Wednesday, January 26, 2022

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on January 31st, 2022



On Jan. 30 a special theatrical version of The Beatles' final live performance on the rooftop of their Apple Corps headquarters in London's Savile Row on Jan. 30, 1969, played to near-sellout crowds in nearly 70 Imax theaters across North America and at the BFI Imax theater in London. The debut of the 60-minute The Beatles: Get Back -- which features the roughly 45-minute concert in its entirety -- was accompanied by a live Q&A with director Peter Jackson and BBC broadcaster, author and musician Matt Everitt. Jackson used footage from his 8-hour docu-series to create the larger-than-life presentation of the rooftop concert. The acclaimed series itself debuted on Disney+ over Thanksgiving 2021. According to Imax, a majority of the Jan. 30 locations were sold out in cities including New York, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Denver, Charlotte, St. Paul, Pittsburgh, San Antonio and Cleveland, with the special event generating roughly $500,000 in grosses. The Beatles: Get Back -- The Rooftop Performance will play exclusively in select Imax locations across the globe over the Feb. 11-13 weekend. The concert footage was digitally remastered with proprietary Imax technology. The film can also be streamed in its entirety on Spotify.com. Meanwhile, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Oh. has announced that The Beatles: Get Back to Let It Be, an immersive compliment to Jackson's docuseries, will open on Mar. 18 and run through the remainder of the month. SiriusXM radio's Beatles Channel also debuted a Beatles The Rooftop Concert Special on Jan. 30. - The Hollywood Reporter/Billboard, 1/30/22...... Paul McCartneyIn other Beatles-related news, Paul McCartney has posted an emotional tribute to his late friend and former bandmate John Lennon. To celebrate the 50th anniversary reissue of their debut album Wild Life, a Q&A about the record from 2018 has been shared on PaulMcCartney.com, and can also be viewed on YouTube. Speaking about the Wild Life track "Dear Friend," Sir Paul says that he finds it "very emotional when I listen to it now... I have to sort of choke it back." He went on to explain how the track is "me talking to John after we'd had all the disputes about The Beatles break up." "That lyric: 'Really truly, young and newly wed'. Listening to that was like, 'Oh my God, it's true!' I'm trying to say to John, 'Look, you know, it's all cool. Have a glass of wine. Let's be cool.' And luckily we did get it back together, which was like a great source of joy because it would have been terrible if he'd been killed as things were at that point and I'd never got to straighten it out with him." He goes on to say that "Dear Friend" was "me reaching out... So, I think it's very powerful in some very simple way. But it was certainly heartfelt." - New Musical Express, 1/31/21...... In a new interview with Eddie Trunk's Sirius XM radio show Trunk Nation, Alice Cooper revealed he is working on both his 29th and 30th studio albums simultaneously -- less than a year after releasing his 28th LP, Detroit Stories. "I'm working on two albums right now," the Coop said. "One is... totally written, and we'll be doing bed tracks for that one pretty soon. The other one is just a touch in the future, but that's being written right now too," he added. Alice also confirmed the sound of the two albums, which are both being overseen by his longtime producer Bob Ezrin. "They're two entirely different kinds of albums, but they're Alice Cooper, pure rock'n'roll albums. The two albums will really be hard rock albums," he said, adding that he expects to release one of the albums in 2022. Cooper is also scheduled to kick off a co-headlining UK arena tour with The Cult and a run of US dates later in 2022, as well as appearing at the Graspop Metal Meeting and the "Monsters Of Rock" cruise. - NME, 1/31/22...... Cher has paid tribute to late legendary sitcom actress Betty White with a brand-new rendition of the theme song from one of Ms. White's shows, The Golden Girls. Cher shared the high-energy clip to her social media pages, which includes Instagram, on Jan. 28, with the caption, "Every Friend is Golden." Cher is among the many stars honoring Betty White that were featured in an all-star tribute titled Celebrating Betty White: America's Golden Girl on Jan. 31 on NBC. Betty White passed away on Dec. 31 at age 99. The telecast, available to stream on NBC's Peacock service the following day, includes clips and never-before-seen footage that best capture Ms. White's unmatched spirit and comedic timing throughout her decades-long career. - Billboard, 1/28/22...... On Jan. 31 The Beach Boys confirmed on Twitter that they'll play a second UK show this summer, with the iconic American group taking to Dreamland in Margate on June 23, 2022, as part of ther "Sixty Years of the Sounds of Summer" tour. It follows news that the legendary band will play London's Royal Albert Hall on June 24. The current iteration of The Beach Boys is led by Mike Love alongside long-time member Bruce Johnston. - NME, 1/31/22...... Barry GibbFormer Bee Gees member Barry Gibb has won the 2022 Americana Album Award for the Best-Selling Americana Album by a UK Artist, for his 2021 album Greenfields: The Gibb Brothers' Songbook Vol.1. "This is a wonderful thing! I would really like to thank the UK Americana Awards for recognising this album. It's amazing that this can happen to me at this point in my life," Sir Barry said in an acceptance speech for the award. He also recognized his son Stephen Gibb for "bringing this wonderful idea to my attention... He played me a Chris Stapleton record which blew my socks off and inspired this album." He also praised producer Dave Cobb "for his passion, his patience, and his wonderful team" as well as "all of the legendary artists that took part... Making an album like this is a labour of love. Once again, thank you very much!" The UK Americana Awards 2022 were produced in conjunction with The Official Charts Comany and broadcast via YouTube on Jan. 27. - Music-News.com, 1/27/22...... In an open letter to the music streaming service Spotify.com posted on his Neil Young Archives website on Jan. 28, Neil Young has called out the popular streaming platform for being more of a tech company instead of a music service. "When I left Spotify, I felt better," Young wrote. The iconic singer/songwriter went on to state that he believes Spotify offers a lesser quality product than other streamers such as Apple Music, Amazon and Qobuz, and encourages music fans "to switch to one of the alternatives over Spotify." Young claims that Spotify cuts the quality of its music to 5% of its original content and adds, "It's easy to do that with digital, thus allowing more songs and less music to stream faster. That's because 95% is missing. That's what Spotify the tech company does. Spotify then sells you the downgraded music." He continues by writing that Spotify chooses "business over art, and Young claims the streamer "is ripping you off and has been since day 1. Young's note follows an open letter shared on the NYA site Jan. 24 -- which was later deleted -- requesting that his catalog be pulled from Spotify, citing the spread of vaccine misinformation on the popular Joe Rogan Experience podcast as the reason. "They can have [Joe] Rogan or Young. Not both," Young wrote in that letter, which was addressed to his manager as well as the co-chairman and COO of Warner Records, which releases Young's music through its Reprise Records imprint. Young concludes his Jan. 28 letter by declaring that he "believes in free speech and is not in favor of censorship" and "As an unexpected bonus, I sound better everywhere else." The musician has put his money where his mouth is by offering fans free four-month subscriptions to Amazon Music. Taking to Twitter on Jan. 28, Young plugged Amazon Music to his followers, offering them free access for four months. "Amazon has been leading the pack in bringing Hi-Res audio to the masses, and it's a great place to enjoy my entire catalog in the highest quality available. Thanks also to Apple Music (I LOVE APPLE) and Qobuz for sticking with my High Res music," he wrote .In another post, he wrote: "All folks looking for my music can easily head to AMAZON MUSIC and click here https://t.co/xvhKGMkA36 - all new listeners will get four months free. pic.twitter.com/a66GaGUKEk" On Jan. 30, it was reported that Spotify had lost more than $2 billion (£1.5b) in market value after Young removed his music from the site. Due to Young's pressure campaign, announced on Jan. 26 that it is granting Young's wish and removing his music from the platform, and confirmed that it will be adding Covid content advisories to all relevant podcast episodes. Meanwhile, SiriusXM radio has announced it is bringing back the "Neil Young Radio" channel to the airwaves on Jan. 27. The show will be making a second limited run on the platform, and will feature exclusive stories and music from the veteran rock musician's decades-long career. - Billboard/NME, 1/27/22...... Joni MitchellAs Neil Young continues his battle with Spotify over Covid misinformation, his old friend and fellow Canadian singer/songwriter legend Joni Mitchell announced on Jan. 28 that she's also "decided to remove all my music for Spotify." "Irresponsible people are spreading lies that are costing people their lives. I stand in solidarity with Neil Young and the global scientific and medical communities on this issue," Mitchell posted on her offical website JoniMitchell.com. Mitchell's note was accompanied by a link to the open letter published earlier in January by a group of 270 doctors, scientists, professors and other medical professionals expressing concern over Joe Rogan's platforming of misinformation around Covid-19. In the letter, the signees asked Spotify to implement a misinformation policy as a means of combatting claims made by Rogan and his guests. Among other comments, they noted that Rogan has discouraged young people from receiving the vaccine, incorrectly claimed that mRNA vaccines are "gene therapy" and promoted the use of ivermectin to treat Covid-19, contrary to FDA warnings against using the drug to treat the virus. As of Jan. 28, Mitchell's music was still available on Spotify. - Billboard, 1/28/22...... Also upset over Spotify's spreading of Covid misinformation is longtime Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band guitarist Nils Lofgren. In a statement shared to the NeilYoungArchives.com site on Jan. 29, Lofgren wrote: "A few days ago, my wife and I became aware of Neil and Daryl [Hannah] standing with hundreds of health care professionals, scientists, doctors and nurses in calling out Spotify for promoting lies and misinformation that are hurting and killing people." Lofgren noted that 27 years of his music has been taken off the service and that he is also reaching out to labels that own his earlier music to have that removed as well. "Neil and I go back 53 years," Lofgren's statement continued. "[Wife] Amy and I are honored and blessed to call Neil and Daryl friends, and knew standing with them was the right choice. The musician then encouraged "all musicians, artists and music lovers everywhere, to stand with us all, and cut ties with Spotify." He went on to call music "our planet's sacred weapon, uniting and healing billions of souls every day." - The Hollywood Reporter, 1/30/22...... In related news, Eric Clapton has said he isn't "concerned with being misunderstood" over his comments about Covid-19 vaccines and other safety measures used during the pandemic. In the second part of a new interview with Real Music Observer that has been shared on YouTube, Clapton discussed the response to his views saying that he wasn't for or against vaccines. "I'm making a rod for my own back by talking about the thing and the things, but one thing about the thing I would like to make clear -- because I have to keep re-establishing it -- is I'm neither anti or pro," he said. He continued by calling those who criticize him over the issue "monsters" who are "always going to be after people who are looking for truth or seeking something, a way forward." "I'm not that concerned with being misunderstood," he said. "You can make decisions about what you're going to do or say without being overly concerned about the repercussions. When the repercussions happen, that's when maybe I will learn my lesson about, well you shouldn't have said that, or you should have said this," he added. Meanwhile, the David Bowie tribute band Holy Holy have announced that they have removed drummer Woody Woodmansey from an upcoming tour due to his unvaccinated status. The band, which also features Bowie's longtime producer Tony Visconti, are set to tour the UK for a series of "Best Of Bowie"' shows in March. Woodmansey, who played drums for Bowie in his Spiders From Mars era, told fans in a statement on Jan. 28 that he was no longer in the band, as the other members didn't feel it was safe to tour with a member not protected against Covid. "It is with deep regret that I have to announce I will no longer be a part of the band Holy Holy," he wrote, adding that "I have no negative feelings towards the band, they are doing what they believe is best for them, whilst I am doing the same." - NME, 1/26/22...... Bette MidlerWest Virginia Gov. Jim Justice flashed his pet bulldog's butt to critics during his State of the State address on Jan. 28, telling Bette Midler and others to "kiss her hiney." Midler had recently described the people of WV as "poor, illiterate and strung out" in a tweet after WV Sen. Joe Manchin refused to support Pres. Joe Biden's Build Back Better Act. Midler responded to the governor's message in a Twitter post on Jan. 28 by sharing a ranking of states that showed West Virginia in the bottom tier among states in categories such as health care, education and the economy, and commented that the governor's dog's heinie would make a better governor than him, though she used a stronger word than that. "BTW, here are the state rankings of all the areas and agencies for which the so-called "Governor of WVA, #JimJustice, is responsible. Judging from these rankings, I'd say his dog's ass would make a better Governor than him!" she wrote. After receiving backlash to her initial tweet, Midler apologized "to the good people of WVA for her "outburst" in follow-up tweet later that day. - Billboard, 1/28/22...... Supermodel Heidi Klum has revealed she had to ask permission from Rod Stewart to sample one of his songs for her new collaboration with rapper Snoop Dogg. Earlier in January, the supermodel released Chai Tea with Heidi, which features a chorus inspired by Stewart's 1983 single "Baby Jane" and Snoop raps the verses. But while Klum and Snoop recorded the track and accompanying music video, she was waiting anxiously to hear if Stewart would agree to the sample. Klum says she didn't hear anything from Stewart for five weeks, then discovered that he had "immediately emailed me back" but his message had become caught up in her spam filter. "He had immediately emailed me back, he had loved the song, and (called it) outrageously amazing... he said, 'Yes, two thumbs up,'" Klum says. - Music-News.com, 1/30/22...... Original The Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock has signed a new solo record deal with Universal Music Group. Matlock will release a new album in 2022 under the deal, and