The 16-date tour kicks off in Dublin on Nov. 16, also visiting Belfast, Liverpool, Newcastle, Leeds and Birmingham before wrapping in Glasgow on Dec. 12. - Music-News.com, 3/4/20...... Journey guitarist Neal Schon and keyboardist Jonathan Cain have fired their bandmates, drummer Steven Smith and bassist Ross Valory, alleging the two attempted a "coup" in order to gain control of the "Journey" trademark. According to the complaint, which was filed in California Superior Court on Mar. 3, Schon and Cain are seeking damages in excess of $10 million. The suit, which was filed by law firm Miller Barondess, lays out what the plaintiffs allege was an underhanded effort by Smith and Vallory to steal away the "Journey" name, to which Schon and Cain claim they own the exclusive rights per a 1998 agreement signed with former frontman Steve Perry when he left the group. That agreement followed a previous one entered into by Schon, Cain and Perry in 1985 via the corporate entity Nightmare Productions providing the trio with an "exclusive, irrevocable license" over the Journey trademark. Schon and Cain allege the two men held "improper" shareholder and board of directors meetings of Nightmare Productions on Feb. 13, 2020, under the "incorrect" assumption that the company held the rights to the Journey name. They accuse Smith, Valory and unnamed "allies" of voting in those meetings to give Smith and Valory control of the board, with Smith usurping Cain as board president and Valory replacing Schon as secretary. Though both Smith and Valory have been members of Journey on and off since the band formed in 1973, the complaint diminishes their contributions to the group, stating that the two "have very few song credits on Journey's albums." Schon is the only founding member of Journey that remains in the band. Cain joined in 1980, departed in 1987 and returned in 1995 and has played with them ever since. The only other remaining member of Journey is current frontman Arnel Pineda, who joined the group in 2007. - Billboard, 3/4/20...... Phil EhartKansas has announed it will release its latest prog rock offering, The Absence of Presence, on June 26 and launch a European tour behind the new album in the fall with co-headliners Foreigner and Europe. Founding Kansas member Phil Ehart says the new LP, which was produced by Kansas guitarist Zak Rizvi, sounds like vintage Kansas. "Zak wrote the majority of 'The Prelude Implicit' and this album, and now having [new member] Tom Brislin add a couple of his songs and his keyboard prowess really pushes the band even more toward that original sound, which is not easy to do by any means," Ehart noted. The lyrics to the title track, meanwhile, were written by Brislin from a title and concept suggested by Ehart. "It can mean a couple of different things," the drummer notes, "but what sticks out is when we're at an airport, there's a lot of people there but everybody is staring at their phone or looking at their computer or their iPad or reading a paper or whatever. Someone's sitting across from you looking up, and you can tell they're not engaged at all. People are there, but they're not really there. They're present, but there's an absence of presence." The first single from the new LP is due in early April, and Kansas has just started a U.S. run of "Point of Know Return and Kansas Classics" shows that stretch into May. The European tour will begin Oct. 18 at The Palladium in London and run through Nov. 10 in Amsterdam. - Billboard, 3/2/20...... Queen has teamed with a Swedish sock manufacturer called Happy Socks for a limited-edition collection of Queen socks that are just as vibrant as Queen's music. Released on Mar. 3, the Happy Socks x Queen collaboration features six pairs of cotton crew socks ($16 each) and four pairs of kid's crew socks ($8 each). There's also a 4-pack gift set ($64) and a Collector's Edition 6-pack ($96) that features the band in a concert setting. Happy Socks is known for its artist collaborations, including the Beatles, Pharrell Williams, Andy Warhol's iconic banana print and -- most recently -- Linda Ramone. The Queen socks collection is now available to purchase at select retailers and the brand's official website. - Billboard, 3/3/20...... Iggy Pop has shared a minimal new