Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on August 4th, 2024

Elton John celebrated 34 years of sobriety on July 31 with a post on Instagram. Sir Elton shared a picture of his Alcoholics Anonymous coin that featured the phrase, "To thine own self be true." The words "unity" "service" and "recovery" were embossed along the triangle while inside, the number "34" appeared in roman numerals. He captioned the image "34 years clean and sober. My life has never been better." John, who took a year off from work in 1990 to attend recovery after years of addiction issues, opened up about just how bad his addition was in his 2019 memoir, Me. Elton recalled the time he hijacked a Rolling Stones show while high on cocaine, as well as the moment he mistook Bob Dylan for his gardener while high -- describing him as "scruffy." In 2020, ahead of an online screening of his film biopic Rocketman, John said despite the debauched lifestyle of many musicians in '70s LA who regularly took cocaine to the point that few commented on it, his cocaine use was so extreme by comparison that it was "noticed" by many. John has spoken extensively about his addiction in the past. In 2019, the musician said he feared he wouldn't be able to perform sober after he took a year long break to have treatment for addiction. "After I finally surrendered and decided to seek treatment for my addiction, there came a point when I wondered if I would ever go back to work as Elton John again," he told in a Variety magazine "Recovery" issue. - New Musical Express, 8/2/24...... AerosmithThree months after rescheduling the remaining dates of their "Peace Out" farewell tour, Aerosmith officially announced their retirement from touring with an Aug. 2 Instagram post amid frontman Steven Tyler's ongoing vocal cord injury. "It was 1970 when a spark of inspiration became Aerosmith. Thanks to you, our Blue Army, that spark caught flame and has been burning for over five decades. Some of you have been with us since the beginning and all of you are the reason we made rock 'n' roll history," the statement began. "It has been the honor of our lives to have our music become part of yours. In every club, on every massive tour and at moments grand and private you have given us a place in the soundtrack of your lives." The statement continued that Tyler "has spent months tirelessly working on getting his voice to where it was before his injury," before adding, "We've seen him struggling despite having the best medical team by his side. Sadly, it is clear, that a full recovery from his vocal injury is not possible. We have made a heartbreaking and difficult, but necessary, decision -- as a band of brothers -- to retire from the touring stage." The band then thanked their crew and team before concluding with a message to their fans. "A final thank you to you -- the best fans on planet Earth. Play our music loud, now and always. Dream On. You've made our dreams come true," they wrote, noting that all tickets purchased will be refunded. Tyler first revealed that he injured his voice in Sept/ 2023. "I'm heartbroken to say I have received strict doctor's orders not to sing for the next thirty days," he explained at the time. "I sustained vocal cord damage during Saturday's show that led to subsequent bleeding. Aerosmith, formed in 1970 by Tyler, guitarist Joe Perry and bassist Tom Hamilton, were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2001. - Billboard, 8/2/24...... A rare collection of Michael Jackson's signed drawings was scheduled to be auctioned off in Los Angeles on Aug. 3. The 78 sketches made using wax pencils and pastels as well as watercolors include images of the singer in a Jedi-style robe, as well as drawings of chairs, Michelangelo's David, a number of U.S. presidents, Peter Pan, pop art icon Andy Warhol, Walt Disney, Marilyn Monroe and Queen Elizabeth II. "Get ready to own some of the most coveted pieces of art by one of the biggest music icons in the world," reads a description from auction house Kings Auctions. "These one of a kind pieces of art aren't just an investment, they are your chance to own a piece of music history." "He was influenced by many art genres, from classical and architectural to pop art and even formal portraiture. He also had a great fondness for London and British customs," the auction house added of the sketches, all of which are signed and some of which are double-sided. However, the Jackson estate is challenging the authenticity of the drawings. "The Estate of Michael Jackson does not accept that this artwork was created by Michael Jackson," a rep for the estate told Billboard. "Our representatives examined this artwork several years ago while it was being stored in a hangar at the Santa Monica airport, and the inspection only raised further concerns. We have made this clear to the auction house and others many times since. The Estate asked for evidence that these works were in fact created by Michael, and no sufficient evidence has ever been produced. Caveat emptor." The collection, including images Jackson sketched of shoes, doors, chairs, keys, bi-planes, the gates of his Neverland Ranch and flowers, can be browsed on Instagram. - Billboard, 8/1/24...... JourneyThe never-ending legal feud between Journey members Jonathan Cain and Neal Schon has erupted once again, with Cain filing a new lawsuit against Schon over claims that his "exorbitant" spending is threatening to cripple the band's touring operations. In a complaint made public in Delaware court on July 30, Cain claimed that Schon's alleged spending -- including unilaterally chartering private jets and charging personal expenses to their shared American Express card -- has led to a "deadlock" that must be resolved. "The deadlock between the company's directors is now interfering with the company's ability to take even the most basic actions and is causing significant disruptions in the smooth operation of the company," Cain's lawyers write, adding that the problems "pose a severe threat of harm to the company and to Journey's storied history of musical greatness." Legal battles are nothing new for Schon and Cain, the two key remaining members of the iconic rock band that's still a big ticket seller decades after its "Don't Stop Believin'" heyday. In 2022, Schon sued Cain over allegations that his bandmate had unfairly blocked his access to the Amex account, "interfering" with the band's activities and delaying payments to crew members and vendors. A few months later, Cain countersued -- claiming he had placed those restrictions on the Amex to stop Schon from "misusing" the company card, including spending $400,000 in a single month. The new case largely rehashes those same disagreements over spending -- like Cain claiming that Schon has "spent up to $10,000 per night for hotel rooms for him and his wife" during their most recent tour. But in technical terms, the new case focuses narrowly on the governance of Freedom 2020 Inc., a Delaware-based corporate entity they created to operate Journey's touring. Since Cain and Schon each control exactly 50% of the company, the lawsuit says the two have reached an impasse that has spilled into other aspects of the band's operations, like managing their staffers. The lawsuit claims the strife between Cain and Schon has also led to other problems, including disagreements about whether to accept an advance from AEG for their most recent tour, the purchase of cancellation insurance and other problems. - Billboard, 8/2/24...... Ted Nugent has teamed up with his son Rocco Winchester Nugent on a new song about the July 13 attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump. The mid-tempo track, "Who Shot Trump," featuring laconic vocals from Rocco -- who usually records under the name "rocco, moon" -- was recently uploaded to YouTube and finds the pair repeating a series of Trumpian talking points while warning "they f---ed up." Rocco goes on to describe watching Fox News that day and seeing Trump turn his head as the assailant's bullet nicked his ear during an outdoor rally in Butler, PA, suggesting that intended target Trump was "clearly touched by the hand of God." The FBI has determined that Trump was struck by a bullet, or a bullet fragment, that grazed his ear in the incident in which attendee Corey Comperatore, 50, was killed and a number of other attendees were wounded; Crooks was shot and killed by snipers shortly after he opened fire from a roof near the rally site. Nugent has long been a full-throated supporter of former one-term President Trump, who is currently in an increasingly tighter race with expected Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris. The former Senator and San Francisco prosecutor stepped in two weeks ago when Pres. Joe Biden announced that he was dropping out of the race and endorsing his VP. - Billboard, 8/1/24...... Fleetwood MacA new Fleetwood Mac live album, Mirage Tour '82, will be released on Sept. 20 in 2xCD, 3xLP vinyl and digital formats. The set captures the magic of the band's iconic performances at The Forum in Los Angeles during their 1982 Mirage Tour. Some of the band's greatest hits, such