his previous solo albums will also be rereleased under UMG's catalog division. "I am over the moon to have now signed to Universal Music Group, who will be releasing my brand spanking new album, and I can't wait to get cracking with the team. Watch this space," Matlock said in a statement via Music Week. Matlock has released six previous solo albums, most recently his 2018 LP 'Good To Go which saw him partner with guitarist Earl Slick (David Bowie/John Lennon) and drummer Slim Jim Phantom (The Stray Cats). - NME, 1/27/22...... Eddie Van Halen was remembered on social media on what would have been his 67th birthday on Jan. 26 with posts from his son, brother, and former members of his band Van Halen. Eddie's son Wolfgang Van Halen wrote: "Happy birthday, Pop. I love and miss you more than you could ever know." The late musician's brother, drummer Alex Van Halen, wrote: "Hey Ed, Happy birthday! May your light never dim. Love you, miss you and btw... Wolf is killin' it. (sic)" Former VH bassist Michael Anthony added: "Happy birthday Ed, I miss ya brother! You were such a huge part of my life, I will always celebrate and wave the VH flag high!! (sic)". Eddie Van Halen passed away after a lengthy battle with cancer in Oct. 2020 at the age of 65. - Music-News.com, 1/27/22...... Barry ManilowBarry Manilow posted on Twitter on Jan. 28 that rumors that his music will be removed from Spotify.com after Neil Young's feud with the streaming service over Covid-19 misinformation "didn't start with me." "I recently heard a rumor about me and Spotify. I don't know where it started, but it didn't start with me or anyone who represents me," Manilow posted to Twitter. In support of the "Heart of Gold" singer, his fans started a boycott against Spotify, tweeting that they are canceling their subscriptions with the hashtags #SpotifyDeleted and #CancelSpotify, both of which were trending on Twitter. "Manilow" was also trending amid rumors that the fellow star would be removing his songs as well. - Billboard, 1/28/22...... It has been revealed that one of Meat Loaf's final TV appearances is set to be aired in a new episode of the US paranormal series Ghost Hunters. Meat Loaf was a keen paranormal investigator and worked with the Ghost Hunters team numerous times after his first appearance on the show in 2009. He joined them on an investigation for one last time in Sept. 2021, visiting an old farmhouse in Tennessee. "I am so incredibly honored and thankful to Jason [Hawes, star and co-producer of the show] and the team for inviting me out again," Meat Loaf says in a new trailer for the episode, which has been shared on Facebook. Meat Loaf's final Ghost Hunters appearance will air in "The Haunted House On The Hill" episode on Discovery+ on Feb. 12. Meat Loaf, whose real name was Marvin Lee Aday, died on Jan. 21 at the age of 74. - NME, 1/30/22...... Sam Lay, a Chicago blues drummer and vocalist who played with Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Bob Dylan and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, died on Jan. 29 at age 86. Known for wearing a cape and carrying a walking stick, Mr. Lay was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2015 as part of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. Mr. Lay, a native of Birmingham, Ala., played professionally in Cleveland in the mid-1950s before moving to Chicago, the record label said. In 1969, he played drums on Fathers & Sons, Muddy Waters' best-selling record on Chess Records. Mr. Lay backed up Bob Dylan on drums in 1965 at the Newport Folk Festival. It caused a stir in the crowd because Dylan played an electric guitar and had turned to a rock sound. - Billboard, 1/31/22...... Hargus "Pig" Robbins, a Country Music Hall of Fame member and renowned session pianist who played with the likes of George Jones, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn and many more, died on Jan. 30 at age 84. Mr. Robbins' breakout performance as a session player came in 1959, on George Jones' "White Lightning." In the Nashville studio, he went on to work on innumerable sessions with country stars. Notable credits would include Patsy Cline's "I Fall to Pieces," Loretta Lynn's "You're Looking at Country" and "Coal Miner's Daughter," Dolly Parton's "Coat of Many Colors, Kenny Rogers' "The Gambler" and Tammy Wynette's "D-I-V-O-R-C-E" -- just to name a handful of highlights. Mr. Robbins was also the pianist on Bob Dylan's classic Blonde on Blonde, during the album's Nashville sessions in 1966. Beyond his countless contributions over decades as a session player, Mr. Robbins also recorded a number of his own solo studio albums in the '60s and '70s. Mr. Robbins was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2012. Among the various awards he's won, Mr. Robbins was named the CMA's instrumentalist of the year in both 1976 and 2000, and he took home a Grammy for best country instrumental performance in 1978. - Billboard, 1/30/22...... Howard HessemanBeloved American sitcom actor Howard Hesseman, who made a career out of portraying off-the-wall characters -- none more popular than the disc jockey Johnny Fever on the sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati -- died on Jan. 29 at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Los Angeles of complications from colon surgery he first had last summer. He was 81. A member of the San Francisco improv group The Committee and a real-life DJ back in the 1960s, Mr. Hesseman also was known for his stint as out-of-work actor turned history teacher Charlie Moore on the ABC comedy Head of the Class, quitting that show after four seasons to aim for a movie career. And on the ninth and final season of One Day at a Time, his character, architect Sam Royer, married longtime divorcee Ann Romano (Bonnie Franklin). In other eccentric turns, Mr. Hesseman played hippies in director Richard Lester's Petulia (1968) and on NBC's Dragnet (he was billed as Don Sturdy back then); a patient suffering from writer's block on The Bob Newhart Show; a psychiatrist on Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman; a pimp opposite Dan Aykroyd in the film Doctor Detroit (1983); and a shock rocker in the cult heavy metal band classic movie This Is Spinal Tap (1984). Mr. Hesseman received Emmy nominations in 1980 and '81 for his work on CBS' WKRP in Cincinnati, which ran for four seasons (1978-82). With his shades, mustache and slouch, he became a countercultural icon. Hugh Wilson, a former sales executive at a Top 40 radio station who created WKRP (the fictional station's call letters were a pun on "W-crap"), based the rock DJ on "a guy I knew in Atlanta called Skinny Bobby Harper," he once said. "That was funny, because he was the morning guy, so Skinny had to get up at 4 in the morning to get in there. But he also loved being in the bars at night. He was like Fever." Mr. Hesseman went on to host Saturday Night Live three times and fronted music specials like 25 Years of Motown and Supernight of Rock & Roll. Howard HessemanBorn on Feb. 27, 1940, in Lebanon, Ore., Mr. Hesseman spent a couple of years at the University of Oregon after graduating high school in 1958, then was off to San Francisco, where he landed a gig as a disc jockey for the underground rock station KMPX. He then latched on with The Committee, where he took the Don Sturdy stage name. "Howard had at one time been a DJ," director Jay Sandrich said in a 2001 interview for the website The Interviews: An Oral History of Television. "He just stepped in and killed it. He knew exactly what he was doing." With WKRP switching to a top 40 rock format, he christened himself Dr. Johnny Fever. After that series ended, he came back a few times for The New WKRP in Cincinnati, which had a couple of seasons in syndication. Afterward, Hesseman kept busy with appearances in such films as Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment (1985), Heat (1986), Gridlock'd (1997), About Schmidt (2002), The Rocker (2008) and Halloween II (2009). He also guest-starred as a judge on Boston Legal, a radio station manager on That '70s Show, a former drug dealer on John From Cincinnati and a schoolmaster on Fresh Off the Boat. In addition to his wife -- they lived together for seven years before getting married in July 1989 -- survivors include their godchildren Grace, Hamish and Chet. - The Hollywood Reporter, 1/30/22...... UK comedian, entertainer and writer Barry Cryer has died at the age of 86. One of the most prolific scriptwriters in British comedy, Mr. Cryer wrote gags for The Two Ronnies and Morecambe and Wise. A hugely talented stand-up comedian himself, he became famous in his own right for appearances on BBC Radio 4's "I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue." - BBC.com, 1/27/22.

Elton John announced on Jan. 25 that he has tested positive for Covid-19 and has postponed the the Dallas leg of his "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" tour. "Hi everyone, wanted to send a message to let you know that I have contracted COVID and so have had to reschedule my shows in Dallas," the star posted on his Instagram Stories page on Jan. 25. "If you have tickets, you'll be contacted with the new dates really soon. It's always a massive disappointment to move shows and I'm so sorry to anyone who's been inconvenienced by this but I want to keep myself and my team safe," he added, also assuring fans that his symptoms are mild, and he still plans to play the shows scheduled for Arkansas over the weekend. "As always, thank you for all your love and support and I can't wait to see you all soon," he concluded. Elton kicked off his farewell tour in 2018, but paused in March 2020 along with the rest of the live music industry as the coronavirus pandemic began to spread. To kick off 2022, the star resumed his tour with a sold out show in New Orleans, La., on Jan. 19. His final show ever is scheduled in 2023. - Billboard, 1/25/22...... Meat LoafIn the wake of Meat Loaf's death on Jan. 20 allegedly from Covid-19 complications at age 74, streams of the rock star's catalog have leaped 2,583%, while sales of his songs and albums have also made sizable jumps. From Jan. 21 through Jan. 23, on-demand audio and video streams of his music soared to 15.9 million, according to initial reports to MRC Data. That's up from 593,000 streams over Jan. 18-20. Leading the way are his hits "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)" (3.2 million streams, up 1,645% from the three previous days), "Paradise by the Dashboard Light" (3.1 million streams, up 4,399%), and "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" (1.9 million, up 1,856%). Meanwhile, digital sales of Meat Loaf's catalog ballooned 21,298% to 54,000 Jan. 21-23 from a negligible amount Jan. 18-20. In album sales, Meat Loaf's discography moved 19,000 copies Jan. 21-23, a 11,856% surge from a negligible amount Jan. 18-20. 1977's Bat Out of Hell accounted for 13,000 of those sales (up 14,941%), followed by 1993's Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell (3,000, up 14,195%) and his hits collection, The Essential Meat Loaf (1,000, up 44,700%). Lyrics to Meat Loaf's songs have similarly skyrocketed, with 10 of the top 25 entries on the LyricFind U.S. site being Meat Loaf songs, led by "Bat Out Of Hell" which experienced a 26,483% blast in lyric views and usages following the death. Meanwhile, in the U.K. the Grammy-winning singer's material has also soared on the charts. Based on sales and streaming data from the first 48 hours in the chart cycle, the title track from Bat Out Of Hell flew to No. 4, which would mark a new chart peak if it maintains its position. Bat was released in Great Britain in 1979 and has a U.K. chart best of No. 8, set in 1993. His 1993 leader "I'd Do Anything For Love (But I Won't Do That)" is at No. 7 on the country's First Look chart, and "Two Out Of Three Ain't Bad" is poised to enter the Top 20 for the very first time at No. 15, having originally topped-out at No. 32 back in Sept. 1978. Meat Loaf had six U.K. Top 10 singles during his lifetime, most recently with 2006's "It's All Coming Back To Me Now" featuring Marion Raven, which peaked at No. 6. His last single to impact the weekly chart was 2007's "Cry Over Me," which reached No. 47. In other Meat Loaf news, the singer's widow, Deborah Aday, said in an exclusive interview with People magazine that "some of my fondest memories will always be about how we so often laughed, and how we brought out the silliness and playfulness in each other." "Michael was a hugger -- such a physically affectionate and kind man -- and I'm grateful that he brought out those traits in me," Deborah said. The couple married in 2007, and "there wasn't a day that went by that we didn't tell the other how much we loved them. Not a day that we didn't hug each other," she reminisced. It's also been reported that Meat Loaf had been planning a world tour, a new EP of music, and a new game show titled after his 1993 hit "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)" before his death. - Billlboard, 1/25/22...... Bob DylanSony Music Group announced on Jan. 24 that they had bought the master recordings of perhaps their most prestigious artist, Bob Dylan. Although neither Sony nor Dylan's team would comment on the deal terms, it is estimated that Dylan's masters are worth $200 million or more, based on the revenue they generate -- an estimated $16 million a year worldwide -- and the standard multiple investors now apply to determine the value of assets. The deal closed in mid-2021, however, when recorded-music catalogs were trading at slightly lower multiples, meaning that Sony could have paid a bit less. In a separate deal, Dylan also extended his recording contract with Columbia. Rob Stringer, chairman of Sony Music Group, said in a press release that "Columbia Records has had a special relationship with Bob Dylan from the beginning of his career and that the company was "excited to work with Bob and his team to find new ways to make his music available to his many fans today and to future generations." For his part, Dylan said that "Columbia Records and Rob Stringer have been nothing but good to me for many, many years and a whole lot of records. I'm glad that all my recordings can stay where they belong." The catalog deal includes all of Dylan's recordings -- 39 studio albums, 16 "Bootleg Series compilations of outtakes and live recordings, and numerous singles and rarities -- plus unreleased material that could be compiled and put out in the future. It does not include rights to Dylan's lyrics and compositions, which Universal Music Group announced it bought in Dec. 2020, for a price said to be about $400 million, almost 30 times its net publishers share. Meanwhile, the rock bard has announced details of a U.S. run of dates this spring for his "Never Ending Tour." The tour resumes in Phoenix on Mar. 3 and will run for 27 dates in Southwest and Southern states over five weeks, wrapping on Apr. 14 in Oklahoma City. Dylan's website hints that more dates will be announced after this, saying that the tour will run until 2024. - Billboard/New Musical Express, 1/24/22...... In related news, BMG Music Publishing announced on Jan. 25 that they've signed an exclusive, worldwide publishing administration agreement with Elvis Costello. The deal will let BMG administer the publishing rights to the acclaimed artist's entire catalog of 32 studio albums dating back nearly 44 years. The arrangement includes future works as well, according to BMG. Costello's works