video for his track "We Are The People" on YouTube. The song, which originally appeared on Iggy's 2019 album Free, makes use of words from a poem written in 1970 by the late Lou Reed, and the video was shared on Mar. 2, what would have been Reed's 78th birthday. "How beautifully contemporary this poem from 1970 is," Pop wrote on Twitter. "How true are the words. We ARE the people," he added. - New Musical Express, 3/2/20...... Barbra Streisand launched a scathing attack on U.S. Pres. Donald Trump in an op-ed in Variety magazine on Mar. 4. Streisand, a vocal critic of Trump's, declared that America "was great before" Trump was elected in 2016. "Every morning I wake up, holding my breath while I turn on my phone to see the latest news," she wrote. "I think to myself, 'It can't be worse than yesterday.' But when the news loads, I think, 'Ohhhhh, yes, it is worse.'" Streisand went on to slam Trump for firing acting Director of National Security Joseph Maguire in mid-February, claiming the move was, "an effort to suppress the truth about Russia interfering in our elections again." "He's purging the government of anyone with any expertise who doesn't bow down before him," Streisand alleged. She then urged fans to vote Trump out of office in the 2020 presidential election. "Since 2016, we've been dragged down into the mud of Trump's swamp. He has demolished our standing in the world with his laughable boasts and breathtaking ignorance.... Every day, he takes another swipe at the pillars of our democracy, but we cannot allow him to irrevocably change this country." - Music-News.com, 3/4/20...... John Sebastian'70s "Welcome Back" hit-maker and '60s pop band Lovin' Spoonful leader John Sebastian participated in a Lovin' Spoonful reunion concert at the Alex Theatre in Glendale, Calif., on Feb. 29. More than 30 Lovin' Spoonful songs were performed over three hours at the annual "Wild Honey" tribute concert, which in previous years has recreated classic songs and albums by the likes of the Beatles, Beach Boys, Buffalo Springfield and the Band. The concerts, organized by founder Paul Rock, raise funds and awareness for the Autism Think Tank. Sebastian, 75, left the New York-based Lovin' Spoonful in 1968 and last reconvened with its original members at their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000. "I think the band is a little underappreciated in the big picture of '60s music," said Lovin' Spoonful bassist Steve Boone, 76. "John should be even more credited with being a fantastically versatile songwriter." Joining the surviving Spoonful trio was the Wild Honey Orchestra, led by musical director Rob Laufer, and a cast of gifted singers and soloists, including Dave Alvin, Micky Dolenz, Marshall Crenshaw and Carnie Wilson. At night's end, the entire cast of players crowded onto the stage to perform "Do You Believe In Magic," the Spoonful's first single and a hopeful tune that Sebastian said epitomizes the sound and personality of his former band. "It was something that happened to me. I didn't really write that song," he said. "It happened. And I was so delighted." - Billboard, 3/2/20...... '70s glam-rock stars The Sweet have announced a pre-Christmas tour of the UK that will launch on Nov. 30 in Bury St Edmunds with special guests Limehouse Lizzy, a Thin Lizzy tribute band. The Sweet's 17-date tour will also visit cities including Norwich, Frome, Salisbury, Brighton, London, Cardiff, Manchester, Newcastle, Glasgow and Edinburgh before wrapping in Ulverston on Dec. 19. The Sweet's 2020 line-up features founding member, Andy Scott (lead guitar, vocals), Steve Mann (guitar, keyboards), Bruce Bisland (drums, vocals) Lee Small (bass, vocals) and Paul Manzi (lead vocals). Founded in 1968, the band still tours the world extensively with one of the most dynamic and slick live shows on the circuit. - Noble PR, 3/2/20...... Barbara Martin, an original member of the popular 1960s Motown girl group The Supremes, died on Mar. 5. She was 76. The Detroit-born singer replaced Betty McGlown in 1960 when the founding quartet -- consisting of Wilson, McGlown, Diana Ross and Florence Ballard -- were called The Primettes. The reconstructed girl group went on to sign a record deal with Motown's Berry Gordy as The Supremes in 1961. Martin