Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on May 1st, 2022



A musical stage version of director Cameron Crowe's '70s-themed 2000 film Almost Famous is almost ready for Broadway and will likely make its debut in the fall or winter of the 2022-2023 season. Like the film, the stage version is loosely based on Crowe's experiences as a cub reporter for Rolling Stone magazine and centers on William Miller, a 15-year-old scribe in the 1970s who gets the assignment of a lifetime when Rolling Stone sends him on tour with a fictitious up-and-coming band named Stillwater. The show had its world-premiere run in 2019 at San Diego's The Old Globe after going through a late 2019 spring developmental lab in New York City. Directed by Jeremy Herrin, with a book by Crowe and with original music and lyrics by Tom Kitt, the stage version was first announced in 2018. The original film, with Patrick Fugit in the title role, earned a best screenplay win for Crowe at the 2000 Oscars and best supporting actress nominations for stars Kate Hudson and Frances McDormand. - The Hollywood Reporter, 4/30/22...... Elvis PresleyAs director Baz Luhrmann's upcoming Elvis Presley biopic Elvis is set to open in U.S. theaters on June 24, Elvis's widow Priscilla Presley took to Facebook on Apr. 29 to praise Luhrmann as well as Austin Butler, who portrays the late King of Rock & Roll. "This story is about Elvis and Colonel Parker's relationship," Presley posted. "It is a true story told brilliantly and creatively that only Baz, in his unique artistic way, could have delivered. Austin Butler, who played Elvis is outstanding. Halfway through the film Jerry [Schilling] (Elvis and Priscilla's longtime friend) and I looked at each other and said WOW!!! Bravo to him - he knew he had big shoes to fill. He was extremely nervous playing this part. I can only imagine." Priscilla continued by sharing her memories of Elvis' manager Col. Tom Parker, portrayed in the film by Tom Hanks. "There was two sides to Colonel, Jerry and I witnessed both. The story, as we all know, does not have a happy ending. But I think you will understand a little bit more of Elvis' journey, penned by a directer who put his heart and soul and many hours into this film." Warner Bros. screened footage of the film in late April at the CinemaCon festival. - The Hollywood Reporter, 4/30/22...... The fan ballot for inductees into the class of 2022 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees was revealed on Apr. 30, and rapper Eminem, 1980's hitmakers Duran Duran, and distaff rocker Pat Benatar came out on top. Duran Duran, a first-time Rock Hall nominee in 2022, came out on top with nearly 934,000 votes, which was 250,000 more votes than second highest artist on the fan ballot, Eminem (684,000). Finishing just 50,000 votes behind the Detroit rapper, two-time nominee Benatar took third place on the fan ballot with 631,000. The fourth and fifth spots went to Eurythmics (442,000) and Dolly Parton (394,000) respectively. Finishing just outside the Top Five were three-time nominee Judas Priest and first-time nominees Carly Simon and Lionel Richie. Winning the fan ballot does not ensure an induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. A body of more than 1,000 artists, industry members and historians will help decide which five acts out of the 17 will progress into the final round of induction consideration. Other names vying for a place in the Rock Hall include A Tribe Called Quest, Devo, Beck, Rage Against The Machine, MC5, Dionne Warwick, Fela Kuti, New York Dolls and Kate Bush. In related news, Dolly Parton has reversed her stance on being inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame and said she will accept the honor should she be voted in. In an interview on NPR's Morning Edition on Apr. 29, the country superstar was asked what she would do if she still received enough votes to enter her into the RRHOF. "Well, I'll accept gratefully," she replied. "I will say 'thanks' and accept that." In March, Dolly shared a statement saying that, while she was "extremely flattered and grateful" to be in the running, she didn't feel that she had "earned the right." "I really do not want votes to be split because of me, so I must respectfully bow out," she wrote. - New Musical Express, 4/30/22...... As David Bowie's iconic persona Ziggy Stardust marked 50 years of existence on Apr. 28 -- the date "Starman" from his fifth album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars was released as a single in 1972 -- Parlophone Records announced on Apr. 28 that two special edition vinyl LP's containing all 11 of the original's tracks will be made available online on June 17 -- 50 years plus one day after it was originally released. Using the same master recordings and promotional artwork from the original album, the first of the limited vinyls will be a picture disc displaying Ziggy himself posing in a blue jumpsuit. The second will be a half-speed mastered LP, which means the music takes twice as long to be etched into each disc, producing a fuller, more accurate sound. According to a press release, the records were cut by John Webber at AIR Studios. Bowie's breakthrough album, Ziggy Stardust peaked at No. 21 on the Billboard Hot 200 album chart and rocketed the influential pop pioneer to superstardom. - Billboard, 4/29/22...... A 40th-anniversary reissue of Rush's 1981 album Moving Pictures has re-entered the Billboard Top Album Sales chart at No. 2 and hit No. 1 on the Top Rock Albums, Top Hard Rock Albums and Catalog Albums charts for the first time. It also re-entered the Billboard Hot 200 at No. 11 -- the band's highest rank in nearly a decade. Moving Pictures sold 18,000 copies in the U.S. in the week ending Apr. 21, according to Luminate, an increase of 7,847% compared to its sales in the previous week. It marks the band's best sales week in over six years, since R40 Live sold 24,000 copies in its debut week, when it arrived at No. 14 on Top Album Sales (Dec. 12, 2015-dated chart). The 40th-anniversary reissue of Moving Pictures is available in multiple remastered editions, including a deluxe box vinyl set that sells for $99. - Billboard, 4/28/22...... The Beach BoysCapitol Records and UMe have announced a newly remastered and expanded edition of The Beach Boys' career-spanning greatest hits collection, Sounds Of Summer: The Very Best Of The Beach Boys, will hit stores on June 17 as part of a year-long 60th anniversary Beach Boys celebration. The new release will feature 50 more of the band's songs that "span their earliest hits to deeper fan-favorite cuts from their 1962 debut album, Surfin' Safari through to 1989's Still Cruisin'," according to a press release. It continues: "The collection boasts 24 new mixes including two first-time stereo mixes, plus 22 new-and-improved stereo mixes, which in some cases feature the latest in digital stereo extraction technology, allowing for the team to separate the original mono backing tracks for the first time." The new collection will be available digitally, via a 3-CD soft-pack, and as a Super Deluxe Edition 6-LP vinyl boxed set on 180-gram black vinyl. A trailer for the new releases has been shared on YouTube. After this, Capitol/UMe will release the next chapter in the BB's archival releases, 1972's Carl and the Passions - So Tough and 1973's Holland. The Beach Boys are also participating in a new feature length documentary that is currently in the works. "This is a huge milestone that we're all very honored to have achieved. And to our incredible fans, forever and new, we look forward to sharing even more throughout the year," the band said about their 60th anniversary celebration in a press release. - NME, 4/29/22....... Paul McCartney wowed fans on the opener of his "Got Back" tour in Spokane, Wash., on Apr. 28 by performing the Beatles' classic "I've Got a Feeling" with footage of John Lennon from director Peter Jackson's recent The Beatles: Get Back documentary in the background. McCartney began the song strumming a guitar with a swirl of pastel colors on the screen behind him and then elicited gasps of elation when mid-way through when Lennon's voice came in for his verse as Macca turned toward the screen to watch the footage from the Beatles' legendary Jan. 1969 rooftop gig atop the band's Apple Corps HQ in London. "Everybody had a hard year/ Everybody had a good time/ Everybody had a wet dream/ Everybody saw the sunshine," Lennon sang in the footage as McCartney sang counter-melodies. After the performance, McCartney explained how it came together, telling the audience, "So, Peter Jackson, the director of the Get Back film, he texts me one day. And he says, 'we can extract John's voice. And he can sing with you live.'" The crowd roared at the idea and McCartney, 79, shrugged and added, "I thought, 'Oh, yeah!" The gig marked McCartney's return to the stage following the pandemic and he was overjoyed to be performing once again as he treated the crowd to hits from the Beatles, Wings and his solo career. He said: "They said 'get back', and we got back. And it feels cool. "You'll have to give me a moment to myself, just to let me take this in." - Billboard/Music-News.com, 4/29/22...... In other Beatles-related news, John Lennon's son Julian Lennon says he's had a "love-hate relationship" with the Beatles classic "Hey Jude." Julian, the son of John and his first wife Cynthia Lennon said the song serves as a "dark reminder" about his parents' divorce after it was written for him by Sir Paul McCartney. Speaking on the SiriusXM radio show Debatable,Julian explained: "I wasn't really aware of what was going on except when I started seeing Yoko (Ono) around, obviously that made a bit of an impact and apparently I struggled with the separation a great deal at five. "I would have raging moments of being a screaming child but those moments haven't stuck with me. For me it has always been about moving forward, protecting mum the best that I could and making her proud, keeping an eye on her, arms around her, protecting her all the way up until the end, she was my priority." Julian also explained how the track inspired the name of his latest album, titled Jude: "The album allowed me to explain what 'Hey Jude' meant to me because the fact of the matter is it was a love-hate relationship, I thought I had heard it enough. I am thankful to Paul for writing it and putting some hope behind what was to come, but the downside of it was it was a dark reminder of what actually went down at that time, the separation." Lennon revealed how he was filled with pride after watching the recent Fab Four documentary The Beatles: Get Back. He said: "After watching the documentary there was such pride seeing dad the way I used to know him as a kid, remembering him and seeing him being a goofy b------ but also being such a great writer, performer and singer." - Music-News.com, 4/30/22...... Ozzy OsbourneIn a tearful interview with British television network Talk TV on Apr. 28, Ozzy Osbourne's wife Sharon Osbourne revealed that Ozzy has tested positive for Covid-19 after two years of avoiding the virus. Sharon said Ozzy caught the virus and that she would have to temporarily leave her new gig as a host on The Talk to be with him in America as he recovers. "I spoke to him, and he's okay, she told the network of her husband, before saying how unlucky the timing of his diagnosis was. "I can't believe my luck that I'm missing the show, I've only been there three days!" With the 73-year-old former Black Sabbath frontman's string of health issues these past few years, it makes sense why Sharon is feeling emotional over his new Covid case. Ozzy revealed he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2020, and prior to that he both suffered a fall requiring him to undergo surgery and contracted a potentially deadly staph infection. "I am very worried about Ozzy right now," she confessed, wiping tears with a tissue. "We've gone two years without him catching COVID and it's just Ozzy's luck he would get it now." Concerned as she is, Sharon is confident Ozzy will recover quickly and she'll be back on The Talk soon. "It'll take me a week to get my old man back on his feet again, and I will be back in a week," she said. "We're going to get him a negative test by next week." And in the meantime, her plans are to "hold him and kiss him, but with about three masks on." Sharon's interview can be viewed on Twitter.com. Meanwhile, Sharon has announced that she and Ozzy are planning to welcome "two Ukrainian families into the unused properties" on their country estate in the UK. During a new interview with The Sunday Times, Sharon criticized the UK government over the issues relating to processing refugees who have fled Ukraine as Russia's invasion of the country continues. "I think it's heinous what [Prime Minister Boris Johnson] is doing," she told the paper. "Ozzy's very well known in Ukraine, I think they'd be happy," Sharon added. - Billboard/NME, 4/28/22...... Speaking of Covid-19, KISS' Gene Simmons has once again called out those who are skeptical about getting the coronavirus vaccine. Simmons has long been a staunch advocate for the vaccine, and in a new interview with iHollywoodTV he's explained that he's still of the opinion that anti-vaxxers are posing a risk to themselves and to all those around them. He said: "Look, I've always been a safe guy. I've never been run over by a car. But then whenever I get to the street corner, I do what I was taught, which is look both ways, cross at the green, not in between, and all that stuff. So cars never hit me -- surprise! The pandemic is the same thing. You've gotta get a flu shot. If you go to school, you get all kinds of... A polio shot, all kinds of shots. Which may not be life-threatening. The pandemic and COVID could be life-threatening, especially if you have predisposed other diseases, you could die. A million Americans have died. Close to 10 million worldwide have died because of this. I know the conspiracy idiots are telling you that it's not true -- it is. So I got vaccinated twice, then had a booster, and I'm about to get another boost. This is gonna be a fact of life. Every year I go and get my flu vaccine -- I get the shots. Because even though flu might not be life-threatening, I don't wanna deal with the headaches and stuff." Simmons' interview can be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 4/28/22...... The Who's Pete Townshend will release a new Audible Original podcast Words + Music, Somebody Saved Me on May 6. Townshend says the two-hour Words + Music covers some material he's discussed in the past, but that the opportunity to create a long-form podcast, in which he can weave his story in between poignant performances of some of his favorite solo songs, was what convinced him to participate. "I loved this format, because it enabled me to approach the songs and the music that I was writing in that five-year period [through] what was going on in the music," says Townshend about 1978-1982 stretch he discusses -- which included the release of his solo albums Empty Glass (1980) and All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes (1982). One of the other perks for Townshend was working with revered music journalist and Somebody Saved Me co-producer Bill Flanagan, an old friend who also helped shepherd the VH1 Storytellers episode he recorded in 2000. Townshend's Audible Original Words + Music, Somebody Saved Me will begin streaming for free on Audible.com beginning on May 6 in the U.S. A preview of the installmant can be heard on Soundcloud.com. - Billboard, 4/28/22...... Stevie NicksOn Apr. 26 Stevie Nicks announced a string of summer solo shows throughout this June. The Fleetwood Mac frontwoman will play Ridgefield, Wash. (6/10), Mountain View, Calif. (6/12), Salt Lake City (6/16) and Noblesville, Ind. (6/21). Nicks has already been confirmed for various US festivals in 2022, including Bonnaroo, Sound On Sound, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Eddie Vedder's Ohana Festival. Announcing the gigs on Instagram, Nicks told fans to "stay tuned for more" live dates. The singer was forced to cancel all of her scheduled tour dates in 2021 due to Covid-19 concerns. - NME, 4/26/22...... Veteran producer T Bone Burnett announced on Apr. 26 that he has been in