had previously been represented by Universal Music Publishing Group, which had inherited the catalog in the mid-2000s when then-parent company Vivendi bought BMG Music Publishing. A BMG exec noted that "it is not often that a catalogue as distinguished as Elvis Costello's becomes available" and that the company "looks forward to working with Elvis and his management to further raise awareness and appreciation of one of the greatest songwriters the UK has produced." Costello's discography includes a now-inconceivable string of critically revered albums that kicked off his career, beginning with 1977's My Aim Is True and followed (yearly) with such gems as This Year's Model, Armed Forces, Get Happy!!, Trust, Almost Blue, Imperial Bedroom and Punch the Clock. Born Declan Patrick MacManus in London, Costello was inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in 2003 and the Songwriters Hall in 2016. The singer/songwriter and his backing band The Imposters appeared on CBS's The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Jan. 21 to deliver a pair of performances including an impromptu medley. He and the band performed a standalone rendition of "Magnificent Hurt" followed by a surprise medley that combined "Farewell, OK" and his 1978 cover of Nick Lowe's "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding." His performances and interview with host Stephen Colbert have been shared on YouTube. - Billboard/NME, 1/25/22...... The Rolling Stones guitarist and sometime vocalist Keith Richards has announced a limited edition, super-deluxe box set of his 1992 second solo album, Main Offender, will drop on Mar. 18 via BMG Records. The 30th anniversary release will feature an 88-page book with never-before-seen photos, a Main Offender tour guitar pick, bumper sticker, promotional posters, reproductions of handwritten lyrics, reprinted essays from the album's release and an archival envelope with exact replicas of promotional and tour material from the 78-year-old rock icon's archive. In addition to the original album, the release includes the previously unreleased 12-track Winos Live in London '92 recorded at the Town & Country Club in Kentish Town which features nearly all the album tracks in performance, plus the Stones' "Gimme Shelter" and several cuts from Richards' 1988 solo debut, Talk Is Cheap. The collection is also available in a two-CD mediabook, limited edition LP on red (or black) 180g vinyl, CD digipak and digital formats. The track listing and a live video of "How I Wish" can be viewed on YouTube. - Billboard, 1/25/22...... Julian LennonJulian Lennon, the eldest son of John Lennon, has announced on Instagram that he'll sell a range of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) featuring digitized pieces of Lennon and Beatles memorabilia from his personal collection in an online Julien's Auction on Feb. 7. While Julian will keep the physical items from his collection, bidders will have the chance to buy NFT versions of the memorabilia in the auction. Each item, which will be presented as an audio-visual collectible, will include narration by Julian and imagery of the item in question. The NFT collection includes handwritten notes by Paul McCartney from the writing of "Hey Jude," which as legend goes was originally written for Julian to comfort him during the time of John and Cynthia Lennon's divorce. The bidding for this NFT starts at $30,000 (£22,258). Other items include the Afghan coat worn by John Lennon in the Beatles film Magical Mystery Tour, a Gibson Les Paul guitar gifted by the late artist to his son, and the black cape worn by John in the film Help!. A portion of the proceeds from sales of this NFT collection will benefit Julian Lennon's White Feather Foundation. Julian told Variety that "I have a lot of projects happening this year, including a new album, and these [items] tie in to a few of them. I can't really say much more -- you'll understand why when it happens. The first release will be April 8 and that will inform you of the campaign going forward." - New Musical Express, 1/25/22...... In related news, Ozzy Osbourne's recent launch of a series of NFTs was reportedly targeted by scammers who made use of a fake Discord server to defraud supporters of hundreds of dollars in cryptocurrency. The project, known as "CryptoBatz," is a collection of 9,666 "digital bats" -- a reference to Osbourne infamously biting the head off a bat during a concert in the early '80s. The collection was previewed earlier in January, with Osbourne himself describing the project as "f---ing mental," and a pre-sale for the NFTs opened in December through its official Discord server. Users who joined the scam Discord server were asked to "verify [their] assets in order to participate, and were directed to a phishing site that gave the scammers access to the users' cryptocurrency wallets." One victim reportedly said he lost about $300 to $400 in Ethereum cryptocurrency to the scammers. On Jan. 21, the official "CryptoBatz" Twitter account warned supporters of the scammers, saying it was trying to get Discord to close down the fake servers. Osbourne has yet to comment on the reported scam. - NME, 1/24/22...... Bjorn Ulvaeus of ABBA has announced he's launching a radio show on the Apple Music streaming platform, with hopes of figuring out why his songs like "Mamma Mia" and "Dancing Queen" have stayed stuck in the heads of so much of the world for so many decades. Ulvaeus will host Bjorn from ABBA and Friends on Apple Music Hits starting Jan. 24. The limited series includes music and conversations with Ulvaeus' friends and collaborators, starting in the first episode with his fellow producer, songwriter and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Nile Rodgers of Chic. The episode finds Ulvaeus and Rodgers talking about the secrets of hit-making and why ABBA's music has remained in the public consciousness. "I have long wanted to ask some emotionally intelligent as well as intellectual people who know about ABBA about why they think our songs have lasted for such a long time -- almost 40 years -- because I don't understand it myself," the 76-year-old Ulvaeus said. - Billboard, 1/25/22...... Neil YoungNeil Young fired off a public missive to his management on Jan. 24, demanding that they remove his music from Spotify.com in protest of controversial radio host Joe Rogan spreading misinformation about the Covid-19 vaccine on his popular podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience. "They can have Rogan or Young. Not both," Young wrote in an open letter to his management team and record label posted to his Neil Young Archives website, according to Rolling Stone. "I want you to let Spotify know immediately TODAY that I want all my music off their platform," Young wrote. "I am doing this because Spotify is spreading fake information about vaccines -- potentially causing death to those who believe the disinformation being spread by them. Please act on this immediately today and keep me informed of the time schedule," he wrote Young addressed his letter to his manager and the co-chairman and COO of Warner Records, which releases Young's music through its Reprise Records imprint. The post has since been removed, and as of Jan. 24, Young's music was still available on Spotify. Joe Rogan has come under fire for spreading misinformation on his show about Covid-19 and vaccines. In addition to broadcasting his own vaccine-skeptical views, Rogan has hosted firebrands including Dr. Robert Malone, an immunologist who has drawn comparisons between the Covid-19 vaccine drive in the U.S. with the rise of the Nazi party in Germany, among other inflammatory remarks. In 2015, the singer-songwriter ordered his music removed from Spotify -- along with Apple Music and other subscription streaming services -- after stating that he felt the audio quality of the streamers was too low. His music reappeared on the platforms the following year. Meanwhile, a new documentary about the making of Young and Crazy Horse's latest album, Barn, has been shared on YouTube. Directed by his wife Daryl Hannah, the doc shows the group as they worked on the album together in an old, 19th century log barn. - AP News/Billboard, 1/24/22...... In related news, vaccine skeptic Eric Clapton has seemingly embraced a controversial theory claiming that secret messages are allegedly being hidden inside YouTube videos with the goal of driving mass compliance with Covid precautions. The 76-year-old guitar great pointed to the theory as an explanation for his divisive views on the global pandemic that has killed more than 5.6 million people worldwide. "[I thought], "What's going on here?' I didn't get the memo. Whatever the memo was, it hadn't reached me," Clapton told YouTube channel the Real Music Observer about why he decided to team up with his old friend -- and fellow lockdown opponent Van Morrison -- for the anti-lockdown screed "Stand and Deliver," as well as releasing his own similar take, "This Has Gotta Stop." Clapton told the YouTube channel's host that he then realized that he had, in fact, gotten the memo in the form of a controversial theory espoused by clinical psychology professor Mattias Desmet, who has been promoting the idea that we are all suffering from a "mass psychosis when it comes to Covid-19. The theory proposes that messages encouraging people to get vaccinated against Covid and to take other precautions are part of a shadowy attempt to hypnotize the masses to fall in line. The theory, which has been widely debunked, gained steam in Dec. 2021 on the popular Joe Rogan Experience podcast, which has frequently been the source of incorrect and medically dubious information about the pandemic. Clapton has claimed that he suffered from severe nerve damage to his fingers as a result of taking the AstraZeneca vaccine, and was so sick he could not play his guitar for months. Meanwhile, Graham Nash has hit out at the anti-vaccination campaigner Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for using his song "Chicago" to promote an anti-vaxx rally. The chorus of the 1971 song, which is also known as 'We Can Change the World," can be heard in Kennedy's track "Heart of Freedom," which credits Kennedy as the lyricist. The song was used to promote a march in Washington D.C. on Jan. 23) where Kennedy wanted attendees to "stand united to protest all government mandates." After Nash's manager Mark Spector confirmed to Rolling Stone that "a cease-and-desist letter is in the works," Nash shared a post on Instagram on Jan. 22 which criticized the unauthorised use of "Chicago." "The use of my song 'Chicago' by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.'s Children's Health Defense movement in a video to promote his organization's rally in Washington, D.C. tomorrow is not authorised and I am taking steps to cause the cessation of its use," Nash wrote. "I do not support his anti-vaccination position as the history of the efficacy of the Covid19 vaccines is well documented," he added. - Billboard/NME, 1/24/22...... Don WilsonDon Wilson, the guitarist and co-founder of the Sixties and early Seventies instrumental guitar band The Ventures, died on Jan. 22 in Tacoma, Wash., of natural causes. He was 88. "Our dad was an amazing rhythm guitar player who touched people all over world with his band, The Ventures," son Tim Wilson said in a statement. "He will have his place in history forever and was much loved and appreciated. He will be missed." The Ventures charted 14 singles and 38 albums in the U.S., and with over 100 million records sold, are the best-selling instrumental band of all time. The band's hits included the 1960 No. 2 "Walk, Don't Run," and the theme song for Hawaii Five-O. They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2008. The band, which formed in Tacoma in 1958 and also included guitarist Bob Bogle, bassist Nokie Edwards and Mel Taylor who replaced Howie Johnson on drums, continued to perform through numerous lineup changes, but Mr. Wilson was the one constant throughout. He didn't miss a tour until his retirement in 2015, according to the family's statement. - Billboard, 1/23/22...... Trombonist/keyboardist/flutist Dick Halligan, a co-founder of Blood, Sweat & Tears, died of natural causes on Jan. 18 in Rome, Italy. He was 78. Halligan also co-wrote several BS&T tracks, including "Redemption" and "Lisa Listen To Me." Halligan's expertise in music stemmed from hours spent listening to the big band music of Stan Kenton, Tommy Dorsey and Glenn Miller as a boy growing up in Glens Fall, N.Y. He went on to receive a master of arts degree in music theory and composition from the Manhattan School of Music and continued his studies in voice and piano. Halligan left the band in 1971 following the recording of the group's fourth studio album, B,S&T4. Of the four albums that Halligan created with the band, four were certified Gold by the RIAA and one was certified four-times Platinum. Following his time with the two-time Grammy-winning Blood, Sweat & Tears, Halligan went on to score over 20 film and TV projects, including The Owl and the Pussycat, the Chuck Norris movies A Force Of One and The Octagon, as well as ABC's Holmes And Yoyo. He also composed for orchestras and, most recently, wrote, performed and toured with the one-man show "Musical Being," which was based on his book of the same name detailing his unique musical journey. Halligan is survived by his daughter and musician Shana, a son-in-law, a grandson and a stepson. - Billboard, 1/24/22...... Meat LoafPeter Robbins, who voiced the beloved Charlie Brown in the classic Peanuts specials of the 1960s A Charlie Brown Christmas and It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, has died of an apparent suicide in San Diego, Calif., according to a statement by his family. He was 65. Born in Los Angeles on Aug. 10, 1956, Robbins got his start as a child performer and, beginning at age 9, brought to life beloved Peanuts character Charlie Brown. His first project as the voice of the so-called "blockhead" was A Boy Named Charlie Brown, a 1963 television documentary about the life of Peanuts creator Charles M. Schulz. He went on to voice Charlie in six television specials, including perennial holiday staples A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965) and It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1966), along with the 1969 feature film also entitled A Boy Named Charlie Brown. Additionally, he appeared as an actor on such '60s TV series as Rawhide, The Donna Reed Show, The Munsters, F Troop, Get Smart and Blondie. An appearance on a 1972 episode of My Three Sons marked his final acting role before stepping away from Hollywood. Robbins then dealt with a series of unfortunate addiction issues and had been open about his mental health struggles, including suffering from bipolar disorder. In 2019, shortly after he was released from prison following a 2015 sentence for making criminal threats against people as he was going through rehab, Robbins told a San Diego television station that he felt "much more humble, grateful and thankful that I lived through the experience." At the time, he shared with the outlet that he had recently gotten some touch-up work done to a tattoo on his right arm showing Charlie Brown and Snoopy, as the characters remained so important to him. "Charlie Brown fans are the greatest fans in the world," he said back then. "And everybody is willing, I hope, to give me a second chance." - The Hollywood Reporter, 1/26/22.