shared vocals with Ross on the group's early single "(He's) Seventeen." She left the pop girl group in 1962, and the remaining women took off as a trio until 1967, when the group renamed itself again as Diana Ross & The Supremes and Cindy Birdsong replaced Ballard. The Supremes went through numerous trio combinations until dissolving in 1977. "Our hearts go out to Barbara's family and friends. Once a Supreme, always a Supreme," the group posted on its Facebook page. - Billboard, 3/6/20...... James Lipton, the US actor-turned-academic who for decades interviewed Hollywood's biggest A-listers as host of Inside the Actors Studio, died on Mar. 2 after a battle with bladder cancer. He was 93. Mr. Lipton hosted the influential show for nearly 25 years, conducting hour-long interviews with silver-screen legends from Paul Newman to Dennis Hopper to Scarlett Johansson. Inside the Actors Studio was conceived as part of a program for drama students at the New School in Manhattan, but the Bravo cable channel picked up the television rights. Mr. Lipton focused on the craft of filmmaking and avoided straying into celebrity gossip. Nominated for 21 Emmys, the show was praised for its stellar lineup and in-depth discussions, but drew criticism for an approach labeled sycophantic by some viewers. Born in Detroit in 1926, Mr. Lipton embarked on an acting career in the 1940s, and later moved into writing and producing. - Yahoo News, 3/2/20.

Brian Wilson announced on Mar. 2 that he'll take his "Good Vibrations" greatest hits tour to the UK this summer for 11 dates, kicking off on May 31 at The Dome in Brighton. The Beach Boys legend, with former bandmates Al Jardine and Blondie Chaplin supporting, will also visit major cities including London (6/1), Glasgow (6/4), Birmingham (6/8), Manchester (6/10), and Leeds (6/14) before wrapping in Cambridge on June 17. Wilson's career-spanning set will feature songs from his career with the Beach Boys and solo hits. - New Musical Express, 3/2/20...... Mick FleetwoodPeter GreenA tribute concert to founding former Fleetwood Mac member Peter Green organized by Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood was held on Feb. 27 with appearances by Fleetwood Mac's Christine McVie as well as David Gilmour, Pete Townsend, Steven Tyler, Billy Gibbons, Neil Finn, Kirk Hammett and Noel Gallagher. Footage of Gilmour performing "Oh Well (Part 2)" from the event, which benefited the Teenage Cancer Trust, has been shared on YouTube. Gibbons and Tyler also joined forces on "Oh Well," and Finn performed the Fleetwood Mac song "Man of the World." Mick Fleetwood told the audience how Green influenced other bands, including the Beatles: "This is where we do our 'Albatross' thing, like Fleetwood Mac," one of the Fab Four reportedly said during a radio interview, according to Fleetwood. "And that woke the hell out of me [and the rest of the band]... So, our minds were truly blown... To know that this floating, lovely song had inspired just a little bit of something so precious as the band who was talking on the radio," Fleetwood added. Fleetwood then dedicated a performance of "Albatross" to not only Green but to late Beatle George Harrison, whose birthday it happened to be. Peter Green founded the original incarnation of Fleetwood Mac in 1967 and he performed in the band until 1970, when he left the band after struggling with addiction and mental illness issues. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with the band in 1998. - New Musical Express, 2/28/20...... Former Talking Heads frontman David Byrne appeared on NBC's Saturday Night Live on Feb. 29 for the first time in more than 30 years. Byrne and his 11-member backing band -- all barefoot and dressed in gray suits -- treated the audience to the TH classic "Once in a Lifetime," then later in the show performed his 2008 collaboration "Toe Jam" with the Brighton Port Authority. Byrne, who last appeared on SNL in 1989 to promote his first solo album Rei Momo, also appeared in a music-filled sketch titled "Airport Sushi," which also featured a cameo by actor Jake Gyllenhaal. Footage of Byrne on the show can be streamed on YouTube. It was recently announced that Byrne's acclaimed "American Utopia" show will be returning to Broadway at New York's