the studio with frequent collaborator Bob Dylan, and the two have been working toward re-recording some of the rock legend's classic songs. The revisited recordings were created to showcase the brand-new high-fidelity medium called "Ionic Originals." The introduction of Ionic Originals debuts "the first breakthrough in analog sound reproduction in more than 70 years," according to a press release. Few details have been released regarding when we can expect these new Dylan recordings to come out and what songs were re-recorded, or what hardware will be needed to play them. Burnett has long been committed to advocating for the sonic excellence of analog sound. The Grammy-winning producer's new company, NeoFidelity Inc., will release a series of Ionic Originals, with the Dylan recordings serving as the company's first offering. Though the format they will be released in resembles vinyl, it will be a whole new medium altogether. A photo accompanying the announcement shows Burnett holding an aluminum platter on which Ionic Originals releases will be available. - Billboard, 4/26/22...... '70s Saturday Night Live star Dan Aykroyd and his wife of 39 years, actress Donna Dixon, have split up after 39 years together. The Hollywood stars married just months after meeting on the set of Doctor Detroit in 1983 but have announced that they have split up because they are now on "separate life paths" but will remain legally married. "After 39 years as a couple we are now on separate life paths," the couple told People magazine in a joint statement released on Apr. 29. "We remain legally married, co-parents, co-workers and business partners. This is our choice in loving friendship." Following their wedding, Aykroyd, 69, and Dixon, 64, went on to appear in a slew of movies in the mid-to-late 1980s and early 1990s together including Twilight Zone: The Movie, Spies Like Us, The Couch Trip and Exit to Eden. The couple share daughters Belle, 28, Stella, 24, and 32-year-old singer Danielle -- better known by her stage name of Vera Solo -- together. - Bang Showbiz, 4/30/22...... Klaus Schulze, one of the pioneering figures of '70s electronic music, died on Apr. 26 "after a long illness, but yet suddenly and unexpectedly," according to his family. He was 74. Schulze emerged from Berlin at the turn of the '70s, when "Krautrock" was first starting to come to international prominence, as drummer for eventual cosmic greats Tangerine Dream -- then with his own group Ash Ra Tempel, formed alongside future proto-electronic trailblazer Manuel Gettsching. Shortly after, Schulze launched his solo career, releasing his debut LP in 1972 with the drone symphony Irrlicht, hailed today as a classic of its genre. The composer-producer would continue to release acclaimed early electronic sets throughout the '70s, including 1973's Cyborg and 1976's Moondawn, with his layered, atmospheric work from this period ultimately proving hugely influential on later genres like ambient, new age and trance. He also performed as part of the loose collective The Cosmic Jokers, whose recorded jam sessions would be released on a series of full-length records in the mid-'70s. - Billboard, 4/27/22...... Randy Rand, the founding member and bassist of the '80s glam metal band Autograph, has died. "It is with great sorrow and heavy hearts to announce the unexpected passing of our cherished friend and founding member of Autograph, Randy Rand," Autograph wrote on Instagram. "At the time of death, Randy was surrounded by his beautiful and infinite love, Regina Rand and family." Rand got his start in the '70s in California during the Sunset Strip era, later becoming an established and seasoned studio musician before later forming Autograph in Pasadena in 1984 with Steve Plunkett (vocals), Keni Richards (drummer), Steve Lynch (guitarist) and Steven Ishram (keyboard). The band's debut album, Sign In Please, arrived in October of 1984 and spawned the band's signature song, "Turn Up the Radio," which peaked at No. 29 on the Billboard Hot 100. The album also peaked at No. 29 on the Billboard 200, and enjoyed 29 weeks on the all-genre chart. - Billboard, 4/27/22...... Andrew WoolfolkAndrew Woolfolk, the longtime saxophonist with Earth, Wind & Fire, has died. He was 71. Woolfolk's EW&F bandmate Philip Bailey took to Instagram on Apr. 26 to confirm the news, sharing a photo of the duo with the caption, "I met him in High School, and we quickly became friends and band mates. Andrew Paul Woolfolk was his name. We lost him today, after being ill of over 6 years. He has Transitioned on to the forever, from this Land of the dying to the Land of the Living. Great memories. Great Talent. Funny. Competitive. Quick witted. And always styling. Booski& I'll see you on the other side, my friend." Woolfolk joined the genre-spanning R&B/rock troupe in 1973, according to the group's website, as a flautist and saxophonist, and played on and off with EW&F until 1993. His most recognizable work comes in the form of his lively soprano saxophone on the band's beloved 1978 hit, "September," the fourth of seven Top 10 songs for the group. Every year, "September" scores significant sales and streaming gains on Sept. 21, the day (or night, technically) mentioned in the classic hit's opening line. Most recently, in 2021, "September" drew 1.5 million on-demand U.S. streams, according to MRC Data. That's a 322% surge over Sept. 20, when the song racked up 352,000 streams. In 2000, Woolfolk was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame along with his fellow original Earth, Wind & Fire members. That evening, Woolfolk, dressed in a fiery red suit jacket, performed a jaw-dropping solo on "Shining Star." - Billboard, 4/26/22.

In a recent interview with Swedish radio station P4, Mick Jagger shared his thoughts about the state of rock music today, and his picks for who he specifically believes is breathing life into the genre in 2022 might surprise longtime rock fans. "You have Yungblud and Machine Gun Kelly," Jagger shared. "That kind of post-punk vibe makes me think there is still a bit of life in rock 'n' roll. The 78-year-old Rolling Stones frontman also touched on the Stones' upcoming 60th anniversary tour, and assured fans this will not be a "farewell tour." "I am not planning it to be the last tour. I love being on tour," he shared. "I don't think I would do it if I did not enjoy it. I enjoy going out there on stage and doing my stuff. That is what I do. I want everyone to enjoy themselves and forget the troubles in their lives for a couple of hours and just chill out and have a great afternoon and evening," he added. - Billboard, 4/25/22...... The B-52sThe B-52s announced on Apr. 26 that they'll be hitting the road one last time this summer on a farewell tour that will see the band's three surviving members -- Fred Schneider, Kate Pierson and Cindy Wilson -- performing at least 15 shows across 11 venues in the U.S. between August and November. "No one likes to throw a party more than we do, but after almost a half-century on the road, it's time for one last blowout with our friends and family... our fans," Fred Schneider, 70, said in a statement. Cities on the itinerary include Seattle (8/22), Mashantucket, Conn. (9/29), Boston (9/30), Washington, DC (10/1), Chicago (10/7), New York City (10/13, 14), Atlantic City, NJ (10/15), Las Vegas (10/19, 21, 22), San Francisco (10/28, 29), and Los Angeles (10/4) before wrapping in their Georgia home base with a show at The Fox Theatre in Atlanta on Nov. 11. Additional dates are expected to be added in the next few weeks. Opening for the band on select dates will be KC and The Sunshine Band and The Tubes. "It's going to be one hell of a farewell party at these concerts," Schneider added about the special guests. Although it's not listed on the schedule, the trio will technically kick off the tour with a performance on Hollywood Boulevard with an Apr. 27 performance on Jimmy Kimmel Live. Originally made up of four members who historically formed the group after drinks in an Athens, Ga., Chinese restaurant, The B-52s became famous for their party-perfect hits such as "Love Shack" and "Rock Lobster" before guitarist Ricky Wilson died from an AIDS-related illness in 1985. - Billboard, 4/26/22...... It has been revealed that late guitar god Eddie Van Halen left a contribution of at least $1million (£780,000) to the US-based music education charity Mr Holland's Opus Foundation (MHOF). For 26 years, the MHOF -- named for the titular character of the 1995 film Mr. Holland's Opus (played by Richard Dreyfuss) -- has aimed to provide school-aged children from low-income backgrounds with the opportunity to enjoy music education, offering, among other avenues, access to musical instruments. The MHOF issued a statement on its website on Apr. 20 announcing that Van Halen, who died from throat cancer in 2020 left the charity a seven-figure bequest. Although an exact sum wasn't specified, the statement said the "transformative" amount would provide a "significant [increase to] the nonprofit's capacity to support music programs across the country." "Eddie's support and friendship over the years meant the world to us and to his fans. His passion for music and our work created a strong bond, which is evident in his extraordinary bequest," MHOF CEO Felice Mancini said. Prior to his death, Van Halen had been an ardent supporter of the organization, donating 75 guitars from his personal collection to the cause in 2012. - New Musical Express, 4/25/22...... In a new interview The Who frontman Roger Daltrey said he believes the music industry has been "stolen" from artists. Daltrey, 78, maintained that musicians are being "robbed blind" by their record labels, who have much less to do in the digital age but still take the same percentages, and by streaming services, who issue low royalty payments. "Musicians cannot earn a living in the record industry any more. That is ridiculous, and they're being robbed blind by streaming and the record companies, because the old deals with record companies that existed in the Seventies, Eighties and Nineties, they're still working on the same percentage breaks," Daltrey said. "And of course, they don't do any work. They just press a button and it goes out on digital, whereas before they had to manufacture, they had to distribute, they had to do all that stuff. They're doing bugger all and taking all the money, and the musicians are getting nothing," he added. Daltrey also said he thinks younger musicians can't earn a living writing music: "The streaming companies pay so little in the beginning and then the record companies take 85, 90 per cent of that. You need a billion streams to earn 200 quid. That's the reality. We've given our music industry to a lot of foreign-owned companies, and the money's not coming here any more. We used to lead the world in that, pay an awful lot of tax. It's terrible." - Music-News.com, 4/24/22...... Elton JohnElton John and Mercury Records announced on Apr. 21 that a deluxe 50th Anniversary reissue of his classic 1971 album Madman Across the Water will be released in various formats on June 10, including a three-CD and one Blu-ray Super Deluxe Box Set, a 4-LP set, a 1-LP Limited Edition blue and white-colored vinyl, and a 2-CD set. The 4-LP boxset, the most exhaustive of the releases, will include 18 previously unreleased songs, a 40-page booklet with introductions by John and songwriting partner Bernie Taupin, as well as photos interviews with people who collaborated on the album. It will also include a reproduction poster from 1971, memorabilia and artwork from Elton's Rocket Archive. Ahead of the reissue's release, fans can preview the boxset's contents with an "unboxing trailer" that has been shared on YouTube. John's fourth studio LP, Madman Across the Water was mostly written after his first adventures in America, inspiring signature songs "Tiny Dancer" and "Levon" off the album. Madman peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 200 album chart and stayed on the chart for a total of 51 weeks. It was also the first album feature John's classic '70s band lineup, consisting of Dee Murray, Nigel Olsson, Davey Johnstone and Ray Cooper. - Billboard, 4/21/22...... Ozzy Osbourne's daughter Amée Osbourne has shared a new single under the alias ARO on YouTube. The dark electro-pop track is the eldest daughter of Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne's first new music in two years, and a press release states she plans on "sharing more new music this year." "I feel a different sense of freedom and excitement that comes from releasing a couple of songs or a single at a time," Amée recently told Rolling Stone. When asked what dad Ozzy thinks about her music, she said: "My dad has responded really positively to a lot of it. It's been a really fun way to connect with him about being in the same industry now. He is so dedicated and his ability to continue working and creating, his appetite for that is so admirable, it's unbelievable." - NME, 4/22/22...... Heart's Ann Wilson and Eagles member Vince Gill have teamed up for a cover of the Queen song "Love of My Life," which will be featured on Wilson's upcoming album Fierce Bliss, out Apr. 29 via Silver Lining Music. "'Love of My Life' is a beautiful song about endless love. It was my honor to duet with Vince Gill on this song; an unforgettable experience for which I'm grateful!," Wilson said in a statement. Of bringing Gill in to sing on the song, she added, "I had the idea for the Queen song 'Love of My Life' as a duet, so I just tried to picture who would be 'the male angel' that would sing the other part of it. I thought how great the song would be if it was stripped down and just sung with soul, and it had to be Vince Gill because he's got that voice, that soul." Written by late Queen frontman Freddie Mercury for Queen's classic 1975 set A Night At The Opera, "Love of My Life" went on to peak at No. 23 on Billboard's Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart during the "Queen-mania" of the Bohemian Rhapsody movie in 2018; the chart launched in 2009. - Billboard, 4/21/22...... Bonnie RaittAppearing on Kelly Clarkson's syndicated daytime talk show on Apr. 21, Bonnie Raitt recalled that she was "so terrified" about being in the same room with late Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Prince for a video that she basically changed her whole life before making a pilgrimage to Prince's Paisley Park compound for a 1980s summit. Raitt, 72, said Prince thought the she had been so mistreated by her label that he invited her to his Minneapolis recording compound to work on an album together. But before the meeting happened, Raitt recalled how she had a skiing accident the resulted in a broken thumb, which pushed back their collaboration for a few months. "I was like 35-40 pounds heavier and I went, 'You know, if I do a video with this guy -- if the songs works and it's really sexy -- I gotta do something -- I gotta work on this," Raitt said with a laugh. Using her cast as an excuse to lose weight, Raitt said she stopped drinking and found a group of sober friends to hang out with and realized, "You know what? This feels really good... So I lost 20 pounds before I worked with Prince." The crowd erupted in applause and Clarkson remarked, "I love that -- that's what did it!" Raitt added, "I was so terrified of being in a video with him and not looking and saying all that sexy stuff to me and going, 'I don't think people are gonna believe that'." Raitt's full interview with Clarkson can be streamed on YouTube. She released her 18th studio album, Just Like That, on Apr. 22 . - Billboard, 4/21/22...... The new Pink Floyd charity single for the victims of the Ukraine invasion has debuted atop Billboard Rock Digital Songs Sales chart for the week dated Apr. 23. "Hey Hey Rise Up, which features Ukrainian vocalist Andriy Khlyvnyuk, starts with 10,200 downloads sold in the Apr. 8-14 tracking week, according to Luminate, formerly MRC Data. It is Pink Floyd's first new song in 28 years and the band's first No. 1 on Rock Digital Song Sales, which began in 2010. The band has appeared on the chart with three other titles: "Wish You Were Here" (No. 6 peak, May 2020), "Eclipse" (No. 24, Sept. 2017) and "Another Brick in the Wall (Part II)" (No. 29, Mar. 