Friday, January 21, 2022

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on January 21st, 2022



Meat LoafMeat Loaf, the "larger than life" rock superstar loved by millions for his 1977 Bat Out of Hell album and for such theatrical, dark-hearted anthems as "Paradise By the Dashboard Light," "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad," and "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)," died on the evening of Jan. 20, according to a statement posted by his family on his official Facebook page the following morning. He was 74. "Our hearts are broken to announce that the incomparable Meat Loaf died with his wife Deborah by his side," the statement reads. "Daughters Pearl and Amanda and close friends have been with him throughout the last 24 hours... We know how much he meant to so many of you and we truly appreciate all of the love and support as we move through this time of grief in losing such an inspiring artist and beautiful man. We thank you for your understanding of our need for privacy at this time. From his heart to your souls & don't ever stop rocking!," it continued. A cause of death has not been disclosed, although the celebrity gossip site TMZ.com is reporting that the singer died after being seriously ill with Covid-19. Born Marvin Lee Aday in Dallas, Tex., on Sept. 27, 1947, Meat Loaf was the son of a school teacher who raised him on her own after divorcing his alcoholic father, a police officer. He was singing and acting in high school (Mick Jagger was an early favorite, so was Ethel Merman) and attended Lubbock Christian College and what is now the University of North Texas. In November 1963, he saw Pres. John F. Kennedy arrive at Love Field in Dallas, then after learning the president had been assassinated, drove to Parkland Hospital to witness a bloodied Jackie Kennedy step out of a car. He was still a teenager when his mother died and when he acquired the nickname "Meat Loaf," the alleged origins of which range from childhood friends taunting him about his weight to a favorite recipe of his mother's. He left for Los Angeles after college and was soon fronting the band Meat Loaf Soul. They played their debut gig in 1968, opening for Van Morrison's early band Them, as well as the "garage band" Question Mark And The Mysterians. For years, he alternated between music and the stage, recording briefly for Motown, opening for such acts as the Who and the Grateful Dead and appearing in the Broadway production of "Hair." Meat LoafBy the mid-1970s, he was playing the lobotomized biker Eddie in the theater and film versions of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, had served as an understudy for his friend John Belushi for the stage production of "National Lampoon" and had begun working with Jim Steinman, whom he met while auditioning for Steinman's musical production of "More Than You Deserve" (1973). The dense, pounding production by Todd Rundgren was openly influenced by Wagner, Phil Spector and Bruce Springsteen, whose bandmates Roy Bittan and Max Weinberg played on the record. Rundgren initially thought of the album as a parody of Springsteen's grandiose style. After a slow start and mixed reviews, Bat Out of Hell became one of the top-selling albums in history, with worldwide sales of more than 40 million copies, and made him one of the most recognizable performers in rock. Bat Out of Hell spent 82 weeks on the Billboard Hot 200 album chart, peaking at No. 14, and spawned three top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, with "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" going highest at No. 11. He scored another slew of hits when he reteamed with Steinman for the sequel, Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell, which topped the Billboard 200: that album's "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)" became his sole Hot 100 No. 1 for five weeks in 1993, also earning him a Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Solo; the album also produced two more top 40 hits in "Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through" and "Objects In the Rear View Mirror May Appear Closer Than They Are." The hot streak continued in 1995 with the No. 13-peaking "I'd Lie for You (And That's the Truth)," which would be his final appearance on the Hot 100. Meat Loaf wasn't a consistent hit maker, especially after falling out for years with Steinman (who died in Apr. 2021 at age 73), but he maintained close ties with his fans through his manic live shows, social media and his many television, radio and film appearances, including Fight Club and cameos on Glee and South Park. Meat Loaf, or "Meat," had struggled with ill health in recent years and was previously left unable to stand up for longer than five minutes due to a nerve issue in his back -- meaning he was forced to spend most of the time sat down. Meat LoafHe explained at the time: "I don't do drugs. I don't drink. I have a pinched nerve in my back and it feels like when I stand up to walk, that Norman Bates from Psycho is stabbing me in the back. And it hurts like hell." When asked if he is on medication, he replied: "No, if you get on medication then you can't speak. And my assistant said 'don't talk about this'. But I went to a doctor the other night and he told me my tongue was swollen. And I have no idea why. It's causing me to talk slower than normal." Other health scares include collapsing on stage during performances in 2003, 2011 and 2016. In March 2021, it was reported that Meat was launching a new relationship-based competition reality TV series called I'd Do Anything For Love, But I Won't Do That. He was to serve as the project's executive producer, according to Deadline.com. The singer was also planning to launch a world tour in 2022, and recently said he told his agent: "Let's do five weeks, 16 shows in America, take a little break, do 16 shows in Europe, take a break, do another 16, then see how we like it. I'm ready to get out there." He is survived by Deborah Gillespie, his wife since 2007, and by daughters Pearl and Amanda Aday. Among those paying tribute to Meat on social media are Cher, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Boy George. - Billboard/New Musical Express/Music-News.com, 1/21/22.

Music publisher Round Hill has acquired a significant share of Heart singer/songwriter Nancy Wilson's aster royalties and has entered a long-term deal to administer her neighboring rights income. Though the exact share of Wilson's master royalties remains undisclosed, Round Hill will own portions of classic Heart songs like "Barracuda," "Magic Man," "Alone," "Crazy on You" and "These Dreams" -- all of which were co-penned by Wilson and her sister Ann Wilson. Round Hill founder and CEO Josh Gruss said in a statement that Nancy "has played a pivotal role in their astonishing success over the last 45 years" and "is an icon and the longevity of her music is a testament to her incredible talent." - Billboard, 1/20/22...... Attorneys for ABBA filed a public notice in federal court on Jan. 20 stating that the iconic Swedish pop group has reached a settlement to end a lawsuit it filed against a British tribute band called Abba Mania that ABBA had labeled "parasitic." The agreement came just six weeks after ABBA filed the lawsuit, which claimed that Abba Mania's use of the word "ABBA" in its name had infringed the band's trademarks and would dupe some fans into thinking the tribute group was officially authorized by the original. Although the notice did not include any specific terms, like whether money changed hands, an attorney for ABBA confirmed to Billboard that Abba Mania had agreed to stop using the name. - Billboard, 1/20/22...... Stevie NicksSeventies artists Stevie Nicks, The Who, Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band, Willie Nelson, Elvis Costello & the Imposters and Lionel Richie have been announced as among the headliners for the 2022 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, which is back after two years of cancellations and postponements due to the coronavirus pandemic. Set for the Big Easy this spring, the first weekend of the festival will take place from Apr. 29 through Sunday, May 1, while the second will begin on May 5 through May 8 at the festival's longtime home at the Fair Grounds Race Course in New Orleans, La. An announcement and miniaturized poster listing all performers can be viewed on the NOJ&HF's Twitter page. - Billboard, 1/20/22...... In related news, Elton John resumed his "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" tour in New Orleans on Jan. 19 after ongoing Covid-19-related restrictions prevented the star from making his live comeback for two years. After multiple delays, the legendary artist played at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans where he treated the sold-out crowd to a career-spanning, 21-song set of hits. The Rocket man kicked off the kicked off the concert by performing "Bennie And The Jets" from his 1973 album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, then went on to dust off favourites such as "Tiny Dancer," "Rocket Man," "I'm Still Standing," "Crocodile Rock" and "Your Song." "It's good to be back!!," Sir Elton posted to his Twitter account. "New Orleans, I've loved you since I first visited in 1971! You've got funk and you've got electricity and I couldn't have asked for a better welcome back after so long off the road....Texas, I'll see you soon!," he added. Clips of the superstar performing "The Bitch Is Back" and the first live airing of his current hit "Cold Heart" can also be viewed on YouTube. The show marked John's first "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" gig since he performed in Australia in early March 2020. "This is a new experience for us," he told the crowd at the start of yesterday's concert. "I've never had this amount of time off in my life, as far as playing music. Well, at least since I was 17 years of age.... I can't thank you enough for being so patient. We live in funny times, but we're gonna have a great time!," he added. - NME, 1/20/22...... Two new clips from the new Brian Wilson documentary Long Promised Road, about the Beach Boys co-founder, have been shared on YouTube. In the first clip, Elton John discusses Wilson's commitment to touring: "Brian will always wanna go out and perform. He will always wanna make records. It's because music runs through his veins." In the second clip, Wilson hails his Holland track "Sail On, Sailor" as "probably one of the best songs I ever wrote." Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road also features contributions from the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Al Jardine, Nick Jonas, Don Was, Blondie Chaplin, Jakob Dylan and Taylor Hawkins, among others. Directed by Brent Wilson (unrelated to Brian), the documentary charts Wilson's life and career through "a literal and metaphorical trip exploring Brian's hometown." Featuring over 50 of Wilson's most iconic songs, the documentary originally premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in the US in June to positive reviews. - New Musical Express, 1/21/22...... Tina Turner and her husband Erwin Bach have reportedly purchased a 70-million-Swiss-franc (USD $76 million) estate on Lake Zurich in the village of Staefa. Turner, 82, and Bach acquired the century-old, 24,000-square-meter (260,000-square-foot) property last September because the both have Swiss nationality now and "feel very comfortable in Switzerland," according to an interview with Bach in the Swiss newspaper Handelszeitung. He added that "due to the pandemic and its consequences we -- like many other Swiss -- unfortunately are refraining from travel." The couple will be nearby neighbors to Swiss tennis superstar Roger Federer, who reportedly also looked at the property before settling on a different one further east along the lake. Turner married German music executive Bach in 2013 after a long relationship, and has lived in Switzerland with him since 1994. The couple have rented a home in the town of Kuesnacht, closer to the city of Zurich, for years. - Billboard, 1/20/22...... The estate of Jimi Hendrix and Sony Music filed a lawsuit in Manhattan federal court on Jan. 18 against the heirs of Hendrix's former bandmates after they allegedly threatened to bring a lawsuit in British court for "millions of pounds in unpaid royalties dating back decades." The plaintiffs are asking for a legal declaration that they owe nothing to the estates of Noel Redding and John Graham "Mitch" Mitchell -- Hendrix's bandmates in the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Entities representing the families of Redding and Mitchell sent a cease-and-desist in December claiming to own a stake in Hendrix's music and threatening to sue for infringement, but the plaintiff's lawsuit said those claims were bogus because the pair had signed away any rights immediately after Hendrix died in 1970. The duo signed "broad general releases and agreements not to sue in exchange for significant monetary consideration that was paid at the time," the Hendrix estate and Sony maintain, adding that the settlements "specifically dealt with the band's recordings." Sony is involved in the dispute because it's the exclusive licensee of Hendrix's music, which is owned by Hendrix Experience LLC and Authentic Hendrix LLC. Hendrix died Sept. 18, 1970, at the age of 27 and, according to this week's lawsuit, both Redding and Mitchell participated in the "protracted proceedings required to settle his estate. As part of that legal process, they allegedly signed the releases. Redding died in 2003 and Mitchell died in 2008. The lawsuit is a so-called declaratory judgment action, meaning the Hendrix estate and Sony aren't suing for damages, but simply for a ruling that they've done nothing wrong. Such cases are often filed preemptively when a company believes it has wrongly been threatened with a copyright lawsuit. - Billboard, 1/19/22...... Mick FleetwoodFleetwood Mac co-founder and drummer Mick Fleetwood will serve as an executive producer and contribute creative ideas and music for a new musical drama called 13 Songs for the Fox television network. From writers Will Reiser (50/50) and Jonathan Prince (Four Weddings and a Funeral), 13 Songs revolves around rock legend Jasper Jones, who with his band, The Grift, once made music that spoke to a generation of Americans. Decades later, after being diagnosed with terminal cancer, Jasper is given only a few months to live. As a final love letter to his fans, Jasper reconnects with his band to write and record 13 final songs and leave his mark on the world forever. 