Saturday, December 23, 2023

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on December 28th, 2023

Speaking on his Paul McCartney: A Life in Lyrics podcast, Paul McCartney has admitted the Beatles classic "Let It Be" was subconsciously inspired by William Shakespeare's "Hamlet." "In those days [at school], I had to learn [Shakespeare] speeches off by heart. So I could still do a bit of 'to be or not to be', or 'O that this too too solid flesh'. And it had been pointed out to me recently that Hamlet, when he has been poisoned, he actually says, 'Let it be' - act five, scene two. He says 'Let be' the first time, then the second time he says, 'Had I but time -- as this fell sergeant, Death, Is strict in his arrest -- oh, I could tell you. But let it be Horatio.'" He added: "I was interested that I was exposed to those words during a time when I was studying Shakespeare so that years later the phrase appears to me in a dream with my mother saying it." Sir Paul, 81, previously explained how the idea for the song came to him in a dream about his mother during the intense writing sessions for the Beatles' 1968 "White Album." His mother Mary Patricia McCartney died of cancer in 1956, when he was 14. He later said: "It was great to visit with her again. I felt very blessed to have that dream. So that got me writing 'Let It Be'." In another interview, he clamed she said to him in the dream: "'It will be all right, just let it be.'" - Music-News.com, 12/28/23...... XTCEnglish post-punk legends XTC have expressed mixed opinions about the possibility of reforming, with each member offering different perspectives about the prospect. In a rare new interview with their hometown newspaper, The Swindon Advertiser, the quartet -- frontman Andy Partridge, bassist Colin Moulding, drummer Terry Chambers and guitarist Dave Gregory -- reflected on their legacy and looked to the future. "I think we've all got our own things going as I do sessions at the moment and I'd want to do another EP probably next year as well of my own," said Moulding. "As for reforming now, I can't see it really because we've all got different agendas because Terry wants to tour and Andy doesn't and nor do I so it's hard to reconcile that really. Never say never I suppose because with the internet you're able to record remotely with one another and that could quite feasibly happen with the memories of XTC." Chambers, who still tours with his band EXTC, playing covers of the band's original songs, shared: "It wouldn't be a problem for me as I'm still playing live regularly but as for the others, ask them. My feeling is no, it will never happen." Gregory also agreed that it would be dependant on a number of factors. "If everyone was into it, I would join in but I'm not going to force it and I'm not even going to suggest it," he said. As for Partridge, the frontman stated that it would "horrify" him, unless it was "just a kickabout." "Some of the saddest sights you will see, and hear, are old, fat, bald, hoarse pop groups, waddling around a stage, in front of people trying to relive their youth," he explained. "Move on folks, get your feet out of the nostalgia swamp, it's deadly. I'd leave XTC as it is, a perfectly flawed historical event that left much good music in our vapour trail... The future belongs to the young." The band, known for songs like "Making Plans for Nigel," "Sgt. Rock (Is Going to Help Me)" and "Senses Working Overtime," formed in 1972 and split in 2006. They released 12 original albums between 1977 and 1992, starting with their debut White Music in 1978 and bookending their Virgin discography with Nonsuch in 1992. They released their final two albums, Apple Venus Volume 1 (1999) and Wasp Star (Apple Venus Volume 2) (2000), through Cooking Vinyl. - New Musical Express, 12/28/23...... Hall and Oates' John Oates has reflected on his musical partnership with Daryl Hall amid their ongoing legal battle. In November it was revealed that Hall was granted a restraining order against his longtime former musical partner, though details of their legal dispute were unknown at the time. Hall later said he was suing Oates after claiming that he was left "blindsided" by his plan to sell a business stake -- while the latter described the claims as "inaccurate." In a court statement about Oates' alleged breach of their business partnership agreement, Hall accused his bandmate of making a "completely clandestine and bad faith move" by trying to sell a share of their business without consent. Speaking on David Yontef's Behind the Velvet Rope, Oates said: "You can't ignore the fact that the Hall & Oates catalogue of hits and the 50-year career will always trump almost anything that Daryl does on his own or I do on my own, which is okay because I'm very proud of that music. I'm really proud of what Daryl and I created together." Oates said that he doesn't like to "live in the past", adding: "I make the analogy of what it's like when you go to a great museum and you're really excited to go and see all the beautiful paintings or the exhibits or whatever it might be, and then near the end, your feet start to hurt and you say, 'You know what? I can't wait to get out of here.' That's kind of how I feel about it. It's just a matter of living in my present." Earlier in December, Oates was revealed to be "Anteater" on the US version of The Masked Singer. - NME, 12/28/23...... CherIt appears that Cher has filed for a conservatorship of her youngest son, Elijah Blue Allman, over fears of alleged "severe" substance abuse issues. According to court documents filed in Los Angeles Superior Court and obtained by People, the singer is requesting to be the sole conservator of her son's estate, claiming he is "substantially unable to manage his financial resources." The doc also states that a conservator is "urgently needed" to "protect Elijah's property from loss or injury," because he is "currently unable to manage his assets due to severe mental health and substance abuse issues." It adds that Allman's estranged wife, Marie Angela King, is not fit to be conservator because of "their tumultuous relationship has been marked by a cycle of drug addiction and mental health crises." It continues: "Elijah is entitled to regular distributions from the Trust, but given his ongoing mental health and substance abuse issues, [Cher] is concerned that any funds distributed to Elijah will be immediately spent on drugs, leaving Elijah with no assets to provide for himself and putting Elijah's life at risk." The filing concludes that Cher has reportedly "worked tirelessly to get Elijah into treatment and get him the help he needs... [she] loves Elijah immensely and has always acted with his best interests in mind." A hearing for a temporary order is currently set for Jan. 5, 2024, while the hearing for a permanent order will follow on March 6, 2024. In September, Cher was accused of hiring four men to kidnap Allman, 47, as a way to prevent him from seeing King and get him clean from drugs. Cher subsequently denied allegations that she orchestrated a kidnapping. "That rumour is not true," she told People. While the singer declined to comment further, she did confirm that the situation was related to Allman's addiction issues. "I'm not suffering from any problem that millions of people in the United States aren't," she added. - NME, 12/28/23...... In other Cher news, the pop legend has entered the U.K. history books twice as her new holiday single "DJ Play a Christmas Song" has rocketed to No. 20 from No. 41 on the Official U.K. Singles Chart. This makes Cher the first solo artist to land top 40 hits with new material in seven consecutive decades in the U.K., and at 77 years old she becomes the oldest female to snag a top tier hit in the country. Cher beats the previous mark set by Shirley Bassey, who was 70 when "The Living Tree" peaked at No. 37 in 2007. "DJ Play" has also broken records across the pond -- when the single jingled to the top of the Dec. 2-dated Dance/Electronic Song Sales survey, she became the first solo artist to earn a new No. 1 on a Billboard songs chart; the only other act to have at least one new No. 1 on a Billboard songs chart in each of the seven decades from the 1960s through the 2020s is the Rolling Stones. - Billboard, 12/27/23...... Speaking of the Rolling Stones, the band has scored a Christmas No. 1 with their latest album Hackney Diamonds, which jumped from 6-1 on the Official U.K. Albums Chart, published Friday, Dec. 22, for its second non-consecutive week at the top. Featuring collaborations with Lady Gaga, Elton John, Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney, Hackney Diamonds is the band's first album of original material in 18 years since A Bigger Bang, which peaked to No. 2 in 2005. Meanwhile, the Stones have announced they've hired a Tina Turner impersonator as a backing singer for their upcoming US tour. They will joined by former "Tina: The Tina Turner Musical" star Chanel Haynes, who joined the band onstage at their show in Milan in June 2022 to perform "Gimme Shelter" together. A source told the U.K.'s The Sun newspaper's "Bizarre" column: "The Stones had a very close relationship with Tina and Chanel blew them away when she got up on stage with them. Chanel has now been booked as one of their backing singers and will be going out on tour with them across America in the spring." - Billboard/Music-News.com, 12/26/23...... Ozzy OsbourneOzzy Osbourne has referenced a scene from the 1975 comedy Monty Python and the Holy Grail to squash an online rumor that he had died. "The thing on YouTube, it's got 'Celebrities Who Died Today', and there's a picture of me," Ozzy exclaimed on the Dec. 26 edition of his The Osbournes Podcast. "I'm not dead! I'm not really dead, just a little flesh wound," he said, recalling Monty Python's Black Knight, played by John Cleese, who declares, "Tis but a scratch" and "Just a flesh wound" when Arthur (Graham Chapman) severs his arm. The singer's wife Sharon Osbourne called those who spread the death hoax "sick f**kers." Ozzy, 75, has experienced ill health in recent years and in September, he announced he'd undergone his "final" surgery on his spine, admitting he couldn't "do it anymore." In addition to a spinal injury suffered in a 2003 ATV accident which required metal rods installed in his body, he revealed in 2020 that he had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in Feb. 2019. - Music-News.com, 12/27/23...... On Dec. 22 KISS shared a teaser clip on X/Twitter revealing the date when their digitized avatar characters will make their debut. "50 years is a long time, and what the future holds is in the making," Kiss captioned the clip. The 25-second teaser includes previously seen footage of KISS digital avatars and concludes with the message, "2027 - A Show Is Coming." During their the last concert of their "End of the Road" farewell tour at Madison Square Garden on Dec. 2, KISS made a surprise announcement that they will continue on as digitized versions of themselves going forward with a two-minute video on YouTube. "The future is so exciting," Simmons says in the clip amid behind-the-scenes snippets of the band wearing motion capture suits to develop their high-tech avatars. Stanley adds, "We can live on eternally." KISS avatars were created by George Lucas' Industrial Light & Magic, in partnership with Sweden's Pophouse Entertainment Group, according to the Associated Press. The companies recently collaborated on the ABBA Voyage show in London, a virtual concert performed by the Swedish pop group. - Billboard, 12/23/23...... In an interview with the U.K.'s HELLO! magazine, Rod Stewart and wife Penny Lancaster have joked that they will need a large marquee tent to be able to host their "huge" family Christmas. "We've got such a huge family Christmas that Rod's been talking about getting a marquee just for the dining table," Lancaster said. Stewart shares eight children with five mothers and now has three grandchildren. The couple, who wed in 2007, did not divulge which of his older children will be visiting them and their sons Alistair, 18, and Aiden, 12. Stewart revealed after Christmas they plan to travel up to Scotland to celebrate Hogmanay. "We've never done a Hogmanay, so this will be our first in Scotland," Rod noted. "There will be whisky galore." While he is now 78, Rod insisted that he is feeling as energetic and agile as ever as he rings in the New Year. "I don't feel my age -- I feel great," he gushed. "I work out a lot and look fantastic." - Music-News.com, 12/25/23...... On Dec. 27 authorities at North Kern State Prison in California confirmed that That '70s Show actor Danny Masterson has been admitted to their prison, and released his first prison mug shot. The photo shows him wearing orange prison attire, with long hair and a beard. In June, the 47-year-old Masterson was convicted of raping two women in his Los Angeles home in 2003. In September, a judge sentenced him to 30 years to life in prison. His wife, actor Bijou Phillips, filed for divorce in the weeks that followed after a marriage of nearly 12 years. Masterson had been held in Los Angeles County jail in the months since while post-sentencing hearings were held and issues resolved, including the turnover of all the guns he owned, some of which had to be located. It will be more than 25 years before he will be eligible for parole. His lawyers said they plan to appeal the conviction. - AP, 12/27/23...... Tommy SmothersTommy Smothers, one half of the comedic folk duo The Smothers Brothers, died "peacefully at home with his family" on Dec. 26 following a "recent battle with cancer," according to a statement released by his younger brother, Dick Smothers. He was 86. "Tom was not only the loving older brother that everyone would want in their life, he was a one-of-a-kind creative partner," Dick said in the statement. "I am forever grateful to have spent a lifetime together with him, on and off stage, for over 60 years. Our relationship was like a good marriage -- the longer we were together, the more we loved and respected one another. We were truly blessed." With Tommy on acoustic guitar and Dick on double bass, the duo performed satiric and farcical folk music with a socio-political bent beginning in the late '50s. By the early '60s, they were making regular appearances on various variety programs, from The Judy Garland Show to The Jack Paar Show. The duo released their first album, The Smothers Brothers at the Purple Onion, in 1961, and followed it with several other popular comedy LPs. The Billboard Top 40 1966 album Mom Always Liked You Best! was titled after Tommy's signature phrase, which was often delivered in the midst of staged feuds with his brother, who would play the smarter straight man to Tommy's sillier, innocent persona. Mom Always Liked You Best! and 1963's (Think Ethnic!) were both nominated for the best comedy performance Grammy. Following a one-season sitcom from 1965-1966, The Smothers Brothers Show, the duo landed a network variety show, The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, which aired on CBS from 1967-1969. CBS hoped the show would bring in a younger, savvier audience during a decade marked by massive generational change but ended up getting more than it bargained for. Despite playing an unworldly, stammering goof on television, Tommy was the more liberal and politically driven of the two behind the scenes, pushing their comedy in a direction that gently skewered American culture, religion and the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Following complaints from viewers and sponsors, CBS censors and network execs clashed with the Smothers Brothers, but Tommy was steadfast in refusing to self-censor or kowtow. The show, which boasted performances from edgier acts than what you'd find on most network variety shows, including Cream, Joan Baez, Buffalo Springfield and The Who, was canceled in Apr. 1969 despite the Smothers Brothers having a contract through 1970; the duo filed a breach-of-contract suit against CBS, which they won in 1973 to the tune of $776,300. In June, the same month the show's final episode aired, it won an Emmy for outstanding writing achievement in comedy, variety or music for its platoon of writers, which included a young Steve Martin and the versatile writer/musician Mason Williams, who scored a No. 2 pop hit in 1968 with "Classical Gas." In 1968, cast member Pat Paulsen won an Emmy for special classification of individual achievements for his appearances on the show. He ran for president that year under the slogan "If nominated I will not run, and if elected I will not serve." The duo made a few other TV shows in the '70s, which were less successful than their highly influential Comedy Hour, which is now celebrated as an essential piece of television and cultural history that paved the way for the arrival of NBC's irreverent variety show Saturday Night Live in 1975. They appeared sparingly over the ensuing decades, popping up for a televised 1988 anniversary special and a 2009 episode of The Simpsons. The Smothers Brothers officially retired from touring in 2010, over a half century after their live debut. Tommy Smothers is survived by his children Bo and Riley Rose Smothers, grandson Phoenix, Marcy Carriker Smothers, sister-in-law Marie Smothers, and several nephews and a niece. His son Tom and sister Sherry Smothers preceded him in death. - Billboard, 12/27/23.