2012). The songs are originally from 1975, 1973 and 1979, respectively. "Hey Hey Rise Up" also bowed at No. 2 on Billboard's all-format Digital Song Sales chart, Pink Floyd's first appearance on the ranking, which began in 2004. Shared on YouTube earlier in April, also recently debuted at No. 5 on the Official U.K. Singles Chart. "My daughter-in-law is Ukrainian, Pink Floyd's David Gilmour recently told Rolling Stone of the new song's origin. "It just struck me that here we are, with our name [Pink Floyd] and this platform, and we could use it more." - Billboard, 4/21/22...... Speaking to the UK's MOJO magazine, former The Police frontman and '80s and '90s solo superstar Sting said he doesn't believe "any grown man" can be in a band. Sting, a member of The Police from 1977 until 1983 before the trio -- which also included Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers -- went their separate ways, said that he "doesn't think any grown man can be in a band actually." "A band is a teenage gang. Who wants to be in a teenage gang when you're knocking 70? It doesn't allow you to evolve. You have to obey the rules and the gestalt of the band. As much as I love the Stones and AC/DC, it's hard to see growth in their music. For me, the band was merely a vehicle for the songs and not the other way round," Sting said, adding that "Both Andy and Stewart had made albums without me so it was my right too." "I recruited a band from the jazz world and I was lucky [his solo debut The Dream of the Blue Turtles] was a hit. I have no idea what would have happened if it hadn't been a hit. Would I have gone back to the band and eaten humble pie? I hope not." Sting reunited briefly with his former bandmates in 2003 for their Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction and again in 2007 for a reunion tour, but he insisted he won't be doing it again as there's still a "power struggle" between them. "It was hugely successful but I wouldn't do it again. That would be a bridge too far," he said. - Music-News.com, 4/24/22...... RushIn a new interview with Canadian talk show The Strombo Show, Rush's Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson revealed that their late bandmate Neil Peart wanted to keep his cancer diagnosis a secret prior to his death, and that the band was forced to be "dishonest" to its fans about Peart's disease. "[Peart] didn't want anyone to know [about his illness]," Lee said. "He just didn't. He wanted to keep it in the house. And we did. And that was hard. I can't tell you it was easy, 'cause it was not easy. And it was ongoing. His diagnosis was... he was given 18 months at the most, and it went on three and a half years. And so that was a constant flow of us going to see him, giving him support," Lee added. He continued: "....When you're in that state, it's very hard to function normally, because you can't talk to anybody about it, 'cause no one's supposed to know. And so people hear rumblings and they bring things up to you, and you deflect it. And so that feels, on one hand, it feels dishonest, but on the other hand you're being loyal to your friend. So f--- the dishonesty part. That wins. I would say that was the most difficult time for us to move forward, during that whole thing, because we were in this bubble of grief sort of walking towards an inevitable and terrible conclusion." Elsewhere in the interview, Lee and Lifeson expressed disappointment in how things essentially ended for Rush, prior to finding out about Peart's cancer diagnosis. "...it was becoming really difficult for Neil to play at that level, and unless he could play a hundred percent at that level, he really didn't wanna do any more shows ... And it was hard for him -- a three-hour show playing the way he played. It's a miracle that he was even able to play." Lee and Lifeson's full interview can be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 4/24/22...... Gene Simmons has come out in support of former heavyweight boxing champ Mike Tyson who was caught on video punching a passenger on a flight bound for Miami on Apr. 20. After Tyson was loudly heckled and antagonized by a passenger who was seated behind him on the JetBlue flight, footage obtained by TMZ.com showed Tyson landing several blows on the man -- later identified as 36-year-old Melvin Townsend III -- who appears bloodied after the battering. Tyson's representatives said Townsend was acting "aggressive" towards the boxer -- who was en route to Miami for a speaking engagement at the Benzinga Cannabis Conference -- and claimed that in addition to verbally "harassing" him, Townsend "threw a water bottle at him while he was in his seat." Gene Simmons echoed the sentiment of social media personality Jake Paul, who tweeted: "If you're being heckled in public like Mike Tyson was you should legally get a hall pass to beat someone's ass. This generation thinks they can get away with anything." "Agreed!," Simmons tweeted in response. - NME, 4/25/22...... Guitar maker Rick Turner, known as "the father of boutique guitar building" who created Lindsey Buckingham's signature axe and had a hand in building the Grateful Dead's famous "Wall of Sound," died on Apr. 17 in Pasadena, Calif., of complications from heart failure and stroke. He was 78. Turner was a pioneering concert sound mixer and guitar luthier who built instruments for the Dead, Led Zeppelin, The Who, Fleetwood Mac and many others. The Model 1 guitar he built for Buckingham, among other instruments, prompted Premier Guitar magazine to once call him "the father of boutique guitar building." One of Turner's best-known early instruments was the Alembic #1, a bass he made for the Jefferson Airplane's Jack Casady, which became the foundation for his pioneering company, Alembic, and was later displayed at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. In 1972, Turner relocated to a factory in Cotati, Calif., and word spread to the point that top jazz and rock stars were commissioning Turner's state-of-the-art instruments. "Rick was not only an innovator and inventor, but he had an ongoing curiosity about everything. He would learn something and felt compelled to share it with everybody," says Jason Kostal, a luthier and owner of Kostal Guitars, who worked closely with Turner. - Billboard, 4/22/22...... Cynthia AlbrittonFormer groupie Cynthia "Plaster Caster" Albritton, an artist best-known for her sculptures of male rockers' genitalia, has died in her home town of Chicago after a long illness. She was 74. Albritton became famous for her molds of body parts, including the penises of Jimi Hendrix and his bassist, Noel Redding, The Animals' Eric Burdon, The MC5's Wayne Cramer and Dennis Thompson, singer Anthony Newley, The Dead Kennedys' Jello Biafra, The Buzzcocks' Pete Shelley, a variety of rock tour and road managers, and more than 40 other filmmakers and rock-adjacent figures. She later branched out into casting female body parts as well, making breast casts of members of Stereolab's Laetitia Sadier, Peaches, members of L7 and the Demolition Doll Rods and The Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Karen O, among others. Born on May 24, 1947 in Chicago, Albritton hit upon her unique artistic lane in college when a professor asked the class to cast a solid object the could retain its shape. The budding artist and rock fan decided to try memorializing erect male phalluses using a dental-molding substance, with Hendrix agreeing to be her first subject. Soon after she found a patron in gonzo rocker Frank Zappa, who was not interested in sitting for one of her unique sessions but paid for the fellow irreverent artiste to relocate to Los Angeles, where she began making her unique sculptures. Caster was the subject of the 2001 doc Plaster Caster, and was famously memorialized herself in the KISS song "Plaster Caster" from the group's 1977 Love Gun album (sample lyric: "The plaster's gettin' harder/ And my love is perfection/ A token of my love/ For her collection"). In 2000 she exhibited her "plasterpieces" at a SoHo gallery, followed by another showing in 2017 at the MoMA PS1 in Queens, New York. She launched a long-shot, unsuccessful bid for Chicago mayor in 2010 under the "Hard Party" banner. - Billboard, 4/22/22.

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on April 21st, 2022



A source close to Elton John has told the U.K. paper The Sun that the pop star is working on new music amid his final "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" tour. "The past few years have given Elton's career a new lease of life. It started with his film Rocketman, then "Cold Heart" with Dua Lipa took him to a new level, getting him to No 1," the source was quoted in The Sun's Bizarre column. "A few years ago he said he wasn't interested in making new music but over the past 12 months things have changed. A new generation has fallen in love with him and he's never been in more demand," the source added. John previously hinted that "more new music" is on the way during a recent acceptance video for his Global Awards' Mass Appeal prize. "Hi everyone, I am delighted to accept the award for Mass Appeal artist," Elton said. "I've worked in this industry for a long time, over 50 years, and it's still a real joy to be making and releasing music and knowing that the songs, many people enjoy tuning in and hearing those songs being played on the radio. In fact, even after all this time, there's still the utter thrill, as an artist, when you hear your music played on air for the very first time. I'm a huge fan of new music and supporting new artists and I thoroughly enjoyed getting to work with the likes of Dua Lipa, Ed Sheeran and Olly Alexander from Years and Years... I am very grateful for this award, which will look great alongside the Big Top 40 awards we've collected recently. And I can't wait for you to hear more new music soon," he added. - Music-News.com, 4/21/22...... Billy JoelAs many major pop/rock stars including Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, Neil Diamond, Sting and Stevie Nicks have sold their back catalog of songs in recent years, Billy Joel is one of the the more obvious hold outs. In Oct. 2021, Joel acknowledged that he had received several offers for his prized song catalog, but he joked to Howard Stern that he wasn't interested in selling for anything short of what would be an astronomical sum because, he said, he wants to retain control over how his songs are used when licensed in commercials, TV and films. Joel conceded that he might sell his song catalog if he was offered $1 billion -- a price Stern suggested as a valuation for his songs. "I don't know who would pay that but if someone offered me $1 billion what am I gonna say, no?... I'm from Levittown," the Piano Man said. However, sources say that after receiving inquiries about the catalog, Joel's representatives actively tested the waters by reaching out to potential suitors to test what the market was willing to bear, with a pricing suggestion described by a number of music asset buyers as "quite possibly the highest valuation ever for a song catalog" -- at least on a multiple basis. But it's unclear how far that effort went. Sources indicate Joel's reps were armed with an annual revenue number and an expected bidding price but hadn't prepared more extensive data. Joel's representatives are insisting the catalog is not up for sale. "At this time the [Billy Joel] catalog is not on the market," his agent Dennis Arfa said in an e-mail. Another source familiar with the proceedings disputes the characterization that the Joel catalog was ever up for sale. In addition to his songwriter share, Joel owns publishing of his song catalog, too, having received it as a present from his then-label head, the late Walter Yetnikoff. The CBS Records president had induced an early manager of Joel, who had locked up the publishing as part of his managerial contract with the artist, to relinquish control of Joel's publishing, according to numerous press reports at the time. - Billboard, 4/18/22...... The 1983 Journey hit "Separate Ways (Worlds Apart)" has returned to Billboard Rock Digital Song Sales chart dated Apr.23 following the inclusion of a reworked version of the song in the trailer for the fourth and final season of the Netflix series Stranger Things. "Separate Ways" debuted at No. 19 with 800 downloads sold in the Apr. 8-14 tracking period, according to Luminate (formerly MRC Data). It enjoyed a 208% surge over the previous week, sparked by its appearance in the series new trailer, which premiered Apr. 12. "Separate Ways" peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart in Mar. 1983, becoming the rockers' fourth of six Top 10 singles during 1981-1986. The song also spent four weeks atop the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart, marking the band's lone leader among eight Top 10s. In the trailer for the 80s-set Stranger Things, the song retains former Journey frontman Steve Perry's vocals but alters the instrumentation in certain parts to a moodier, more atmospheric sound. The fourth season of Stranger Things is scheduled for release in two segments, the first due May 27 followed by the second half on July 1. - Billboard, 4/20/22...... On Apr. 18 Bob Dylan announced some new West Coast tour dates as part of his summer "World Wide Tour." Dylan will begin this leg of his tour on May 28 in Spokane, Wash.at the First Interstate Center of the Arts, also visiting Kennewick, Wash. (5/29), Portland (5/31), Seattle (6/1, 2), Eugene, Ore. (6/5), Redding, Calif. (6/7), Oakland (6/9, 10, 11), and Los Angeles (6/14, 15, 16) before wrapping at the San Diego Civic Theatre on June 18. Dylan, 80, recently completed a 26-date tour of 2022 shows across the U.S. The "World Wide Tour" follows his "Never Ending Tour," the popular name given to Dylan's regular touring schedule that began in 1988 and was forced to end due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Tickets will be available starting Apr. 22 on his website, www.bobdylan.com. - Billboard, 4/18/22...... Brian MayIn a new interview with Classic Rock magazine, Queen guitarist Brian May recalled the "odd experience" of working on Guns N' Roses' infamous 2008 album Chinese Democracy. "It was an odd experience. I think it was about midway through the whole thing. By that point Axl [Rose, frontman] was pretty much a recluse. He was working in his house, and I was working in the studio at the bottom of the hill with his engineer at the time, and he only rarely came down," May said, adding that "Now and again he would call in and get all enthusiastic and talk a lot, and then he'd be gone again. I don't think any of what I played actually got onto the album." At the time of Chinese Democracy's release, May told his fans on his website that it was "a shame" that his parts were omitted from the album. "I did put quite a lot of work in, and was proud of it," he posted. Meanwhile, May has teased that Queen might be performing at Queen Elizabeth II's upcoming Platinum Jubilee concert on June 4. The star-studded event set for Buckingham Palace before an audience of around 10,000 so far has only confirmed George Ezra as a headliner, which a statement has said will range from "pop stars to rock royalty to opera singers." The concert will also feature a full live orchestra, while "stars from film, TV and the stage will also tell the story and celebrate some of the most significant cultural moments from the Queen's reign." Speaking on the Zoe Ball Breakfast Show May, who previously performed a guitar solo of the British national anthem on top of Buckingham Palace for the Queen's Golden Jubilee in 2002, teased that he and his Queen bandmates -- Roger Taylor and Adam Lambert -- might be taking part in the concert. "I don't think I'm allowed to tell you this but I think something might happen," May said. There is talk of something happening. What can I tell you? We may be there, we may actually be there. Of course, it's hard to follow standing on the roof of Buckingham Palace but you never know it might be possible," he added. - New Musical Express, 4/21/22...... In a recent interview on Swedish radio station P4, Mick Jagger admitted that the Rolling Stones "provoked a lot of people" with the release of their 1971 single "Brown Sugar", but now accepts that things