Hudson Theatre in September for 17 weeks, with beginning performances starting on Sept. 18 and scheduled through Jan. 17, 2021. An official reopening date will be announced soon. - Billboard, 3/1/20...... Neil Young has posted on his Neil Young Archives website that he plans on reissuing his classic 1970 LP After the Gold Rush as a deluxe 50th anniversary release later in 2020 to celebrate the milestone set. No official release date has been set, however the package will likely include a live concert film (dubbed "Young Shakespeare") from Young's Jan. 22, 1971, performance at Shakespeare Theater in Stratford, Conn. -- which occurred three days after his legendary Massey Hall set in Toronto, Canada. "In fact, today as we listen and compare, [producer] John Hanlon and I both feel 'Shakespeare' is superior to our beloved 'Massey Hall,'" wrote Young on his site. "A more calm performance, without the celebratory atmosphere of Massey Hall, captured live on 16mm film. 'Young Shakespeare' is a very special event. To my fans, I say this is the best ever." Young added that the "Young Shakespeare" show was both "personal and emotional" for him and that it "defines that time." Vintage footage of Young performing After the Gold Rush's title track can be viewed on Spotify.com. - New Musical Express, 3/1/20...... John OatesDaryl HallAfter announcing in late January an ambitious 32-date 2020 North American tour set to kick off in May, Hall & Oates played a sold-out show at New York's Madison Square Garden previewing the upcoming tour on Feb. 28. After sets from tour openers KT Tunstall and Squeeze, Hall & Oates opened the show with lively rendition of their H2O album hit "Maneater." Longtime H&O saxophonist Charles DeChant reminded the 20,000 fans in attendance how crucial the sax is to the duo's music on songs like "Say It Isn't So," during the set, which in addition to H&O hits included a few covers of songs by such acts as Paul Young, The Righteous Brothers and The Dramatics. Just before leaving the stage before the encore, the pair delivered a smooth version of The Dramatics' "What You See Is What You Get" (featured on 2004's Our Kind of Soul), the most R&B-heavy cover of the night. Meanwhile, John Oates has announced he's donating two of his cars, including 1984 Tiga SC84 Sports 2000 race car and a custome Porsche, for auction to benefit the Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance Foundation. Hall & Oates also recently announced they're planning a new album, the first studio set by the duo since their 2006 Home For Christmas album. - Billboard, 2/29/20...... With his contribution to the new Ozzy Osbourne hit "Ordinary Man," Elton John has set a new record on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Songs chart for the longest gap between mainstream rock song entries. Osbourne's ballad, featuring John, has bowed at No. 34 on the airplay tally dated Feb. 29, marking the first time that John has appeared on the survey in over 27 years. The last time Elton made the tally was in Sept. 1992, when his "Runaway Train," featuring Eric Clapton, rolled to No. 10. John now has the record for the longest break between Mainstream Rock Songs appearances in the chart's 39-year history, passing Queen guitarist Brian May, who waited just under 26 years between his solo track "Driven by You" (No. 9, 1993) and his featured appearance on Five Finger Death Punch's "Blue on Black," (No. 1 for five weeks beginning in June 2019). Sir Elton has tallied five top 20 hits on Mainstream Rock Songs from the chart's 1981 inception through 1992, with "Runaway Train" marking his lone top No. 10. "Ordinary Man" is the title track from Ozzy Osbourne's 12th solo studio album, which was released Feb. 21 and is expected to bow in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 200 album chart dated Mar. 7. Meanwhile, Ozzy says he's relieved that he and Elton never partied together during their drink and drug-fuelled heydays because he's convinced it would have led to an early grave. "I don't think we would have both f--ing made the '90s if we had," the 71-year-old told New Musical Express. "I remember (manager wife) Sharon (Osbourne) taking me to a gig of his (Elton's) years ago, and his f---ing dressing room was like a f---ing bar with