Late The Band frontman Robbie Robertson has been shortlisted for a Best Original Score Oscar for his work on the film Killers of the Flower Moon. Killers was the 12th and final film Robertson and director Martin Scorsese collaborated on. Robertson, who died in June at age 80, is vying to become the first composer to be nominated in this category posthumously since the legendary Bernard Herrmann was cited in 1976 for both Obsession and Taxi Driver. Also nominated for Best Original Score was legendary Star Wars composer John Williams for Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. This would be Williams' record-extending 49th nod in a scoring category and his fourth for a film in the Indiana Jones franchise. A total of 148 scores were eligible, from which this shortlist was culled by members of the music branch, who will also vote to determine the nominees. The final nominations for the 2024 Academy Awards will be announced on Jan. 23, and the awards will be presented on Mar. 10. - Billboard, 12/21/23...... David GilmourDavid Gilmour's wife Polly Sampson has been sharing photos on Instagram of her Pink Floyd legend husband working on a "new album" in his recording studio in Brighton, UK. Sampson, an author and lyricist, has posted pics of Gilmour with various artists such as Brian Eno's brother, pianist Roger Eno and Guy Pratt -- who has worked with both Pink Floyd and Gilmour on various occasions. Though there is no exact reason as to what Gilmour's studio sessions are for, the Pink Floyd fansite Neptune Pink Floyd recently reported that Samson had told an Romanian entertainment website that Gilmour is working on an album of original material. If the sessions result in a new album, it would be Gilmour's first since 2015's Rattle That Lock. Since then, he released the standalone single "Yes, I Have Ghosts"' in 2020, and revived Pink Floyd with Nick Mason for the charity track "Hey, Hey, Rise Up!" His last live performance was back in 2016 for his six-night residency at London's Royal Albert Hall. - New Musical Express, 12/22/23...... Rising starlet Sydney Sweeney is reacting to claims she was "objectified" for the Rolling Stones' music video for their lead single from Hackney Diamonds, "Angry." Sweeney told the UK's Glamour mag that she "felt hot" in the video, which can be viewed on YouTube, and wore a bustier and studded chaps. "I picked my own outfit out of racks and racks of clothes. I felt so good in it." The Euphoria actress also revealed that the dance moves she performed in the video were unprompted, and that she felt honored to be part of the Rolling Stones' videography. "I'm in a Rolling Stones video. How cool and iconic is that?," Sweeney said. "I felt so good. All the moves, everything I was doing was all freestyle. I mean, who else gets to roll around on the top of a convertible driving down Sunset Boulevard with police escorts? It's the cool things in this career that I had no idea I'd get to do," she added. The music video for "Angry" was released on Sept. 6. The album arrived on Oct. 20 and peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 200 album chart dated Nov. 4. The Stones have claimed the UK's Official Christmas Number 1 album for 2023 with Hackney Diamonds. "It's a wonderful way to round off 2023," the band told Official Charts. "Thank you to everyone for listening to Hackney Diamonds. Have a very happy Christmas and New Year!" Meanwhile, the Stones have shared the official video for their latest single from Hackney Diamonds, "Mess It Up," on YouTube. The clip features British actor Nicholas Hoult and was filmed in the US and helmed by Grammy award-winning director Calmatic. In still more Rolling Stones news, Keith Richards wished his wife Patti Hansen a happy 40th anniversary with a throwback wedding photo he posted on Instagram on his 80th birthday, Dec. 18. "For Patricia, Happy 40th Anniversary! I love you. Keith," Richards captioned the post, which featured a photo of him and Hansen dressed in their wedding attire on the beach and cutting into their cake. Richards adding a black heart emoji to the caption. - Billboard/NME/Music-News.com, 12/21/23...... According to a new report from UK financial sources, ABBA's Voyage avatar concert experience boosted London's economy with nearly £323 million in spending turnover within a one year period. Voyage -- which is continuing to run until at least Nov. 2024 at the 3,000-capacity ABBA Arena in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park -- provided a huge financial boost to London and the East London area around the venue. "The operation and attendee spending are ongoing generators of economic contribution to the local and city-wide economies, demonstrating that as long as ABBA Voyage is in London, it has the potential to contribute to the economic wealth of the city," read the report. Contributing factors included spending on accommodation, food and beverage, transport, shopping and entertainment. Additionally, Voyage has provided employment opportunities to 5,075 workers in London. That includes those directly connected to the concert and sectors impacted by the show including staff in restaurants, sales, hotels and more. - NME, 12/22/23...... Cher took to X/Twitter on Dec. 19 to gush over Kelly Clarkson recent "Kellyoke" cover of Cher's Christmas single "DJ Play a Christmas Song" on Clarkson's eponymous talk show. "KELLY,,,,U ACED IT," Cher wrote. "U GOT THE GIRL VERSION OF MY VOICE. BABE, I AM OUT OF MY MIND OVER UR VERSION.. THE MODULATION GAVE ME & I DONT KNOW, I JUST LOST MY MIND. SISTER U GOT IT." Cher released "DJ Play a Christmas Song" as the lead single from Christmas her first holiday album. The single topped the Billboard Dance/Electronic Digital Song Sales chart in November -- giving Cher a record for having a Billboard chart-topper in the last seven decades -- while Christmas debuted atop Billboard's Top Holiday Albums chart earlier in December. Clarkson's take on "the hit "DJ Play a Christmas Song" has been shared on YouTube. Meanwhile, Cher has expressed an interest in playing the esteemed "legends" slot at the UK's Glastonbury festival. Appearing on BBC Radio 2 on Dec. 20 to promote her new Christmas album, host Rylan Clark asked: "There are so many rumours, you haven't done it yet, Glastonbury. Are we ever going to see Cher take on that Legends slot at Glastonbury?" Cher confirmed she would "like to" perform at the festival one day. Clark reiterated: "So hang on, you're saying if I manage to make this happen you'll be on that stage?," to which she replied "Yes." The 2024 Glastonbury fest is set for June 26-30 at Worthy Farm. - Billboard/NME, 12/20/23...... Ted NugentControversial rocker Ted Nugent has set his sights on Taylor Swift, accusing the superstar singer of churning out "poppy nonsense" with "no fire" and "no sensuality." Nugent, who has been a musician since the 1970s and later became a right-wing commentator, was asked his opinions on modern music during an appearance on the The Joe Pags Show podcast, and his thoughts on Swift were particularly unsparing. "So I'm afraid to say in this world that's gone down the toilet in all aspects, I'm afraid the success of Taylor Swift, and God bless her work ethic, God bless her musical dreams, but that's cartoon music," Nugent said. "I mean, it doesn't have any piss and vinegar. There's no fire, there's no sensuality in that. It's all poppy nonsense as far as I'm concerned, and it's the most popular stuff in the world, which is an indictment to the music industry and music fans. They're not looking for that fire from a ZZ Top or from a Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels or from a Brownsville Station or an Amboy Dukes [Nugent's own band from the '60s]. And I miss that. Thank God I'm still around. We still deliver the fire that the Beatles did [at clubs] in Germany." In June, Nugent had also voiced his displeasure for Swift's music -- also labelling it "cartoon music" -- on an episode of his Nightly Nuge podcast. - NME, 12/22/23...... Denny Tedesco, the director/producer of the acclaimed documentary The Wrecking Crew! about an earlier generation of studio musicians who backed '60s pop giants from Frank Sinatra to The Beach Boys, has come out with a follow-up film about five other prominent session musicians titled Immediate Family. Immediate Family showcases Danny "Kootch" Kortchmar, Leland Sklar, Waddy Wachtel, Steve Postell and Russ Kunkel who have played with the likes of Linda Ronstadt, James Taylor, Jackson Browne, Phil Collins, Carole King and hundreds of others since the '70s. Shortly after Tedesco's crew started filming in 2019, Wachtel, Sklar, Kortchmar and drummer Russ Kunkel, who'd been known for nearly 50 years as The Section, rebranded themselves as a new band called the Immediate Family. They began playing gigs on their own and added a longtime collaborator, guitarist Steve Postell, for a self-titled 2021 album. Producer Peter Asher's decision to credit the studio musicians on the album covers in the early '70s was a "quantum change" from The Wrecking Crew days, says Sklar, 76. The Section, collectively and individually, went on to perform on Browne's "Running On Empty," Stevie Nicks' "Edge of Seventeen," Hall & Oates' "Rich Girl," Warren Zevon's "Werewolves of London," Don Henley's "All She Wants to Do Is Dance" and thousands of other classic tracks. "Unlike the Wrecking Crew, we got credit for it as it was happening, not necessarily later," Kunkel adds. "It changed all of our careers. It made us who we are today." Immediate Family documents the band's evolution, complete with funny stories like Zevon insisting on 61 straight studio takes of "Werewolves," before settling on the second take for his album. Conspicuously absent are the usual recollections of drug and alcohol excess that accompany many documentaries about rock touring in the '70s and '80s. "We did talk about drugs here and there, and there are things that are very painful for those guys," Tedesco says. "They took in a lot of things and they survived -- some did, some didn't." - Billboard, 12/20/23...... Brian MayBrian May has shared that he is concerned over the increase in copyright strikes issued against Queen and Adam Lambert concert videos posted on social media. On Dec. 18, May took to his official Instagram page to share a screenshot of a fan's post in which she claimed to have received a strike from both Universal and YouTube over Queen concert videos she posted on the platform. "Hi guys, it looks like Universal and YouTube are now coming for everyone who posts concert videos of Queen and Adam [Lambert]. I got a strike and deleted most of my concert videos. If you get multiple strikes you may lose your channel. Be careful!," she wrote. In the caption of his post which featured the screenshot of the fan's claim, May wrote: "Hi Folks - - i've been watching this for a few days, and I'm very concerned. I've asked our management to look into it, and try to figure out if there is a reason for Instagram and Universal suddenly becoming so Draconian. The decision to take these videos down certainly hasn't come from us, the band. Hopefully we will get an answer soon. Meanwhile, be extra careful and I'm sorry you good folks of good intentions have been put in this position." - NME, 12/19/23...... An unreleased Bob Dylan song is set to feature in a new box set compilation chronicling the British-Irish folk rock band The Waterboys' album This Is The Sea. The track, an instrumental titled "Meridian West," came about in 1985 when The Waterboys were invited to play with Dylan at a session in North London recording studio Church Studios. Dylan had been working on the piece with the musician Dave Stewart when The Waterboys joined in, and the band's frontman Mike Scott happened to record the jam session. When compiling the upcoming re-release project, Scott contacted Dylan and received his authorization to include the track on the box set. The six-CD, 90-track collection is set to be released in 2024. The original album came out in 1985 and featured the band's signature song, "The Whole of