need to "change" and so the legendary British rockers decided to drop the song from their performances in 2021, due to racist and sexist connotations of slavery. "The early days were the days of shock and awe, things can't stay like that forever," Sir Mick, 78, said. "When you start out, I mean popular music is always in need of shaking up. We were quite good at that. We had our own style and our own way of approaching things and we had a different way of behaving. And it provoked a lot of people," he added. But Jagger said he feels a lot of people overreacted to their provoking: "I thought a lot of it was super over-reaction but it became a bit of a cliché. It served us well in some ways... we got noticed." Stones guitarist Keith Richards, also participating in the interview, also addressed the backlash and insisted the song was about "the horrors of slavery" and he couldn't get his head around why it's so controversial. "You picked up on that, huh? I'm trying to figure out with the sisters quite where the beef is," Richards said. "Didn't they understand this was a song about the horrors of slavery? But they're trying to bury it. At the moment I don't want to get into conflicts with all of this," he added. However, some believe "Brown Sugar" depicts non-consensual sex between a slave and slave owner. - Music-News.com, 4/21/22...... The Ohio State Athletic Band paid an emotional tribute to Eddie Van Halen during their annual half time show at Ohio Stadium in Columbus on Apr. 16. The band played a medley of Van Halen songs over eight minutes that included "Runnin' With The Devil," "Dreams," "Panama" and "Jump," moving in formation to spell out the band's name as they performed, as well as the titles of some songs. An audience of 60,000 were in attendance, with the game resulting in a 34-26 victory by the Ohio State Scarlet over the Ohio State Gray. The moment has been shared on YouTube. Eddie Van Halen died from throat cancer on Oct. 6, 2020. In other VH news, former Metallica guitarist Jason Newsted has said he was approached six months ago to take part in a potential Van Halen tribute tour. Newsted told The Palm Beach Post that he was approached six months ago to take part in a potential Van Halen tribute tour, but didn't go ahead with the project when thinking about the weight of Van Halen's legacy. "How could you? There's nobody that can top it, so how do you show it honor? I didn't want it to be viewed as a money grab. And then it kind of just all fizzled," Newsted said. He added that acclaimed guitarist Joe Satriani was also approached to take part in a VH tribute tour. A tribute band or tour to Van Halen has been touted for some time with Eddie's son, Wolfgang Van Halen, previously saying that a tribute concert "definitely should happen" but that it was "not in the immediate plans" due to logistical hurdles. - NME, 4/18/22...... Speaking of potential collaborations that never came to be, David Bowie's longtime producer Tony Visconti has told The Times that David had suggested that he and Marc Bolan of T. Rex, who Visconti also produced, work together after they had been reunited on his show Marc after initially losing touch. "It was on the cards that we were going to work together. Marc came down to the studio [after David had invited him], looked around, and said, 'I'd love to see Tony again'," Visconti recalled. However, any potential collaboration between Bowie, Bolan and Visconti never came to fruition because just a short while later -- on Sept. 16 1977 -- the "Get It On" rocker was involved in a tragic car crash with Gloria Jones. Bolan was killed instantly when Jones, who survived, drove her Mini into a tree just two weeks before his 30th birthday. Although Visconti said that Bowie trumped Bolan with his "Ziggy Stardust" persona and began "copying" him, he did go on to explain that Marc -- who shot to fame around the same time as David -- was, along with T.Rex, "revolutionary" when it came to glam rock, implying that it all began with their performance of "Hot Love" on BBC show Top of the Pops. "That [performance] was before Bowie started wearing dresses, so it was revolutionary. Chelita took Marc to shops like Biba and got him to wear little Mary Jane shoes, which worked brilliantly because he had an ability to look feminine and still be really macho. One time, he turned up to a session and kicked me straight in the bollocks. I doubled up in pain and said, 'What was that for?' He replied, 'You're a kung fu guy. You should have blocked that.' It was his little power play to show he was still the Hackney punk, the leader of the gang." - Music-News.com, 4/20/22...... Gene SimmonsIn an extensive new interview with the syndicated showbiz program Entertainment Tonight, Gene Simmons of KISS has boldly claimed that artists like Beyoncé, Bono, Mick Jagger and Bruno Mars wouldn't be able to perform in his famously over-the-top costumes, due to their excessive weight and unwieldiness. Simmons went to explain that especially at age 72 -- more than 50 years since he first debuted with the band -- fitness is crucial to maintaining his prowess as a performer. "We work hard at it," he assured ET's Kevin Frazier, telling him the band currently enjoy "no drugs, no booze, no smoking. None of that stupid rock and roll stuff." He continued: "I hike almost every single day with Shannon [Tweed, Simmons' wife], we do three to five miles a day, and it's hard to keep this going." Simmons said that although "we love" Jagger, Mars, Bono, etc., "if you put those guys -- Beyoncé, put Beyoncé in my outfit with seven-to-eight-inch platform heels, dragon boots that each weigh as much as a bowling ball... The entire outfit, studs, leather and armor is about 40 pounds. The guitar and the studs is 12 pounds by itself. Then, you got to spit fire, fly through the air and do that for two hours. They would pass out within a half hour." Simmons then declared KISS to be "the hardest working band out there" -- something they "take pride in," especially considering their five-decade tenure is almost at an end. The band are currently gearing up to embark on the last stint of their final world tour, with their last-ever gigs slated to go down this November (as part of this year's edition of the KISS Kruise). - NME, 4/18/22...... On Apr. 17 Ringo Starr added further dates to his upcoming 2022 North American All-Starr Band tour in a post to his Instagram account. The legendary Beatles sticksman and his band -- Toto's Steve Lukather, Men At Work's Colin Hay, Warren Ham, Gregg Bissonette, Average White Band's Hamish Stuart and Edgar Winter -- are set to kick-off their tour on May 27 in Ontario, Canada. Following the tour's initial announcement which had it wrapping up in Clearwater, Fla., on June 26, Ringo and the band have confirmed 19 new dates extending the run to Oct. 20 with a two-night stand in Mexico City, Mexico, with new Sept. and Oct. shows in Michigan, Washington, New Jersey, California and more. Starr -- who turns 82 this summer -- last released a solo album, What's My Name, in 2019. Since its release, he has shared two EPs in 2021: "Zoom In" and "Change the World." - NME, 4/17/22...... As The Who prepare to kick off a two-part North American tour on Apr. 22 in Florida, the band promoted the upcoming trek with an Apr. 15 appearance on CBS' The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The Who ran through a grand version of their 1971 track "Behind Blue Eyes," backed by a full orchestra .The performance, which has bee shared on YouTube, came in support of the Teen Cancer America organisation, and was recorded during the band's annual Teenage Cancer Trust gigs at the Royal Albert Hall in London in March, which featured The Who, Liam Gallagher, Ed Sheeran, and more. Dubbed "The Who Hits Back!," the first leg of the tour will run through May, then the band will then return to the States in October for another run of dates, which take them through until November. Speaking of the tour, Roger Daltrey said: "Pete [Townshend] and I said we'd be back, but we didn't think we'd have to wait for two years for the privilege. This is making the chance to perform feel even more special this time around. So many livelihoods have been impacted due to COVID, so we are thrilled to get everyone back together - the band, the crew and the fans. We're gearing up for a great show that hits back in the only way The Who know how. By giving it everything we got." - NME, 4/17/22...... Don McLean has shared a new version of this iconic 1971 hit "American Pie" featuring boxer Tyson Fury as Fury gears up to defend his world title belts in a fight against Dillian Whyte on Apr. 23. "American Pie" has become synonymous with Fury since he famously performed it following his defeat of Deontay Wilder in 2020. The latest iteration, which has been shared on YouTube, sees McLean singing the verses to "American Pie," perfectly articulating Fury's comeback story, as a montage of clips from across the boxer's impressive career flash up. Towards the end of the track, the Gypsy King -- who previously appeared alongside Robbie Williams on "Bad Sharon" in 2019 -- joins in with McLean, singing along to the track. In addition to celebrating Fury's upcoming fight, the duet coincides with the 50th anniversary of "American Pie" -- both the album and single as well as the release of a children's book, a documentary about the impact McLean's song has had on pop culture, and a world tour which will come to the UK and Europe starting in Sept. 2022. - NME, 4/19/22...... Former The Sex Pistols frontman John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) has hit out again at his former bandmates for participating in the new Danny Boyle-directed biopic series Pistol, calling them "dead wood" and questioning their talents. Earlier in April, Lydon branded the forthcoming show a "middle class fantasy" that "bears little resemblance to the truth" after claiming in 2021 that it was green-lit without his consent. Now, in a new interview with the U.K. paper The Sun, Lydon took aim at Steve Jones and Paul Cook for allegedly removing him from Pistol's production process. "Cutting me out is a shockingly stupid move It's so ridiculous. It's so preposterous," Lydon said. "They can all f--- off. I supported them for years and years and years, knowing they were dead wood. None of these f---s would have a career but for me. They did nothing before, they've done nothing since," he added. Pistol is due to premiere on the Hulu streaming channel (and Disney+ where Hulu isn't available) on May 31. - NME, 4/18/22...... Brian EnoBrian Eno has announced he will be releasing an exclusive collaboration with former R.E.M. singer Michael Stipe on Earth Day 2022 (Apr. 22). The single, called "Future If Future," will be released to draw attention towards the climate crisis. As reported by The Guardian, Eno is one of 100 artists who will be releasing material exclusively via Bandcamp, with proceeds going to causes at the forefront of the climate emergency. "I'm very pleased with the way it's gone," Eno told the paper. "It's a very good song, a very Stipe song. Beautiful lyrics, extraordinary piece," he added. Eno recently founded EarthPercent, a charity providing a simple way for the music industry to support the most impactful organizations addressing the climate emergency. He hopes that his Earth Day plans will become an annual campaign, led by the charity. "We've been trying to say to people, 'Look, if you want to find a simple way of joining the climate struggle, this might be the answer. We're a shortcut to a lot of things that otherwise might be fairly hard to do," he noted. Later in April, Eno will sit down in at the Royal Garden Hotel in London for a conversation on the climate emergency and how the energy of music can benefit the planet. For tickets and more info, you can visit www.agreenerfestival.com/green-events-innovations-confernence-gei. - NME, 4/15/22...... In a new interview with the Daily Star newspaper, Sting recalled how his stage name started "as a joke." Sting, whose real name is Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner, said he was given his famous moniker as a joke by a trombone player in an old band when he complained about a song and began to wear a black-and-yellow t-shirt, seemingly to resemble a bee. He said: "He made me sing a song which was awful. So, in protest I began to wear a black and yellow top. He started to call me Sting as a joke." However, Sting went on to explain that he is "grateful" for the stage name because it speeds up the process of signing autographs. "I'm grateful for it now as when you have to sign something, it's short!," he said. - Music-News.com, 4/20/22...... Art Rupe, the founder of Specialty Records who was responsible for giving early breaks to the likes of Sam Cooke and Little Richard, died on Apr. 15 at his home in Santa Barbara, Calif. He was 104. Born Arthur Goldberg, Mr. Rupe was raised outside the Pittsburgh area. He attended college at Virginia Tech and Miami University of Ohio, and in 1939 set off for Los Angeles to make his way in the world. During World War II, Mr. Rupe worked at Terminal Island testing ships. However, with a passion for blues, gospel and R&B music, he formed Juke Box Records with partner Ben Siegert in 1944. The label had a regional hit with the Sepia Tones' "Boogie No. 1." Two years later, in 1946, Mr. Rupe parted ways with Juke Box and founded Specialty Records. Over the next 15 years, Specialty became one of the most prominent independent recording companies, with worldwide distribution, and Mr. Rupe's work at Specialty played a key role in the emergence of the new musical genre of rock 'n' roll. Little Richard was the label's biggest hitmaker, starting with the classic "Tutti Frutti" in 1955. Other Specialty hits by Little Richard included "Long Tall Sally," "Good Golly Miss Molly" and "Rip it Up." In a 2011 interview for the Rock Hall archives, Rupe said: "There was something in Little Richard's voice I liked." Elsewhere, Sam Cooke recorded some songs at Specialty in the mid-1950s after wanting to expand his appeal beyond gospel; one of those tracks included "You Send Me." Other artists that recorded for Specialty included Lloyd Price, Roy Milton and Percy Mayfield. Specialty's masters were acquired by Saul Zaentz's Fantasy Records in 1990. Today they're owned and distributed by indie music giant Concord. - NME, 4/17/22...... Robert MorseActor Robert Morse, best known for starring in the hit TV series Mad Men as Bert Cooper, has died at the age of 90, his son Charlie confirmed on Apr. 20. Mr. Morse's acting career spanned almost six decades and he appeared in around 100 theatre, TV and film productions. Born on May 18, 1931, in Newton, Mass., the mischievous comedic star first made his name in a theatre adaptation of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" -- for which he won the Tony Award for best actor in a musical. He repeated the feat in 1990 as he won the Tony for best featured actor in a play for his performance as Truman Capote in the one-man show "Tru." He is one of just four actors to win the top acting Tonys for play and musical. Mr. Morse's portrayal of Capote also earned him an Emmy award three years later when the production was broadcast on TV. But it was the role of the eccentric Bert Cooper in Mad Men that earned Mr. Morse international fame -- earning him five Emmy nods and a Screen Actors Guild award. The star's final episode saw him channel his Broadway skills as he performed a song-and-dance routine following his character's death. Debuting in films in 1956 with The Proud and the Profane, his other movie credits include the 1967 How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying bigscreen adapatation, A Guide for the Married Man (1967), Where Were You When the Lights Went Out? (1968), and The Boatniks (1970). Larry Karaszewski, the Vice-President on the board of governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, paid tribute to Morse in a tweet: "My good pal Bobby Morse has passed away at age 90. A huge talent and a beautiful spirit. Sending love to his son Charlie and daughter Allyn. Had so much fun hanging with Bobby over the years - filming 'People v OJ' and hosting so many screenings ('How To Succeed', 'Loved One', 'That's Life)." - Bang Showbiz, 4/21/22.