as "Landslide," "Dreams," and "Don't Stop" are among the newly available live tracks. A live version of "Don't Stop" has been released for streaming ahead of the album launch. "In September 1982, Fleetwood Mac embarked on a 31-city U.S. tour in support of Mirage, the band's fourth consecutive multiplatinum album and third No. 1 in America," according to a press release. "Both shows at The Forum were recorded, and Mirage Tour '82 combines songs from both into a single concert experience." Mirage, the band's thirteenth studio album, was issued on June 18, 1982 and produced several hit singles, including "Hold Me," which peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 Pop Chart. The release follows last year's Rumours: Live, which debuted at No. 4 on Billboard's Top Album Sales chart dated Sept. 23, 2023. This marked Fleetwood Mac's highest chart debut since their studio album Say You Will opened at No. 2 in May 2003. Rumours: Live featured recordings from the band's Aug. 29, 1977, concert at The Forum during their Rumours Tour. - Billboard, 7/31/24...... A 100th birthday celebration in honor of former Pres. Jimmy Carter will take place on Sept. 17 in Atlanta headlined by an all-star group of musicians and celebrities. "Jimmy Carter 100: A Celebration in Song" will come ahead of the ailing former commander-in-chief's centenary on Oct. 1. Among the musical acts booked for the show are: the Allman Brothers Band's Chuck Leavell, D-Nice, Drive-By Truckers, Eric Church, GROUPLOVE, Maren Morris, the War and Treaty and The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chamber Chorus, along with expected appearances from former Atlanta Braves star Dale Murphy, rapper Killer Mike and actor Sean Penn. Organizers said other guests will be announced at a later date. The show at Atlanta's historic Fox Theatre will also celebrate Pres. Carter's tireless work advocating for human rights, public health and democracy around the world through the Carter Center. Pres. Carter, the nation's 39th President (1977-1981), has been in his Plains, GA home since Feb. 2023 receiving hospice care and was last seen publicly at his late wife former First Lady Rosalynn Carter's funeral in November. The Associated Press reported that Jason Carter said in a statement that his grandfather remains in good spirits and still enjoys watching his beloved Atlanta Braves on TV and listening to music. "Whether it was on his record players, on the campaign trail, or on the White House lawn, music has been and continues to be a source of joy, comfort and inspiration for my grandfather," Jason Carter said. The Fox Theatre's announcement of the event can be seen on X. - Billboard, 8/2/24...... On July 31 Elvis Presley's actress granddaughter Riley Keough announced a book tour in support of her late mother Lisa Marie Presley's upcoming memoir. The memoir, which was partially written by Presley and later finished by her daughter Keough upon request, is titled From Here to the Great Unknown and is due for release via Random House on Oct. 8. The finished product sees Keough tell her mother's story through Lisa Marie's own words via tape recordings, and Keough's own reflections of her relationship with her mother. Now, Keough has announced a book tour in support of the book. For the tour, she will also be joined by currently unnamed special guests at each of the tour stops. The tour will take place across six dates in October, with stops in New York City (10/9), Memphis's Graceland (10/12), St. Louis (10/13), Nashville (10/14), London, UK (10/15) and Los Angeles (10/20). Lisa Marie Presley, born in 1968, was the only child of Elvis and Priscilla and died of a small bowel obstruction at the age of 54 after an emergency admission to the hospital in Jan. 2023. She went on to pursue her own music career, within which she released three studio albums, namely To Whom It May Concern in 2003, Now What in 2004, and Storm And Grace in 2012. The former two albums peaked in the Top 10 of the Billboard 200 album charts. - NME, 7/31/24...... Johnny CashU.S. House of Representatives speaker Mike Johnson and Democratic House Minority leader Hakeem Jeffries announced on Aug. 1 that a bronze statue of country icon Johnny Cash will become the first professional musician to take its place in Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol. The tribute to Cash will be unveiled during a ceremony in the Capitol's Emancipation Hall on Sept. 24. The eight-foot tall statue of a stern-looking Cash holding a Bible and a guitar was designed by sculptor Kevin Kresse, who says he "couldn't be happier with these choices for Arkansas... I'm also extremely proud to be a native son of Arkansas, getting this opportunity to sculpt an Arkansas icon for the nation's Capitol." Cash, born in Dyess, AR, will be enshrined alongside civil rights activist Daisy Bates, whose statue was put in place in May. With his signature rumbling baritone voice and songs of faith, murder, longing and love, Cash was a beloved country outlaw best known for such iconic tracks as "I Walk the Line," "Ring of Fire," "Folsom Prison Blues," "Man in Black" and "Daddy Sang Bass," and many others. Cash's enshrinement will place him in good company alongside such historic figures as Amelia Earhart, inventor Thomas Alva Edison, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Andrew Jackson, Hellen Keller, astronaut John Swigert, Jr., George Washington and many others. Johnson, Jeffries, Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Cash's family are expected to attend the unveiling. Cash died in 2003 at age 71 due to respiratory failure tied to complications from diabetes. The announcement and a picture of the statue can be viewed on Instagram and X. - Billboard, 8/2/24...... Ozzy Osbourne has apologized to Britney Spears for mocking the pop singer's dance videos on the latest episode of his clan's The Osbournes podcast. The spat originally began in mid-July ago when Ozzy criticized Spears' dancing videos, saying on the podcast that he was, "fed up of seeing poor old Britney Spears [dancing] on YouTube every f---in' day. It's sad, very, very sad," with wife Sharon Osbourne adding, "poor little thing." At the time, Spears shot back with a terse Instagram post that has since been deleted, in which she said, "I'm gonna tell the Osbourne family who is the most boring family known to mankind to kindly f--k off!" After first replaying Ozzy's offensive comments, Ozzy offered up a less appeasing peace offer than offspring Jack Osbourne and Kelly. "Britney, I really owe you an apology," Ozzy said. "I'm so sorry for making that comment. However, it would be better if you didn't do the same f---ing dance every day! Change a few movements I love Britney Spears, but it's the same dance every day!" That comment drew a loud guffaw from Jack, while Kelly noted that she is a fan of Britney's dancing -- "Britney, never stop dancing, I love your dancing it makes you happy" -- while apologizing on behalf of the family if she felt offense, with Sharon adding "I like Britney a lot." The family also objected to Ozzy's claim that it was, literally, the same dance every day, with Kelly and Jack noting that sometimes "there's knives." Ozzy then leaned into a less strings-attached amends, adding, "I really do apologize. I love you and I think you're beautiful." Spears has long made a habit of posting dance videos from her home in which she does interpretive moves to her favorite songs. Ozzy's apology can be viewed on Instagram. - Billboard, 7/30/24...... SparksIn an interview with Britain's Mojo magazine, the L.A.-based pop duo Sparks says they "feel an obligation" to continue making high-quality music. Sparks, made up of brothers Ron and Russell Mael, have released 26 albums in a career spanning more than half a century but refuse to let the standard of their work diminish as they are always gaining new fans. "There are so many newer fans that have kind of come our way of late," Ron said. "We feel an obligation, which we always do, to keep the quality high. We're lovers of pop music, and we think it's a disservice to pop music to come out with stuff that isn't cool." Sparks are preparing to release another new album in 2025 and Ron explained that the band are going against convention by making their music more "aggressive" as they grow older. "I think that the assumption for a band that, say, has been around for as long and has made as many albums as we have -- I won't mention years - is that we would be introspective and mellow down a touch," says Ron, 78. "You know, the usual things where musicians try to come to grips with mortality and all those sorts of things. We're not like that. It still has a pretty high degree of aggression to it, I think." Russell, 75, added that the forthcoming album will be "consistent" with the "This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us" band's previous material. "I think it's consistent with the lyric universe that Sparks has always had, with some issues that are maybe not treated so much in normal pop music, or issues that are, treated in a way that's not clichéd," he said. - Music-News.com, 7/28/24.