the Moon." Meanwhile, Dylan ecently secretly released a 28-track CD of studio outtakes from the soundtrack to 1973's Pat Garrett and Billy The Kid, with copies of the CD popping up at record stores scattered around Europe. Dylan's 50th Anniversary Collection features an alternative rendition of "Knockin' On Heaven's Door" along with multiple takes of tracks "Billy Surrenders," "And He Killed Me Too" and "Final Theme." Dylan fanatics have reportedly lined up to buy the disc online for prices over $500. NME, 12/21/23...... Billy Joel was joined by his two daughters -- eight-year-old Della and six-year-old Remy -- during the latest of his Madison Square Garden shows on Dec. 19 for a rendition of "Jingle Bells." The two girls sang the festive classic with their father joining on piano, in a show that also featured Christmas favorites such as "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer," "Silent Night" and "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing." At the same show, the Piano Man was joined by Elvis Costello to play a version of Joel's "Allentown" and Costello's "Pump It Up." The show was part of Joel's decade-long monthly concert residency at the legendary New York venue, which is due to come to an end in July 2024. That show will mark the 104th show of the residency and Joel's 150th overall at the venue. - NME, 12/21/23...... Noddy HolderFormer Slade frontman Noddy Holder has revealed the real inspiration behind Slade's festive 1973 hit "Merry Christmas Everybody." Arguably one of Slade's biggest hits, "Merry Christmas Everybody" has become so famous that strangers regularly shout the iconic "IT'S CHRISTMAAAAAAS!" line back to Holder in the street. It still generates £500,000 in royalties every year, 50 years after its original release. However, Holder has now revealed he and bandmate Jim Lea were never intending to write a Christmas song, explaining that its first iteration was conceived in the band's "hippy dippy psychedelic days" in 1967, when it was called "Buy Me A Rocking Chair," and was later discarded. Their label later pushed them to release a Christmas song, prompting them to revive the track and use its melody for "Merry Christmas Everybody." The song was also partly inspired by the success of John Lennon and Yoko Ono's "Merry Christmas (War Is Over)." "I went to the local pub in Wolverhampton and went back to my mum and dad's after and I sat up all night with a bottle of whisky and wrote the total lyrics that night," Holder told the BBC. Holder said the record company "were making serious dough from us" after the song sold 500,000 records through pre-orders alone before it topped the charts. Despite this, Holder said it was the "hardest song we ever had to record" after drummer Don Powell narrowly escaped death in a car crash in Wolverhampton earlier that year and had to re-learn his instrument. At the time, he could only play the drums for a short while at a time, but their engineer was a "clever cookie" and was able to stitch together the sections of the song they recorded, so that afterwards "you couldn't tell." - NME, 12/16/23...... Julian Lennon has spoken out about his relationship with his half-brother Sean Ono Lennon, saying that rumours of an alleged feud between them are "such bull." The elder son of John Lennon reflected on his relationship with his sibling during a new interview with Esquire, and shut down speculation that there was any feelings of rivalry between them. The conversation arose as he looked back at the red carpet premiere of the Beatles' 2021 documentary series Get Back, which he attended with Sean. Recalling the event, he explained that Sean initially had reservations about attending. "He felt overwhelming pressure. And I didn't particularly want to go. But he said he felt obligated to go," he told the magazine. "So, because I love him so much I said, 'Listen, I'm coming with you. We'll face the demons together.' And it's funny because there's always been, especially in the U.K. press, 'Lennon Sons Feuding,' this, that. We've never had a fight in our life. It's such bull." Julian also revealed that he's been "driven up the wall" by the Beatles' classic "Hey Jude." Paul McCartney wrote the 1968 non-album single about John's break-up with Julian's mother, Cynthia. The couple had separated and John began a relationship with Yoko Ono, whom he married in 1969. "It's a beautiful sentiment, no question about that, and I'm very thankful - but I've also been driven up the wall by it," he told Esquire. "I love the fact that he wrote a song about me and for Mum, but depending on what side of the bed one woke up on, and where you're hearing it, it can be a good or a slightly frustrating thing." - NME, 12/20/23...... Jim LaddJim Ladd, the legendary Los Angeles-based disc jockey whom Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers immortalized in their 2002 song "The Last DJ," died suddenly on Dec. 17 of a heart attack. He was 75. A fixture in the L.A. radio market, Ladd worked up and down the radio dial, including stints at KNAC, KMET and KLOS. He was considered the last "freeform DJ" in the country, allowed to pick his own song selections. Ladd started his career at Long Beach, Calif.'s KNAC in 1969 as FM radio was burgeoning and quickly established himself as one of Southern California's leading rock voices. From KNAC, Ladd moved to KLOS in 1971 and then had stops at Los Angeles stations KMET, KMPC and KLSX before returning to KLOS in 1997, where he stayed for 14 years. After leaving KLOS in 2011, he was quickly picked up by SiriusXM's "Deep Tracks" channel, where he appeared until his death. Over the decades, he was well known for his interviews with such artists as John Lennon, Pink Floyd, Stevie Nicks and Led Zeppelin. The Doors drummer John Densmore paid tribute to Ladd on social media, posting on X/Twitter, ""The Last DJ' has crossed the tracks. There wasn't a more soulful spinner of music. The songs he played were running through his blood, he cared so much for rock n' roll. Irreplaceable & a very sad day, which can only be handled by carrying his spirit forward." Densmore's Doors bandmate Robby Krieger also posted, "Rest in peace, Jim Ladd. He was the best friend in radio The Doors ever had. Even when people forgot about us in the late '70s, he kept playing our music." Ladd inspired "The Last DJ" song, which Petty once told journalist Jim DeRogatis was "about a DJ who becomes so frustrated with his inability to play what he wants that he moves to Mexico and gets his freedom back." SiriusXM is airing tributes to Ladd, who is survived by wife Helene, on "Deep Tracks" as well as other classic rock channels. - Billboard, 12/18/23.

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on December 18th, 2023

ABBA was spoofed during the Dec. 16 episode of NBC's Saturday Night Live in a skit that featured the cast performing Christmas spins on classic ABBA songs. Kate McKinnon was joined by fellow SNL alumni Kristen Wiig and Maya Rudolph along with current cast member Bowen Yang as the quartet were decked out in shiny red and green outfits to perform Christmas spins on such classic ABBA songs as "Dancing Queen ("Santa Queen") and a new take on "Chiquitita" called "Frostitita." The cast also staged the performance with ABBA's "signature 'standing close, facing different directions'," and could be seen laughing as they sang with their faces pressed right up against each other. The full sketch can be viewed on YouTube. - New Musical Express, 12/17/23...... Elton JohnElton John unveiled his 15 favorite songs from 2023 during his Rocket Hour radio program on Dec. 15. "I'm looking back and choosing some of my favorite songs that I've played on the show this year," he said on the show, before adding on his Instagram account that "2023 has been a fantastic year for new artists and great songs." Among those included on the "Cold Heart" singer's list are artists such as Boygenius ("Not Strong Enough"), Mitski ("My Love Mine All Mine"), Chappell Roan ("Red Wine Supernova"), Stormzy and Raye ("The Weekend") and James Blake ("Loading"), among several others. Elton's list comes at the end of a banner year for the superstar -- his years-long "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" tour, which officially wrapped in July, became the highest grossing tour in history and the first to ever earn $900 million dollars, according to Billboard Boxscore. John's full list of his favorite 2023 song can be viewed on Instagram. Meanwhile, Elton and his good English pal pop idol Ed Sheeran posted a sweet video on X/Twitter on Dec. 13 of their annual gift exchange. The 82-second clip opens with Sheeran in a dark blue puffer jacket preparing to go watch a soccer match between Ipswich Town and Watford with John. The two exchange ugly soccer-themed Christmas sweaters before hitting the stands, where they perform an impromptu bit of John's "Your Song" and Sheeran steals John's famous spectacles as a prank -- before Ed raises his first in victory after his team bested Watford 2-1. In still more "Elton Christmas" news, celebrity chef Massimo Bottura has revealed he's cooking a Christmas banquet for the Rocket Man when Elton plays Venice, Italy on Dec. 19. "This Christmas, the 19th of December, I have to cook Christmas lunch in Venice, in Venice theatre, 'cause it's gonna be a big Elton John concert," Massimo, 61, told The Dish podcast. "It's going to be a big party and you know - they're ask me to cook like a Christmas, like with tortellini, zampone, lenticchie, everything. So [Elton's] gonna be there." - Billboard/Music-News.com, 12/15/23...... The Grateful Dead spinoff band Dead & Company are reportedly in talks for a 2024 residency at the impressive new music venue The Sphere in Las Vegas. Dead & Company members Bob Weir, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, John Mayer, Oteil Burbridge and Jeff Chimenti are in talks for a potential residency that would take place "next summer," however the New York Post story stressed that negotiations are "still in the works and not 100%." Dead & Company embarked on a supposed "farewell" tour this summer but Weir posted on Twitter: "Well it looks like that's it for this outfit; but don't worry we will all be out there in one form or another until we drop." The Sphere opened in September with a residency featuring U2 playing its classic LP Achtung Baby in full, which was recently extended into March. Phish will be playing a week-long residency later that month, while Beyoncé has also reportedly been involved in talks. - NME, 12/16/23...... CherCher has scored her first Top 40 hit on Billboard's Pop Airplay chart for the first time since 2002 with her new holiday single "DJ Play a Christmas Song." "DJ" debuted at No. 40 on the survey dated Dec. 23 with radio support in such major markets as New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Cher last appeared on the chart, which began in 1992 and ranks weekly plays on over 150 mainstream top 40 radio stations, in Mar. 2002 with "Song for the Lonely," which reached No. 38. The carol is from Cher's first holiday LP, Christmas, which chimed in at No. 1 on the Nov. 4-dated Top Holiday Albums chart. "DJ" is also spending a third week at No. 