A Long Island, N.Y., contractor has agreed to end a lawsuit claiming that Billy Joel, his wife Alexis, business manager, and a rival contractor ripped off copyrighted architectural designs for a renovations project at his Oyster Bay mansion. Berry Hill Development Corp. claimed in 2020 they were abruptly fired and the plans were illegally handed over to a new builder. Berry Hill said it was terminated after it was told that engineering defects were discovered in its work, but it called the firing "wrongful and not truly for cause," and said it was never compensated for the $126,700 the company it had already spent on drawing up architectural plans for the site. Berry Hill said its plans were then handed off to a new architect. The replacement, Neal Stufano and his firm, N.J. Caine Architecture PLLC, then submitted "nearly identical plans for the house to local building regulators," according to Berry Hill's lawsuit. Joel's 12,000 square-foot Oyster Bay compound features three homes and 29 acres of beach front property. Berry Hill's notice to end the lawsuit, filed in Brooklyn federal court on Apr. 14, did not included any specific terms of the settlement agreement. - Billboard, 4/15/2022...... Johnny and Edgar WinterBrother Johnny, a new tribute album honoring the late Grammy-winning blues guitarist Johnny Winter, features the first posthumous music from late Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins. Hawkins, who died on March 25 as his band was on tour in Columbia, contributes his thunderous vocals on "Guess I'll Go Away," the hard-rocking boogie blues tune that appeared on the 1970 album Johnny Winter And. Brother Johnny was put together by Winter's younger brother Edgar Winter, and in a note on his site in March, Edgar paid tribute to Hawkins, saying "he did an incredible lead vocal on a song written by Johnny and featuring the phenomenal guitarist in my own band, Doug Rappoport." Brother Johnny, which hit stores on Apr. 15, features an enormous roster of blues, pop and rock icons paying homage to Johnny, including Joe Bonamassa, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Derek Trucks, Billy Gibbons, Joe Walsh, Ringo Starr, Michael McDonald and Steve Lukather, among others. A clip of Hawkins' rendition of "Guess I'll Go Away" has been shared on YouTube. Meanwhile, Rush frontman Geddy Lee has shared his feelings about the passing of Hawkins in a new interview with the Toronto-based radio show House Of Strombo. "It's heartbreaking -- just heartbreaking," Lee said. "That really broke my heart, his passing. [He was] so full of file. I remember when he presented the [Rock And Roll] Hall Of Fame award to us in 2013 and we came up on stage, he was literally jumping up and down like a two-year-old -- he was jumping up and down, he was so happy -- and that was him. He was so full of admiration and rock and roll joy juice. And it just seems wrong that he left us," he added. Lee's interview, which also features his Rush bandmate Alex Lifeson, can be streamed on YouTube. - Billboard/New Musical Express, 4/15/22...... Speaking of tributes to famous rockers, Queen's Brian May has honored pioneering rock & roller Buddy Holly with a reworking of Holly's classic 1958 track "Maybe Baby." The track, which has been shared on YouTube, appears on the forthcoming deluxe reissue of May's second solo album, 1998's Another World, which is due to arrive on Apr. 22. "I've never done a Buddy Holly song," May said in a statement. Explaining how the song played in his development as a musician, he said: "That song more than probably any other, is the reason that I'm here doing this, playing guitar and being a rock star and being a very fortunate person. I heard Buddy Holly make that incredible sound on his guitar, that clang, singing that beautiful song, hearing those wonderful harmonies of the Crickets. And it completely motivated me. I just thought, 'That's what I want to do. I want to be able to make music that does that to people, makes them feel this kind of yearning, makes them feel this joy and passion.'" The second release in May's Gold Series, the deluxe Another World contains the remastered original album alongside "Another Disc," which features a wealth of previously unreleased remixes, rarities, live tracks and cover versions. - New Musical Express, 4/14/22...... David BowieMoonage Daydream, an all-new David Bowie celebrating the life of the iconic late rocker, is coming to theaters and the HBO premium TV channel. The production company NEON and Universal Pictures announced the project on Apr. 13, saying the film will be released by NEON in the U.S., while Universal has international distribution rights. No theatrical release date has been announced, though the film is slated to premiere on HBO and HBO Max in spring 2023 via HBO Documentary Films. Theatrical engagements for Moonage Daydream, will include IMAX screenings in select markets. Five years in the making, the documentary was written, directed, edited and produced by Brett Morgen, who was given "unfiltered" access to Bowie's personal archives, including all master recordings, according to a press release. While researching the film, Morgen came across hundreds of hours of never-before-seen 35mm and 16mm footage, allowing him to assemble Bowie's performances from these original camera masters. The resulting project is described by the companies as "an artful and life-affirming film that takes the audience on a journey through Bowie's creative life." Guided by "Bowie's narration" with contributions from Bowie's long-time collaborator Tony Visconti, according to the release, Moonage Daydream includes 48 musical tracks mixed from their original stems and is the first film to be officially sanctioned by Bowie's estate. - Billboard, 4/13/22...... A British Beatles fan named Ken Lambert has turned George Harrison's suburban Liverpool childhood home at 25 Upton Green into an Airbnb and "living museum" of Harrison memorabilia. Lambert says he bouth the home in Nov. 2021 for around £171,000. According to the listing, Harrison lived at the three-bedroom house between 1949 and 1962, and the house was also used as a practice space for the pre-Beatles incarnation, The Quarrymen. Lambert says the house will be "a living museum by letting people stay overnight" and that a weekly tour group will also be able to stop by and spend about half an hour in the home drinking tea and playing music. "I'm not a wealthy individual. It's not like I go around buying up properties. I'm a Beatles fan, yes, but I am a big George Harrison fan specifically," Lambert told the New York Post. "I think it was a shame that George's house had no relevance to millions of Beatles fans, but they're waiting in line to walk into John Lennon's house. George is my favourite Beatle. I want to respect his legacy," he added. The property sleeps five guests, and a stay will set you back around £200 a night (there is a two-night minimum). Meanwhile, Paul McCartney announced earlier in April that he's opening up his childhood home for unsigned artists to use as a base to write, perform and gain inspiration from. The Forthlin Sessions initiative, backed by the former Beatle's brother Mike McCartney, will see artists chosen by Mike and local partners to write music at the same place where Paul and John Lennon forged their distinguished songwriting partnership. - NME, 4/14/22...... Announcing he was "hearbroken" and that "this just might be the cruelest thing that has ever happened to me," Barry Manilow revealed that he had tested positive for Covid-19 on Apr. 13 just hours before his new musical "Harmony" was scheduled to open at the National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene at the Museum of Jewish Heritage. "I am heartbroken to say that I have just tested positive for Covid-19 and won't be able to attend tonight's opening night performance of my new musical 'Harmony,'" Manilow told Billboard. "This just might be the cruelest thing that has ever happened to me: 25 years waiting for this show to premiere in New York and I can't attend. Even in the face of this pandemic, we New Yorkers remain the toughest, staunchest people on the planet so, put on a mask and go see a show!" Created and scored by Manilow and his longtime musical collaborator Bruce Sussman, "Harmony" tells the true story of the Comedian Harmonists, an internationally famous, all-male German close harmony ensemble which featured three Jewish members and performed in Europe between 1928 and 1934, selling millions of records and starring in more than a dozen films. Manilow is not a cast member of the show, which opened as planned in his absence. - Billboard, 4/13/22...... Jimmy PageIn a new interview with Classic Rock magazine, Jimmy Page revealed that his curringly working on "multiple projects." "It's not just one thing, it's multiple things, and I don't want to even give a hint, because if you do & you give a one-sentence sound bite, and then if it doesn't materialize, it's like: 'Why didn't you do a solo album?' So I don't want to say what it is that I've got planned, because I don't want to give people the chance to misinterpret it." Of his new album, he added: "I really can't put on record what the new record is. I'll leave it to your imagination. The thing is there are so many ways I could present myself right now. Actually, not right now. I'll rephrase that: within a space of time." One project he won't be working on is Ozzy Osbourne's new solo album, which the former Black Sabbath frontman announced he has completed work on in a new Instagram post. Page said in the same interview that he turned down the opportunity to appear the follow-up to Ozzy's 2020 LP Ordinary Man. Page said Osbourne tried to get him to contribute to his new LP but said "I don't think he plays anymore." "I will never be one of those people who'll record alone and send someone a file," Page told Classic Rock. "I never went into music in the first place to do that -- it was for playing together." - NME, 4/13/22...... Rick Springfield's long-overdue homecoming tour of his native Australia with the '70s Australian band Zoot has been scrapped, promoter DRW Entertainment has announced in a Facebook post. "It is with much sadness and disappointment that we must announce that the Zoot tour of Australia is cancelled," the statement reads. "Much has changed in the two years since we announced the tour, and individual members of the band, whilst excited about the potential offered by the tour, are now unfortunately not in a position whereby they can move forward with the tour as scheduled, the message continues. Springfield and Zoot were scheduled to visit Brisbane, Sydney, Perth, Adelaide and Melbourne this October, for Zoot's first Australian shows in over 50 years. Springfield was to be joined on stage by Rick Brewer, Beeb Birtles and Russell Morris, with Little River Band founding member Roger McLachlan on bass. After delays due to Covid, DRW said it was decided "rather than postpone the tour yet again, the decision has been taken to cancel the tour and refund all ticket holders." The door isn't closed, however, on another trek. "It may be that the tour can be rescheduled in the future, the statement continues, "and if so, we will notify all of new dates." Springfield, who released his first US album in 1974 on Columbia, was a member of Zoot from 1969 to 1971, before launching his successful solo career in 1981, and notably snagging a Grammy with "Jessie's Girl." Springfield was booked for a rare solo tour of his homeland in 2014, but canceled when he landed a part in the movie Ricki And The Flash alongside Meryl Streep and Kevin Kline. - Billboard, 4/13/22...... Alice CooperAlice Cooper has announed he'll kick off a month-long fall 2022 tour of North America on Sept. 7 in Bethlehem, Pa. Cooper, who is currently finishing up the spring leg of his North American tour before he tours Europe from late May to early July, announced the fall series of tour stops on Twitter on Apr. 12. Cooper will also make stops at Blue Ridge Rock Festival in Alton, Va., on Sept. 9, and at Louder Than Life in Louisville, Ky. on Sept. 24 with Rob Zombie and KISS as part of the tour. Cooper recently revealed back in January that he is currently working on both his 29th and 30th studio albums simultaneously -- less than a year after releasing his 28th, Detroit Stories. Cooper will wrap his fall tour on Oct. 8 in Las Vegas. - NME, 4/13/22...... Songwriting legends Carole Bayer Sager and Mike Stoller will be honored as BMI Icons at the 2022 BMI Pop Awards, it was announced on Apr. 12. Both songwriters are members of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, and in fact have each received that organization's highest honor, the Johnny Mercer Award. Both also are Grammy winners -- Sager for song of the year for co-writing (with Burt Bacharach) "That's What Friends Are For ; Stoller for best musical show album for Smokey Joe's Cafe -- The Songs of Leiber & Stoller. Sager has received 26 BMI Awards, including pop songwriter of the year in 1977. Stoller has amassed a whopping 57. Sager also wrote the lyrics to such songs as "Nobody Does It Better," "A Groovy Kind of Love," "Don't Cry Out Loud," and the Oscar-winning "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)." Sager has also received two Golden Globe Awards. Stoller and his long-time collaborator Jerry Leiber wrote more than 20 songs for Elvis Presley, including "Hound Dog," "Love Me," and "Jailhouse Rock," and wrote and produced all of The Coasters' hits, such as "Yakety Yak" and "Poison Ivy." The 2022 BMI Pop Awards are set for May 10 at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif. - Billboard, 4/12/22...... Speaking of Elvis Presley, Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG) will now act as the global publishing administrator, excluding the U.K., for the historic song catalog of the late King of Rock & Roll. The administration deal includes most of the King's greatest hits, including "Can't Help Falling in Love," "Jailhouse Rock," "Love Me Tender," "Viva Las Vegas," "It's Now or Never," "Memories," "A Little Less Conversation," "Don't Be Cruel," "Teddy Bear," "Amazing Grace," "All Shook Up," and many more. UMPG declined to disclose any financial terms of the deal, and stressed that Authentic Brands Group (ABG), which is the majority stake holder in Elvis Presley Enterprises, remains owner of the catalog. Presley was never a songwriter himself but shared a portion of composition ownership with his first publisher, Hill & Range publishing, for songs purchased by Hill & Range for him to record, according to the official Graceland website. In other Elvis news, a new Presley compilation will reportedly see the likes of contemporary acts Doja Cat and Swae Lee cover several of his greatest hits. The new album will coincide with the release of Baz Luhrmann's upcoming Elvis, biopic, a host of stars have put their spin on the late music legend's iconic songs in a bid to get a new generation into his music. It's hoped the soundtrack will boost streaming figures for Elvis' back catalogue, just like the 2018 Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody did for the English prog-rockers. However, "diehard" fans of the 'Jailhouse Rock' hitmaker might not be so