13 Songs arrives as Fox continues to look to musical-driven scripted originals for its primetime roster. Previously, Fox's Glee became a massive franchise thanks in part to global tours, downloads and merchandising. - The Hollywood Reporter, 1/18/22...... A digitally restored 4K Ultra HD edition of the iconic 1964 Beatles film A Hard Day's Night (Criterion Collection) was released on Blu-ray + DVD on Jan. 18. Showcasing the start of Beatlemania in the States, the Richard Lester-directed A Hard Day's Night takes place one month after the Fab Four's first performance on The Ed Sullivan Show. The film captures just 36 hours in the lives of the British band that became music idols of a generation. Beatles pop anthems like "Can't Buy Me Love," "If I Fell" and the title track are featured in the film, which is available on Blu-ray ($35) and DVD ($14), and as a three-disc Blu-ray/DVD combo pack. The Lester-approved, digital restoration of A Hard Day's Night comes with three audio options: a monaural soundtrack, stereo and 5.1 surround sound mixes supervised by Giles Martin, sound producer at the famed Abbey Road Studios. Other bonus features include Things They Said Today, a 2002 documentary about A Hard Day's Night featuring Lester and producer George Martin; the 1994 documentary You Can't Do That: The Making of A Hard Day's Night and In Their Own Voices, a special-edition program consisting of behind-the-scenes footage, photos and interviews with The Beatles during their 1964 American tour. - Billboard, 1/18/22...... Speaking of George Martin, the famed late Beatles producer can be seen in a sweet new clip shared by his son Giles Martin on Twitter. In the footage, the producer discusses with Giles's daughter how he initially met The Beatles and what he thought of the quartet when they travelled from Liverpool to London to meet him: "Well, that's a silly name for a start... I met them in London and when I listened and it was ok but it wasn't brilliant. But the magic bit came when I started to get to know them because they were terribly good people. They were funny, they were very clever -- and they were the kind of people that you liked to be with. So I thought, 'if I feel this way about them, other people will feel this way about them'. So therefore, they should be very popular." "I don't normally share anything personal but this my dad from a while back explaining to my daughter he signed the Beatles," Giles Martin posted ."Ordinary people do extraordinary things. Great decisions are made for the simplest reasons. "I figured if I like them this much other people might too," he added. - NME, 1/19/22...... David Bowie has been declared the 21st Century's best-selling vinyl artist by the UK publication Music Week's chart analyst Alan Jones. Bowie's vinyl sales for the 2000s of 582,704 (calculated up until Jan. 6) place the late musician ahead of the only other act to top half a million units on the format -- The Beatles (535,596 sales). In the 2020s the same two acts lead the way with Bowie on 134,237 sales and The Beatles on 113,613. Based on the Top 10,000 vinyl sellers of 2021, Bowie placed third (53,181) behind The Beatles (58,567) and Taylor Swift (56,917). However, Bowie is ahead on vinyl for the two years of the decade so far due to a successful reissues campaign. Most recently, his "lost" 2000 album Toy has landed in the UK Top 5 with strong physical sales (based on Official Charts Company data). Meanwhile in the US, vinyl has overtaken CD in unit sales for the first time in decades. According to data from the MRC and Billboard, 38.3% of all album sales in the country in 2021 were in vinyl format, while it accounted over 50% of all physical album sales (41.72 million sales out of a total of 82.79 million). - NME, 1/17/22...... Bruce Springsteen has been named the highest-paid musician of 2021 by a former Forbes editor for Rolling Stone magazine, bringing in a reported sum of $590 million (£431.3 million) -- most of which he earned via the landmark sale of his masters and publishing rights in December of 2021. Springsteen's record-breaking deal with Sony Music, valued at $550 million (£402.1 million), marked the biggest sale a musician had ever made for their discography. It gave the company ownership of The Boss' entire back catalogue, which spans 20 studio albums, 300 songs, seven EPs, 23 live records and more. Word of the sale first came last November, when it was said the New Jersey rocker had set his sights on upwards of $350 million (£256.5 million) for both the publishing rights and recorded masters to his expansive catalogue. - NME, 1/17/22...... In related news, Ted Nugent recently praised "dirtbag" Springsteen for surrounding himself with "the best musicians." Appearing on That Jamieson Show, the outspoken and politically conservative musician admitted that "you couldn't get further apart ideologically, politically or truth, logic and common sense-wise than me and Bruce Springsteen, but here I'll show a little love for Bruce." He continued: "I've been able to perform on the Conan show with [Bruce's] E Street Band, which is one of the greatest joys of my life. I've always been surrounded by the best musicians, and that's the perfect example. We played 'Jenny Take A Ride' by Mitch Ryder, and Max [Weinberg] and the guys performed it with unbelievable accuracy and perfection and soulfulness. So I give him that salute for having that quality of virtuosos that deliver his music." However The Nuge till branded The Boss as a "dirtbag," but insisted he wouldn't want to "punch the "Born To Run" musician, despite their differences. "If nothing else, if I met Bruce, I wouldn't punch him. I always have Mike Tyson with me, and I give him a hundred bucks to punch a--holes." - Music-News.com, 1/20/22...... Stevie WonderStevie Wonder took to YouTube on Jan. 19 to express his support for proposed voting rights legislation in the U.S. Congress. "Any Senator who cannot support the protection of voting rights in the United States Of America cannot say that they support the Constitution," the Motown legend says in the video. "Stop the hypocrisy, cut the bull-tish. If you care and support our rights, do the hard work. You can't please everybody, but you can protect all of us. And to keep it all the way real? The filibuster is not working for democracy. Why won't you?," he adds. The video arrives as politicians take the debate over new voting rights legislation to the Senate floor. The bill, known as the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act, would represent a change in how America's elections are carried out, including how votes are cast and tallied and how House districts are drawn. Republicans have long opposed the bill and two Democratic Senators, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, who are needed to push the bill forward, continue to be reluctant to support it because of their opposition to changing filibuster rules. - Billboard, 1/19/22...... Queen guitarist Brian May will make his acting debut in an upcoming episode of the CBBC show Andy and the Band. According to May, he was offered the chance to star in the children's TV show as the "Godfather of Rock," but initially turned them down. However, May says he changed his mind after reading the script. "It was very moving because it's a great story, it's such a lovely look into what happens to kids and how they lose their confidence and what can be done," he said. In the episode, May will perform alongside The Odd Socks. "It is a good song, I didn't write it, I did contribute. I'm a person who can't help sticking my oar in so we did collaborate on it. He went on to explain how The Odd Socks speak to children who "feel like they're an outcast -- it's an antibullying campaign built into what they do, which I think is wonderful. It must give so many kids confidence who have lost their belief because they're regarded as something different, a bit odd, and they get bullied." He continued: "These things are very serious, I have grandchildren now and I know, all over again, what happens in schools, and it's so easy for a kid to be marginalized," May said of the program's anti-bullying theme. "You don't realize how much damage that can do to kids. So it's grown ups that need to be educated, not just the kids," he added. - NME, 1/20/22...... A video of a Michael Jackson impersonator who goes by the name of Santana Jackson has gone viral after footage emerged of him in a fight with a man in Las Vegas. Santana is also said to be a "professional wrestler," a skill that no doubt came in useful when an unidentified man "came out of nowhere and began to attack him in the street." Captured by a passer-by, a clip of the encounter has gone viral on Twitter. The one-minute-13-second video has so far registered over 2.2 million views on the social media platform, as well as clocking up 13,000 "likes" and 6000 retweets. "I was performing and this guy came out of nowhere and started hitting me so I have to put him down for his own good. Please know I don't think fighting is the answer so try to avoid a fight if u can. Stay safe," Santana posted on Instagram. He describes himself as a "nationally famous Michael Jackson impersonator" on his official Facebook page, adding that he performs in a bid to "keep the King of Pop's legacy alive." - NME, 1/18/22...... Louie AndersonComedian Louie Anderson, an Emmy-winning actor, author and stand-up comic, died on the morning of Jan. 21 of complications from cancer, according to his publicist. He was 68. Anderson was being treated in a Las Vegas hospital after being diagnosed with a type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Mentored by legendary stand-up Henny Youngman, the gap-toothed Minnesota native was named one of "100 Greatest Stand-Ups of All Time" by Comedy Central in 2004. He also co-created Life With Louie, the Saturday morning animated series in which he played a version of his 8-year-old self, and hosted a revival of the game show Family Feud. For his first big movie part, Saturday Night Live cast member Eddie Murphy picked Anderson to portray Maurice, a upward-striving employee at McDowell's, in Coming to America (1988), and he returned for the 2021 sequel. Born on March 24, 1953, in St. Paul, Minn., Anderson, who said he had a "lifelong food addiction," claimed his weight problem was the result of the turmoil at home, and he told People magazine in 1987 that he "ate to escape." In 1981, he took first place in the Midwest Comedy Competition, hosted that year by Youngman, who hired him as a writer and helped shape him as a performer. His breakthrough came in Nov. 1984 when he made his national TV debut on The Tonight Show. True to form, his 5 1/2-minute routine was mostly made up of fat jokes, starting with, "I can't stay long, I'm in between meals, so bear with me." A few months later, he was featured alongside Bob Saget, Rita Rudner and Sam Kinison on HBO's ninth annual Young Comedians special. He made his film debut as a taxi driver in Cloak & Dagger (1984), then showed up in the 1986 films Quicksilver, Ferris Bueller's Day Off and Ratboy. In 1988, he starred with Richard Lewis and Richard Belzer in The Wrong Guys and had his memorable cameo in Coming to America. His portrayal of Christine in Baskets earned him his Primetime Emmy in 2016, the first of three straight years with a nomination. He also once had a stint as the host of the game show Family Feud. - Billboard, 1/21/22...... Songwriter and music exec Jon Lind, who co-wrote such hits as Earth, Wind & Fire's "Boogie Wonderland, Madonna's "Crazy For You and Vanessa Williams" 'save the Best for Last, died on Jan. 15 following a two-year cancer battle. He was 73. While still a teenager, the Brooklyn native started as a folk singer, sharing stages with Judy Collins, Harry Chapin, Tom Paxton and other legendary artists. While at New York City's Mannes College of Music, he formed the Fifth Avenue Band, which was managed by Bob Cavallo and signed with Warner Reprise in 1969, according to an interview Lind gave Songwriter Universe in 2012. He was subsequently in bands that signed with A&M and Capitol before switching to full-time songwriting. Among the other artists who recorded his songs include Cher, Cheap Trick, Aaron Neville, Jennifer Holliday, Rick Astley and Pete Townshend. Lind received a Grammy nomination for song of the year in 1992 for "Save the Best for Last," which topped the Billboard Hot 100 for five weeks and was ASCAP's Song of the Year. He was equally successful as a label executive, serving as head of A&R at Hollywood Records from 1998-2011. Among the artists he worked with were Miley Cyrus, The Jonas Brothers, Selena Gomez, Demi Lovato and Jesse McCartney. He is survived by his wife, Kobalt executive Sue Drew, and the couple's two daughters. - Billboard, 1/17/22...... Rosa Lee Hawkins, a member of the 1960s girl group trio The Dixie Cups, died on Jan. 11 at age 76. The Dixie Cups, a New Orleans girl group, did not want to sing "Chapel of Love." "It sounded like a country song, OK?" the trio told the Brill Building professionals who'd written the tune. "Chapel of Love," written by Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich (with a songwriting credit to the late producer Phil Spector), hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1964, displacing The Beatles' "Love Me Do." It became a foundational song for '60s girl groups, rock 'n' roll and pop music. In addition to soundtracking countless weddings, The Dixie Cups classic has been covered by Elton John and Bette Midler, and appeared in movies from Father of the Bride to Full Metal Jacket. After "Chapel of Love," The Dixie Cups recorded many other tracks, including "People Say" and a version of the Mardi Gras standard "Iko Iko." The group was doing shows in Las Vegas when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, and they lost many of their belongings in the flood. Rosa and Barbara later moved to Tampa, Fla., where Rosa Hawkins died during surgery at Tampa General Hospital. - Billboard, 1/17/22...... Yvette MimieuxActress Yvette Mimieux, who created a stir in the 1960s with performances in such films as Where the Boys Are, Light in the Piazza, Toys in the Attic and, in a history-making turn, Dr. Kildare, died overnight in her sleep on Jan. 18 at her home in Bel Air, Calif. She was 80. The enigmatic Ms. Mimieux, discovered while horseback riding in the Hollywood Hills, appeared in eight movies before she turned 21 -- lots of them in swimsuits -- and often was cast as a wounded or sensitive woman early on. In 1964, she became what is believed to be the first actress to show her navel on an America TV show when she guest-starred in a two-part episode of NBC's Dr. Kildare in which her surfer character has an ill-fated romance with Richard Chamberlain. A year later, she played a struggling law student in a reunion with Chamberlain in the big-screen melodrama Joy in the Morning (1965). In the 1970s, Ms. Mimieux wrote and starred as a remorseless assassin in the 1974 ABC telefilm The Hit Lady, portrayed a falsely accused woman victimized by a sadistic guard in Jackson County Jail (1975) and appeared in the sci-fi drama The Black Hole (1979), the first PG-rated film from Disney. She also co-wrote, produced and starred as a psychotic soap opera fan in the 1984 CBS telefilm Obsessive Love. Her resume also included the films Skyjacked (1972), The Neptune Factor (1973), Journey Into Fear (1975) and Circle of Power (1981) and the 1985 NBC primetime soap Berrenger's, revolving around a family who owns a glamorous New York department store. She was married to Singin' in the Rain director Stanley Donen from 1972 until their divorce in 1985 and to Howard Ruby, founder of Oakwood Worldwide, a provider of furnished corporate housing, since December 1986. He survives her. - The Hollywood Reporter, 1/18/22.

Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on January 16th, 2022



Elton John has made a second showing in the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart as his "Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)" with Dua Lipa jumped to No. 7 on the tally dated Jan. 15. While it's Sir Elton's first top 10 on the chart in nearly 24 years, it's also a return to the tier for his July 1972 hit "Rocket Man," whose chorus Lipa updates in the mash-up. John, in fact, has become particularly adept at having his songs reach the top 10 twice, in various forms: "Your Song," the singer's first Hot 100 top 10, rose to No. 8 in Jan. 1971; then in 2014, Aloe Blacc's "The Man," which revives the original's "you can tell everybody" lyrical hook, also hit No. 8. "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me," a No. 2 hit on the Hot 100 in July 1974, did even better in Feb. 1992 when a charity live duet by Elton and George Michael shone at No. 1. A live version of his 1973 song "Candle In The Wind" rose to No. 6 in Jan. 1988, then revived in 1997 as a tribute to the late Princess Diana, reigning at the top of the chart for 14 weeks from Oct. 1997 to Jan. 1998. Elton recently reflected on the huge success of "Cold Heart": "A lot of it is, of course, due to Dua Lipa's popularity and the brilliant Pnau remix, but I feel very, very content and happy that I'm relevant." Meanwhile, Pearl Jam vocalist Eddie Vedder's upcoming solo album Earthling will feature duets from the likes of John, Ringo Starr and Stevie Wonder. Earthling will drop Feb. 11 via Seattle Surf/Republic Records. - Billboard, 1/14/22...... Ronnie SpectorIn a new interview with Ultimate Classic Rock, Steely Dan producer Gary Katz revealed that Eagles principle Don Henley was once fired from contributing backing vocals to Steely Dan's 1977 hit "Peg" because Steely Dan frontman Donald Fagen decided his contributions were "no good." As Steely Dan were putting the track together, Katz says he and Fagen discussed how they "both liked Henley's singing" and decided to bring him in with Linda Ronstadt to track some vocals for the song. Since Ronstadt wasn't feeling well, Nicolette Larson came in her place to sing background with Henley. Not long after Henley and Larson added vocals for a second time, Fagen signaled for bandmate Walter Becker to "go get a sandwich" with him, and as the pair left the studio, Katz said Fagen told him to fire Henley and Larson. "It left me with my finger up my ass having to fire Henley. Which I did -- and have heard about for 35 years since, in various ways," Katz said. "It was a difficult day at the office, because, like [Fagen and Becker], I was part of that inner-circle crowd. We were all in the same little area. We lived in the same place and had the same manager. It was always Eagles and Steely Dan for a long time in L.A.," he added. - Billboard, 1/14/22...... In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Elvis Costello revealed that he doesn't like much modern rock music because "the beat is so square." "I don't like much rock music," the 67-year-old Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame member said. "I like rock & roll. I think if you lose the roll part, a lot of the fun goes out of it." He then went on to say that "when people ask me, 'What's your favourite record?', I usually don't name any electric-guitar records made in the last 30 years because the beat is so square. I like things that float a bit or swing a bit, whether it's rock & roll or actual jazz that swings. You listen to these records out of Nashville, they couldn't float if you filled them full of water. They just don't; they're square and they sound like bad rock records from the nineties. To my ear, they just do. But somebody likes them." Elvis added that his grandfather "was a trumpet player [who] never used to criticize other musicians... I'm trying to live by his example a little better these times and not be so critical of everybody else. But you can't like everything." Costello and his backing band The Imposters released their new album, The Boy Named If [And Other Children's Stories] on Jan. 14, ahead of a summer 13-date summer 2022 UK tour. - New Musical Express, 1/16/22...... Former The Commodores member and '80s solo superstar Lionel Richie will be honored with the prestigious Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, the Library of Congress announced on Jan. 13. Richie is the 12th recipient of the award, and the third who rose to fame at Berry Gordy's Motown Records, following Stevie Wonder in 2009 and Smokey Robinson in 2016. These are also the only Black composers to receive the honor. "This is truly an honor of a lifetime, and I am so grateful to be receiving the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song," Richie said in a statement. "I am proud to be joining all the other previous artists, who I also admire and am a fan of their music," he added. Richie has received six Grammy nominations for Song of the Year, which puts him in a tie with Paul McCartney for the most by any songwriter in Grammy history. McCartney received the Gershwin Prize in 2010. Richie has also received three Oscar nods for best original song, for "Endless Love" from the film of the same name (1981), "Miss Celie's Blues (Sister)" from The Color Purple (1985) and "Say You Say Me" from White Nights (also 1985). He won for the latter song. - Billboard, 1/13/22...... The BeatlesThe 2021 Beatles documentary The Beatles: Get Back is coming to Blu-ray and DVD on Feb. 8, and is currently available for pre-order at Amazon.com, Target, Walmart and Best Buy. The triple-disc collection ($27.99) features nearly eight hours fully restored, archival footage with Dolby Atmos sound, while a special collector's edition Blu-ray gift set, which comes complete with collectible cards, will also drop on Feb. 8. The Blu-ray set is available for pre-order at Walmart, Target and Best Buy while supplies last. Director Peter Jackson's 6-hour documentary premiered on Disney+ in Nov. 2021 over Thanksgiving weekend. The film takes audiences inside the band's recording of the band's 1970 album Let It Be and compiles over 60 hours of unseen footage with more than 150 hours of unheard audio showcasing the creative genius of the Fab Four. The film also shows footage of The Beatles' legendary 1969 rooftop concert at London's Saville Row, which marked the band's last live show as a group. Fans will get a chance to relive that unforgettable concert in IMAX theaters beginning Jan. 30. The release date coincides with the 53rd anniversary of the original performance. The Beatles: Get Back - The Rooftop Performance Concert will screen in IMAX at the Apple Corps headquarters in London and various theaters around the U.S. Jackson will attend the London showing and participate in a Q&A that will be broadcast simultaneously in participating theaters. The 60-minute film will return to IMAX screens for a short theatrical run from Feb. 11-13. - Billboard, 1/13/22...... OneOf -- a green non-fungible token (NFT) platform tailored to the music business -- has partnered with the Rolling Stones' Keith Richards to auction off the guitarist's first-ever NFT for the MusiCares Charity Relief Auction. The Richards NFT sale will comprise of a signed Gibson ES-335 guitar and a one-of-a-kind four-second video of the signing, minted as an NFT. Bidding begins Jan. 13 and will continue until 4 p.m. ET on Jan. 30. Other items included in the upcoming MusiCares charity auction include pieces from Paul McCartney, Dolly Parton, BTS, Katy Perry and Bono. Proceeds from these sales go back to MusiCares, a nonprofit organization founded by the Recording Academy in 1989 to provide relief to musicians and music industry professionals with a spectrum of needs, including physical and mental health, addiction recovery, unforeseen personal emergencies and disaster relief. - Billboard, 1/13/22...... Concert promoter Live Nation announced on Jan. 13 that Rod Stewart's scheduled tour of Australia has been canceled due to the wave of Covid-19 cases currently spreading the country. Stewart had been booked to perform nine concerts down under throughout March and Apr. 2022, however due to the "ongoing surge of COVID in Australia and the reimposition of entertainment venue capacity limits in several states" [the tour] "regrettably, been cancelled," reads a statement issued by Live Nation. Stewart was scheduled to play a mix of arenas, and outdoor wineries, for Roundhouse Entertainment's A Day on the Green series. "My dear friends, once again I feel we've all been cheated by this evil disease, so it is with great regret that I announce my shows for 2022 have had to be canceled," Stewart says in the statement. "My thoughts are with all your families at this difficult time as we come out of the joyous and hopefully safe holiday season and I look forward to returning to Australia as soon as the health situation permit," he added. - Billboard, 1/13/22...... The Bonnaroo Music Festival in Manchester, Tenn., which is finally back after its 2020 edition was scrapped due to Hurricane Ida-related flooding and Covid-19 caused its 2021 edition to be called off, has revealed its 2022 lineup. Stevie Nicks and Robert Plant & Alison Krauss will be among the '70s-related headliners for the festival, which runs from June 16-19. Plant and Krauss will perform on the Friday (6/17) show, while Nicks will headline the Sunday (6/19) event. Tickets went on sale on Jan. 13 at the Bonnaroo site. Other headliners among the approximately 113 band lineup include Tool, J. Cole, The Chicks, Flume, 21 Savage, Billy Strings, Gryffin, Machine Gun Kelly and Roddy Ricch. - Billboard, 1/11/22...... Dewey BunnellThe music publishing and talent management company Primary Wave has acquired the song publishing catalog of Seventies popsters America, as well as a stake in the publishing royalties of former Free and Bad Company singer/songwriter Paul Rodgers, along with Rodgers' master recording income streams from both bands. Terms of the deals, which were first reported by The Wall Street Journal, were not announced but were described as multi-million dollar acquisitions. America, a soft-rock band with a penchant for naming their albums with words that begin with the letter "H," scored a string of top 10 hits in the 1970s including "Horse With No Name," "Sister Golden Hair," "Venture Highway" and "Tin Man." All three original America members wrote the band's songs, but Primary Wave is buying the publishing of Dewey Bunnell and Gerry Beckley, not the songs owned by the late Dan Peek, nor his share of co-written songs. "We are pleased that our catalogue is now in the able hands of the good folks at Primary Wave, where the music we have created over the last 50 years will be given new attention and exposure," America's Bunnell said in a statement. "We are proud of the music we produced across these decades, and look forward to watching the catalogue continue to enhance listeners' lives for generations to come through the vision and actions of Primary Wave. Meanwhile, we continue to actively pursue our careers as songwriters and performers into the 21st Century," he added. Meanwhile, Paul Rodgers fronted a string of blues rock/hard rock bands but had his biggest commercial success with Bad Company and Free. The latter band's biggest hit was "All Right Now," but a share in that song's publishing was already purchased through Primary Wave's acquisition of a stake in Chris Blackwell's Blue Mountain publishing company back in 2018. The current deal brings in another share of that song's publishing and other Free songs, as well as hit Bad Company singles like "Can't Get Enough Of Your Love," "Feel Like Makin' Love" and "Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy." Other well-known songs by the band, like "Bad Company" and "Shooting Star," were not released as singles but have garnered plenty of FM airplay. Rodgers will also head a new label imprint for Primary Wave distributed by Sun Records, which Primary Wave acquired in Jan. 2021. Besides having the ability to co-sign new artists, Rodgers will also curate compilations for Sun Records. The WSJ reported that sources placed the America deal at about $40 million, and the Rodgers deal at about $20 million. - Billboard, 1/12/22..... In related news, The Round Hill Music Royalty Fund has acquired a bundle of music rights from David Coverdale, the Whitesnake frontman and former lead singer of Deep Purple. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. According to the announcement, the acquisition includes his music publishing and master recording royalties and from Coverdale's three-album stint in the mid-1970s with Deep Purple -- Burn, Come Taste The Band, and Stormbringer - and from his entire Whitesnake catalog including the band s multi-platinum 1987 self-titled album. Also, as part of the deal Round Hill apparently has acquired some Whitesnake master recordings that Coverdale owned. Round Hill CEO Josh Gruss said in a statement that Coverdale "has blazed a trail since the early '70s, and his legacy and influence on the generations of artist that followed him cannot be understated. To have been entrusted with David"s work is a proud day for Round Hill." - Billboard, 1/14/22...... Doo-wop singer Fred Parris, the frontman of The Five Satins whose smash 1956 ballad "In the Still of the Night" became an enduring standard and was prominently used in movies including Dirty Dancing and The Irishman, died on Jan. 13 after a brief illness. He was 85. Born in New Haven, Conn., Parris grew up listening to big-band star Glenn Miller on the radio before discovering R&B music through family members' records. He delivered newspapers as a teenager and, in high school, joined a group called the Scarlets, for which he wrote a regional hit called "Dear One." On Feb. 19, 1956, Parris and one of his bandmates, Al Denby, were at home on military leave in New Haven when they recorded "In the Still of the Night," produced by Marty Kugell, in the St. Bernadette Catholic Church basement. "Doo-wop was what you had back then when young kids were singing on street corners... it was just honest street music," Jim Freeman, a former Parris bandmate, said in 2019 after The Irishman movie came out. The song was interpolated in Ronnie Milsap's "Lost In The Fifties Tonight (In The Still Of The Night)," a No. 1 hit on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart in 1985. That genre-crossing update brought Parris and co-writers Mike Reid and Troy Seals a 1985 Grammy nomination for Best Country Song. Later, Parris sang in other groups, including Fred Parris and the Restless Hearts ("Bring It Home to Daddy") in the '60s and Black Satin in the '70s. Of "In the Still of the Night," Parris said in a 2013 interview with WJCT of Jacksonville, Fla.: "Because we did it at the church, I think the song was blessed. And so was I. It lasted a long, long time." - Billboard, 1/14/22...... Ralph Emery, a longtime country music broadcaster and a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, died on Nov. 15 of as yet undisclosed causes. He was 88. Born in 1933 in McEwen, Tenn., Mr. Emery a successful career in the country music industry for more than 50 years, working in radio before shifting to television. Known as the dean of country music broadcasters, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2007 and the Country Music Disc Jockey Hall of Fame in 1989. He notably interviewed a number of country music stars as the host of the Nashville Network talk show Nashville Now over the course of a decade, from 1983 to 1993. Throughout the years, he also hosted the syndicated TV series Pop Goes the Country (1974-1980) and the live show Nashville Alive on WTBS (1981-1983). From 2007 to 2015, he hosted the weekly program Ralph Emery Live on satellite and cable television channel RFD-TV. In 1961, he charted with a song that he recorded. "Hello Fool" peaked at No. 4 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart. It was an answer song to Faron Young's country classic "Hello Walls" (an early hit for songwriter Willie Nelson). Loretta Lynn, T. Graham Brown, The Bellamy Brothers and The Oak Ridge Boys are among the country stars who paid tribute to Mr. Emery on social media. - Billboard, 1/15/22...... Ronnie SpectorLegendary '60s girl group singer Ronnie Spector, the leader of The Ronettes, died on Jan. 12 after a brief battle with cancer according to a statement on her official website. She was 78. Born Veronica Bennett in the Spanish Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan on Aug. 10, 1943 to an Irish-American father and a mother of African-American and Cherokee descent, Spector sang from an early age, joining a family group with sister Estelle Bennett and cousin Nedra Talley in 1957. Initially known as the Darling Sisters, the group first rebranded as Ronnie and the Relatives, and then ultimately The Ronettes. While they achieved some success as live performers in the early '60s and developed a striking image of wildly teased hair and heavy eye makeup, the group s initial run of singles on New York-based Colpix records went nowhere. In 1963, however, they auditioned for Philles Records -- and legendary producer and music biz impresario Phil Spector -- and quickly found their proper home. Spector was ecstatic over Bennett's voice, and initially tried to sign her as a solo act, which the sisters mother shot down. The group officially moved over to Philles, and after some abortive attempts at a first single, connected in 1963 with "Be My Baby." Co-written by Spector with venerated Brill Building duo Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, "Be My Baby" was captivating from its famous (and oft-copied) opening Hal Blaine drum beat, with the lush pop arrangement that followed serving as arguably the definitive example of Spector's famous "Wall of Sound" production technique. The song shot to No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart, and a 2021 Rolling Stone industry poll voted it the 22nd greatest song of all time. They followed it up with "Baby, I Love You," while they also appeared on the label's compilation album A Christmas Gift For You From Phil Spector. The group only released one studio album in their career, 1964's Presenting The Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica. They continued to release singles sporadically until they broke up in 1967, following a tour supporting The Beatles. Spector decided to reform the group in 1974 after divorcing her husband, replacing Bennett and Talley with Chip Fields and Denise Edwards. They released one single -- 1974's "I Wish I Never Saw The Sun Shine -- before the outfit folded once again. Ronnie SpectorSpector went on to launch her own solo career, releasing four solo albums between 1980 and 2016, plus three EPs. Prior to making full-length records, she also put out seven singles, including 1964's "So Young" and 1976's "Paradise." On her 2006 solo record Last Of The Rock Stars she collaborated with the likes of Patti Smith, The Raconteurs, Yeah Yeah Yeahs Nick Zinner and more, while in 2017 she shared a track called "Love Power" under the name Ronnie Spector And The Ronettes. With The Ronettes, Spector has been inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame in 1999 for "Be My Baby," the Vocal Group Hall Of Fame in 2004 and the People s Hall Of Rock And Roll Legends in 2010. In 1986, AOR rocker Eddie Money invited Spector to feature on a new single, "Take Me Home Tonight," which allowed Spector to recreate her epochal"Be My Baby" hook on the chorus (following Money's vocal lead-in, "Listen, honey, just like Ronnie sang... ). The song was an enormous hit, peaking at No. 4 on the Hot 100 the highest-charting single of Money's career, and Spector's highest since the original "Be My Baby" and giving her career a second wind. Spector would never have another hit single, however, she continued to record and perform, with future generations of rock and pop stars citing her as a key inspiration -- including Joey Ramone, who co-produced her 1999 EP "She Talks to Rainbows," and Amy Winehouse, whose throwback image and sound in the mid-2000s suggested nothing so much as a more streetwise and tougher-luck Ronnie Spector. "Ronnie lived her life with a twinkle in her eye, a spunky attitude, a wicked sense of humour and a smile on her face," according to the statement by Spector's family. "She was filled with love and gratitude. Her joyful sound, playful nature and magical presence will live on in all who knew, heard or saw her." Ronnie was married to Phil Spector from 1968 until 1974 and shared three adopted sons with him, and in 1982 she married manager Jonathan Greenfield, with whom she shared two sons, in 1982. Tributes to Spector that began to flow in after news of her death broke include those by Brian Wilson, Stevie Van Zandt and Darlene Love. - Billboard/NME, 1/12/22.