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart. In other Cher news, the "Believe" legend appeared on The Kelly Clarkson Show on Dec. 15 and told host Kelly Clarkson that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame can "you-know-what-themselves" after repeatedly snubbing her since she's been eligible for induction since 1991. "It took four of (the Rolling Stones) to be one of me," the 77-year-old icon told Clarkson, prompting Kelly to jump out of her seat and clap. "And I'm not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame!" Cher added. After the studio audience let out a collective groan, Cher told them it was okay. "You know what, I wouldn't be in it now if they gave me a million dollars. I'm not kidding you," she said, laughing that she almost dropped an f-bomb in her answer. "I'm never going to change my mind. They can just you-know-what themselves," Cher said to applause, while casually noting that she "changed music forever" with her 1998 dance pop hit "Believe," one of the best-selling singles of all time and the track that is widely credited with introducing the world to AutoTune. Cher's interview with Clarkson has been shared on YouTube. - Billboard, 12/15/23...... Speaking of the Rolling Stones, the band has shared a live video of their performance of their Hackney Diamonds track "Whole Wide World" on YouTube. The song is featured on the forthcoming Hackney Diamonds (Live Edition) 2-CD set recorded live at the studio album's launch event in October at Racket in New York. It hits stores in the US on Jan. 19. The band recently announced they'll be touring North American behind Hackney Diamonds in 2024, hitting 16 cities across the U.S. and Canada. - NME, 12/15/23...... Warner Chappell Music has signed founding Foreigner member Mick Jones to a global publishing deal. Foreigner's recorded music is already being looked after by Warner's Rhino Entertainment, so this deal unites publishing and records for Jones under one roof. - Billboard, 12/15/23...... Phil ManzaneraFormer Roxy Music guitarist Phil Manzanera has announced his memoir, titled Revolución to Roxy, will be published in early 2024. With over 100 color and black and white photographs, the book not only covers Manzanera's life and times with Roxy Music, David Gilmour and many of the luminaries of popular music, but also his family history, dating back to the expulsion of the Sephardic Jews from Spain in 1492, via the 1959 revolution in Cuba and the discovery of a Neapolitan Opera musician grandfather. "I've written this memoir for my English and Colombian family, dear friends and music fans, who've followed my musical twists and turns for over half a century," Manzanera notes. "It's a memoir that spans my '50's childhood in Cuba, Hawaii and Venezuela, when everything seemed in the brightest technicolor, to monochrome but very cool '60's London and the start of a music career that continues to enrich my life. Roxy Music is an important part of the story but I hope the reader will find my family history every bit as fascinating as my music adventures: I'm proud to be related to the most famous 17th century Sephardic Jewish pirate of the Caribbean, a British spy and an Italian opera musician." Revolución to Roxy will be published on Mar. 22. - Music-News.com, 12/17/23...... A new Willie Nelson documentary titled Willie Nelson & Family will debut on the Paramount+ streaming platform on Dec. 21 as a four-part series. The film captures the complexity of Nelson, who dreamed in his boyhood of becoming a singing cowboy like his movie idols, and became one of the most acclaimed songwriters and singers of his age, as well as a celebrated actor, author and activist, living through decades of tragedies and triumphs. Nelson speaks throughout the film, in both current and archival interviews (with aging audio often supplemented by helpful subtitles). But the filmmakers also present extraordinary insights from numerous family members, friends and fellow artists, including Dolly Parton, Kenny Chesney, Rosanne Cash, Emmylou Harris, Nelson's longtime bandmate and harmonica player Mickey Raphael and more. "Dad has been homeless, he's had his house burned down, he's been through four marriages, he's been up and down, he's been broke, he fought the IRS, he's lost a child that's what makes him inspiring to me, his resilience in the face of adversity," says Willie's son Lukas Nelson in the film. "Willie Nelson is someone who not only has covered every genre of music, but also has really united people from all sides of the political conflict. All sides of every conflict," says co-director Oren Moverman. "So, yeah, we need him. We need his healing." - Billboard, 12/14/23...... John Oates of Hall & Oates was revealed as "the anteater" on the Dec. 13 episode of reality talent series The Masked Singer. Oates performed a rendition of Chuck Berry's "Johnny B Goode" (shared on YouTube) before having his identity shared (also shared on YouTube). The anteater costume was a reference to Hall & Oates' 1982 hit "Maneater." No one on the judging panel -- made up of Ken Jeong, Jenny McCarthy Wahlberg, Nicole Scherzinger and Robin Thicke -- were able to guess who the anteater could be. After his reveal, Oates said: "I'll tell you what, I've done a lot of crazy stuff in my career. This is one of the best things I've ever done so thank you very much." Speaking to Variety about being on the show, Oates said he agreed to take part in the show after he realized there was an opportunity to perform without any preconceived Hall & Oates notions from the audience. "...I realized that it was a huge platform. It's such a successful show. I'm doing a lot of charity work and things like that for some great organizations. And I thought, if I can get the word out, I can reach a lot of people," Oates said. The reveal of the musician as the anteater comes weeks after it was shared that he was being sued by his former bandmate Daryl Hall. Hall recently explained why he is suing Oates -- claiming that he was left "blindsided" by his plan to sell a business stake -- while the latter described the claims as "inaccurate" and saying that he was "tremendously disappointed" to hear about the filing. - NME, 12/14/23...... Barbra Streisand has been named the recipient of the 2024 Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award, which is presented annually to an actor who exhibits what the guild describes as the "finest ideals of the acting profession." In Streisand's case, it joins a lengthy list of accolades including her two Academy Awards, eight Grammys (plus the Grammy Legend and Lifetime Achievement Awards), five Emmys and an honorary Tony. She is the 59th recipient of the tribute; she follows Sally Field, who received it during the 2023 telecast. "[Barbra's] enduring career is a testament to her genuine performances, connecting with audiences on a profound level," said SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher. "She is a colossal icon with a relentless work ethic, evolving with each stage of her remarkable journey. We celebrate Barbra Streisand not just for her achievements but for the enduring legacy she has carved." The SAG Awards will stream live for the first time on Netflix. The nominees for this year's event, which is being held at the Shrine Auditorium & Expo Hall, will be unveiled early next year. - The Hollywood Reporter, 12/14/23...... Pete TownshendA graphic novel version of The Who's Pete Townshend's legendary Lifehouse rock opera is hitting stores on Dec. 19. Townshend has been trying to bring his sprawling, dystopian sci-fi epic Lifehouse to life since he first wrote the follow-up to the band's iconic rock opera Tommy in 1970. Through several re-writes, false starts and re-imaginings, Townshend has struggled to bring his epic vision of a future world in which music is outlawed by the tyrannical despot Jumbo 7 -- and saved by a group of idealistic underground rock rebels via a massive, mind- and spirit-melding concert -- to the masses. "I'd gone back to it a few times and tried to get it to make sense and several times I've worked with other creative people, producers and writers who, in a sense, tried to 'fix' what they thought was wrong with it," Townshend says. "But in the case of this graphic novel what happened is people who trusted the original idea and used those [original scripts I wrote in 1971 and a 1978 revision] to create the bulk of the story." The bulk of the original songs Townshend wrote for Lifehouse ended up on The Who's 1971 album, Who's Next, including such iconic tracks as "Behind Blue Eyes," "Won't Get Fooled Again" and the song that provides the beating human heart of the graphic novel, "Baba O'Riley." A limited-edition run of 1,000 copies of the project -- which is being released in a square, vinyl-sized box -- signed by Townshend and Who singer Roger Daltrey, will be released by Tower Records on Jan. 20 and Rockbox Studios, with standard and deluxe versions coming from Rockbox and Image Comics on Dec. 19. - Billboard, 12/13/23...... Patti Smith is reportedly "resting, as the doctor ordered" following a brief stay in an Italian hospital to deal with what's been described as a sudden, unnamed illness. "This is thanking all at the hospital for their help and guidance," Smith wrote in an Instagram post on Dec. 14 in which she is pictured standing in the middle of a group of eight hospital workers in scrubs. "I am so sorry that we had to cancel concerts in Bologna and Venice. I will return to fulfill my happy obligations. This is also to thank all the medical teams globally, who attend to the people's needs, especially those altruistically serving under fire, all healers, physicians, nurses, attendants," she continued. Italian media reported that Smith was taken to the Maggiore Hospital on Tuesday due to a "sudden illness" that resulted in the cancellation of her planned show at the Teatro Duse in Bologna that night; she was reportedly released after the short visit to the ER. The artist/poet's planned Dec. 14 show t the Teatro Malibran in Venice was also cancelled. - NME, 12/14/23...... In a new interview with The New York Times, former Talking Heads frontman David Byrne admitted that he "harboured a lot of racial biases" on an unconscious level when was younger. "Well, I realized quite a few years ago that as much as I might like to deny it, I harbored a lot of racial biases," Byrne told the Times. "At that point, a younger liberal person would say, 'Oh, I'm not racist, or I believe in equality'. But at the same time, I was aware that I was also harboring these inner biases that I could occasionally sense." Byrne continued: "Overcoming those is more difficult than just rationally saying, 'Oh, no, that's not right' Those beliefs and biases, whether they're about race or women's rights or whatever they might be, those things can take a long time to fundamentally change within us." He went on to explain how he's used his art to widen his perspective on life, drawing reference to his recent "American Utopia" show. Byrne added: "I would like to think that I've been engaged in that process and was trying in 'American Utopia' to demonstrate that that can be done. That kind of change can happen, but it doesn't happen with this snap of fingers." - NME, 12/13/23...... Colin BurgessColin Burgess, the original drummer for AC/DC, has died at age 77. AC/DC announced Burgess' death in an Instagram post on Dec. 16. A cause of death was not given. "Very sad to hear of the passing of Colin Burgess," AC/DC captioned a photo of the drummer on Instagram. "He was our first drummer and a very respected musician. Happy memories, rock in peace Colin." Burgess had been the drummer for Australian rock band Masters Apprentices, and after the group's split in 1972, he joined AC/DC alongside founding members, brothers Angus and Malcom Young and singer Dale Evans. Four months after being recruited, he was fired in Feb. 1974 for supposedly performing while intoxicated. He served as the drummer on AC/DC's debut single "Can I Sit Next to You, Girl," which became a minor hit in Australia. Burgess was later replaced on drums by Phil Rudd, but he played a handful of shows in 1975 while Rudd recovered from a hand injury. "Can I Sit Next to You, Girl" was later re-recorded for AC/DC's 1975 album, T.N.T., with Rudd on drums and new singer Bon Scott on vocals. After his time with AC/DC, Burgess went on to perform in the groups His Majesty, Good Time Charlie and Dead Singer Band. Burgess wasn't one of the AC/DC members to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003, but he was inducted into Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Hall of Fame for his contributions to Masters Apprentices. - Billboard, 12/16/23...... Jeffrey Foskett, a longtime guitarist for the Beach Boys, died on Dec. 11, bandmate Brian Wilson confirmed. Foskett, who was diagnosed with anaplastic thyroid cancer in 2019, was 67. - People, 1/8/24.