thrilled by the project. A source told The Sun newspaper's Bizarre column: "It's hugely controversial. Elvis fans are diehard and see any tampering as sacrilege, but Warner Bros wanted to bring his music to a new audience. He is one of the most successful musicians of all time, but this album will help introduce his music to a new generation of kids." - Billboard/Music-News.com, 4/12/22...... Debbie HarryIn a new interview with Johnny Marr on his The Big Issue podcast, Blondie frontwoman Debbie Harry revealed she has swapped her partying ways for knitting. Harry, 76, previously battled heroin addiction, but now says she has changed her hard partying ways over the years and revealed she'll be bringing her knitting needles and yarn with her when she returns to the road. "I've had to change behaviour over the years, and behaviour is very hard to change. "On tour these days I do what the women on the front during the French Revolution would do. I sit there knitting and rocking back and forth. That's what I do. I will be bringing my knitting needles with me," she said. In 2020, Harry revealed she found obtaining drugs "a drag," and insisted she didn't need to go to rehab to get clean as she simply got tired of the effort it took to source the narcotics. "Drugs are a funny thing. The thing that drove me away from taking them was having to acquire them and what a drag that was. It was kind of a full-time occupation and a waste of time. It became unpleasant. Luckily for me I was able to handle the withdrawal," she said. These days, Harry says she's much more health-conscious, working out twice a week and eating a diet of "mainly raw foods" but she thinks getting older is "horrible" and she has "some dissatisfaction" with her life. Asked if she's happier now than she was in her 20s, she said: "There's [still] some dissatisfaction and hopelessness. It varies by the day." - Music-News, 4/12/22...... Bruce Springsteen fans were treated to some of the rocker's unreleased outtakes at a Mexican radio conference on Apr. 9, thanks to his longtime engineer. Toby Scott was a guest at the SoundCheck Xpo in Mexico City, and during his presentation he offered up some snippets of a few old recordings that Springsteen recorded in the early 1980s. During his 87-minute presentation, the engineer played a few different takes of the Boss recording "Born In The U.S.A." One of the versions was the solo-acoustic demo that Springsteen recorded in 1982, during the Nebraska era -- this version ended up on his 1998 box set Tracks. Scott also played a bluesy, full-band take of the iconic anthem that has not previously been heard. - NME, 4/11/22...... Gilbert GottfriedGilbert Gottfried, the unfiltered standup comedian whose signature nasally squawk could be heard on everything from Saturday Night Live and The Howard Stern Show to movie favorites like Aladdin and Problem Child, died on Apr. 12 after a long battle with a form of heart failure. He was 67. The Gottfried family announced his death in a statement on Twitter: "We are heartbroken to announce the passing of our beloved Gilbert Gottfried after a long illness. In addition to being the most iconic voice in comedy, Gilbert was a wonderful husband, brother, friend and father to his two young children. Although today is a sad day for all of us, please keep laughing as loud as possible in Gilbert's honor." Gottfried's most recent appearance on TV was earlier in April on The Masked Singer. He also had recurring roles on Night Court, Wings, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and guest-starred on 30 Rock (as himself), The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Married... with Children, SpongeBob SquarePants, Family Guy, Crashing, three Sharknado movies, Sesame Street, Hannah Montana, Mad About You and The Cosby Show. In 2017, his life and career were the subjects of a documentary, Gilbert, directed by Neil Berkeley. - Yahoo.com, 4/12/22...... Actress Liz Sheridan who was famous for playing Jerry Seinfeld's mother in the hit show Seinfeld -- passed away in the early hours of Apr. 15, TMZ.com has reported, with her death sadly coming just five days after her 93rd birthday. It is believed Liz -- who is also known for her role as neighbor Raquel on the '80s sitcom ALF -- passed away from natural causes. Ms Sheridan's death comes shortly after Estelle Harris, who played George's mom in Seinfeld, also passed away. - Bang Showbiz, 4/15/22.

Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on April 11th, 2022



John Lennon's eldest son Julian Lennon has broken a musical vow to himself to help the people of Ukraine by singing his dad's peace anthem "Imagine" "only if it was the end of the world." Julian sang "Imagine" publicly for the first time ever on Apr. 8 to help raise money for Ukrainian refugees during Global Citizen's Stand Up For Ukraine fundraising campaign, and shared his performance across socials with a lengthy caption addressing his decision to finally perform his late father's iconic peace anthem. "The War on Ukraine is an unimaginable tragedy ... As a human, and as an artist, I felt compelled to respond in the most significant way I could," Julian wrote on Instagram. "So today, for the first time ever, I publicly performed my Dad's song, IMAGINE." Julian LennonThe 59-year-old singer-songwrier explained what led him to decide to perform the song for the first time in his decades-long career. "I had always said, that the only time I would ever consider singing 'IMAGINE' would be if it was the 'End of the World,'" he wrote. "The song reflects the light at the end of the tunnel, that we are all hoping for ... As a result of the ongoing murderous violence, millions of innocent families, have been forced to leave the comfort of their homes, to seek asylum elsewhere," he added. Julian performed the song, which has also been shared on YouTube, in a somber setting, surrounded by dozens of candles. He was accompanied by Extreme frontman Nuno Bettencourt on acoustic guitar. John Lennon released the title track to his album Imagine in 1971, and it peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart. - Billboard, 4/11/22...... Meanwhile, other famous rockers including Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, U2 and Ozzy Osbourne have shared messages for the "Stand Up For Ukraine" campaign ahead of a summit that was held on Apr. 9 with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau co-hosting the main conference alongside European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen. "Refugees in Ukraine and around the world need our help now... Join all of us on E Street, and Global Citizen, as we stand up for Ukraine and stand up for those displaced globally, because everyone deserves safe and humane living conditions," Springsteen said in a video message on Instagram on Apr. 8. "We are devastated to see the suffering of people in Ukraine as this conflict unfolds," Elton John expressed in his Instagram post. "Two decades ago, we pledged to raise awareness and provide support for people living with HIV in Ukraine through [the Elton John AIDS Foundation]. They, and so many more, need our help now more than ever." For their contribution, U2's Bono and Edge shared an acoustic performance of U2's anthemic 2000 song "Walk On" on Instagram, and in an accompanying statement, they wrote: "...More than four million people, mostly women and children, have had to flee for their lives -- a population nearly the size of Ireland." - Billboard, 4/9/11...... In related news, a new Pink Floyd song recorded earlier in April to help Ukranian refugees is on track to give the legendary prog-rock band a rare Top 10 hit in the U.K. "Hey, Hey, Rise Up!," which has been shared on YouTube, is Pink Floyd's first original music since 1994, and features co-founding Floyd members David Gilmour and Nick Mason, along with bassist Guy Pratt and Mercury Prize-winning keyboardist Nitin Sawhney. David GilmourThe song is headed for a No. 5 debut on the UK's Official U.K. Singles Chart, and would be the just the band's third U.K. Top 10 single, and its first since "Another Brick In The Wall" hit No. 1 back in 1979, their only chart-topper. "Rise Up" features a sample of Andriy Khlyvnyuk, from Ukrainian band Boombox, and all proceeds go towards the Ukrainian Humanitarian Effort. "I hope it will receive wide support and publicity," Gilmour said in a statement. "We want to raise funds for humanitarian charities, and raise morale. We want express our support for Ukraine and in that way, show that most of the world thinks that it is totally wrong for a superpower to invade the independent democratic country that Ukraine has become," he added. - Billboard, 4/11/22...... Ozzy Osbourne confirmed on Apr. 10 that he's finished work on his new studio album, the follow-up to 2020's Ordinary Man. Sharing a photo on Instagram, Osbourne said: "I'm so happy to let everyone know that I finished my new album this week and delivered it to my label Epic Records. I'll be sharing all the information about the album and its upcoming release with you in the next several weeks." The new LP was forecasted to be released before the end of April according to a financial statement issued by Sony at the end of 2021. In December, Osbourne's producer and guitarist Andrew Watt said he and his bandmates were "about halfway through" recording Ozzy's new album. The new band, Watt revealed, features Osbourne on vocals, himself on guitar and Robert Trujillo (Metallica) on bass, with the late Taylor Hawkins (Foo Fighters) and Chad Smith (Red Hot Chili Peppers) sharing drumming duties. - NME, 4/10/22...... Meanwhile, Ozzy's former Black Sabbath bandmate Geezer Butler has revealed that he's finished the first draft of his forthcoming autobiography. Butler revealed in early 2021 that he'd already written half of the book, which he hopes will offer his grandchildren an insight into his illustrious career with the seminal heavy metal band. "[It's] been fun going through stuff -- old times and growing up in Birmingham, and all that," Butler explained at the time. "I'm right in the middle of doing that at the moment." Posting to Twitter on Apr. 6, the bassist told fans that he'd "just turned in the 1st draft of my book" and was now thinking of potential titles. "So far, I have: Into the Void, Basses Loaded, Past Forward, What The Butler Did [and] Bassic Instinct," he wrote, adding: "Feel free to send me which of those you think would suit my #autobiography." Butler's upcoming memoir is reportedly "about growing up in Aston, Birmingham and how Sabbath came about." A release date is not yet known. - NME, 4/7/22...... In other Heavy Metal news, a new study conducted in Germany has shown that surgeons who listen to AC/DC while performing operations are more accurate and efficient. Interestingly, the study found that listening to rock music can actually have a calming effect and even lower blood pressure, and listening to fast-paced music proved to be a major factor in speeding up operations. Those who listened to AC/DC's "Highway To Hell" and "T.N.T." in the trials went from taking 236 seconds to make an incision to 139, while they were also 5% more accurate. The Beatles' "Hey Jude" and "Let It Be" also sped up the time taken to stitch up wounds by a whopping 50%, however, only when the music was played at a low volume. Overall, the study found that "soft rock and hard rock" can improve surgical performance. Lead researcher Cui Yang from Heidelberg University, Germany, wrote in Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery journal: "Our results show that both soft rock and hard rock can enhance surgical performance. For hard rock music, the positive effect was especially noticeable when the music was played in high volume. It is possible that music with high rhythmicity could provide a tempo to keep up the speed of the performance and thus enhance task performance." - Music-News.com, 4/11/22...... Organizers of a "Crown Our Prince" project in downtown Minneapolis honoring late funk-rock superstar Prince have revealed that a mural honoring the musician will be unveiled in June. The painting is scheduled to begin on May 16 on a parking ramp near near First Avenue and 8th Street, according to the officials. The artwork will be carried out by Hiero Veiga, 33, a Black Florida street painter known for the rendering on the exterior wall of Miami's Museum of Graffiti. The $500,000 Minneapolis project has been in the works for seven years, and a block party is scheduled for June 2 to celebrate its completion. Prince died six years ago of an accidental fentanyl overdose at his Paisley Park home in Chanhassen. - Associated Press, 4/10/22...... Dead & Company announced dates for its upcoming 20-date, 16-city US summer tour on Instagram on Apr. 8. Composed of surviving Grateful Dead members alongside younger musicians John Mayer, Jeff Chimenti and Oteil Burbridge, the Dead are set to kick off the tour at Los Angeles' Dodger Stadium on June 11 before visiting such markets as Mountain View, Calif. (6/13, 14), Boulder, Col. (6/17, 18), Cincinnati (6/22), Chicago (6/24, 25), and Philadelphia (7/10). The band also plans to play two dates in New York City to close out the tour on July 15 and 16. A full list of stops can be seen on the Instagram post. - NME, 4/8/22...... The Nitty Gritty Dirt BandThe Nitty Gritty Dirt Band has announced that a new covers album of Bob Dylan songs, Dirt Does Dylan, will hit stores on May 20. "Bob Dylan was an obvious choice because his songbook is so deep," NGDB co-founder Jeff Hanna says. "There's an embarrassment of riches as far as songs go, and the songs cover every possible place you might want to go musically," he added. Dirt Does Dylan will include the country rock band's star-studded version of "The Times They Are A-Changin'," which was released in 2021 as a charity single benefitting Feeding America, and features The War & Treaty, Jason Isbell, Steve Earle, Rosanne Cash and Hanna's wife Matraca Berg, among others. Hanna is joined on the album by fellow NGDB co-founder Jimmie Fadden and longtime Dirt Band member Bob Carpenter, as well as Jim Photoglo (who co-wrote the band's hit, "Fishin in the Dark"), Ross Holmes and Jaime Hanna, who all became part of the band over the last few years. A video for their new single "I Shall Be Released," which features Larkin Poe, has been shared on YouTube. Hanna says he first saw Dylan in concert when he was in high school in 1964, and has been a lifelong fan. Like his bandmates, he relished diving into the material. 