After Republican Vice President candidate JD Vance's comments in a 2021 interview with Tucker Carlson that "We're effectively run in this country via the Democrats, via our corporate oligarchs, by a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives and choices that they've made" recently went viral on the internet and mainstream media, Bette Midler took to X on July 25 to playfully rally her fellow "childless cat ladies" of the world by sharing a photo of the iconic cat lover herself, Taylor Swift, on the cover of Time magazine with her beloved cat Benjamin Button lounging over her shoulder. "Giddyup and GO, #ChildlessCatLadies!" Midler wrote. Another celebrity to take a stand against Vance is Jennifer Aniston, who has been open with her struggles with fertility over the past few years. She aimed Vance's decision to vote in June to block legislation that would protect access to IVF. "I truly can't believe this is coming from a potential VP of the United States," the Friends actress wrote on her Instagram Stories. "All I can say is Mr. Vance, I pray that your daughter is fortunate enough to bear children of her own one day. I hope she will not need to turn to IVF as a second option. Because you are trying to take that away from her, too." - Billboard, 7/25/24...... Billy JoelBilly Joel concluded his historic 10-year residency at Madison Square Garden in New York City with a sold-out show on July 25. To mark the occasion, The Tonight Show talk show host Jimmy Fallon joined the Piano Man to present him with a banner celebrating 150 shows at the New York venue. "Congratulations," Fallon said. "I love you. New York City loves you. The world loves you. You've given us all great memories of being here. And now we get to watch you get a memory. You're never going to forget this night here." Joel's two youngest daughters, Della, eight, and Remy, six, then took to the stage to join dad as he performed his 1978 hit "My Life." Joel was also joined on stage by Guns N' Roses star Axl Rose, with the duo performing renditions of Wings' "Live and Let Die" and AC/DC's "Highway to Hell." Fan video of the Rose and Joel performances has been shared on YouTube. Joel then continued with a number of hits including "Uptown Girl," "Only The Good Die Young," "Piano Man,""It's Still Rock and Roll to Me" and "We Didn't Start The Fire," before inviting Axl back on stage for the final song of the night, "You May Be Right," which segued into a cover of Led Zeppelin's "Rock and Roll." Joel kicked off the MSG residency in Jan. 2014 and played at the venue once every month over the next decade. With his final show, he set a record for the arena by giving his 150th lifetime performance on its stage. Joel, 75, will travel to the U.K. in August to play a stadium show in Cardiff, Wales with Chris Isaak. He will then play a series of headlining shows in North America including Cleveland, St. Louis, Los Angeles, San Antonio and Las Vegas, sharing the bill with Rod Stewart or Sting. In February, he released his first new pop song in 17 years, "Turn the Lights Back On." - Music-News.com, 7/27/24...... In a new interview with the UK paper The Sun, Rod Stewart reflected on approaching his milestone 80th birthday next Jan. 10. "I'm aware my days are numbered but I've got no fear. We have all got to pass on at some point, so we are all in the same basket," he said. "I am going to be enjoying myself for these last few years as much as I can. I say few -- probably another 15. I can do that easy mate, easy," he added. "I'm not like I was in the '70s and '80s and I can't stay up all night, get drunk and go mad and still have a voice just like that. Nowadays I have to protect my voice before and after every show." In February it was reported that Stewart had sold his back catalogue for close to $100 million (£79.3million) to Irving Azoff's Iconic Artists, who now owns his publishing catalogue, recorded music and a stake of Stewart's likeness and image rights. In a statement to the The Wall Street Journal, Stewart said of the deal: "Irving and I are a couple of old-timers and I believe we have a mutual respect and admiration for each other. My life's work is in safe hands with him." Meanwhile, Stewart was recently booed at a gig in Germany after he expressed his support for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. - NME, 7/28/24...... Pink FloydSpeaking to The Sunday Mirror, Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason discussed the potential to forge a Pink Floyd reunion via artificial intelligence. "It would be fascinating to see what AI could do with new music. If you tried to run it as a sort of 'Where did Pink Floyd go after?'," Mason said. "The thing to do would be to have an AI situation where David [Gilmour] and Roger [Waters] become friends again," he continued, adding: "We could be like ABBA by the time we've finished with it." Mason also spoke of the feud between Waters and Gilmour, who declared Pink Floyd was over in 2015 by saying the band had "run its course," and Waters, expressing disappointment that it had overshadowed the band: "In a 55-year career, most of it was great fun. We were enormously privileged to be in a successful band and tour the world and hang out with really interesting people. It's a gold card to meet all sorts of your favourite sportsmen and actors." Mason, who currently plays some of Floyd's earlier music as Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets alongside Spandau Ballet's Gary Kemp and bassist Guy Pratt, also reflected on continuing to perform Floyd songs. "The best thing about keeping the thing going is for our benefit," he said. "It makes sense to keep it going rather than shutting it down. I also enjoy it because the more time passes, the more you can look at it with a rosier glint." Gilmour has also discussed the possibility of an ABBA-style Floyd show, saying he would agree to it under "a series of very, very difficult and onerous conditions." "I thought the images of them were sort of OK, but they weren't ever going to convince me it was real," he once said of his experience watching ABBA's Voyage show. "If you're down the sort of mosh pit end of the thing and it's all going on, it's probably great. The best moment for me was when the live band played a song ['Does Your Mother Know'] on their own." When asked if a Pink Floyd hologram show would ever be a possibility, he answered: "If someone came up with all the money and all the brilliant ideas -- and then once we've agreed to a series of very, very difficult and onerous conditions -- I'd say, 'Yeah, OK.'" - New Musical Express, 7/28/24...... Actor Jeremy Allen White, star of the FX comedy-drama series The Bear and was tapped back in January to play Bruce Springsteen in an upcoming biopic, has apparently been texting with the Boss in the hopes of meeting him in London to prepare for his upcoming role. White revealed to Variety that he has "texted and emailed" Springsteen in the run up to the New Jersey rocker's July 27 show at London's Wembley Stadium. "I'm really excited to see him perform," White said, cheekily adding that Springsteen texts "like a boss." The film is reportedly set to explore the making of Springsteen's 1982 classic album Nebraska. Scott Cooper (Crazy Heart, Hostiles) will write and direct the film, which is based on Warren Zane's 2023 book, Deliver Me from Nowhere: The Making of Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska. In other Bruce news, Springsteen will be in Toronto, Canada, in early September during the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival for the debut of longtime collaborator Thom Zimny's Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, a documentary that follows the singer-songwriter's latest world tour. He also recently took part in Mark Knopfler's star-studded charity re-recording of "Going Home," which also featured the likes of Brian May, Tony Iommi, Eric Clapton, Ronnie Wood and many more. - NME/Canoe.com, 7/27/24...... Pete TownshendPete Townshend has released a new box set of live solo performances, Live in Concert 1985 - 2001, which assembles some of The Who guitarist's most memorable live shows away from the band in an expanded 14-CD box set and digital offering featuring seven long-out-of-print live albums. When the compilation landed at his door in late June, Townshend says he grew reflective thinking about his time away from The Who that has been an indelible part of music since their 1965 debut My Generation. "I needed a creative outlet outside of The Who. I needed to be a solo artist," Townshend said of his independent tours and seven solo studio albums -- 1972's Who Came First; 1977's Rough Mix; 1980's Empty Glass; 1982's All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes; 1985's White City: A Novel; 1989's The Iron Man and the 1993 concept album Psychoderelict. But listening back through the new anthology, Townshend says he's reminded how he's never felt at home onstage. "The weird thing about me, compared to most artists, is despite the fact that I look like I'm enjoying myself, I don't really feel that," he muses. "It's not that I don't feel good about performing, I just don't know who that guy is that's up there on the stage. He isn't me. As a creative, I'm happiest in a studio. I don't like touring. I don't like travelling. I like to be at home in my studio being creative on my own." Townshend, 79, said that his decision to really embrace an identity as a solo artist was inspired by the death of the band's original drummer Keith Moon in 1978. "Keith Moon's death came at a time where The Who were already struggling creatively. After Keith died, I think the logical thing for me would have been to end my tenure with The Who and choose a solo career," he said. "I thought it would be good to work with a different drummer, because Keith's style was very much decorative. It was not a rhythmic style and I'd been contained in a sense with The Who." - Canoe.com, 7/27/24...... German electronic pioneers Kraftwerk paid tribute to the late composer Ryuichi Sakamoto with a cover of "Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence" on July 27 at the Fuji Rock Festival in the renowned composer's home