every known f---ing spirit (liquor). Then he'd do seven gigs on the bounce. I've said to him, 'How the f--- did you keep singing?' If I even thought about cocaine, my singing would go out the f---ing window." Ozzy is also the focus of a new 8-bit video game called Legend Of Ozzy. The aim of the game is to catch as much blood as you can, keeping your Ozzy-bat alive, while killing monsters and avoiding wolves, devils and other creepy foes will earn you health points. It can be played at LegendOfOzzy.com. - Billboard, 2/27/20...... Steve MorseDeep Purple have announced they'll release their 21st LP, Whoosh!, on June 12 with veteran producer Bob Ezrin once again helming their album project. On working with Ezrin -- who also produced Deep Purple's albums InFinite (2017) and Now What?! (2013) -- for a third time, Deep Purple guitarist Steve Morse said: "We've included everything that made the whole band smile, including Bob Ezrin. We've always enjoyed making music and having the incredible luxury of a loyal audience." Announcing the new LP in a press release, the band made it clear they intend to address the current state of the world and "all generations" on their new collection of songs. The band will tour the U.S. behind the new album beginning on Apr. 15 in Alexandria, Va., also visiting such markets as Los Angeles (4/23), Milwaukee (4/25), St. Louis (4/27), Dallas (5/2) and Nashville (5/7) before wrapping in Cincinnati on May 9. Then they'll launch an extensive European tour that's set to kick off at Moscow's Megasport Ice Palace in Russia on May 31, and wrap at Amsterdam's Ziggo Dome in The Netherlands on Oct. 28. The UK leg sees the group stop off at London's O2 Arena on October 3, with dates also set for Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham, and Glasgow. - Music-News.com, 2/27/20...... Rock 'n' roll pioneer Chuck Berry is being remembered with a new special called Chuck Berry: Brown Eyed Handsome Man which premiered on PBS stations across the US in late February as Black History Month 2020 closes out. Narrated by actor Danny Glover, Brown Eyed Handsome Man is packed with illuminating, full-length performances from Berry and other artists culled from rare and classic footage dating back to 1964. That's when the Beatles performed "Roll Over Beethoven" at the band's first U.S. show in Washington, D.C., while the Rolling Stones, fronted by a gyrating Mick Jagger, played "Around and Around" during a U.K. concert. Among the 90-minute film's other standout moments: Jeff Lynne and Electric Light Orchestra delivering a powerful live mash-up of Berry's "Beethoven" and Beethoven's Fifth Symphony; Linda Ronstadt having fun with "Back in the USA"; and an undeniably reverent Bruce Springsteen and his E Street Band working out alongside the man himself on "Johnny B.Goode." - Billboard, 2/27/20...... A guitar once co-owned by Beatles legends George Harrison and John Lennon has been valued at £400,000 on the British version of Antiques Roadshow. On the Mar. 2 episode, the guitar's current owner, a former session musician, said he was given the guitar because he could play it better than Harrison. Bartell's of California manufactured the prototype fretless instrument for the band in the 1960s, and it was brought to Battle Abbey in Sussex for this week's show. Valuing the guitar at between £300,000 and £400,000, expert Jon Baddeley said of the guitar: "I think in 25 years it's by far the most expensive thing I've ever seen. You know, to a guitar collector it's initially a very rare guitar. Then to somebody who's a Beatles fan, to own a guitar that was once owned by both John Lennon and George Harrison, can you get a better history? Two of the most important rock stars of the 20th century." Blown away by the value of the guitar, the owner admitted that he still plays it regularly. "I never really thought about value, as George being a mate and all that," he said. "I don't know what to say actually, I'm really taken aback by it.... I didn't realise it was worth that much money. It's lucky I don't keep it in the house," he added. The owner also showed the audience a photograph with George and the guitar, adding proof that it had once been a part of his Harrison's impressive collection. - New Musical Express, 