2022 also marks the 50th anniversary of the release of the band's iconic Will the Circle Be Unbroken album, which paired the band with bluegrass and country pioneers like Earl Scruggs, Roy Acuff, Doc Watson and Mother Maybelle Carter. Hanna says there was not the intent to make the entire Dylan album a collaborative effort. "We never really floated the idea of it being a duets record from top to bottom," he says. "We were so focused on creating something with this band." The 10-track LP comes out on the band's own NGDB Records, distributed by MRI. A commemorative coffee table book celebrating the recording of the album will also come out this summer. - Billboard, 4/7/22...... Tom Waits performed a rare live set during an Apr. 6 tribute to the late Hal Willner, Saturday Night Live's longtime sketch music producer who died in 2020 at the age of 64. The tribute event was held on Apr. 6, taking place at Brooklyn's St Ann's Warehouse with a number of famous faces including Bono and the Edge, Elvis Costello and Michael Stipe, in attendance. Waits gave a rare live performance, which has been shared on Instagram, which included his rendition of "Shenandoah" from the Willner-curated album Son Of Rogue's Gallery: Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs & Chanteys. Waits and his wife Kathleen also penned a touching tribute on social media, where they called Willner "Wise and reckless. Lamb and black sheep," and "Lover of the afflicted and the blessed." "If you took a cross section of Hal's heart... you would see the rings of a wise old tree," the post read. "Above all, let's remember that Hal loved music... and from all appearances it seems very much to have loved him right back big time." - NME, 4/8/22...... Dolly Parton has said she thinks mistreating the environment is like "being ugly to your mama" in a new interview with National Geographic published on Apr. 6. The country superstar expressed concern over the extreme weather events the world has experienced lately and urged world leaders and regular people alike to do more to protect the environment. "Well, my hope for the environment, for all things living, and all things good, just nature in general, [is] that we should pay more attention to how we're treating our mountains, how we're treating our world, how we're just treating everything," the country legend said. She continued, "We're just mistreating Mother Nature. That's, like, being ugly to your mama, you know? That's like being disrespectful. So, I really think we all need to pay closer attention to taking better care of the things that God gave us freely and that we're so freely messing up. We need to rethink that and do better." The 76-year-old Parton has often used her platform to encourage and create change when it comes to the environment. Her theme park, Dollywood, hosts a bald eagle sanctuary run by the American Eagle Foundation, which rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned bald eagles, owls, vultures and other birds. The center has been able to release over 180 bald eagles back into the wild. - Billboard, 4/7/22...... The EaglesThe Eagles posted on their official website on Apr. 6 that Deacon Frey, son of late Eagles member Glenn Frey, is leaving the band to pursue other opportunities. "Deacon Frey has devoted the past 4 1/2 years to carrying on his father's legacy and, after some weeks of reflection, he now feels that it is time for him to forge his own path," the band posted. "We understand, completely, and we support him in whatever he wishes to pursue in the years ahead... We are grateful to Deacon for his admirable efforts and we wish him well as he charts his future. Deacon's Eagles Family will always be here to surround him with love, support and goodwill, and he is always welcome to join us onstage at any future concerts, if he so desires. We hope our fans will join us in wishing Deacon the very best as he moves into the next phase of his career," they added. Glenn Frey died in 2016 at the age of 67 from complications due to rheumatoid arthritis, at which point Deacon stepped up to take his place in the L.A. country rockers' lineup with Don Henley, Joe Walsh and Timothy B. Schmit. One year later, Vince Gill also joined the band on rhythm and lead guitar and vocals. This summer, Eagles are set to embark on a number of stadium dates throughout Europe -- including stops in Liverpool, Dublin, Edinburgh and London -- with support from Robert Plant and Alison Krauss. - Billboard, 4/6/22...... Former Sex Pistols frontman John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) has slammed the new Danny Boyle-directed 6-part biopic series about the band, Pistol, as a "middle class fantasy." In a statement on his official website, Lydon's representative says they were "led to believe" that the series would focus on founding member Steve Jones and would not be "a Sex Pistols story," but that that "doesn't seem to be the case" based on its trailer. "John's 'likeness' is clearly being used to sell this series, a series he was not involved in, and was put together behind his back. Putting words in John's mouth and rewriting history. A middle class fantasy. Disney have stolen the past and created a fairytale, which bears little resemblance to the truth. It would be funny if it wasn't tragic," the statement continues. Created and written by Craig Pearce and directed by Boyle, the series is based off Jones' memoir Lonely Boy: Tales from a Sex Pistol, and is set to premiere on Hulu (and Disney+ where Hulu isn't available) on May 31. - NME, 4/8/22...... The Clash have announced they will release a special edition of their classic album Combat Rock. Entitled Combat Rock/The People's Hall, the original record now comes with 12 additional tracks compiled by the surviving members of the band. Not only that, but the band's collaborations with the late Ranking Roger will receive their first ever official release within a separate two-track EP, and those two tracks have been shared on Spotify.com. It finds the legendary frontman of The Beat infusing "Rock the Casbah" and "Red Angel Dragnet" with his own unique style. The EP will receive a limited edition 7" vinyl following release on May 20. - NME, 4/6/22...... Chris BailyChris Bailey, frontman of the pioneering Australian punk band The Saints, died on Apr. 9 at age 65. "It is with great pain in our hearts that we have to inform you about the passing of Chris Bailey, singer and songwriter of The Saints, on April the 9th 2022," reads a message on Twitter posted by the band. The Saints' '70s single "I'm Stranded" was one of the sparks that lit the punk scene, as the band soaked up the frustration of living in the culturally-stifling Queensland of Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen and let it all spill out. The song was cut in 1976, and released on EMI the following year in the U.K., at the infancy of punk. "I'm Stranded" is considered one of the first and most influential songs of the punk era, and The Saints have been described by Bob Geldof as "one of the three bands which changed the 1970s, the others being the Sex Pistols and the Ramones." Born in Kenya in 1957, and raised in Brisbane, Bailey formed the pioneering punk outfit in 1973 with guitarist and songwriter Ed Kuepper and drummer Ivor Hay. The Saints were inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 2001. - Billboard, 4/11/22..... Bluegrass legend Roland White, a Bluegrass Hall of Fame member who played fast without sacrificing the genre's melodic core, died on Apr. 1 after complicaions from a heart attack. He was 83. Mr. White, who had a long career of masterfully not following directions in bluegrass, played in the late '60s and early '70s with two of the genre s most important figures: Bill Monroe, for whom he was a singer and guitarist; and Lester Flatt, who hired him for mandolin. In the late '80s, Mr. White joined the Nashville Bluegrass Band, which earned two Grammys for Best Bluegrass Album, then formed the Roland White Band. "He formulated things in his own mind. He didn't ever read music and follow directions on how to play," says Diane Bouska, his wife since the 1980s and longtime musical partner. "It seemed like he was dancing through his instrument." - Billboard, 4/6/22...... Veteran actress Kathryn Hays, a longtime star of the daytime soap As the World Turns, died on Mar. 25 of as yet undisclosed causes. She was 88. Ms. Hays, who worked on As the World Turns for 38 years, from 1972 and 2010, began her career in the 1960s with roles on such shows as Hawaiian Eye, Dr Kildare, Route 66, Bonanza and The Man from U.N.C.L.E. In 1966, she was cast as Elizabeth Reynolds in The Road West for 29 episodes. In addition, she starred in the 1968 episode of Star Trek named "The Empath" as the titular character named, who went by Gem. Throughout her career, Ms. Hays appeared in 40 different television series with her last being a 2007 episode of Law and Order: SUV. - Bang Showbiz, 4/8/22.

Several of Manchester, UK's most famous pop bands including the Sex Pistols, Joy Division and New Order will be featured in a new British Pop Archive in the city. Hosted at the John Rylands Research Institute and Library at the University of Manchester, the new BPA is described as "a national collection dedicated to the preservation and research of popular culture" and has made a trailer available on YouTube. The exhibition promises to "celebrate and preserve British popular music and other aspects of popular culture, recognising its pivotal influence on the world stage." Its first exhibit is titled "Collection" and will launch launch on May 19. And speaking of the Sex Pistols, the official trailer for director Danny Boyle's upcoming Sex Pistols TV series Pistol has been shared on YouTube. The brief trailer, titled "Destroy," sees John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten, plaed by Anson Boon), tell his bandmates that "the monarchy has stolen our future" before we hear of the start of "a youth revolution." Pistol premieres on Disney+ on May 30. - New Musical Express, 4/6/22...... Paul McCartneyThe childhood Liverpool home of Paul McCartney at 20 Forthlin Road, where Paul and his songwriting partner John Lennon wrote such iconic Beatles hits as "I Saw Her Standing There" and "When I'm 64," has been opened up to unsigned artists as a spot to write and perform songs. Britain's National Trust announced on Apr. 5 that the initiative, dubbed the "Forthlin Sessions," will allow budding acts to "visit, write, and perform at 20 Forthlin Road, sitting in the very same spots where around 30 of the world's most famous songs, including "Love Me Do," "I Saw Her Standing There," "Hold Me Tight," "I'll Follow The Sun" and "When I'm 64" were written and rehearsed. It is also where Paul wrote his first-ever song, "I Lost My Little Girl." National Trust Director General Hilary McGrady said in a statement that the Beatles "inspired a generation to feel free to be creative, regardless of who or where they were" and that "it's a pleasure to care for the Beatles' childhood homes and to use the story of what happened there to continue this legacy." The artists who get this rare opportunity will work with Paul's younger brother, Mike McCartney, and British journalist Pete Paphides in consultation with the Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts; acts must be over 18 and UK-based in order to participate. The sessions will be recorded and publicized, allowing the act to reach new, potentially global audiences. A video announcing the initiative has been shared on Twitter. - Billboard, 4/5/22...... On Apr. 5 a lawsuit brought by the widow of songwriter Jacque Levy -- who co-wrote "Hurricane" and none other songs on Bob Dylan's 1976 album Desire -- against Dylan was rejected by a New York appeals court. In 2021 Levy's widow Claudia claimed she was owed a portion of Dylan's recent huge catalog sale to Universal -- a $7.25 million cut of the $300 million sale to UMPG -- but a trial judge ruled in August that Levy had signed away his rights years ago. New York's Appellate Division has now upheld that ruling -- and said it wasn't a particularly close call. "Nothing submitted by plaintiffs concerning music industry custom and practice supports a reading otherwise, or even suggests an ambiguity in the relevant contractual language," New York's Appellate Division wrote in the rulling. Claudia Levy first filed the case in Jan. 2021, a month after news broke that Dylan had sold his entire songwriting catalog of more than 600 songs to UMPG. An attorney representing Dylan said, "We are pleased the court has again rejected this sad attempt to profit off of Bob's recent catalog sale." - Billboard, 4/5/22...... Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler hosted his annual Grammy Awards charity viewing party at the Hollywood Paladium on Apr. 3 after the event took a hiatus in 2021 due to the pandemic. At the start of the evening, Tyler toasted the crowd of celebrities, which included Ashlee Simpson Ross, Caitlyn Jenner, Melissa Joan Hart, Ashley Benson and Matt Sorum , kicking off the Grammy's livestream. Following the three-course dinner and awards telecast, Tyler made his first public performance in two years, performing a piano rendition of Aerosmith's "Dream On." The event historically benefits Tyler's charity organization Janie's Fund, a philanthropic initiative to raise awareness for young girls who have survived abuse and neglect. In an emotional speech, Tyler spoke to the crowd about how child victims of neglect and abuse "paid dearly as a result of the pandemic," referencing Janie and Gabriel Fernandez, the 8-year old boy who was a victim of abuse and, ultimately, murder -- a story that was chronicled in Netflix's The Trials of Gabriel Fernandez. - The Hollywood Reporter, 4/5/22...... Newly unearthed footage of an 11-year-old Prince arguing for better pay for Minneapolis teachers has made its way onto YouTube. Filmed in 1970, the rare short clip was discovered in the archive room of Minneapolis television station WCCO by production manager Matt Liddy, who was searching the archives in order to place another Minneapolis teacher's strike that took place earlier in 2022 into better context. Once Liddy came across the footage, he "immediately just went out to the newsroom and started showing people and saying, 'I'm not gonna tell you who I think this is, but who do you think this is?'" WCCO then brought in a specialist to restore audio to the footage, and they tracked down a local historian and a childhood friend of Prince's to confirm that the child in the footage was indeed Prince. It was recently announced that "Prince: The Immersive Experience" will debut in Chicago this summer, where fans can "immerse themselves fully in the music and life of Prince." - NME, 4/4/22...... Alex LifesonRush guitarist Alex Lifeson has embarked on a new project called Envy of None with bassist Andy Curran and Maiah Wynne, an up-and-coming singer-songwriter from Oregon. Along with producer and engineer Alfio Annibalini (who also plays keyboards and guitars), the band will release its self-titled LP on Apr. 8. Lifeson, 68, says he continued to work on music "very casually" after Rush took its final bow at the Forum in Los Angeles nearly seven years ago. Lifeson says after Curran recommended Wynne, who was "really special...you've got to hear her voice," the pair immediately connected and "she was so inspiring to me... We are separated by quite a few years in age and experience, but there is something old-world about her. I may have known her in another life." Lifeson also commented on his surviving Rush bandmate, Geddy Lee: "As far as Geddy and I getting together, we're best friends. He's working on his book. We try to see each other whenever we can. We still love being together. Whether that leads to something musical, we'll see. There's no pressure, and our friendship comes before anything." - Canoe.com, 4/3/22...... During a stop on his "Farewell Yellow Brick Road The Final Tour" in