country of Japan. "Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence" is taken from the 1983 war film of the same name, whose soundtrack was the first that Sakamoto created in his illustrious career. Indeed, his soundtrack has been credited as one of the key reasons the film went on to become a cult classic despite mixed reviews from critics. Sakamoto also starred in the film alongside David Bowie, which was based on the experiences of Sir Laurens van der Post, a prisoner of war in Java during World War II. Sakamoto died in March 2023 at the age of 71, having been diagnosed with cancer for the second time in a decade. Sakamoto was originally diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014, which is now in remission, but shared details of a rectal cancer in 2021. A posthumous album, Opus, is set to be released on Aug. 9. Kraftwerk's version of "Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence" has been shared on X. - NME, 7/27/24...... Dick Asher, a music industry pioneer who served as president at PolyGram and Columbia Records and worked with some of music's biggest names, including Bruce Springsteen, Michael Jackson and Bon Jovi, died peacefully at his home in Boca Raton, Fla., on July 25. He was 92. Born in New York City in 1932, Mr. Asher began his professional journey after graduating from Tufts University and Cornell Law School. After serving in the Marine Corps, he joined CBS Records (now Sony Music) in the mid-1960s as vp of business affairs. Following Bob Dylan's near-fatal motorcycle accident in 1966, Mr. Asher famously traveled to Woodstock, N.Y., to negotiate the superstar's contract renewal. Mr. Asher left CBS to briefly work at Capitol Records but returned to the label in 1971 to work with Clive Davis at Columbia Records. He later served as deputy president of Columbia, where he played a crucial role in stabilizing the company's finances. In the 1980s, Mr. Asher stood up to the powerful network of independent promoters known as "The Network," who had monopolized radio airplay through payola and other questionable practices. To do this, he released Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall, Part II" without their involvement, an episode recounted in the book Hit Men by Frederic Dannen. His resistance to The Network ultimately helped lead to Congressional hearings that exposed and dismantled the group's operations in the mid-1980s. Mr. Asher's tenure at Columbia ended in 1983 after conflicts with the company's president, Walter Yetnikoff. He subsequently joined Warner Communications and later became the president/CEO of PolyGram Records in 1985. During his time at PolyGram, the company released several blockbuster albums, including Bon Jovi's Slippery When Wet and Def Leppard's Hysteria. He left PolyGram in 1990 following a contractual dispute and returned to law practice, providing consultancy services to various artists and companies. Later, Mr. Asher became an original director for Electronic Arts for more than two decades. In the 1990s, he moved to Florida and joined Florida Atlantic University as an affiliate professor of commercial music. He is survived by his wife, Sheila, a son, Jeffrey, and four grandchildren. - Billboard, 7/25/24...... Stevie NicksDuring her set at Glasgow's OVO Hydro stadium on July 24, Stevie Nicks opened up about the health condition that had impacted her UK tour earlier in July and led to her postponing shows in Glasgow and Manchester, with her camp stating she had "sustained a leg injury" and required a "minor surgical procedure" as a result. "I don't know what happened," she told the audience. "I just got this weird infection, and it just went crazy." Nicks went on to say that she was staying at a "fabulous castle" in Scotland with some of her crew at the time, adding: "We get here days early because we want to be here for a few days." She continued: "I finally just looked at my assistant -- it was like two in the morning -- and I said, 'I think we need to go to emergency'. She looked at me and I said, 'I'm not kidding! I think we need to go to the hospital'. And so our butler -- this wonderful man -- throws us in his BMW Sedan, and off we sped through the night to a hospital." Nicks confirmed that she spent two days in hospital. "They let me go back to the castle, and we cancelled this show," she explained. "This whole tour I've been fighting what started here, and I would be damned if I wasn't coming back here." Fan shot footage of Nicks's speech can be viewed on YouTube. Before fulfilling her planned dates in Manchester and Glasgow, Nicks headlined BST Hyde Park in London where she was joined onstage by Harry Styles. The pair played an emotional joint rendition of Fleetwood Mac's "Landslide" in tribute to Christine McVie on what would have been the late musician's birthday. They also performed "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" -- Nicks' 1981 collaboration with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers. - NME, 7/25/24...... John Bennett, a veteran BBC Northern Ireland broadcaster, died peacefully on the evening of July 26, surrounded by his family. No cause of death has been given. Mr. Bennett's broadcasting career spanned almost 60 years. During that time, he became one of Northern Ireland's most famous radio personalities, presenting music, entertainment, sports and current affairs programmes for the BBC since 1965. In 1974, on New Year's Eve, he co-launched BBC Radio Ulster alongside Gloria Hunniford. Hunniford has shared a tribute to Mr. Bennett, calling him "A giant in broadcasting." "He was a truly gifted, gracious and generous man," she added. "His contribution to audiences in Northern Ireland and beyond is immeasurable." He was most celebrated for his work on The Sunday Club, which he presented for over 44 years. In Jan. 2023, Mr. Bennett was awarded an MBE for services to Television and Radio Broadcasting. Shortly after, he was inducted into the IMRO Radio Awards Hall of Fame. His citation said that he had "left an indelible mark on the broadcasting landscape." - NME, 7/29/24...... A Polish television journalist has been suspended by the Polish state broadcaster for reacting to an Olympic Games opening ceremony performance of John Lennon's "Imagine" by saying it was a "vision of communism." TVP, the Polish broadcaster, issued a statement that day saying that the journalist and sports commentator, Przemyslaw Babiarz, would not be allowed to comment on air anymore during this summer's Games. Lennon's song asks to imagine no heaven or hell, no countries, and no possessions. "This is a vision of communism, unfortunately," Babiarz said during the grand opening ceremony along the Seine River in Paris -- comments that immediately triggered controversy for those watching in Poland. TVP said in its statement announcing his suspension: "Mutual understanding, tolerance, reconciliation -- these are not only the basic ideas of the Olympics, they are also the foundation of the standards that guide the new Polish Television. There is no consent to violate them." State media has been an ideological battleground in Poland for years. It was used as a mouthpiece by the right-wing populists who governed Poland from 2015-23. However Prime Minister Donald Tusk, a centrist politician whose broad coalition took power in December, acted quickly to remove their control of the airwaves. Many Polish conservatives condemned the mixing of LGBTQ+ themes with a Last Supper tableau during the opening ceremony. - AP, 7/28/24...... William CalleyIt has been revealed that William L. Calley Jr., a junior Army officer who became the only person convicted in connection with the My Lai Massacre of 1968, died on Apr. 28 at a hospice center in Gainesville, Fla. He was 80. The Washington Post obtained a copy of his death certificate from the Florida Department of Health in Alachua County. The Post was alerted to the death, which was not previously reported, by Zachary Woodward, a recent Harvard Law School graduate who said he noticed Mr. Calley's death while looking through public records. Although he was once the country's most notorious Army officer, a symbol of military misconduct in a war that many considered immoral and unwinnable, Mr. Calley had lived in obscurity for decades, declining interviews while working as a jeweler in Columbus, Ga., not far from the military base where he was court-martialed and convicted in 1971. A junior-college dropout from South Florida, Mr. Calley found a home in a military that was desperately trying to replenish its lower ranks as the war escalated in Vietnam. Mr. Calley was quickly tapped to become a junior officer, with minimal vetting, and was soon promoted to second lieutenant, commanding a platoon in Charlie Company, a unit of the Army's Americal Division. The company sustained heavy losses in the early months of 1968, losing men to sniper fire, land mines and booby traps as the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong launched coordinated attacks in the Tet Offensive. On the morning of Mar. 16, 1968, the unit was airlifted by helicopter to Son My, a patchwork village of rice paddies, irrigation ditches and small settlements, including a hamlet known to U.S. soldiers as My Lai 4. Over the next few hours, Mr. Calley and other soldiers in Charlie Company shot and bayoneted women, children and elderly men, destroying the village while searching for Viet Cong guerrillas and sympathizers who were said to have been hiding in the area. Homes were burned, and some women and girls were gang-raped before being killed. An Army investigation later concluded that 347 men, women and children had been killed, including victims of another American unit, Bravo Company. A Vietnamese estimate placed the death toll at 504. For more than a year and a half, the details of the atrocity were hidden and covered up from the public. A report to headquarters initially characterized the attack as a significant victory, claiming that 128 "enemy" fighters had been killed. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the top commander in Vietnam, praised American forces at My Lai for dealing a "heavy blow" to the Viet Cong. - The Washington Post, 7/28/24.