3/2/20...... Paulina PorizkovaRic_OcasekIn an interview on CBS's Sunday Morning show on Mar. 1, former supermodel Paulina Porizkova branded her omission from her late husband Ric Ocasek's will an act of "betrayal." Ocasek and Porizkova were in the midst of divorce proceedings at the time of The Cars frontman's death in Sept. 2019, but the stars had still been living together at their marital home in New York City, where Porizkova found him dead following a surgical procedure -- a discovery she claims was the "worst moment" of her life. "It made the grieving process really, really tricky," Porizkova said. "I would love to be able to be sad and miss him and not also feel this incredible hurt and betrayal." The couple had separated more than a year before the Ocasek's demise, but Porizkova -- who was 19 when she met Ocasek, then 40, back in 1984 -- revealed she wasn't the one who wanted a divorce, so she continued to live with the singer, the father of her two sons, in the hopes of maintaining a close bond. "He was still the man that I loved and that I had grown up with. And I couldn't really imagine life without him," Porizkova said. She insists she has no idea why Ocasek chose to cut her out of his will completely, and it's a question she will forever wrestle with: "I'm never gonna get an answer. And that sucks," she added. Porizkova officially filed court papers seeking a share of Ocasek's estate, worth at least US $5.1 million, in December. She wasn't the only family member snubbed in the 75-year-old's will -- Ocasek also appeared to have cut out two of his six sons from a previous relationship. They have yet to formally reveal if they will challenge the decision. - WENN/Canoe.com, 3/1/20...... In a new interview on SiriusXM radio, Dee Snider of Twisted Sister said the next AC/DC album will feature a number of surprises involving the late AC/DC guitarist Malcolm Young. Snider said he previously had dinner with AC/DC vocalist Brian Johnson and the pair discussed the group's plans for 2020. "He told me a lot of stuff, and a lot of stuff that I don't wanna say," Snider said. "But we know from the photos, and Brian confirmed it, they've been in the studio, they've been recording. The original -- I don't say the 'original' guys, because a lot of 'em are gone, but I say the 'classic' line-up is back together and there are some surprises, which I can't talk about, regarding Malcolm Young that just had my jaw on the floor. I will say he will be present. So this is AC/DC as we know and love them," he added. Young, the group's founding guitarist and brother of Angus Young, passed away in 2017 after battling dementia. - NME, 2/29/20...... Malcolm Jones, cofounder and bassist of the '70s pop band Blues Image, reportedly died on Feb. 22. Blues Image, best known for its 1970 hit "Ride Captain Ride, was formed in Tampa, Fla. in 1966 by singer-guitarist Mike Pinera, singer-drummer Manuel "Manny" Bertematti, singer-percussionist Joe Lala, keyboardist Emilio Garcia, and bassist Jones. The band moved to Los Angeles and signed with Atco Records, releasing their self-titled debut album in Feb. 1969. Their second album, Open (Apr. 1970), included the popular hit "Ride Captain Ride." Featuring Kent Henry on guitar solo and fills, and Pinera playing solo at the end, the song was co-composed by Pinera and Konte. This disc sold over one million copies, and earned a gold record from the R.I.A.A. in August 1970. It was Blues Image's only charting hit, making the group a one-hit wonder. Pinera left the band to join Iron Butterfly in the fall of 1969, during the recording of Open, and was replaced by singer Denny Correll and guitarist Henry. The band later broke up after the release of their third album, Red White & Blues Image, in May 1970. - 2/24/20...... Actor Ben Cooper, who starred in the 1954 western drama Johnny Guitar and also had roles in such TV series as Gunsmoke and Bonanza, died on Feb. 24 in Memphis, Tenn., after a long illness. He was 86. Mr. Cooper starred opposite Joan Crawford in the 1954 western Johnny Guitar, which saw him play the bandit Turkey Ralston. Throughout his career, Mr. Cooper also appeared in a variety of western films and TV shows, including Gunsmoke, Bonanza and Gunfight at Comanche Creek. - DailyMail.co.uk, - 2/25/20.