Distinguished British actor Sir Ian McKellan and ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus have recorded another festive clip, this time the ABBA hit "Gimme Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)" celebrating their new ABBA-themed socks. Sir Ian and Ulveaus been recording Christmas knitting clips since 2021, when a silent video of the pair knitting sweaters went viral online. In 2022 they returned with another video, this time promising to create some knitwear for the legendary Kylie Minogue. Now, McKellen and Ulvaeus have teamed up again to promote some ABBA-themed socks, which are sold as part of the virtual ABBA Voyage production. All four pairs cost £35, and can be purchased either at the ABBA Arena or the ABBA Voyage online store. The video of the pair dancing to "Gimme Gimme! Gimme!" has been shared on YouTube. - NME, 12/8/23...... ZZ TopOn Dec. 12 ZZ Top announced they'll be launching their first UK and European tour in five years next summer. The Texas-based rockers will performing in nine countries across the continent including festivals and indoor headline shows, starting in Sweden on June 28 before hitting Norway (6/29), Denmark (7/1), Austria (7/3), Germany (7/5, 6), Paris (7/9), London (7/11) and Germany (7/13, 14), then wrapping at Switzerland's Sion Festival on July 16. "It's been a while since we've been able to check in with our European fans, so it goes without saying that we're excited about coming back this summer," frontman Billy Gibbons said in a press release. "We're looking forward to a good time and that goes for both those in the audience and on stage." Meanwhile, Gibbons teamed up with Slash and Myles Kennedy for a nearly 10-minute cover of Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Simple Man" with Warren Haynes' band Gov't Mule at Haynes' 2023 Christmas Jam on Dec. 9. The cover featured vocals from Haynes and Kennedy, along with an extended guitar solo from Slash. The concert marks the 32nd edition of Haynes' annual Christmas Jam, and took place at the ExploreAsheville.com Arena in Asheville, N.C. The charity event raised funds to benefit local non-profits, Asheville Area Habitat For Humanity and BeLoved Asheville. Gibbons also treaed the crowd to a set a ZZ Top songs, including "Jesus Just Left Chicago," "Sharp Dressed Man" and "La Grange." The "Simple Man" cover has been shared on YouTube. - New Musical Express, 12/12/23...... Lawyers representing Michael Jackson's estate have sent a legal threat letter over the recent release of a rare Jackson 5 recording from 1967 touted as "Michael Jackson's first ever studio recording," claiming the release by the Swedish company Anotherblock "violates" the estate's trademark and likeness rights for Michael, and that the company was potentially "misleading the public" by claiming the song was the "first-ever Jackson recording." "We have serious doubts that Michael would have ever wanted these recordings released and commercialized," the estate's attorneys wrote. "What you are doing is the opposite of honoring Michael Jackson." A subsequent version of "Big Boy" as commercially released in 1968, and the earlier version is called the "One-derful Version" because it was recorded at Chicago's One-derful Studios. According to Rolling Stone, that version of the song first surfaced in 2009 and was released in 2014 on vinyl. On Dec. 6, Anotherblock said it would release the track for the first time in digital format, doing so in partnership with Jackson's mother, Katherine Jackson, and with a company called Recordpool, which purportedly controls the intellectual property rights to the recording. The sale, which included $25 and $100 packages with various other goodies, was planned to continue through the weekend via the Anotherblock site. But in its letter of Dec. 7, the estate warned that whatever deals Anotherblock had struck to facilitate the "Big Boy" sale could be invalid if they covered rights that were controlled solely by Michael's estate, like his trademark rights. The estate's lawyers also strongly questioned the claim that the "One-derful Version" was Jackson's first studio recording. The estate also sharply criticized the decision to publish previously unreleased songs, telling Anotherblock that Jackson was "was the consummate perfectionist" and that he had been "very careful about what recordings he released to the public." At the bottom of the letter the estate warned that it reserved "all of the Jackson Estate's rights and remedies," including the right to seek monetary damages and an injunction blocking further sales. A spokeswoman for Anotherblock declined to comment. - Billboard, 12/12/23...... Pete TownshendIn a new interview with Record Collector magazine, Pete Townshend said The Who will have a talk about "what happens next" after the English rock icons wrapped their final orchestral tour date at the Sandringham Estate over the summer. "I think it's time for Roger [Daltrey] and I to go to lunch and have a chat about what happens next," Townshend said. "Because Sandringham shouldn't feel like the end of anything but it feels like the end of an era. It's a question of, really, what is feasible, what would be lucrative, what would be fun? So, I wrote to Roger and said, 'Come on, let's have a chat and see what's there.'" Townshend's comments come after he recently revealed that he is currently working on creating a new rock opera, that will see him take his novel The Age Of Anxiety to the stage, and see it performed alongside a variety of new songs. Townshend released the novel in 2019, and it explored themes of societal anxiety, triggered by things such as global warming and the threat of terrorism. It also saw the musician depict the detrimental consequences of social media on modern life, and how mental health issues are becoming more prominent across younger generations. Meanwhile, The Who's "Tommy" musical is set to return to Broadway in 2024, with previews starting on Mar. 8 at New York's Nederlander Theatre, ahead of the official opening on Mar. 28. Daltrey has also revealed he's working on a biopic about the band's late drummer Keith Moon, who died aged 32 in 1979 from an accidental drugs overdose. - NME, 12/10/23...... After reaching the top of the Billboard album charts with her first ever holiday collection Christmas, Cher is embarking on her first ever trip to the "metaverse." In the latest collaboration between Warner Music Group and leading metaverse game developer Gamefam, Cher will head to WMG's music-themed Roblox world Harmony Hills for a limited-time Cher store of virtual merchandise. It will feature some of the superstar's most iconic looks with tinsel hair, winter fairy wings, diamond antlers and a winter crown. The activation will spotlight three of Cher's new Christmas tracks: "Drop Top Sleigh Ride" with Tyga, "Angels in the Snow," and her historic new No. 1 Billboard single, "DJ Play a Christmas Song." Alongside a virtual Cher NPC (non-playable character) designed to match her new album cover, players can earn the wearable avatar merch by successfully completing tasks like delivering presents, climbing up Christmas trees and participating in snowball fights. Roblox currently has 70 million daily active users, and the new project marks a unique opportunity for Cher to reach across generations, including an entirely new audience and demographic, via festive and familiar holiday music. Cher's Christmas event on Roblox, which launched on Dec. 8), joins her heavy promo run for the holiday LP that's included performances at the iHeartRadio Z100 Jingle Ball, the Rockefeller Center Tree-Lighting Special and Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. - Billboard, 12/8/23...... Lou Reed's final solo album, Hudson River Wind Meditations, will be getting its first vinyl release in January. Originally released in 2007, the LP is a collection of ambient and drone recordings from the late Velvet Underground frontman, and was his last solo studio album. Helmed by Seattle independent label Light In The Attic, in conjunction with the Lou Reed Archive and Reed's wife, Laurie Anderson, the vinyl release marks the album's first-ever, and is scheduled to drop on Jan. 12. The album is not currently available on streaming platforms. The package comes with remastered audio, liner notes from yoga instructor Eddie Stern, and an unreleased interview with Anderson. Deluxe versions of the vinyl will also come with five 810 photographs of New York City's Hudson River by Reed himself. In the album's original liner notes, Reed wrote: "I first composed this music to play in the background of life to replace the everyday cacophony with new and ordered sounds of an unpredictable nature." In a statement for the re-release, Anderson elaborated further: "I guess by 'life,' he meant something like what Brian Eno might mean ambient music that colors the air in very interesting ways. For me, it resets my brainwaves." In Feb. 2023, Reed's fourth album with VU, Loaded, received a limited-edition re-release as a nine-LP box set containing stereo, mono and "full-length" mixes of the album alongside demos, outtakes and live recordings. - NME, 12/1/23...... Ryan O'NealRyan O'Neal, the boyish leading man who kicked off an extraordinary 1970s run in Hollywood with his Oscar-nominated turn as the Harvard preppie Oliver in the legendary romantic tearjerker Love Story, died on Dec. 8. He was 82. O'Neal's death was reported by his son Patrick O'Neal, sportscaster with Bally Sports West in Los Angeles, on Instagram. O'Neal had been diagnosed with chronic leukemia in 2001 and with prostate cancer in 2012. Born Patrick Ryan O'Neal on Apr. 20, 1941, in Los Angeles, O'Neal was the older son of novelist-screenwriter Charles "Blackie" O'Neal (The Three Wishes of Jamie McRuin) and actress Patricia Callaghan. He competed in Golden Gloves events in L.A. in 1956 and 1957 and compiled a boxing record of 18-4 with 13 knockouts, according to his website. In the late 1950s, O'Neal and his family moved to Munich, and he became infatuated with the syndicated TV series Tales of the Vikings, which shot in Europe and was produced by Kirk Douglas' company. He went on to perform as a stuntman on the series. After appearing on such shows as The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, The Untouchables, Leave It to Beaver and My Three Sons, O'Neal co-starred opposite Richard Egan on Empire, a 1962-63 NBC Western set in New Mexico. The sandy-haired O'Neal then made the ladies swoon for five seasons when he starred as Rodney Harrington on more than 500 episodes of the hit Peyton Place, the 1964-69 serialized ABC melodrama spawned by the Lana Turner movie. As Peyton Place was drawing to a close, he made his big-screen debut in The Big Bounce (1969), an Elmore Leonard adaptation that also starred then-wife Leigh Taylor-Young, then played a marathon runner in Michael Winner's The Games. Author Eric Segal adapted the screenplay, and that led to their Love Story collaboration. In the 1970 Arthur Hiller-directed film, O'Neal played a college kid from a wealthy family who sacrifices his riches as he falls for Ali MacGraw's lovely Jenny, a wisecracking, working-class girl, only to watch her agonizingly succumb to a rare blood disease. The drama, a box-office smash, also received seven Oscar nominations, including one for best picture, and won for best score. (O'Neal lost out to George C. Scott of Patton in the best actor race.) The actor then signed up to star with auteur Peter Bogdanovich opposite Barbra Streisand in the screwball farce What's Up, Doc?, an homage to the fabled Cary Grant-Katharine Hepburn 1938 comedy Bringing Up Baby. Next came Paper Moon in 1973, in which he portrayed a good-natured con artist in the Midwest in the 1930s. O'Neal's daughter with first wife Joanna Moore, Tatum O'Neal, starred as his youthful partner in crime and went on to make history as the youngest winner of a competitive Oscar, taking home the best supporting actress prize. Also in the 1970s, O'Neal starred with Jacqueline Bisset as a computer programmer turned crook in The Thief Who Came to Dinner (1973); played a general in the World War II-set A Bridge Too Far (1977); portrayed a getaway driver in Walter Hill's The Driver (1978); and returned as a widower in the Love Story sequel Oliver's Story (1978). Ryan O'NealLater roles include So Fine (1981), Partners (1982), Irreconcilable Differences (1984), Fever Pitch (1985), Tough Guys Don't Dance (1987), Chances Are (1989), Zero Effect (1998) and Knight of Cups (2015). Recently, he had recurring roles on the TV series Miss Match and Bones. O'Neal's relationship with Farrah Fawcett began after they were introduced by her then-husband, actor Lee Majors, in 1979. They lived together for years in Malibu; had a son, Redmond, who went on to battle drug addiction (he and his father were arrested at home for drug possession in 2008); and starred together in the 1989 ABC dramatic telefilm Small Sacrifices and as co-anchors on the 1991 CBS sitcom Good Sports. They broke up for a spell after Fawcett caught him in bed with a younger actress but reunited after O'Neal was diagnosed with leukemia. In 2012, he published a memoir, Both of Us: My Life With Farrah, and three years later, he was back with MacGraw for a national tour in Love Letters. O'Neal was married to and divorced from actresses Moore and Peyton Place co-star Taylor-Young before beginning an on-and-off 30-year relationship with Fawcett that ended with her death at age 62 on June 25, 2009. O'Neal had Tatum and a son, Griffin O'Neal, with Moore. Patrick is his son with Taylor-Young. His younger brother, Kevin O'Neal, a regular on the TV version of No Time for Sergeants in the 1960s, died in Jan. 2023. "[My father] meant the world to me," said Tatum O'Neal, who like Redmond often did not get along with her father, in a statement to People. "I loved him very much and know he loved me too. I'll miss him forever, and I feel very lucky that we ended on such good terms," she added. "My dad was 82 and lived a kick ass life," Patrick O'Neal wrote on social media. "I hope the first thing he brags about in Heaven is how he sparred 2 rounds with Joe Frazier in 1966, on national TV, with Muhammad Ali doing the commentary, and went toe to toe with Smokin' Joe. YouTube has it, and trust me, it's so awesome. Ryan by a majority decision." - The Hollywood Reporter, 12/8/23.