Indianapolis on Apr. 1, Elton John credited teenage AIDS victim Ryan White and his Indiana-based family for saving his own life. "I knew that my lifestyle was crazy and out of order. And six months later, I got sober and clean and have been ever since," John told the crowd at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. He added that White's family was the catalyst for him to change. "I cannot thank them enough, because without them, I'd probably be dead... I love you so much.... This song is for you," he said to White's mother, Jeanne White-Ginder, who continues to share a close relationship with John and was present at the concert. John then began playing his ballad "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me." - AP, 4/2/22...... Joni Mitchell was named the 2022 MusiCares Person of the Year during a gala at the MGM Grand Conference Center in Las Vegas on Apr. 1. A number of musicians, including Stephen Stills, Chaka Khan, Herbie Hancock, Cyndi Lauper, Beck, St. Vincent, John Legend and Brandi Carlile took part in the event to pay tribute to Mitchell, who made a rare appearance to accept the honor. During the event, there was a group singalong of Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi," with Mitchell taking to the stage for the first time in nine years to deliver the final line: "Put up a parking lot." "Everybody was splendid; it just kept getting better and better and better," she said during her her acceptance speech. "I can retire now and just let other people do it." The event raised funds for the charity MusiCare's programs and relief efforts. Mitchell, who was also a presenter at the Grammy Awards on Apr. 3, has largely kept out of the public eye since suffering a brain aneurysm in 2015. - NME, 4/3/22...... Patti Smith told the UK paper The Guardian in an interview published on Apr. 1 that she plans to release "one more album" as a follow-up to her last effort, 2012's Banga. "I do have plans" Smith said when asked if she's been working on new music. "I've written a lot of songs. I'd like to do one more album and my record company, Columbia, has very generously left the door open," the 75-year-old punk poetess said. After recording four albums, including her historic 1975 Horses set, Smith went into semi-retirement back in 1980 to focus on raising her children. "I was at the pinnacle of real success and financial success," she said, "but I wasn't growing as an artist or human being." She then emerged in 1988 to release Dream of Life, and go on to release six more albums. Smith also discussed the artwork for Horses, a black and white treatment by her photographer friend Robert Mapplethorpe, who depicted her in an androgynous pose and wardrobe. "I wanted Robert [Mapplethorpe] to do the album cover because he wasn't known and I wanted people to see his work," she said. "I had no idea that it would have such impact. Robert took 12 pictures and I think it was the eighth and he just said: 'This is the one with the magic.'" When asked what her definition of punk rock is, Smith replied: "Freedom." - NME, 4/1/22...... Mick JaggerMick Jagger has released a new solo track called "Strange Game." Described as a "poignant, moodily strutting theme tune" that is "underpinned by Jagger's powerful and eery vocals," "Strange Game" serves as the theme song to the new Apple Original series Slow Horses, the first two episodes of which premiered on Apple TV+ on Apr. 1. Jagger teased the song on Twitter on Mar. 28, posting: "I've been working on a fun project with the composer Daniel Pemberton... look out for it coming soon!" Starring Oscar winner Gary Oldman, Slow Horses is based on a series of acclaimed books by British thriller novelist Mick Herron about a team of British intelligence agents who have fallen from grace. "Strange Game" has been made available for listening on YouTube. Promoting the new song on Simon Mayo's podcast on Apr. 5, Jagger also expressed excitement about his upcoming European tour with the Rolling Stones. "We did a US tour last year and...you know, people hadn't been out for a long time and, and they were...are very pleased to get out and there's a lot of big tours out this year all over Europe. So, we're, you know, very glad to be part of it all and we'll certainly enjoy playing Hyde Park. It was such a great gig the last time we did it, if the weather is as good as it was last time, it'll be great." - NME/Music-News.com, 4/1/22...... Kraftwerk have added further dates to their upcoming 2022 North American tour, which kicks off in St. Louis on May 27 and runs through a July 10 show in Vancouver, B.C. Following the announcement of a North American leg of their renowned "3D Tour" in May, the German electronic pioneers have now announced an expanded itinerary that includes the addition of new shows in New Brunswick, NJ; New Haven, CT; and Bentonville, AK. Kraftwerk were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2021. - NME, 3/31/22...... Judas Priest cancelled a concert at the Paul E Tsongas Arena in Lowell, Mass. at the last minute on Apr. 4 due to what was described as a "non-Covid related illness." The heavy metal icons tweeted that "We hope to be able to make this show up in the near future. Refunds available at point of purchase." Clips from Priest's concert at the Premier Theater at Foxwoods Resort Casino in Mashantucket, Conn. on Apr. 2 appear to show frontman Rob Halford struggling as he performed. Halford, 70, was diagnosed with prostate cancer amid the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 but is currently in remission. Halford updated his Confess autobiography to include his diagnosis in order to encourage men of a "certain age" to get themselves checked out regularly. "It's just a miracle what they can do with health care these days; it's absolutely remarkable," he wrote. "So in my story, my main message is to guys everywhere around the world, when you get to a certain age, it's very important that you get your prostate checked, your bloodwork checked, get a colonoscopy," he added. - Music-News.com, 4/5/22...... Deep Purple guitarist Steve Morse has announced that he will be temporarily stepping away from live duties with the band. Deep Purple kicked off a 2022 North American tour in February with three shows in Florida, and they're due to head to Europe in May, June and July, with dates at festivals including Hellfest in France and Stimmen Festival in Germany. In a statement posted on Facebook, Deep Purple confirmed that Morse will be taking a break, with Simon McBride replacing the guitarist for any upcoming dates. Morse also added his own statement, revealing that he is stepping back to care for his wife, who is unwell. "Steve's replacement for the upcoming live shows in May, June and July 2022 will be guitarist Simon McBride, who has previously toured with both Ian Gillan and Don Airey amongst others," the statement reads, with Morse adding that "my dear wife Janine is currently battling cancer... At this point, there are so many possible complications and unknowns, that whatever time we have left in our lives, I simply must be there with her." Deep Purple are due to play the UK in October, with dates in London, Glasgow, Leeds, Birmingham and Manchester. - NME, 3/31/22...... Bobby RydellBobby Rydell, an early 1960s-era pop crooner who scored 29 Billboard pop chart entries and starred in the 1963 movie adaptation of the Broadway musical "Bye Bye Birdie," died on Apr. 5 after a battle with pneumonia. He was 79. First making a splash with 1959's "Kissin' Time," his follow-up single, "We Got Love," peaked at No. 6 as the singer's first of six career top 10 hits during the early 1960s. Rydell's highest-charting track was "Wild One," which landed at No. 2 in the spring of 1960. Other successes included "Volare" (No. 4 in Sept. 1960), "The Cha-Cha-Cha" (No. 10 in Nov. 1962) and "Forget Him" (No. 4 in Jan. 1964). Rydell's image as the poster boy for pre-Beatles pop stardom also led to him landing the starring role in the 1963 big-screen adaptation of "Bye Bye Birdie." In the movie musical, he played Hugo Peabody, the high school sweetheart of Ann-Margret's Kim McAfee, a teenager randomly chosen to get a goodbye kiss from Elvis Presley-style rock 'n' roll singer Conrad Birdie before he leaves for the Army. The film also starred Janet Leigh and Dick Van Dyke, and featured Ed Sullivan as himself. His legacy was also cemented in the 1971 stage musical "Grease" and its blockbuster 1978 film adaptation. Rydell High, the school attended by Danny, Sandy and the rest of the T-Birds and Pink Ladies, was named in his honor. In his 2016 autobiography Bobby Rydell: Teen Idol on the Rocks, he wrote that after years of alcohol abuse he was near death in July 2012 and underwent a kidney and liver transplant. He recovered three months later was back singing on a cruise ship with Frankie Avalon, but shortly after he underwent cardiac bypass surgery. Some of his later appearances were charity promotions for organ donation. - Billboard, 4/5/22..... Guitarist Joe Messina, one of the legendary Motown "Funk Brothers" studio musicians who is credited with creating the "Interval Study Method," a playing technique using diatonic and chromatic scales, died on Apr. 4 in the Detroit suburb of Northville after battling kidney disease. He was 93. "Joe was a super player, a jazz player. He loved to work," said Mr. Messina's Funk Brothers cohort Dennis Coffey. He added that Mr. Messina's preferred instrument, a Fender Telecaster, "was unusual for jazz players who typically preferred "the big boxes." But the Telecaster allowed Messina to differentiate himself within the Funk Brothers corps and brought a clean sound to hits such as Martha & the Vandellas' "Dancing in the Street," The Four Tops' "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)" and The Temptations' "Ain't Too Proud to Beg as well as recordings by Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles and others. Detroit's Motown Museum paid tribute to Mr. Messina, noting that he was the first Funk Brother to donate an instrument to its "The Magic Behind the Magic" exhibit. "Among other things, Joe was known for keeping the backbeat, heard in many Motown hit songs, the Museum wrote in a statement. "We remember Joe Messing for his prolific contributions to the Motown Sound. He is survived by a son, Joel, and daughter Janice Coppa, as well as four grandsons and six great-grandchildren. Memorial arrangements are pending. - Billboard, 4/5/22...... British punk genre legend Jordan (aka Pamela Rooke) died on Apr. 3 "a stone's throw away from the sea in her home town of Seaford, East Sussex in the company of her loving family," her family said in a statement. She was 66. "Jordan (Pamela Rooke) has left her mark on this planet, whether it be as "The Queen of Punk," or for her veterinary work and countless prize winning cats," the family continued. "She lived life to the full and was true to herself and others throughout the whole of her life. She was totally trusted and respected by all those who knew her.... a wonderful woman and will be remembered for countless decades to come." Rooke was a model who worked with Vivienne Westwood and helped create the W10 London punk look alongside Johnny Rotten, Soo Catwoman and Siouxsie Sioux. She also attended several early Sex Pistols concerts and can be seen in Julien Temple's The Great Rock & Roll Swindle, appearing on stage with the Sex Pistols during their first live television performance of "Anarchy In The UK' in Aug. 1976. She will be played by Maisie Williams in Pistol, director Danny Boyle's forthcoming TV series about the Sex Pistols. British writer, musician and activist John Robb wrote that the world would miss Jordan, hailing her as "punk rock public enemy number one and maybe the fifth Sex Pistol." - NME, 4/1/22...... C.W. McCallC.W. McCall, the baritone country singer best known for his CB-inspired 1976 chart-topping hit "Convoy", died on Apr. 1 at age 93. The death of Mr. McCall, whose real name was Bill Fries, was announced by his son, Bill Fries III. Mr. McCall had announced in Feb. 2022 that he was receiving cancer treatment in hospice. Best known for his outlaw country anthems, the Audubon, Iowa-bred Mr. Fries rose to musical prominence through his day job as a creative director at the Bozell & Jacobs advertising agency in Omaha, Neb., where in 1973 he wrote a Clio award-winning TV campaign for Old Home Bread. The jingle told the story of trucker C.W. McCall, who hauled the goods from the Metz Baking Company in his 18-wheeler as he romanced a waitress named Mavis, who worked at the Old Home Filler-Up an' Keep on a-Truckin' Cafe in Pisgah, Iowa. The ads clicked and bread sales went up as fans became fascinated by the fictional couple, prompting Fries to spin them off into a modestly selling promotional single for Metz called "Old Home Filler-Up an' Keep On A-Truckin' Cafe." The song was written by Fries and Bozell's in-house jingle writer, Chip Davis, who would go on to found Mannheim Streamroller and collaborate with Fries on a number of other songs over the next half-decade. Soon enough, MGM Records in Nashville got interested and Fries cooked up his iconic truck life story song, "Convoy," which was larded with a string of CB radio buzzwords. "Ah, breaker one-nine, this here's the Rubber Duck/ You gotta copy on me, Pig Pen, c'mon?/ Ah, yeah, 10-4, Pig Pen, fer shure, fer shure/ By golly, it's clean clear to Flag Town, c'mon/ Yeah, that's a big 10-4 there, Pig Pen/ Yeah, we definitely got the front door, good buddy/ Mercy sakes alive, looks like we got us a convoy," Fries talk-sings in the intro of the song, which balances his deep, froggy vocals with a bright chorus of female voices chirping, "'Cause we got a little ol' convoy/ Rockin' through the night/ Yeah, we got a little ol' convoy/ Ain't she a beautiful sight?/ Come on and join our convoy/ Ain't nothin' gonna get in our way/ We gonna roll this truckin' convoy/ 'Cross the USA." "Convoy" rose to No. 1 on the Billboard pop and country charts in 1975-76 at a time when CB radios were gaining wider cultural prominence, popping up in consumer cars as well as in the films White Line Fever (1975) and Burt Reynolds/Sally Field smash comedy Smokey and the Bandit (1977). They were also front-and-center in a big-screen spin-off of Fries' song, the 1978 Sam Pekinpah-directed film, also Convoy, which starred country singer/actor Kris Kristofferson as a trucker trying to pull together a nationwide convoy to outwit a cop played by Ernest Borgnine; Fries re-recorded some of the original's lyrics to more closely follow the movie's plot. Under his McCall stage name Fries would score a handful of other charting country hits before stepping away from his performing career by the late 1970s after releasing 9 studio albums, beginning with his 1975 debut, Wolf Creek Pass, through his final album of originals, 1979's C.W. McCall & Co. Among his other memorable songs were the 1976 environmental anthem "There Won't Be No Country Music (There Won't Be No Rock 'n' Roll)," the emotional 1977 ballad "Roses for Mama," as well "Four Wheel Cowboy" (1976) and 1978's "Outlaws and Lone Star Beer." Following his retirement from music, Mr. Fries served as mayor of Ouray, Col. from 1986-1992. - Billboard, 4/4/22.