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on July 25th, 2024

After a new trailer for the upcoming Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown was shared on YouTube on July 24, fans have been reacting to the film on social media, with some claiming that the film might even shake up the Oscars next year. "This movie will drop in December. I hope it'll be recognized for the Oscars. This movie right here from what we have seen is amazing. I am so here for this!," said one fan. A synopsis of the film, starring Timothe Chalamet as Dylan, Elle Fanning as his girlfriend, Sylvie Russo, Monica Barbaro as Joan Baez, and Edward Norton as folk music legend Pete Seeger, says it's "set in the influential New York music scene of the early 60s, [and] follows 19-year-old Minnesota musician Bob Dylan's meteoric rise as a folk singer to concert halls and the top of the charts -- his songs and mystique becoming a worldwide sensation -- culminating in his groundbreaking electric rock and roll performance at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965." Others were critical of Chalamet's acting skills, with one user posting: "I am never going to see this as anything but Timothee Chalamet doing Bob Dylan cosplay." Some were nonplussed by Chalamet's singing as Dylan, while others branded it as "perfect" as "spot on." A Complete Unknown comes from filmmaker James Mangold, who previously directed the hit Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line, and will premiere in the US sometime in December and the UK in January. - New Musical Express, 7/24/24...... Kamala HarrisAfter weeks of mounting pressure from fellow Democrats to drop out of the 2024 presidential race, Pres. Joe Biden announced on July 21 that he was doing just that -- shortly after which he endorsed his own vice president, Kamala Harris, to take on the role instead. Among the many musicians of all generations to immediately throw their support to Harris were '70s superstars Barbra Streisand and Carole King. Streisand posted a fierce defense of the Biden-Harris administration on X before stating her endorsement of Harris for 2024. "I love Joe Biden, and all the wonderful things he's done for our country," she wrote. "Trump is a pathological liar who lies as easily as he breathes. He wants to take away women's rights and destroy our great democracy. Kamala Harris will continue Joe Biden's work and will be a great president." Carole King, after staunchly standing by Pres. Biden up until he announced the end of his candidacy, was also quick to voice support for Harris. "Right person. Right time," she wrote, sharing a past photo of her posing with the new Democratic front-runner," she posted on Instagram. Cher, who released the song "Happiness Is Just a Thing Called Joe" in 2020, noted that Biden's withdrawal from the upcoming presidential race was a wise move for the Democratic Party. "I Believe Its Only Chance 4 [American flag emoji] 2 Remain DEMOCRACY. DEM PARTY MUST 'REALLY,' 'REALLY' THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX," Cher wrote on X. "'WINNING IS ALL', DONT WIN CANT CHANGE ANYTHING & THE TIMES THEY MUST BE A CHANGIN," she added. Meanwhile, Cher posted the cover of her upcoming two-part memoir on her Instagram on July 24, revealing a throwback pic from early in her six-decade career and her name splayed in color-shifting font just above. The book, Cher: The Memoir, Part One, is due out on Nov. 19 through Dey Street/Harper Collins. "After more than seventy years of fighting to live her life on her own terms, Cher finally reveals her true story in intimate detail, in a two-part memoir," the publisher wrote in a statement about the book that will chronicle the 78-year-old singer's childhood and tumultuous marriage to late partner Sonny Bono. "With her trademark honesty and humor, Cher: The Memoir traces how this diamond in the rough succeeded with no plan and little confidence to become the trailblazing superstar the world has been unable to ignore for more than half a century." The second part of the autobiography is slated for release in 2025. - Billboard, 7/24/24...... The estate of Michael Jackson has scored a victory in litigation over a $600 million catalog sale. The estate recently won a key ruling in a legal battle with the late singer's mother Katherine Jackson -- and though it's only a "tentative" win, the stakes are enormous. A California appeals court tentatively rejected Katherine's objections -- ruling that it would likely rule for the estate both procedurally (that she had failed to preserve arguments on appeal) and substantively (that the estate's executors had the power to make the Sony deal.) In other MJ news, a rare collection of the star's signed drawings will be auctioned off on Aug. 3. The 78 sketches made using wax pencils and pastels, as well as watercolors include images of the singer in a Jedi-style robe, as well as drawings of chairs, Michelangelo's David, a number of U.S. presidents, Peter Pan, pop art icon Andy Warhol, Walt Disney, Marilyn Monroe and Queen Elizabeth II. Browse the collection on Instagram to see images Jackson sketched of shoes, doors, chairs, keys, bi-planes, the gates of his Neverland Ranch and flowers. The unique auction will feature one mega-lot, Lot #1, which requires an opening bid of $1 million for the entire collection. If a bidder meets that price then the auction will be over right away; otherwise each piece will be sold separately. The auction will be co-hosted by Selling Sunset's Bre Tiesi and an as-yet-unnamed special surprise host. - Billboard, 7/23/24...... The Rolling Stones have been known as the world's greatest rock and roll band for six decades, but Grammy voters were shamefully late in getting on board. The Stones weren't nominated in any category until the 1979 ceremony, when Some Girls was nominated for Album of the Year. One reason is that Grammy voters in '60s and '70s were resistant to rock, favoring pop and what we now call traditional pop. (Nowadays, Grammy voters love rock and have been slow to embrace hip-hop. Resistance to the new and different is often a byproduct of institutional voting.) Another reason The Stones were left out for so long was the Grammys didn't have performance categories dedicated to rock until 1980 -- and didn't have a Best Rock Album category until 1995. (Fittingly, The Stones were the first winner of the latter award.) Since Grammy voters belatedly discovered The Stones, the band has fared pretty well in the nominations. They won a Grammy (Best Traditional Blues Album) for their previous studio album, High & Lonesome, and their three studio albums before that were each nominated for Best Rock Album. Now the band's 2023 album Hackney Diamonds, which was produced by Andrew Watt, has an excellent chance of landing a Best Rock Album nod and an outside chance of landing an Album of the Year nod. "Angry," the album's opening track and lead single, was nominated for Best Rock Song at the ceremony in February. The 2025 nominations will be announced on Nov. 8. The awards will be presented on Feb. 2, 2025. - Billboard, 7/23/24...... The Farm Aid benefit concert is returning to New York in 2024, and will be held Sept. 21 at Broadview Stage at Saratoga Performing Arts Center in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. This year's lineup features performances from Farm Aid board members Willie Nelson, Neil Young, John Mellencamp and Dave Matthews (with Tim Reynolds). The bill also includes Mavis Staples, Lukas Nelson with the Travelin' McCourys, Southern Avenue, Cassandra Lewis and Jesse Welles. Additional artists will be announced at a later date. This marks the third time Farm Aid has been held in New York (and the second time in Saratoga Springs). In 2007, Farm Aid was held at Randall's Island, N.Y., followed by Saratoga Springs in 2013. Farm Aid will feature not only music, but also homegrown food and agrarian experiences. Over more than 35 years, Farm Aid has raised nearly $80 million to aid programs that help farmers survive and thrive. Tickets for Farm Aid 2024 will go on sale Friday, July 26, at 10 a.m. ET at livenation.com. - Billboard, 7/23/24...... John LennonA pair of John Lennon's tinted glasses along with a collection of photographs taken of The Beatles at Abbey Road Studio in London are set to go up for auction on July 31 at Farleigh Golf Club in Surrey, UK. According to BBC, Lennon's glasses -- a pair of round specs with blue-tinted lenses -- were gifted to a man who was visiting Abbey Road Studios by the late musician himself back in 1968. Speaking about the specs, a spokesperson for Catherine Southon Auctioneers & Valuers said that they were handed to the man by Lennon after the man saw them placed on top of a piano. "The young man saw the spectacles lying on the piano and went to pick them up but was told by his then girlfriend to leave them, to which Lennon replied, 'It's OK, he can have them'," they said. They are expected to reach roughly £3,000 at the auction. A collection of 33 black and white photos taken at Abbey Road will also be auctioned along with the copyright for an estimated £200 to £300. The photographs include shots of Lennon and his bandmates Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr as well as producer George Martin snapped on the day of the photoshoot for the band's Abbey Road album cover of the band walking across a zebra crossing. - NME, 7/22/24...... In an interview with LifeMinute, Judas Priest frontman Rob Halford said that his cancer was still in remission, four years after being diagnosed with the disease. Back in 2021, Halford revealed that: "I had my little cancer battle a year ago, which I got through and that's in remission now, thank God," he said at the time. "That happened while we were all locked down, so things happen for a reason as far as time sequence of events. I have nothing but gratitude to be at this point in my life, still doing what I love the most." Now, he's spoken about still being in