Sunday, December 3, 2023

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on December 8th, 2023

Billy Joel announced on Dec. 8 he'll be performing a huge gig in Cardiff, Wales on Aug. 9, 2024 -- his only show in the UK and Europe set for 2024. The show will see the Piano Man take to the stage at Cardiff's Principality Stadium and feature opening support from Chris Isaak. It will mark Joel's first gig in the UK since his slot at the 2023 edition of the BST Hyde Park concert series in London, which was also headlined by the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Guns N' Roses, Lana Del Rey and others. Tickets for Joel's Cardiff show go on sale on Dec. 15 at Ticketmaster-UK. Joel's last U.S. show of 2023 will be a special New Year's Eve concert on Dec. 31 at the UBS Arena in Elmont, N.Y., his first show back on his native Long Island since 2018. He has also confirmed that the final show ongoing 9-year residency at Madison Square Garden will take place on July 25, 2024, his 150th appearance at the prestigious NYC venue. - New Musical Express, 12/8/23...... Tom Petty's 1989 Full Moon Fever album was a career highlight of the late Rock and Roll Hall of Fame rocker. One of its deep cuts, "Love Is a Long Road," is up over 8,000 in streams following its inclusion in the recently released trailer for the highly anticipated upcoming Grand Theft Auto VI, which set viewership records in its first 24 hours of release on YouTube. Petty's first LP recorded without usual backing band the Heartbreakers, Full Moon Fever was certified 5x platinum by the RIAA in the U.S., and spawned the massive radio and MTV hits "Free Fallin'," "I Won't Back Down" and "Runnin' Down a Dream." In 1989, "Love Is a Long Road" made it to No. 7 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Airplay chart, despite never being released as an A-side in the U.S. - Billboard, 12/7/23...... Def LeppardOn Dec. 7, Def Leppard and Journey took to Instagram to announce a massive co-headining "Summer Stadium Tour 2024" which will see the bands perform in 23 different cities, beginning with Saint Louis' Busch Stadium on July 6, continuing through cities including Atlanta (7/13), Detroit (7/18), Nashville (7/20), Pittsburgh (7/27), Boston (8/5), New York (8/7), Minneapolis (8/19) and San Francisco (8/28) before concluding on Sept. 8 at Denver's Coors Field. The bands will have opening support from Steve Miller Band, Cheap Trick and Heart at different dates on the tour. The Summer Stadium tour follows Def Leppard's lengthy co-headlining world tour with Motley Crüe, which took place between February and August 2023. - NME, 12/8/23...... The audio from Michael Jackson's first ever studio session in 1967 is set to be released as a limited-edition package. The recording was made 56 years ago, when Michael was aged just nine and entered One-derful Studios in Chicago for the very first time with his brothers in The Jackson Five. In the session -- which took place on July 13, 1967 -- The Jackson Five produced a song titled "Big Boy," and it has been confirmed that this was the first time that the late King of Pop's voice was put on tape. The song is now getting shared in a digital format for the first time, and will be available as part of a limited-edition release. Available on Dec. 7, the packages are shared in collaboration with the song's owner, Recordpool, and Swedish blockchain-based music and royalty marketplace Anotherblock. "Big Boy" comes in two formats -- the "open edition" and the more expensive "limited edition. The former is available for $25 (£19.85) and includes the track, named "Big Boy (One-derful Version)." It is accessible through Anotherblock's player, and also comes with images of master tape and agreements, downloadable song stems, and a digital vinyl B-side including "Michael the Lover" and "My Girl" along with their stems. More information can be found at https://anotherblock.io, and a portion of the sale revenue will go to the non-profit Legacy Foundation. "Big Boy" can also be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 12/6/23...... A 50th anniversary edition of Paul McCartney & Wings' acclaimed 1973 LP Band on the Run has been announced that will be available in a range of formats, including a set of "Underdubbed" mixes. These new unreleased rough mixes were made by Geoff Emerick and Pete Swettenham at AIR Studios on Oct. 14, 1973. "This is Band on the Run in a way you've never heard before," McCartney says of the new remixes. "When you are making a song and putting on additional parts, like an extra guitar, that's an overdub. Well, this version of the album is the opposite, underdubbed." The Band On The Run reissue will be available in vinyl, CD, digital and Dolby ATMOS formats. McCartney formed Wings in 1971, with himself and his wife Linda McCartney as the two permanent members. Band On The Run was Wings' third album, and went on to win multiple Grammy Awards and topped the charts in several countries including the UK. McCartney has been playing tracks from Band On The Run such as "Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five" and "Jet" on his current tour. He is now playing the South American leg of his international "Got Back" tour until Dec. 16, where he will finish in Rio de Janeiro. - NME, 12/4/23...... A new clip from the forthcoming Bob Marley biopic Bob Marley: One Love has been shared on YouTube. In the clip, Marley's son Ziggy Marley gives actor Kingsley Ben-Adir the stamp of approval for his portrayal of his father. "In the audition, I saw Kingsley, who plays my father. He was the one who kept my attention," Ziggy says in the video shared by Paramount Pictures. "Kingsley did a great job in an artful way, not trying to mimic my father. To be true to who Bob was, how he speaks, how he acts, how he sees the world, I think Kingsley is bringing that human element. Not just the legend or the artist, but the human side, the emotional side." According to the official synopsis, One Love "celebrates the life and music of an icon who inspired generations through his message of love and unity" and tells the tale of the singer-songwriter "overcoming adversity and the journey behind his revolutionary music." Produced in partnership with the Marley family and directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green, One Love hits theaters on Jan. 12, 2024. - Billboard, 12/5/23...... Sixty-five years after its 1958 release, pop singing legend Brenda Lee's "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" has finally hits the No. 1 spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The Christmas classic, which rose to No. 2 each of the last four holiday seasons but was previously unable to unseat Mariah Carey's equally beloved "All I Want for Christmas Is You," rose all the way to the top of the Hot 100 on the chart dated Dec. 9 -- marking Lee's third career No. 1, after "I'm Sorry" and "I Want to Be Wanted" both reached pole position in 1960. It comes after a major promotional push from both Lee and her UMG Nashville label, including a new music video, a new holiday EP, and a whole lot of new Brenda Lee TikTok videos, all timed to the song's 65th birthday celebration this year. Lee, whose indomitable spirit and powerful voice, even as a child, earned her the nickname "Little Miss Dynamite," recorded "Rockin'" when she was just 13. Now, at age 78, she's watching as the song, promoted by major label UMG Nashville, has reached the pinnacle of Billboard's all-genre chart. In the process, the song has become only the third holiday song to reach No. 1 ever on the Hot 100. "I like that God has given me that favor that I can stand aside and look and know that it wasn't just me; that it's a conglomerate of a lot of people that made the song what it is," Lee says. I'm happy for everybody here that's worked so hard to make this happen because in today's world, everything moves so fast and furious. But I'm telling you this: My label has come to bat," she added. Produced by Owen Bradley, "Rockin'" was initially released in 1958, though the song's initial chart impact was modest, reaching an original peak of No. 14 in Dec. 1960. Between Dec. 2019 and last year, the song would spend nine weeks at No. 2 on the Hot 100, behind only Carey's "All I Want for Christmas Is You." Johnny Marks, the songwriter behind other holiday classics including "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer" and "A Holly Jolly Christmas," also wrote "Rockin'," with Lee in mind for the song. "He was such a gentle soul," Lee recalls of the late songwriter, who died in 1985. "He was Jewish and didn't even believe in Christmas, and all that would come out of him was Christmas music. In 1990, "Rockin'" became a favorite holiday song for a new generation when it was featured in the Macaulay Culkin film Home Alone. Lee marked the 65th anniversary of "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" by filming the song's first official video, featuring cameos from Tanya Tucker and Trisha Yearwood. It can be viewed on YouTube. - Billboard, 12/5/23...... Geddy LeeRush bassist/vocalist Geddy Lee has released two new songs which were recorded during the sessions of his 2000 solo album, My Favourite Headache. Lee released the recordings on Dec. 5 through Elektra Records under the title The Lost Demos, and the tracks -- "Gone" and "I Am You Are" -- grant fans a deeper look into the writing sessions of Lee's only solo album so far. "I loved the songs when they were written and in some ways they feel as fresh and perhaps more relevant all these years later," said Lee in a press release about the new tracks, which were given fresh mixes by Rush's longtime producer and engineer, David Bottrill. "Gone" and "I Am You Are" have also been shared on YouTube. Meanwhile, Lee has a new TV show, Are Bass Players Human Too?, streaming on Paramount+. The show came about when Toronto filmmaker Sam Dunn approached him about doing some kind of documentary resulting from Lee's 2018 Beautiful Big Book of Bass in which he interviewed other bassists like Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones and the Rolling Stones' Bill Wyman. Lee, who does everything from landscaping to fishing with Primus' Les Claypool to making preserves and flying with Nirvana's Krist Novoselic, said he isn't sure if there will be more episodes yet but he enjoyed the experience. "We had to go through a combination of people I wanted and people that were available and also people that were up for letting me invade their lives for three days," said Lee. "If I had been asked as a bass player to let some other bass player into my house, (starts chuckling) I'm not so sure I would have said yes." - NME/Canoe.com, 12/6/23...... Cher announced on Dec. 5 she'll be joining the "Jingle Ball Party" event in NYC. The legendary singer is joining the lineup for the iHeartRadio Z100 Jingle Ball at Madison Square Garden on Dec. 8. She will join previously announced performers Olivia Rodrigo, SZA, OneRepublic, Sabrina Carpenter, Jelly Roll, Big Time Rush, Doechii, Pentatonix and David Kushner. Meanwhile, the singer said that she is "close with all" of her ex-boyfriends during an appearance on the Dec. 6 episode of the Table Manners podcast. During the program, Cher was asked to name co-stars who she would invite to her last supper. he name-dropped Meryl Streep, Nicolas Cage, Sam Elliott and Val Kilmer, who she dated in the '80s. After co-host Jessie Ware expressed her admiration for Cher inviting exes to the table, the 77-year-old replied, "I'm close with all of them. I have a feeling that you have to like someone a lot before you go to bed with them because if you don't, then when you break up, then there's nothing, you can never be friends because you weren't friends before." Cher was previously married to musicians Sonny Bono and Gregg Allman. Her famous ex-boyfriends also include Warren Beatty, Tom Cruise, Gene Simmons and Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora, among others. - Billboard/Music-News.com, 12/5/23...... Nile Rodgers & CHIC will be among the performers during the 2023 Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve special, set to air live on ABC beginning at 8 p.m. EST on Dec. 31. In his 19th year as host, Ryan Seacrest will lead the traditional countdown to midnight alongside global superstar Rita Ora live from Times Square. Also joining this year's broadcast is Emmy-winning TV personality Jeannie Mai, who will co-host the Hollywood portion of the broadcast in the Pacific time zone. In 2022, the countdown -- which has been the top-rated NYE programming special for more than 30 years -- attracted 13.8 million total viewers. ABC and Dick Clark Productions recently extended their agreement for the annual special for another five years. The show, which will now air on the network through Jan. 1, 2029, was created in 1972 by Dick Clark, who conceived it as a younger-skewing competitor to veteran bandleader Guy Lombardo's long-running New Year's Eve broadcasts on CBS. The special first aired on Dec. 31, 1972. Its first two editions were broadcast by NBC, and hosted by Three Dog Night and George Carlin, respectively, with Clark anchoring coverage from Times Square. The show moved to ABC in 1974, and Clark took over as host. In Dec. 2004, Clark suffered a stroke. Due to lingering speech impediments from the stroke, Clark ceded hosting duties to Seacrest the following year, but he continued to make limited appearances on the show until his death in Apr. 2012 at age 82. - Billboard, 12/7/23...... Blondie will be among the headliners of the Cruel World Festival 2024, set for Brookside at The Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. on May 11, 2024. Also on the bill are Duran Duran, Simple Minds, Placebo, Soft Cell, Adam Ant, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Gary Numan and Ministry, among others. Last year's edition was headlined by Siouxie Sioux and Iggy Pop. Sioux' set was thwarted by severe weather, which halted the festival during sets by Pop and The Human League. - NME, 12/5/23...... KISSDuring the encore of their last ever show on Dec. 2 at Madison Square Garden in New York, KISS made a surprise announcement that the band will live on as digital avatars. "KISS Army, your love, your power, has made us immortal!," vocalist/guitarist Paul Stanley said in a video revealing the digital characters as the virtual band launched into a performance of "God Gave Rock and Roll to You." "The new KISS era stars now!" After the concert, part of the KISS' "End of the Road" farewell tour, the quartet shared a two-minute video on YouTube teasing their next chapter. "The future is so exciting," Simmons says amid behind-the-scenes snippets of the band wearing motion capture suits to develop their high-tech avatars. He pointed out that the forthcoming digital band will be able accomplish things the original members couldn't dream of doing. "We can be forever young and forever iconic by taking us to places we've never dreamed of before," the bassist said. "The technology is going to make Paul jump higher than he's ever done before." Stanley adds, "We can live on eternally." KISS' avatars were created by George Lucas' Industrial Light & Magic, in partnership with Sweden's Pophouse Entertainment Group. The