A "mustachioed" cat that bears a resemblance to late Queen frontman Freddie Mercury has gone viral on Instagram after its owners and other Queen fans pointed out that the feline appears to sport a 'tache similar to that of Mercury's -- resulting in cat puns aplenty in the photos' comments sections ("Don't stop me-owww" and "Freddie Purrcury", to name just a couple). Named Mostaccioli -- which means "moustaches" in Italian -- the cat is a female British Shorthair from California whose Instagram page has attracted almost 11,000 followers. The black-and-white cat shares the social media page with her sister Izanami, who is a Scottish Fold. According to iHeart, the profile is managed by their owner Natalie, a veterinarian officer worker. It's said that Natalie discovered a litter of stray kittens in the summer of 2020, and decided to adopt Mostaccioli herself. Through Mostaccioli and Izanami's Instagram page, the owner is raising money for Cats Of San Bernardino -- a non-profit organisation that is "dedicated to saving the lives of cats and kittens in the city of San Bernardino, CA." Natalie has raised $10,000 (£7,365) in donations to date thanks to the online fame and surrounding press coverage of her cats. Freddie Mercury was himself a big cat person, according to his late partner Jim Hutton. "He treated [his] cats like his own children," said Hutton, who died in 2010, in a 2010 BBC 2 documentary. "He would constantly fuss over them, and if any of them came to any harm when Freddie was away, heaven help us. During the day, the cats had the run of the house and grounds, and at night, one of us would round them up and bring them inside," Hutton added. - New Musical Express, 1/11/22...... The Rolling StonesBritain's Royal Mail has honored The Rolling Stones with a set of 12 special stamps. Available on the Royal Mail's website, the series' main set of eight stamps feature the rock icons performing at various global venues throughout their illustrious career, such as London's Hyde Park in July 1969, Dsseldorf, Germany, in Oct. 2017, and Tokyo, Japan, in Mar. 1995. One of the eight stamps features late Stones drummer Charlie Watts performing in Düsseldorf, Germany, in Oct. 2017. An additional four stamps, presented in a miniature sheet, feature two shots of the band and two promotional posters used on worldwide tours over the years. "Few bands in the history of rock have managed to carve out a career as rich and expansive as that of The Rolling Stones. They have created some of modern music's most iconic and inspirational albums, with ground-breaking live performances to match," Royal Mail Director of Public Affairs & Policy David Gold said in a statement. The Rolling Stones become the fourth iconic rock group to be honoured by the Royal Mail, following The Beatles in 2007, Pink Floyd in 2016, and Queen in 2020. The stamps, as well as a wide range of collectors items featuring the special images, are available to pre-order beginning Jan. 11 and will go on general sale on Jan. 20 via Royal Mail. - New Musical Express, 1/11/22...... In other Rolling Stones news, previously unseen footage from the band's infamous headlining gig at the 1969 Altamont Speedway Free Festival in northern California has been released by the Library of Congress. While footage from the Dec. 6, 1969 day of the festival has previously been shown in the Maysles Brothers' documentary Gimme Shelter, the Library of Congress has now shared a home movie on its government site that has never been seen before. The video, which comes without audio, shows Rolling Stones, Gram Parsons, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and more performing and hanging out in the crowd. The footage was acquired by archivist Rick Prelinger in 1996, whose 200,000-reel collection was given to the LOC in 2022. The Library's head of the Moving Image Section, Mike Mashon, wrote in a blog that a technician had recently come across "two reels of silent 8mm reversal positive -- a common home movie format" which was accompanied by a handwritten note that read "Stones in the Park." Attended by approximately 300,000 people and also featuring performances by the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane, the concert was infamously a scene of severe violence when 18-year-old Meridith Hunter was fatally stabbed by members of the Hells Angels motorcycle gang, who were serving as security at the festival. - NME, 1/9/22...... Drummer Brandon Toews, author of the book The Drummer's Toolbox, has paid tribute to Rush drummer Neil Peart on the second anniversary of Peart's death by playing an epic, 24-minute mash-up featuring snippets of every single Rush song. Shared by Toews on Instagram, the mega-mix featuring 175 tracks shows Toews blitzing through the songs on an appropriately massive drum kit, beginning, in chronological order, with "You Can't Fight It" from the band's 1974 self-titled debut, and bashing along to all the original album tracks from the Canadian prog rock trio through their final studio album, 2012's Clockwork Angels. "Today marks two years since Neil Peart's passing. Neil was one of my biggest influences growing up -- I remember spending hours upon hours trying to learn @rush songs like 'Tom Sawyer' and 'La Villa Strangiato,' and watching all of the Rush concert DVDs over and over to study Neil's playing," Toews posted on Instagram on Jan. 8. - Billboard, 1/10/22...... '70s classic rocker Edgar Winter has honored his late brother Johnny Winter with Brother Johnny, a new 17-track record featuring covers of Johnny's songs by the likes of himself, Ringo Starr, ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons, Foo Fighters' Taylor Hawkins, and others. To go alongside the announcement of Brother Johnny, Edgar has released a cover of Chuck Berry's iconic rock anthem "Johnny B Goode" with Eagles member Joe Walsh and shared it on YouTube. "To this day, when I think of rock 'n' roll, I think of Chuck Berry and 'Johnny B. Goode'. It's not only Johnny's story, but also every kid's story who ever picked up a guitar, coming from humble beginnings with the idea of making it big someday. So of course, it has to be on this album," explained Edgar. Brother Johnny will drop on Apr. 15 via Quarto Valley Records. - NME, 1/10/22...... Paul McCartney has paid tribute to his late friend and BBC DJ Janice Long, who died on Christmas Day at her home at age 66 after battling a short illness. "I was very sad to hear that my old Liverpudlian friend Janice Long has passed away," Sir Paul posted on Twitter on Jan. 7. "Janice was a fun-loving lady who always had a twinkle in her eye. She was very knowledgeable about the music scene and whenever we met it was a pleasure and we had a great laugh... My sympathies go out to her family and friends. We have all lost a great Scouse girl, but I will always have very fond memories of her and of the times we spent together. Paul x," he added. In her career, the beloved broadcaster and champion of new music also became the first woman to regularly host Top Of The Pops, fronting the TV show for five years, and later had a long-running show on BBC Radio 2 until 2017. She also worked for the likes of BBC Radio London, BBC 6 Music, BBC WM, BBC Radio Wales, Greatest Hits Radio and Radio X, and set up her own station Crash FM in Liverpool in 1995. - NME, 1/7/22...... David BowieDavid Bowie fans flocked to social media on Jan. 8, what would have been the late rock icon's 75th birthday, to pay tribute to the highly influential musician who died following an 18-month battle with cancer in 2016. Bowie's widow Iman Abdulmajid paid tribute to her late husband by sharing a quote from Canadian poet and novelist Margaret Atwood: "I exist in two places, here and where you are," while Lenny Kravitz posted a photo of he and Bowie, accompanied by the caption: "Happy Birthday to The Thin White Duke." The official John Lennon Twitter account posted Bowie's performance of "Fame" with the Beatles legend on the Cher show in 1975, writing: "Happy Birthday David Bowie." Meanwhile, the Madame Tussauds exhibit in London announced they will celebrate Bowie's 75th birthday by unveiling a new figure of David -- their second to feature at the Baker Street attraction -- later in 2022. Madame Tussauds have also released new images taken during Bowie's 1983 sitting with their artists for his original figure. Also, a 50th anniversary picture disc vinyl reissue of Bowie's fourth album, Hunky Dory, was released on Jan. 7 featuring a poster with annotated back cover art. ISO Records/Parlophone Records is also celebrating the milestone birthday by sharing two previously unreleased versions of Bowie's "Shadow Man," from 2000 and 1970. The songs feature on the late artist's "lost" Toy album, which includes re-recorded and revamped versions of some of Bowie's earliest tracks. Bowie's Toy album also features in the David Bowie 5: Brilliant Adventure (1992-2001) box set, which was released back in November. - NME, 1/8/22...... A U.S. District Judge in Manhattan has ruled an ex-member of The Rascals cannot block his former bandmates from using the name for a reunion tour. Eddie Brigati accused two of his former bandmates -- Felix Cavaliere and Gene Cornish -- of breaching contracts and infringing trademarks by using the "Rascals" name as part of a 2018 tour, but Judge John G. Koeltl dismissed those accusations in a ruling on Jan. 6. The current lawsuit was filed by Cavaliere and Cornish through their entity Beata Music LLC in 2018, seeking judicial approval to use "Rascals" in a reunion tour after Brigati declined to participate and objected to their use of the name. Brigati later filed counterclaims, accusing Cavaliere and Cornish of wrongdoing by using and seeking to register the trademark. The judge also rejected Brigati's claim that Cavaliere and Cornish violated trademark law, saying there was no chance consumers would be confused when they read the carefully worded tour name: "Felix Cavaliere and Gene Cornish's Rascals." He also said Brigati simply waited far too long to file his case. Judge Koeltl rejected the argument that Cavaliere and Cornish breached contracts by using the name, ruling that various agreements among the bandmembers either did not apply to the current situation or that Brigati had not been a party to them. The Rascals, originally The Young Rascals, were a New Jersey rock act that released a trio chart-toppers in the late 1960s: "Good Lovin'", "Groovin'" and "People Got to Be Free." The band -- Brigati, Cavaliere, Cornish and Dino Danelli -- disbanded in 1972 but has toured occasionally and was later inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. - Billboard, 1/7/22...... Saturday Night Fever and Grease star John Travolta took to Instagram on Jan. 7 to share his "dizziness" that his 21-year-old daughter Ella Travolta is making her official foray into music. "I'm so excited for Ella! Her song 'Dizzy' is out right now! The link is in my stories and bio!," the 67-year old proud dad wrote, sharing on Instagram a video with multiple cuts of Ella singing and playing the piano while softly singing the track. Ella shared that she was just as excited as her father in her own post about her music debut. "So happy and excited to say that my first single 'Dizzy' is out now!!!," she captioned the same video on her Instagram account. "It's been a long time coming but I'm still that 14 year old weird girl at heart and I love it," she added. John Travolta was 22, a year older than his daughter is now, in July 1976 when his debut single, the ballad "Let Her In," reached the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100. He returned to the Top 10 two years later with a pair of duets with his Grease co-star Olivia Newton-John: "You're the One That I Want" and "Summer Nights." Ella first teased the arrival of a music project, which is currently untitled, on Nov. 27 in an Instagram post. "There is something I've been working on for the past year that is very dear to my heart," she said. "I wanted to share a part of a song that I wrote that will be on my EP coming out next year. Very excited (and nervous). Hope you like it!," she added. The father and daughter previously collaborated in 2009 for Disney's ensemble comedy film Old Dogs -- in which Ella starred alongside her dad in the movie as Emily Greer -- on the track "Every Little Step I Take." - Billboard, 1/7/22...... Bob Dylan has asked a New York appeals court to reject efforts to revive a lawsuit that sought a cut from his huge catalog sale to Universal Music Publishing Group, calling it an "opportunistic attempt" at an "unjustified windfall." Filed in 2021 by the widow of a songwriter Jacques Levy -- the co-writer of "Hurricane" and nine other songs on Dylan's 1976 album Desire -- the lawsuit sought a portion of the estimated $300 million sale. But a judge ruled in August that Levy had signed away any ownership rights to the songs when they were written. With Levy's estate currently appealing that ruling, attorneys for Dylan filed his formal response on Jan. 5, calling it an "opportunistic attempt to rewrite a 45-year-old employment contract to obtain a windfall payment that the contract does not allow." The case was filed in Jan. 2021 by Levy's widow, Claudia Levy, a month after news broke that Dylan had sold his entire songwriting catalog of more than 600 songs to UMPG, and dismissed a few months later, with the judge saying that Levy was entitled only to his ongoing royalty payments, not a cut of the rights sale. - Billboard, 1/6/22...... Elvis CostelloIn a new interview with the UK paper The Telegraph, Elvis Costello called on radio stations to stop playing his controversial 1979 single "Oliver's Army." The track, which is taken from his third studio album Armed Forces, has attracted criticism over the years for using the "N-word," in the lyrics. Now Costello says he doesn't want radio stations to play the track at all. "On the last tour, I wrote a new verse about censorship, but what's the point of that? So I've decided I'm not going to play it. [Bleeping the word out] is a mistake. They're making it worse by bleeping it for sure. Because they're highlighting it then. Just don't play the record!" he told the paper. "You know what. It [not playing it] would do me a favour. Because when I fall under a bus, they'll play 'She', 'Good Year For The Roses' and 'Oliver's