remission following his treatment. He explained: "I always take an opportunity to thank the Lord for me being here still, but also my great medical team. And guys, be proactive. Make sure you get your blood work done, your PSA [prostate-specific antigen] checked. I couldn't believe how efficient and the love and the care and the attention that health workers give to each and every one of us." "I had my prostate removed," he continued. "I had some meds and follow-up treatment found a little bit more stuff, so we had to go in for two months of radiation treatment. You do what you've gotta do. The important thing is to stay optimistic, stay positive." He added: "I love my family, my healthcare people that want the best for you. So you can push through it. So anybody that's struggling with that right now, keep that heavy metal faith. With all the due care and diligence and attention, you'll survive." Halford's full interview can be streamed on YouTube. - NME, 7/19/24...... The Pointer Sisters and The Commodores will kick off a joint "An Evening With Icons" tour on July 26 in Oxon Hill, Md., then resume on Oct. 5 in Durant, Okla., Nov. 14 in Tampa, Fla., Nov. 15 in Hollywood, Fla., and Nov. 30 in Primm, Nev. The current incarnation of The Spinners will open all of the dates. Sole Commodores remaining founding member William "WAK" King said the tour was brought together by the agencies: "It wasn't as though we and The Pointer Sisters sat down one day and said, 'Hey, let's put a tour together.' It was brought about through the agencies we both worked with and we both said, 'Yeah, it would be great.' So here we are." Ruth Pointer added, "When they introduced the whole idea to me, I thought, 'Yeah, that could be fun. I haven't seen those guys in quite awhile, but that sounds like a good time to me!'" King said his favorite Pointer Sisters song was "Jump (For My Love)." "It's got to have a hook in there. The track has to grab youand that's what ["Jump"] does," he noted. Pointer says her favorite Commodores number is probably "Nightshift." "We were recording around the same time and we happened to be working with [producer-writer] Peter Wolf and he told us he worked on that song with them and we were like, 'Oh, well, OK, let's go," she says. - Billboard, 7/24/24...... LuluAppearing on Good Morning Britain on July 19, Scottish pop legend Lulu opened up about her hearing problem. "If you're 75 I don't think your hearing is going to be good as it used to be," Lulu, 75, explained. "But if you're in the rock 'n' roll business, if you're a performer, and a lot of them... are deaf!" She added, "They have no hearing at all." Lulu then revealed that she had recently had her hearing tested. "And yes, moderate hearing loss but you know me, I don't want to not hear people!" she said. "I want to hear everything and my music." The "To Sir With Love" singer recently teamed up with Specsavers and the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA) to promote hearing protection. "After being on stage nearly all of my life, I have always noticed ringing and muffled sounds, but never really thought much of it," she explained in a statement via the Daily Record. "Music has always been a cornerstone of everything I do, so it's incredibly important that I can still enjoy it. Wearing hearing aids will mean I can continue to hear every note." Elsewhere in the interview, Lulu confirmed that although her upcoming Champagne for Lulu tour will be her last, she is still open to performing in the future. "This is not the last time ever I'm going to sing, not the last time ever I'm going to perform, but doing tours the way I've done them... I'm 75," she explained. Lulu announced her final tour in February during an appearance on the Rosebud with Gyles Brandreth podcast. "This is actually -- I'm announcing it for the first time now -- this is my farewell tour, with family and friends. Because last year I did a tour that was kind of gruelling -- it was successful, it went well -- but you need an army to be a success in your career these days." She added, "And I felt unsupported. But then I turned 75, and I thought, 'You know what, I want to carry on working, but I want to do it a different way.'" Lulu's 10-city tour launches in Torquay on Nov. 3, also visiting Portsmouth, Nottingham, Hull, Liverpool, Edinburgh, Brighton, Leeds and Ipswich before wrapping in Southend-On-Sea on Nov. 18. - Music-News.com, 7/22/24...... Cable channel ESPN will bridge music and sports in the upcoming Mickey Hart film Rhythm Masters: A Mickey Hart Experience. Hart, the beloved Grateful Dead and Dead & Company drummer, will take viewers on a "sonic journey as he creates an original score inspired by conversations with legendary and iconic voices from the world of sports," according to the film's synopsis. "His breath-taking score combined with insight from athletes helps show the depths of the universal rhythm found in music, sports, and life." The athletes set to be featured in the film include Phil Jackson, Joe Montana, Ozzie Smith, Mario Andretti, Jack Nicklaus, Bob Cousy and the late Bill Walton, a noted Deadhead and a world-class basketball star and NBA coach. In a trailer for the film, which can be viewed on YouTube, Hart is heard saying: "He who knows the rhythm, knows the world." The film will premiere on ESPN and ESPN+ on Aug. 14. - Billboard, 7/24/24...... Jerry Miller, one of the music world's most beloved and admired guitarists and co-founder of Moby Grape, died on July 21 in his Tacoma, Wash., home. He was 81 years old and his cause of death has yet to be revealed. Born in Tacoma, Wash., in 1943, Mr. Miller grew up playing in various local bands including The Elegants, The Incredible Kingsmen and The Frantics. When he was just 23 years old, he co-founded Moby Grape as the lead guitarist alongside Skip Spence (guitar), Bob Mosley (bass), Don Stevenson (Drums) andPeter Lewis (guitar). The band name, chosen by Mosley and Spence, was inspired by the punch line of the joke: "What's big and purple and lives in the ocean?" The group signed with Columbia Records and recorded four albums for the label between 1967 and 1969 -- their self-titled debut in 1967, 1968's Wow/Grape Jam, 1969's Moby Grape '69 and 1969's Truly Fine Citizen. Moby Grape disbanded in 1970, but regrouped in 1971 and have played and recorded music with various members throughout the years since. Mr. Miller's guitar skills were beloved in the instrumentalist community, with Robert Plant citing the musician as an influence for Led Zeppelin and Eric Clapton naming him the "best guitar player in the world." - Billboard, 7/22/24...... Jerry FullerProlific songwriter-producer Jerry Fuller died of lung cancer on July 18 at his home in Sherman Oaks, Calif. He was 85. Mr. Fuller wrote two songs that reached No. 1 on hit parade: Ricky Nelson's "Travelin' Man" in 1961 and Al Wilson's "Show and Tell" in 1974. He also produced the latter song, which in addition to topping the Billboard Hot 100 reached No. 10 on what was then known as Billboard's Best Selling Soul Singles. He also wrote Nelson's "A Wonder Like You," his follow-up to "Travelin' Man," which reached No. 11 on the Hot 100, as well as two subsequent Nelson singles that went top 10: "Young World" (No. 5) and "It's Up to You" (No. 6). Mr. Fuller had another solid run of hits in 1968 with Gary Puckett & the Union Gap, writing the group's punchy pop hits "Young Girl" and "Lady Willpower," which spent a combined five weeks at No. 2 on the Hot 100, and the mellower, adult contemporary-oriented "Over You," which reached No. 7. All three of those singles went gold. Born in Fort Worth, Tex. on Nov. 19, 1938, Mr. Fuller moved to Los Angeles in early 1959. In 1960, while touring with The Champs (best known for their 1958 smash "Tequila"), Mr. Fuller got to know Glen Campbell, who remained a lifelong friend. Early in his career, Mr. Fuller worked as a demo singer, which led to a recording and songwriting contract with Gene Autry's Four Star Music and Challenge Records. Mr. Fuller had four Hot 100 hits as an artist from 1959-61, the highest-charting of which (a rockabilly cover version of the standard "Tennessee Waltz") reached No. 61. But he had far more success working with other artists. He originally wrote "Travelin' Man" for Sam Cooke -- it has the pop flavor of such Cooke hits of the period as "Only Sixteen," "Wonderful World" and "Cupid" -- but it made its way to Nelson instead. Mr. Fuller was unique among writer/producers in that he also produced songs he didn't write, including O.C. Smith's recording of Bobby Russell's "Little Green Apples," which reached No. 2 on both the Hot 100 and Billboard's Best Selling Rhythm & Blues Singles (as the chart was then known) in 1968; and The Knickerbockers' 1965 power-pop hit "Lies." "Lies," which has the energy of Beatles hits of the era, also underscores Fuller's range. From power-pop to ballads; from pop/soul to country, his hits defied easy categorization. In the 1970s, Mr. Fuller formed his own companies, Moonchild Productions In. and Fullness Music Company. Mr. Fuller is survived by his wife, the former Annette Smerigan, and their two children, Adam Lee and Anna Nicole. - Billboard, 7/22/24...... Abdul Kareem FakirAbdul Kareem "Duke" Fakir, the last of the original Four Tops and a stalwart of Motown's golden age died from heart failure on July 22. He was 88. Mr. Fakir, who co-founded the Four Tops in 1953, had been in poor health, including bladder cancer and had retired from touring late last year. Mr. Fakir was born in Detroit on Dec. 26, 1935; his father was a factory worker who'd come over from what is now Bangladesh. He played football, basketball and ran track in high school, meeting Stubbs through neighborhood football games; the two began singing after separately attending a variety show, eventually recruiting Payton and Benson to form the group, first called The Aims but later changed to avoid confusion with the Ames Brothers. The Four Tops recorded without success