companies recently collaborated on the ABBA Voyage show in London, a virtual concert performed by the Swedish pop group. "KISS could have a concert in three cities in the same night across three different continents. That's what you could do with this," Pophouse CEO told the AP. - NME, 12/3/23...... New biographies of two of the '70s most intriguing musicians are available for the holiday season. Karen Carpenter was remembered as much for the anorexia that led to her death as for her crystalline voice. The singer gets her due as an artist to be reckoned with in Lucy O'Brien's immersive biograpy Lead Sister. Singer-songwriter Nick Drake left a trove of breathtakingly lovely songs when he died at 26 in 1974. Richard Morton Jack's exhaustively researched bio Nick Drake: The Life celebrates their power and brings him to life. - People, 12/11/23...... Myles Goodwyn, frontman of Canadian rock band April Wine, has died at the age of 75. News of his death was confirmed by his publicist, who hailed Goodwyn's "distinctive and immediately recognizable" voice and prolific songwriting. No cause of death has been announced. April Wine was formed in 1969, with its original line-up consisting of Goodwyn, brothers David and Ritchie Henman and their cousin Jim. They moved to Montreal and released their self-titled debut album in 1971 before following it up with On Record the next year, which became their commercial breakthrough and featured a successful cover of Hot Chocolate's "You Could Have Been A Lady." It took April Wine slightly longer to crack the US market, but they did so with 1979's Harder Faster and then scored their biggest hit in 1981 with "Just Between You And Me," which was taken from the album The Nature Of The Beast. By the middle of the '80s, the band's fortunes were waning and they parted ways in 1985. Goodwyn released a solo album in 1988 but the band later reformed for the 1993 album Attitude. Their last album together was 2006's Roughly Speaking. Goodwyn was hospitalised for months in 2007 after suffering internal bleeding caused by long-term alcoholism. He later went to rehab when he had recovered. April Wine continued touring until last year when Goodwyn retired, saying: "Touring has been very difficult in recent years because of my diabetes and my health comes first, so unfortunately, my touring days are officially over." Goodwyn also wrote two books, the memoir Just Between You and Me, and a novel, Elvis and Tiger. Earlier in 2023 he was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame. He is survived by wife Kim Goodwyn and their two children, plus another child from a previous marriage. - NME, 12/4/23...... Denny LaineEnglish rock musician Denny Laine, a co-founding former member of The Moody Blues and a member of the Paul McCartney-led '70s band Wings, died on Dec. 5 of a bacterial infection that followed a serious bout of Covid-19. He was 79. Laine's wife Elizabeth Hines posted the announcement on Instagram, stating that her husband had passed away due to Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD). "My darling husband passed away peacefully early this morning," she began. "He and I both believed he would overcome his health setbacks and return to the rehabilitation center and eventually home. Unfortunately, his lung disease, Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD), is unpredictable and aggressive; each infection weakened and damaged his lungs. He fought everyday. He was so strong and brave, never complained. All he wanted was to be home with me and his pet kitty, Charley, playing his gypsy guitar." Hines said Laine was "so very thankful" for the love and support he had received during his "health crisis." "It was my absolute honor and privilege to not only be his wife, but to care for him during his illness and vulnerability," she added. Born on Oct. 29, 1944 in Birmingham, Laine played in his first band The Diplomats (which featured ELO drummer Bev Bevans). From there, he would go on to found The Moody Blues in 1964 with singer Mike Pinder, Ray Thomas and drummer Graeme Edge, who died in 2021 aged 80. He sang on the band's cover of "Go Now," which would eventually top the UK charts and solidify their success. From there, Laine formed the Electric String Band, and would also play with Ginger Baker's Air Force. But it was a call from Paul McCartney that would see Laine join Wings, becoming a constant member of the band. It was he, Paul and his wife Linda that would go on to make their most celebrated album, Band on the Run, in 1973. Wings officially wrapped by the 1980s, but Laine and McCartney stayed in touch, with Laine playing on Macca's Tug of War (1982) and Pipes of Peace (1983), in addition to co-writing the "Ebony and Ivory" B-side, "Rainclouds." After learning of Laine's death, Paul McCartney took to Instagram to mourn the loss: "I have many fond memories of my time with Denny: from the early days when The Beatles toured with the Moody Blues," he wrote alongside a throwback picture of Laine. "Our two bands had a lot of respect for each other and a lot of fun together. Denny joined Wings at the outset. He was an outstanding vocalist and guitar player. His most famous performance is probably 'Go Now' an old Bessie Banks song which he would sing brilliantly. He and I wrote some songs together the most successful being 'Mull of Kintyre' which was a big hit in the Seventies. We had drifted apart but in recent years managed to re-establish our friendship and share memories of our times together." He continued, "Denny was a great talent with a fine sense of humour and was always ready to help other people. He will be missed by all his fans and remembered with great fondness by his friends. I send my condolences and best wishes to his wife, Elizabeth and family. Peace and love Denny. It was a pleasure to know you. We are all going to miss you." Laine is survived by his widow Hines and his five children. - NME, 12/5/23...... Norman LearNorman Lear, the legendary TV writer, director and producer who revolutionized prime time television with such shows as All in the Family, The Jeffersons and Maude, propelling political and social turmoil into the once-insulated world of TV sitcoms, died in his sleep on the evening of Dec. 5 surrounded by family at his home in Los Angeles. He was 101 years old. A liberal activist with an eye for mainstream entertainment, Mr. Lear fashioned bold and controversial comedies that were embraced by viewers who had to watch the evening news to find out what was going on in the world. His shows helped define prime time comedy in the 1970s, launched the careers of Rob Reiner and Valerie Bertinelli and made middle-aged superstars of Carroll O'Connor, Bea Arthur and Redd Foxx. Mr. Lear "took television away from dopey wives and dumb fathers, from the pimps, hookers, hustlers, private eyes, junkies, cowboys and rustlers that constituted television chaos, and in their place he put the American people," the late Paddy Chayefsky, a leading writer of television's early "golden age," once said. Mr. Lear's work transformed television at a time when old-fashioned programs such as Here's Lucy, Ironside and Gunsmoke still dominated. CBS, Mr. Lear's primary network, would soon enact its "rural purge" and cancel such standbys as The Beverly Hillbillies and Green Acres. The groundbreaking sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show, about a single career woman in Minneapolis, debuted on CBS in Sept. 1970, just months before All in the Family started. But ABC passed on All in the Family twice and CBS ran a disclaimer when it finally aired the show: "The program you are about to see is All in the Family. It seeks to throw a humorous spotlight on our frailties, prejudices, and concerns. By making them a source of laughter we hope to show, in a mature fashion, just how absurd they are." By the end of 1971, All In the Family was No. 1 in the ratings and Archie Bunker was a pop culture fixture, with Pres. Richard Nixon among his fans. Some of his putdowns became catchphrases. He called his son-in-law "Meathead" and his wife "Dingbat," and would snap at anyone who dared occupy his faded orange-yellow wing chair. It was the centerpiece of the Bunkers' rowhouse in Queens, and eventually went on display in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History. All in the Family, based on the British sitcom, Til Death Us Do Part, was the No. 1-rated series for an unprecedented five years in a row and earned four Emmy Awards as best comedy series, finally eclipsed by five-time winner Frasier in 1998. Born in New Haven, Conn. on July 27, 1922, Mr. Lear dropped out of Emerson College 1942 to enlist in the Air Force and flew 52 combat missions in Europe as a turret gunner, earning a Decorated Air Medal. After World War II, he worked in public relations. Mr. Lear began writing in the early 1950s on shows including The Colgate Comedy Hour and for such comedians as Martha Raye and George Gobel. In 1959, he and Bud Yorkin founded Tandem Productions, which produced films including "Come Blow Your Horn," "Start the Revolution Without Me" and "Divorce American Style." Mr. Lear also directed the 1971 satire Cold Turkey, starring Dick Van Dyke about a small town that takes on a tobacco company's offer of $25 million to quit smoking for 30 days. In his later years, Mr. Lear joined with Warren Buffett and James E. Burke to establish The Business Enterprise Trust, honoring businesses that take a long-term view of their effect on the country. He also founded the Norman Lear Center at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication, exploring entertainment, commerce and society and also spent time at his home in Vermont. In 2014, he published the memoir Even This I Get to Experience. Tributes poured in on social media after Mr. Lear's death: "I loved Norman Lear with all my heart. He was my second father. Sending my love to Lyn and the whole Lear family," Rob Reiner wrote on X/Twitter. "More than anyone before him, Norman used situation comedy to shine a light on prejudice, intolerance, and inequality. He created families that mirrored ours," Jimmy Kimmel said. - AP, 12/6/23.

Rare and long-lost photos, contact sheets & original negatives of rock music legends including Paul and Linda McCartney, John Lennon, Joan Baez, The Supremes, The Carpenters, The Rolling Stones, Jimmy Cliff and more are up for auction through Dec. 10 at entertainment.ha.com. Bidding is open on the Heritage Auction sale, which also features a treasure-trove of rare and some previously unseen images of music legends including Creedence Clearwater Revival, Donovan, Marianne Faithful, Tim Buckley and others shot by renowned music photographer and photojournalist Shepard Sherbell. Some of the items include the original negatives. The auction closes Dec. 10, 2023. All items come with a certificate of authenticity (COA) from Heritage Auctions. - M4G Media, 12/5/23...... The Beatles are back at No. 1 on a Billboard airplay chart for the first time in over 50 years as their "final song" "Now and Then" jumped from the second to the top spot on the Adult Alternative Airplay tally dated Dec. 9. It's the band's first No. 1 on that particular survey, which began in 1996. The Beatles previously peaked at No. 11 on that chart with "Free as a Bird" that same year. The last time the group notched a No. 1 on a Billboard radio chart was 1970, when "Let It Be" (the Fab Four's sole other airplay leader) ruled Adult Contemporary for four weeks beginning that April. However the Beatles can boast their share of chart-toppers elsewhere, including a record 20 No. 1 singles on the Billboard Hot 100. Billed as the Beatles' final song, "Now and Then" was recorded as a demo in 1977 by John Lennon and finished at last by surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, among others, after multiple attempts via new technology to extract Lennon's vocals from the original demo, along with guitar parts from George Harrison. It's included on the reissues of the group's 1962-1966 and 1967-1970 compilations, initially released in 1973 and re-released Nov. 10. - Billboard, 12/1/23...... John LennonIn other Beatles-related news, a new documentary series about the Dec. 8, 1980 assassination of John Lennon has a claim that Lennon's murderer Mark David Chapman apologized to his group after shooting Lennon dead outside of his New York City apartment block. According to a witness interviewed for the Apple TV+ docuseries, which begins streaming on Dec. 6, Chapman "actually apologized to us... He said: 'Gee I'm sorry I ruined your night'." The witness responded: "You gotta be kidding me, you just ruined your whole life." First announced in October, John Lennon: Murder Without A Trial examines the pre-meditated crime by the troubled Chapman and its aftermath, and its producers were "granted extensive Freedom of Information Act requests from the New York City Police Department, the Board of Parole and the District Attorney's office." It also features interviews with Lennon's friends and Chapman's defense lawyers, psychiatrists, detectives and prosecutors. It also makes use of previously unseen photos from the scene of the crime. The three-part series is narrated by actor Kiefer Sutherland. Its trailer has been shared on YouTube. - New Musical Express, 11/29/23...... Cher has topped Billboard's Adult Contemporary radio airplay chart for the week of Dec. 9 with "DJ Play a Christmas Song" from her new holiday collection Christmas. The carol is the 29th holiday No. 1 on the AC chart since 2000, around the time that most stations in the format began playing seasonal songs heavily, or 24/7, between Thanksgiving and Christmas each year. "DJ Play a Christmas Song" also makes history for Cher, as it's her first AC No. 1 since "If I Could Turn Back Time," which led for a week in Sept. 1989. She ends the longest break between No. 1s in the chart's 62-year history: 34 years and two weeks. She surpasses Elton John, who went 23 years, 11 months and one week between "Something About the Way You Look Tonight" in 1997-98 and his own latest holiday hit, "Merry Christmas" with Ed Sheeran two Yuletide seasons ago. Christmas, meanwhile, has jingled in at No. 1 on the Nov. 4-dated Top Holiday Albums chart. After a festive performance at the recent Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, Cher delivered another dazzling performance with Darlene Love during the Christmas in Rockefeller Center tree-lighting special at Radio City Music Hall on Nov. 29. Cher started with another performance of "DJ Play a Christmas Song," then joined forces with longtime friend Darlene Love to sing Love's signature holiday hit "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)," of which they recorded a duet version for the new Christmas album. Cher and Love's performance can be viewed on X/Twitter. In still more Cher news, the singer says she's finding it "very hard to cast" actors in a biopic about her life. During an appearance on the Dec. 1 episode of The Graham Norton Show, the 77-year-old music icon revealed that she is having a hard time creating her biopic. "It is the hardest thing," Cher said of the project. "I have lived too long and done so much, it is very hard to cast, and we haven't even finished the script." The "Believe" hitmaker noted that she will be providing her own music for the film. "I will do all the music myself because I don't like imitation," she told the host. - Billboard/Music-News.com, 12/1/23...... The Rolling StonesThe Rolling Stones announced on X/Twitter on Nov. 30 that they're releasing a live deluxe edition of their new Hackney Diamonds studio album. The live version will feature seven songs recorded live at the band's surprise show at New York's intimate Racket club on Oct. 19 as part of the launch for their 24th studio album. The brief set memorably featured such classics as "Shattered," "Tumbling Dice" and "Jumping Jack Flash," as well as the live debut of the soul blues burner "Sweet Sounds of Heaven," complete with a cameo from the track's guest, Lady Gaga. The double-disc set -- which will ship on Jan. 19 -- will also spotlight the Hackney tracks "Angry," "Whole Wide World" and "Bite My Head Off." The group has also just released a lyric video for the latter song on YouTube, which features additional vocals from Paul McCartney. Meanwhile, Stones principals Mick Jagger and Keith Richards have landed 2024 Grammy nods for a version of their rock classic "Paint It Black" which appears in the Netflix series Wednesday. Jagger and Richards arranged the classical-shaded treatment of "Paint It Black," hich was recorded for a memorable cello scene in the first episode of Wednesday. Jagger and Richards are now listed alongside Esin Aydingoz, Chris Bacon and Alana Da Fonseca, who had been listed as the arrangers of the track when the Grammy nominations for best arrangement, instrumental or a cappella were announced on Nov. 10. Wednesday, which debuted on Netflix in Nov. 2022, has also aired cello renditions of Metallica's "Nothing Else Matters" and Dua Lipa's "Physical." - Billboard, 12/1/23...... Roger Waters' son Harry Waters has revealed that his father fired him from playing in his band, and he is now planning on playing his dad's music in a Pink Floyd tribute band instead. Interviewed by Rolling Stone, Harry claimed that it was in late 2016 that the ex-Floyd bassist let him know that he would no longer be required to play keyboards in his dad's touring band. "I was fired, it was pretty miserable," Harry said. "I think he just wanted a change of blood, something new, something fresh. I'm not sure of his exact reasoning, but everyone except two people got fired. But the other guys that got the sack weren't his son, so it was doubly hurtful for me." Harry had been part of his dad's band for 14 years, but was dropped ahead of the "Us + Them" tour. Nevertheless, Harry has continued to play the material that he is so familiar with, recently completing a tour with Les Claypool's Fearless Flying Frog Brigade, covering the Pink Floyd album Animals in its entirety. Now, Harry says he's accepted an offer to play three shows with Floyd tribute act Brit Floyd, alongside one of the band's former background singers Durga McBroom and a former saxophonist Scott Page. "I've never met any of them, but I'll just turn up and play," he said. "I've been playing this music for 30 years or so. I think we'll be OK without rehearsal. I think we all know the material pretty well." - NME, 12/1/23...... The Nashville judge overseeing the bitter lawsuit between Hall & Oates sided with Daryl Hall on Nov. 3, ruling that John Oates temporarily cannot sell his share of the band's joint venture to Primary Wave until a private arbitrator hears the case. Hours after attorneys for the two singers squared off in court, Chancellor Russell Perkins agreed to extend an existing restraining order that's been blocking Oates from selling his share of their joint venture to industry heavyweight Primary Wave. Without such an order in place, Perkins ruled that Hall might face the "irreparable harm" of the sale being finalized before he is able to prove his claim that the deal violates the terms of their partnership deal. "If the transfer goes forward before the arbitrator has an opportunity to consider and rule upon plaintiffs' application for interim injunctive relief in the arbitration, then it could, as a practical matter, render much of the relief Plaintiffs are seeking in the arbitration ineffectual," Perkins wrote. The new restraining order bars Oates from completing his sale to Primary Wave until Feb. 2024 or until an arbitrator can decide whether to impose a similar restraining order -- whichever comes first. - Billboard, 11/30/23...... Michael JacksonIn a testament to the enduring popularity of Michael Jackson, the King of Pop's 1983 hit "Beat It" is the latest music video to reach one billion views on YouTube. The streaming giant announced on Nov. 29 that "Beat It" is Jackson's third music video to enter the Billion Views Club, following the Moonwalk-featuring "Billie Jean" and 1996's "They Don't Care About Us." For the period of Nov. 17-23, MJ ranked at #58 on YouTube's U.S. Top Artists chart and at #96 on their Global Top Artists chart. Nearly 15 years removed from his tragic passing, Jackson continues to earn new chart achievements off the strength of his timeless catalog. Earlier in November, Jackson's accidental Halloween anthem "Thriller" re-entered the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 21, marking the sixth consecutive year that the song has reappeared on Billboard's marquee singles chart. During its original chart run, the track reached No. 4. - Billboard, 11/29/23...... Mick Fleetwood has paid tribute to his late Fleetwood Mac bandmate Christine McVie on the one year anniversary of her death, while the Irish family band The Corrs have covered McVie's composition "Songbird" in her memory. In a post on X/Twitter, Fleetwood wrote: "Dear Chris, a year ago today you flew away, and memories come flooding back. Too many to mention! I miss you.. Fleetwood Mac misses you & along with so many that loved your music. Always love, Mick Fleetwood." Meanwhile, The Corrs shared a rendition of "Songbird," one of McVie's best known contributions to Fleetwood Mac's discography, on X/Twitter. The keyboardist and vocalist died last November, aged 79, after suffering an ischemic stroke. She had also been diagnosed with "metastatic malignancy of unknown primary origin," meaning cancer cells had been detected in her body. - NME, 11/30/23...... During a pre-show soundcheck and Q&A session for KISS's Indianapolis gig on Nov. 25, the band's Paul Stanley opened up about the illness that forced the band to cancel three recent shows. In the interview, which has been shared on YouTube, Stanley revealed the extent of just how serious his condition was. "I've done shows with cracked ribs, I've done shows with a 102 [degree] fever," said Stanley. "I was wondering if it was my time." Three shows on KISS's "End Of The Road World Tour" had to be pulled after Stanley came down with the flu. They resumed the tour at the weekend in Indianapolis once he had fully recovered. Stanley announced the cancellation on X/Twitter, posting a photo of himself attached to an IV drip. "I've done everything possible to get onstage and be a part of the incredible 2 1/2 hour celebration we planned but this flu has made it impossible. I along with Gene, Tommy and Eric couldn't be more disappointed and send our deepest apologies." KISS are due to bow out with a performance at Madison Square Garden in New York on Dec. 2. - NME, 11/28/23...... Bruce Springsteen and Tom Waits are among the rock royalty paying tribute to Shane MacGowan, after the charismatic and controversial lead singer of the Celtic punk band The Pogues died at age 65 on Nov. 30, following ill-health and a recent hospital stay after being diagnosed with encephalitis. The singer also had well-documented problems with drugs and alcohol. "Over here on E Street, we are heartbroken over the death of Shane MacGowan," Springsteen posted on Instagram the following day. "Shane was one of my all-time favorite writers," he continued. "The passion and deep intensity of his music and lyrics is unmatched by all but the very best in the rock and roll canon." The Boss also shared memories of his last time seeing the acclaimed singer in Dublin back in May, where he surprised MacGowan ahead of his headline shows in the city. "I was fortunate to spend a little time with Shane and his lovely wife Victoria the last time we were in Dublin," he wrote. "He was very ill, but still beautifully present in his heart and spirit. His music is timeless and eternal. I don't know about the rest of us, but they'll be singing Shane's songs 100 years from now." Meanwhile, Tom Waits has made a rare public comment by paying his own tribute to the life and work of MacGowan. Writing on X/Twitter, Waits and his wife and co-writer Kathleen Brennan wrote: "Ah, the blessings of the cursed. Shane MacGowan's torrid and mighty voice is mud and roses punched out with swaggering stagger, ancient longing that is blasted all to hell. A Bard's bard, may he cast his spell upon us all forevermore." The couple added: "Let him go boys, let him go down in the mud where the rivers all run dry," quoting from The Pogues' song "If I Should Fall From Grace With God." "Love and condolences to Pogues, Victoria, family and all who loved Shane, Tom and Kathleen," they concluded. - NME, 12/2/23...... Aretha FranklinA judge overseeing the estate of Aretha Franklin has awarded real estate to the late Queen of Soul's sons, citing a handwritten will from 2014 that was found between couch cushions. The decision on Nov. 27 came four months after a Detroit-area jury said the document was a valid will under Michigan law, despite scribbles and many hard-to-read passages. Franklin had signed it and put a smiley face in the letter "A." The papers will override a handwritten will from 2010 that was found at Franklin's suburban Detroit home around the same time in 2019, the judge said. One of her sons, Kecalf Franklin, will get that property, which was valued at $1.1 million in 2018, but is now worth more. A lawyer described it as the "crown jewel" before trial last July. Another son, Ted White II, who had favored the 2010 will, was given a house in Detroit, though it was sold by the estate for $300,000 before the dueling wills had emerged. "Teddy is requesting the sale proceeds," Charles McKelvie, an attorney for Kecalf Franklin, said on Nov. 28. Judge Jennifer Callaghan awarded a third son, Edward Franklin, another property under the 2014 will. Franklin had four homes when she died of pancreatic cancer in 2018. The discovery of the two handwritten wills months after her death led to a dispute between the sons over what their mother wanted to do with her real estate and other assets. One of the properties, worth more than $1 million, will likely be sold and the proceeds shared by four sons. The judge said the 2014 will didn't clearly state who should get it. "This was a significant step forward. We've narrowed the remaining issues," McKelvie said of the estate saga. There's still a dispute over how to handle Aretha Franklin's music assets, though the will appears to indicate that the sons would share any income. A status conference with the judge is set for January. - Billboard, 11/28/23...... Despite being often compared, Van Morrison has insisted that he and Bob Dylan are "worlds apart" in a new interview with Vintage Rock magazine. Morrison, 78, insists what they do because the 82-year-old Dylan is a "songwriter who sings" and he is a singer first. "Well, I'm just nothing like Bob Dylan, so I guess what I was trying to say was, like, I'm coming from the place that I'm a singer first. I'm a singer. Right? And I write songs. So Bob Dylan and I are, like, worlds apart. What he does and what I do, you know, it's nowhere near." He continued: "I am a singer who writes songs, so I was comparing myself more to the singer who writes songs, rather than a songwriter who sings." Morrison's latest project is the covers album Accentuate the Positive, and he insists he is only motivated to do things that inspire him, not what other people want him to do. I can do it, you know?" - Music-News.com, 12/1/23...... What is being touted as the "Holy Grail" of Elvis Presley jewelry -- the King of Rock & Roll's iconic and famous "Lion Claw" necklace -- is being auctioned on the GottaHaveRockandRoll.com site through Dec. 15. Originally displayed at the Elvis Presley Museum in Memphis, the relic was later given to Jimmy Velvet, who was once described as "The Godfather of memorabilia" by Rolling Stone magazine. Velvet has even described the Elvis Lion Claw as "the most iconic piece of Elvis Presley Jewelry ever worn by Elvis Presley." The amount of pictures that Elvis can be seen wearing this necklace is mind boggling, he wore it throughout his daily life, on and off stage. Elvis can be seen wearing the necklace on Lisa Marie Presley's birthday, with girlfriend Linda Thompson, and most importantly, he can be seen wearing the necklace when he met boxing heavyweight champ Muhammad Ali both times. Debatably the most iconic photograph ever of Presley, he can be seen wearing this exact Lion Claw Necklace. He also wore the necklace many times in concerts, with over 30 shows Elvis can be seen wearing the same necklace. Bidding for the item ends on Dec. 15. - Music-News.com, 11/29/23...... Henry KissingerHenry Kissinger, a diplomatic powerhouse of the second half of the twentieth century whose roles as a national security adviser and secretary of state under two presidents left an indelible mark on U.S. foreign policy and earned him a controversial Nobel Peace Prize, died on Nov. 29 at age 100. During the 1970s in the midst of the Cold War, Mr. Kissinger had a hand in many of the epoch-changing global events of the decade while serving as national security adviser and secretary of state under Republican Pres. Richard Nixon. The German-born Jewish refugee's efforts led to the U.S. diplomatic opening with China, landmark U.S.-Soviet arms control talks, expanded ties between Israel and its Arab neighbors, and the Paris Peace Accords with North Vietnam. Mr. Kissinger's reign as the prime architect of U.S. foreign policy waned with Nixon's resignation in 1974 amid the Watergate scandal. Still, he continued to be a diplomatic force as secretary of state under Nixon's successor, Pres. Gerald Ford, and to offer strong opinions throughout the rest of his life. While many hailed Mr. Kissinger for his brilliance and broad experience, others branded him a war criminal for his support for anti-communist dictatorships, especially in Latin America. In his latter years, his travels were circumscribed by efforts by other nations to arrest or question him about past U.S. foreign policy. Mr. Kissinger had been active past his centenary, attending meetings in the White House, publishing a book on leadership styles, and testifying before a Senate committee about the nuclear threat posed by North Korea. In July 2023 he made a surprise visit to Beijing to meet Chinese Pres. Xi Jinping. Mr. Kissinger died at his home in Connecticut, according to a statement from his geopolitical consulting firm, Kissinger Associates Inc. No mention was made of the circumstances. It said he would be interred at a private family service, to be followed at a later date by a public memorial service in New York City. - Reuters, 11/30/23.