Army'," he added. "I'll die, and they will celebrate my death with two songs I didn't write. What does that tell you?" Costello and his band The Imposters will release their latest album, The Boy Named If [And Other Children's Stories] on Jan. 14. They'll kick off a UK tour in support of the set at the Brighton Dome on June 5, 2022, before wrapping up at London's Hammersmith Eventim Apollo on June 23. - NME, 1/10/22...... On Jan. 5 Billy Joel took to Twitter to announced that his Jan. 14 show at New York's Madison Square Garden will now be taking place on Aug. 24, making it the second postponement for the event. "Nothing is more important to me than the safety and well-being of my band, crew, and the fans; so due to unfortunate COVID-related circumstances, we made the decision to reschedule the January 14th concert at MSG," Joel wrote, along with a picture with further information regarding the postponement. "Please be advised that the upcoming Billy Joel concert originally scheduled to take place at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, May 2, 2020 that was postponed to Friday, January 14, 2022 has now been rescheduled to Wednesday, August 24, 2022," the text in the image read. "Your tickets will be valid for the new rescheduled show date on Wednesday, August 24, 2022 and will not need to be exchanged." Joel, 72, has a string of shows scheduled in the upcoming weeks: He's due to perform at Hard Rock Live in Florida on Jan. 28 and will return to Madison Square Garden on Feb. 12 and March 24. In November, Madison Square Garden added an 80th show to Joel's monthly residency slated for May 14, 2022 (though subject to change in the event of a playoff game conflict). Prior to the new postponement, the show marked Joel's 126th performance at the Garden. - Billboard, 1/6/22...... On Jan. 6 The Eagles added a string of new dates to the US leg of their upcoming "Hotel California" tour. New stops on the tour, which kicks off on Feb. 19 in Savannah, Ga., include Cleveland (3/17), Chicago (3/19), Indianapolis (3/22), Detroit (3/24), Pittsburgh (3/26), Philadelphia (3/28), Columbus, Oh. (4/19), Buffalo, NY (4/21), Belmont Park, NY (4/23), Nashville (4/28), Houston (5/14), Tulsa (5/16) and Salt Lake City (5/25). In November, The Eagles announced they would be heading out on the road in celebration of their 1976 LP Hotel California. Each stop will feature a choir and an orchestra accompanying the veteran rockers for a run through of the iconic album before an interval followed by a set of the band's greatest hits. In October, the California country rockers confirmed huge shows across the UK and Europe as part of their "Fifty Years" tour. They will also be joining Elton John, Pearl Jam and Duran Duran and more at the BST Hyde Park 2022 festival. - NME, 1/7/22...... Ozzy Osbourne's wife/manager Sharon Osbourne has shared a preview video for Ozzy's new "CryptoBatz" non-fungible tokens (NFTs) collection on Twitter. "[Ozzy] started thinking, he started working," she said. "He was locked away in his library for weeks working on something big. He teamed up with a company called Sutter Systems. Their mission was to create an NFT project that wasn't another celebrity rug pull. They wanted to build something wonderful, something full of utility, something unique. They've called them... CryptoBatz," she adds. As Sharon narrates the preview, Ozzy is seen rummaging around his workspace, making phone calls and rifling through paper copies of various bat designs. The upcoming 'CryptoBatz' range will be comprised of 9,666 unique NFT bats in reference to one of the most infamous moments in Ozzy's career. Back in 1982, the musician bit the head off a bat on stage while performing in Des Moines, Iowa. The collection will mark an innovative first in the NFT scene, which grew rapidly over 2021. Each CryptoBat will have the ability to "bite" another NFT in a user's digital wallet and mutate with it to create another token. - NME, 1/11/22...... The US novelty terracotta planter company Chia Pet has announced that Willie Nelson will be honored with his own Chia Pet planter. Nelson's Chia Pet invites its owner to grow chia seeds in the grooved sections of the planter, with the desired end result -- which is achieved in a couple of weeks -- being the green chia sprouts resembling Nelson's long hair. An image of Nelson's Chia Pet can be seen on the Chia Pet site. "Love mine so much! The only thing that would make it better is if it came with cannabis seeds," posted one fan on Instagram. - NME, 1/7/22...... Dead & Company announced on Jan. 7 the outright cancellation of their destination festival, "Playing In The Sand," less than 24 hours before gates were set to open. The event -- which takes place annually along Mexico's Riviera Cancun -- was initially scheduled to run over two weekends, with the first starting on Jan. 7 nd running through to Jan. 10. The second leg of the stint would have kicked off on Jan. 13 and run until Jan. 14. Now the band has shared an Instagram post saying: "With much sadness and after great consideration of every possible scenario, [both weekends of the festival] have now been canceled by CID Presents due to the spiking COVID-19 cases." The band said they and the promoters had "tried everything possible to bring normalcy and to deliver a great experience and amazing music, but with each day it became increasingly clear that canceling is the correct thing to do for the fans and for our crew." Ticketholders will be sent an email outlining their options for refunds. - NME, 1/7/22...... A rare promo cassette tape of Prince's The Black Album is up for sale. The album was originally intended for release in 1987, and Prince requested that it be pulled days before its release because he thought it was "evil," and it was subsequently replaced with the pop record, Lovesexy. RR Auction house says the cassette is "quite possibly" one of only two cassette copies in existence, and so far 17 bids have been made with the price currently set at $3,384. Bidding ends on Jan. 13. Three vinyl copies of the record previously sold for upwards of $20,000 (£15,000) each. - Music-News.com, 1/7/22...... TMZ.com is reporting that the cause of actress Betty White's death on New Year's Eve, at age 99, was a stroke she had suffered nearly a week earlier, according to a death certificate they obtained. According to the document, issued by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, the stroke occurred six days prior to White's death. The health agency and the county Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk's office, where vital records are kept, both declined to comment. Jeff Witjas, White's longtime agent, said in a statement: "Betty passed in her sleep peacefully without pain. To me this is the most important thing and brings me comfort as her dear friend. Anything else is private to Betty." TMZ cited unnamed sources as saying White had remained alert and coherent following her stroke, before dying in her sleep at home. - Reuters, 1/10/22...... Michael LangMichael Lang, the legendary co-creater of the 1969 Woodstock Music & Art Fair, died on Jan. 8 from a rare form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma at Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York City. He was 77. Lang worked alongside partners Joel Rosenman, Capitol Records' Artie Kornfeld and John P. Roberts for the 1969 festival held at Max Yasgur's 600-acre dairy farm in Bethel, NY. The three-day lineup included icons such as Richie Havens, Santana, Janis Joplin, the Grateful Dead, Sly and the Family Stone and The Who, among others. After Woodstock, he started a record company in 1971 called Just Sunshine Records, which first signed Karen Dalton followed by Billy Joel. He later went into management, primarily working with Joe Cocker for about 15 years. In 1994, he helped promote Woodstock's 25th anniversary with Woodstock '94. In 2019, Lang planned to host "Woodstock 50," with a lineup including Miley Cyrus, Dead & Company, Jay-Z and others. The event was ultimately cancelled following a variety of permit and production issues, venue relocations and artists backing out. Lang is survived by his wife Tamara, their sons, Harry and Laszlo, and his daughters, LariAnn, Shala and Molly. - Billboard, 1/9/22...... Calvin Simon, a founding member of Parliament-Funkadelic and a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member, died on Jan. 8 of as yet undisclosed causes. He was 79. Born in 1942 in West Virginia, where he sang with his church choir, Simon relocated to New Jersey with his family as a teen. He worked as a barber, and by the late 1950s, Simon joined the group originally known as the Parliaments, first formed as a doo-wop quintet with fellow barbers George Clinton and Grady Thomas and customers Ray Davis and Fuzzy Haskins. Simon, who was drafted in 1967 to serve in Vietman, went on to sing with the group that later became known as Parliament-Funkadelic. He eventually parted ways with the group due to financial disputes.A long with other members of Parliament-Funkadelic, Simon was inducted by Prince into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. Simon later released several gospel projects, and in 2019, he, Clinton, and the other members of Parliament-Funkadelic received a lifetime achievement award from the Recording Academy. - Billboard, 1/8/22...... Lyricist Marilyn Bergman, who teamed with her husband, Alan Bergman, to win three Academy Awards as one of the most revered writing tandems in the annals of movie music history, died on Jan. 8 in her Los Angeles home, according to family rep Ken Sunshine. She was 93. The cause of death was respiratory failure (non-COVID related). Her husband, 96, survives her. Bergman, whose work includes such classics as "The Windmills of Your Mind," "Nice 'n' Easy," "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" and "The Way We Were," and her husband worked extensively for the movies, writing the lyrics for three of the five songs nominated for the best song Academy Award in 1983 -- "How Do You Keep the Music Playing?" (from Best Friends), "If We Were in Love" (from Yes, Giorgio), and "It Might Be You" (from Tootsie). In all, the Bergmans received 16 Oscar nominations. During the period from 1969-74, they couple received one Academy Award nom each year, which they shared with their composing partners: "Windmills of Your Mind," "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?" "Pieces of Dreams," "All His Children," "Marmalade, Molasses and Honey" and "The Way We Were." The Bergmans were voted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1980. - Billboard, 1/8/22...... Burke Shelley, singer and bassist of the Welsh hard rock band Budgie, has died at the age of 71 of as yet undisclosed causes. Born in Canton, Cardiff, UK, in 1950, Shelley co-founded Budgie in 1967 with Tony Bourge (guitar/vocals) and Ray Phillips (drums). The group released 10 studio albums between 1971 and 1982. Budgie stopped touring in 1987 before reforming in the mid-1990s and 2000s. The band's 11th and final full-length record, You're All Living in Cuckooland, came out in 2006. The group influenced hard rock and metal acts such as Metallica, Iron Maiden and Megadeth, all of whom have covered Budgie previously. Lars Ulrich and co. offered up a live take on "Breadfan" at one of Metallica's 40th anniversary shows in San Francisco in December. Shelley had battled Stickler syndrome -- a genetic disorder -- in recent years, as well as suffering two aortic aneurysms. - NME, 1/11/22...... Dwayne HickmanActor Dwayne Hickman, who starred as the hopelessly in love high school kid on the popular CBS comedy series The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, died on Jan. 9 at his Los Angeles home of complications from Parkinson's disease. He was 87. Dobie Gillis, which ran for 147 episodes from 1959-63, starred the fresh-faced, crew-cut Mr. Hickman (25 years old when the series began) as a student always looking to date the most beautiful, unattainable girls. Future Gilligan's Island star Bob Denver played his pal, beatnik Maynard G. Krebs. Dobie's quest for love often was capsized by his grocer father (played by Frank Faylen) or something goofy that Maynard had done. The show began with a Dobie monologue such as this: "My name is Dobie Gillis and I love girls. I'm not a wolf, mind you. A wolf wants lots of girls, I just want one." Mr. Hickman also performed in films, most notably as a con man in Cat Ballou (1965) opposite best actor Oscar winner Lee Marvin and Jane Fonda and in the 1965 beach party movies How to Stuff a Wild Bikini and Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine. During the rebellious 1960s and early '70s however, with the Vietnam protests and hippie movement in full force, Mr. Hickman's clean-cut persona was out of vogue, and his acting career faltered. Born on May 18, 1934, in Los Angeles, Mr. Hickman began his acting career at age 6, appearing as a youngster in such films as Heaven Only Knows (1947), The Boy With the Green Hair (1948) and Mighty Joe Young (1948). He earned a degree from Loyola Marymount University (Denver was a fellow classmate) and during college turned down a job at a utility company to play Cummings' nephew Chuck MacDonald in 150 episodes of The Bob Cummings Show, which ran for five seasons on NBC and CBS. It all led to Mr. Hickman's gig on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, which was based on a 1951 collection of short stories written by Max Shulman. His other TV credits include The Lone Ranger, The Loretta Young Show, Wagon Train, Ironside, The Flying Nun, The Mod Squad, Combat, Ellery Queen, Murder, She Wrote and Clueless. He had a role as a lighting emporium owner in the 1998 film A Night at the Roxbury. He wrote a 1994 autobiography, Forever Dobie: The Many Lives of Dwayne Hickman, and developed another talent, painting. He had a penchant for picturesque buildings and vibrant flowers. Mr. Hickman married to actress Joan Roberts, whom he met while she was co-starring in TV's Private Benjamin, in 1983. The couple had a son, Albert. He had another son, John, from a previous marriage to actress Carol Christensen. His older brother is Darryl Hickman, a former child actor who appeared in such films as The Grapes of Wrath and later became a program executive at CBS. - The Hollywood Reporter, 1/9/22.