for several labels -- including Chess, Red Top, Riverside and Columbia -- and supported Billy Eckstine before signing with Motown in 1963. The group started out recording standards for the label's Workshop Jazz Records imprint, but when the songwriting/production team of Holland-Dozier-Holland gave The Tops "Baby I Need Your Loving" in mid-1964, it hit No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100, which opened the floodgates for a string of hits that included "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)," "Reach Out I'll Be There," "Standing in the Shadows of Love" and "It's the Same Old Song." The Tops had several stints with Motown, and away from that company it also had hits with "Ain't No Woman (Like the One I've Got)," "Are You Man Enough" and "When She Was My Girl." The Tops were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998 and the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1999. Fakir accepted a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award on behalf of the band in 2009. "Reach Out I'll Be There" was added to the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry in 20AbA22. With his glasses and angular frame, Mr. Fakir was arguably the most recognizable of The Tops and maintained his leadership in the group following the deaths of Levi Stubbs in 2008, Renaldo "Obie" Benson in 2005 and Lawrence Payton in 1997 (his son Lawrence Payton Jr. is part of the current lineup). In addition to his memoir, Mr. Fakir was also working on a stage musical based on The Four Tops' story. "I'm at such a loss," said Otis Williams of The Temptations. "He is now with Levi, Lawrence and Peyton, singing for God. I miss you and love you, brother." Mr. Fakir is survived by his wife, Piper, five sons, 13 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. - Billboard, 7/22/24...... John MayallInfluential British blues musician John Mayall, whose band the Bluesbreakers was a training ground for the likes of Eric Clapton, Mick Fleetwood and many other rock superstars, died on July 22 at his home in California. He was 90. "Health issues that forced John to end his epic touring career have finally led to peace for one of this world's greatest road warriors," a post on his Instagram page said. Mr. Mayall is credited with helping develop the English take on urban, Chicago-style rhythm and blues that played an important role in the blues revival of the late 1960s. At various times, the Bluesbreakers included Clapton and Jack Bruce, later of Cream; Mick Fleetwood, John McVie and Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac; Mick Taylor, who played five years with the Rolling Stones; Harvey Mandel and Larry Taylor of Canned Heat; and Jon Mark and John Almond, who went on to form the Mark-Almond Band. He protested in interviews that he was not a talent scout, but played for the love of the music he had first heard on his father's 78-rpm records. "I'm a band leader and I know what I want to play in my band -- who can be good friends of mine," he said in an interview with the Southern Vermont Review. "It's definitely a family. It's a small kind of thing really." Born on Nov. 29, 1933 in Macclesfield, near Manchester in central England, Mr. Mayall was often called the "father of British blues," but when he moved to London in 1962 his aim was to soak up the nascent blues scene led by Alexis Korner and Cyril Davies. Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Eric Burdon were among others drawn to the sound. The piano was his main instrument, though he also performed on guitar and harmonica, as well as singing in a distinctive, strained-sounding voice. Aided only by drummer Keef Hartley, Mr. Mayall played all the other instruments for his 1967 album Blues Alone. Mr. Mayall's 1968 album Blues From Laurel Canyon signaled a permanent move to the United States and a change in direction. He disbanded the Bluesbreakers and worked with two guitars and drums. The 1970s found Mr. Mayall at low ebb personally, but still touring and doing more than 100 shows a year. "Throughout the '70s, I performed most of my shows drunk," he said in a 1990 Down Beat magazine interview. One consequence was an attempt to jump from a balcony into a swimming pool that missed -- shattering one of his heels and leaving him with a limp. "That was one incident that got me to stop drinking," he said. In 1982, he reformed the Bluesbreakers, recruiting Taylor and McVie, but after two years the personnel changed again. In 2008, he announced that he was permanently retiring the Bluesbreaker name, and in 2013 he was leading the John Mayall Band. Among the many rock stars lamenting his death on social media were Mick Fleetwood, who posted on Instagram that Mr. Mayall's death is like "losing a musical father... a guiding light to so many of us young English players!," and Eric Clapton, who thanked Mr. Mayall on X for "rescuing me from oblivion!... He found me and took me into his home and asked me to join his band, and I stayed with him and I learned all that I really have to draw on today in terms of technique and desire to play the kind of music I love to play. I did all my research in his home, in his record collection." Mr. Mayall and his second wife, Maggie, divorced in 2011 after 30 years of marriage. They had two sons. - Billboard, 7/23/24.

Deep Purple and Yes will kick off a co-headlining tour on Aug. 14 at Hard Rock Live in Hollywood, Fla., visiting such cities as Tampa, Fort Worth, CIncinnati, Chicago, and Atlantic City, before wrapping on Sept. 8 in Scranton, Penn. Despite 53 years after original Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore delayed Yes's headline slot at the Jazz and Blues Festival in 1971 by setting fire to amplifiers, the two bands have no hard feelings. "We did some festivals together -- one in particular called the Plumpton Jazz and Blues Festival in '71," says Deep Purple bassist Roger Glover. Ian Gillan and I had only been in the band a couple of months at that point. There was an argument about who'd be closing the show, and they won the argument and were closing the show. Ritchie set fire to his amplifiers and made them explode on stage. So they were delayed a lot and weren't very happy with that." However, they didn't hold a grudge, and the groups are set to hit the road again in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the classic rock staple "Smoke On The Water." Roger added: "We've met them since. They're a great band. We saw (Yes guitarist) Steve Howe a couple years ago. We got on, no hard feelings. I don't know which state they're in now, which combination of musicians they have, so I'll be happily surprised." - Music-News.com, 7/19/24...... Bruce SpringsteenForbes magazine has declared Bruce Springsteen a billionaire by a "conservative" estimate. On July 19, the publication reported the Boss, 74, had reached an estimated net worth of $1.1 billion. In terms of other musicians who've crossed into billionaire status, he ranks under Jay-Z ($2.5 billion), Rihanna ($1.4 billion) and Taylor Swift ($1.3 billion). Much of Springsteen's wealth comes from his decades-spanning catalog, which he sold back to his longtime label -- Sony's Columbia Records -- for a whopping $500 million in 2021, the largest deal ever for an individual body of work. At that point, his recordings had racked up 65.5 million sales in the U.S., including his iconic multiplatinum albums Born In The U.S.A. and The River. Springsteen has had only praise for his label, Columbia Records, who he says "have treated me with the greatest respect as an artist and as a person." The New Jersey rocker has also remained a touring force well into the later years of his career, with his 2023 world tour selling more than 1.6 million tickets and generating $380 million in revenue, according to Pollstar. He and his E Street Band are currently on tour again, with dates planned all the way up through July of 2025. Springsteen has also nabbed another chart first; recently making his debut on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart for his appearance on Zach Bryan's "Sandpaper." It also marked Springsteen's first entry on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart in over 15 years. The track entered at Nos. 26 and 71 on the respective charts. Springsteen showed up to duet with Bryan on "Sandpaper" on March 27 at Brooklyn's Barclays Center. The song is drawing comparisons to Springsteen's "I'm on Fire" -- one of seven Hot 100 top 10s from his Born in the U.S.A. album in 1984-86 -- which Bryan has covered in concert. Meanwhile, England fans' embrace of Springsteen's 1984 classic "Dancing In The Dark" to sing the praises of footballer Phil Foden at the Euros 2024 has paid off -- the song has re-entered the UK Top 40 for the first time in 39 years. The last time "Dancing In The Dark" was in the Top 40 was Apr. 1985. - Billboard/Music-News.com, 7/19/24...... Attorneys for Priscilla Presley filed a scathing lawsuit against four of her former business partners over allegations of elder abuse and fraud, accusing them of a "meticulously planned" scheme to drain Elvis Presley's ex-wife of "every last penny she had." In a complaint filed on July 18 in Los Angeles court, lawyers for Presley, 79, accuse Brigitte Kruse, Kevin Fialko, Vahe Sislyan and Lynn Walker Wright of fraudulently convincing her to give them power over nearly every aspect of her life -- and then abusing that control to steal her money. Calling Kruse a "con-artist and pathological liar," high-profile L.A. attorney Martin Singer, who now represents Presley, says the defendants took more than $1 million from Priscilla and convinced her to sign a deal that would give them 80% of her future income. "The fact that the plaintiff in this case is internationally recognized actress, author, and cultural icon & demonstrates both how effective the defendants' plan was (and needed to be), and how anyone can be a victim of elder abuse and fraud," Singer writes. The new case comes eight months after Kruse's company, Priscilla Presley Partners, filed its own lawsuit against Priscilla in Florida. That case claimed that Presley illegally turned her back on Kruse and Fialko after they had helped her "dig herself out of impending financial ruin," including negotiating the deal that led to last year's Priscilla biopic. But in the new lawsuit, Singer argues that the earlier case was merely a cover for Kruse and Fialko's alleged misdeeds. Singer and Priscilla's other attorneys say that Kruse and the others "established a personal relationship" with her and then used it to "isolate her from her long-time business and financial advisors," whom they argued were "deceitful or incompetent" and causing her to lose money. Once they had isolated her, the lawsuit says, Kruse and the others took steps to "fraudulently induce" Presley into signing over power of attorney, giving them control over her trusts and bank accounts, and signing deals with "sham" companies like Priscilla Presley Partners. One of those deals, the lawsuit says, gave the defendants "an exclusive license to exploit and profit off of her name, image, and likeness, and to control and receive virtually all of her income from any of her professional ventures." Neither side has yet to comment on the lawsuit. - Billboard, 7/19/24...... Paul McCartneyOn July 18 Paul McCartney sent a special message to Cincinatti at the debut of his "Liverpool Oratorio" opera. While the city did not get the get the breathlessly hoped-for drop-in from the former Beatles icon at the world premiere of the Cincinnati Opera's take on Sir Paul's "Liverpool Oratorio," they did get a very special message from the night's absent guest of honor. "Hello, Cincinnati! Good evening. I'm so excited to hear that the Cincinnati Opera is putting on my Liverpool Oratorio," McCartney said in a pre-taped message that played for the capacity crowd in Cincinnati Music Hall's 2,300-capacity Springer Auditorium before the opening night of the fresh take on his first classical composition. "This work is really special for me because it was the first large scale thing like this that I'd done, and it's largely based on a lot of events from my childhood. The school I went to& the teacher, Miss Inkley, who was the only female teacher in a school of a thousand boys. So it's really true, as it says in the opera, where she says, 'Hello, boys. You can call me, 'Sir,'" McCartney continued. "Well, as 11-year-olds, it's a little difficult to make sense of that. But anyway, I love the piece, and I love that you're doing it there in Cincinnati. So I hope you have a great evening. Thank you very much for putting it on. I wish I was there with you, but I can't be there. So I'm here. So have a great one. Thank you." And though the 82-year-old Beatle wasn't on hand to see the Opera's high-energy take on his eight-movement homage to his hometown, in the weeks leading up to the debut the city was blanketed with a blizzard of posters, social media messages and memes encouraging locals to help "Get Paul to the Hall." The effort was intended to spur interest in the $1.3 million original production that over the course of 90 minutes tells the story a "war baby" named Shanty, who, like McCartney, comes into a fiery world engulfed in the air raid blitz of WWII. At the final dress rehearsal on July 16, the cast was dialed in to the tale that mixes hope, tragedy, redemption and joy into a joyous spectacle that unfolds on a massive map of Liverpool. After its debut more than 30 years ago, the piece written for orchestra and vocalists has not been performed very often, but the energy and spirit of the Cincinnati Opera's refreshing version seems destined to give the Liverpool Oratorio a second life. Photos from the production can be viewed on Instagram. - Billboard, 7/19/24...... Grateful DeadThe 2024 Kennedy Center Honors will feature a mix of the psychedelic and the soulful with a touch of jazz. Grateful Dead, Bonnie Raitt and jazz trumpeter/pianist/composer Arturo Sandoval will be among this years class announced on July 18 that also includes legendary director Francis Ford Coppola and New York's Apollo theater. In a first, The Apollo theater in Harlem in a special honor as an "iconic American Institution." "It goes without saying that the Kennedy Center Honors represents the highest of reaches for artistic achievement," the Grateful Dead's surviving members wrote in a joint statement. "To be recognized alongside the artists who have in the past received this honor is beyond humbling. The Grateful Dead has always been about community, creativity, and exploration in music and presentation.... so it also must be said that our music belongs as much to our fans, the Dead Heads, as it does to us. This honor, then, is as much theirs as ours." In a statement, Raitt said, "I am deeply honored and thrilled to have been chosen to receive one of this year's Kennedy Center Honors. I have long been an admirer of the awards and have been so blessed to be able to participate in several shows honoring others.... I want to extend my sincere thanks to all who have chosen me to receive this honor. I look forward to the upcoming ceremony and festivities, which I know will be one of my life's peak experiences." The Kennedy Center Honors celebrates individuals whose unique contributions to American arts and culture at an event where the the honorees are seated in the box tier of the Kennedy Center Opera House while their peers pay homage with performances and tributes. The event that will take place at the John F. Kennedy Center For the Performing Arts in WasThe Greatest Night in Pop, a deep dive into the 1985 recording session that produced "We Are the World," has been nominated for an Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special Emmy award-- and Lionel Richie is celebrating the accomplishment. "I am still amazed by what we accomplished in 1985 and I'm even more amazed after receiving an Emmy nomination for 'The Greatest Night In Pop,'" the Richie wrote in a statement. "It has been an absolute joy to be able to bring this moment in history to life alongside @netflix. A big thank you and congratulations to all of the artists and participants for making 'We Are The World' happen, and thank you to the @televisionacad for recognizing our documentary." The documentary follows the group of 45 all-star musicians -- Richie included -- who gathered together Jan. 25, 1985, as they "checked their egos at the door and recorded a song to benefit African famine relief that would alter global pop culture history," the official synopsis for the film reads. The Greatest Night in Pop included never-before-seen footage of the song's planning and writing process, as well as Henson Studios where the recording of the track took place. The film is also up for Directing For a Documentary/Nonfiction Program and Sound Editing For a Nonfiction or Reality Program. - Billboard, 7/17/24...... Bob NewhartBob Newhart, the beloved stand-up performer whose droll, deadpan humor showcased on two critically acclaimed CBS sitcoms vaulted him into the ranks of history's greatest comedians, died on the morning of July 18. He was 94. Jerry Digney, his longtime publicist, said the Chicago legend died at his Los Angeles home after a series of short illnesses. George Robert Newhart was born on Sept. 5, 1929, in Oak Park, Ill. He grew up a Cubs fan and participated in the team's victory parade down La Salle Street after Chicago took the National League pennant in 1945. Mr. Newhart never dreamed of being in show business; in fact, such a gaudy profession ran against the Midwestern grain of his personality and perhaps was why he would connect with Middle America. After attending St. Ignatius College Prep and then earning a degree in commerce from Loyola University, Mr. Newhart spent two years in the Army and then flunked out of law school. He then worked as an accountant with U.S. Gypsum and then the Glidden Co., which sold paint. Somehow there's a connection between numbers and music and comedy. I don't know what it is, but I know it's there," he once said in an interview with a college business professor. "I know it's a case of 2 and 2 equals 5 in terms of a comedian. You take this fact and you take that fact and then you come up with this ludicrous fact." To combat the tedium at work, Mr. Newhart and a friend would amuse themselves by making prank phone calls. He refined those into what was then his signature comic bit: having a one-sided phone conversation (the audience got to imagine what the other side of the chat was like). He and his pal also sold a syndicated radio show in which they did five-minute comedy routines five days a week for $7.50 a week. In 1972, MTM Enterprises cast the modest comic as clinical psychologist Bob Hartley, who practiced in the real-life Newhart's favorite burg, Chicago. The Bob Newhart Show would become one of the most popular sitcoms of all time, featuring a wonderful cast of supporting players: Suzanne Pleshette, Peter Bonerz, Marcia Wallace, Bill Daily and Jack Riley among them. Mr. Newhart ended the series in 1978 after 142 episodes -- and, incredibly, no Emmy nominations for him and no wins for the show -- feeling it had exhausted its bag of tricks. But he was back on CBS in 1982 to front another MTM comedy. In Newhart, he portrayed Dick Loudon, a New York author turned proprietor of the Stratford Inn in Vermont. The show was a mainstay for eight seasons, and this one also featured a great cast (Mary Frann, Tom Poston -- who later would marry Pleshette -- Julia Duffy, Peter Scolari and, as handymen "Larry, Darryl and their other brother Darryl," William Sanderson, Tony Papenfuss and John Voldstad). In one of the most admired series endings in history, Newhart wrapped its eight-season run with a cheeky final scene in which Loudon wakes up in the middle of the night as Bob Hartley in bed with Pleshette in their Chicago apartment, suggesting that his whole second series had been a dream. Newhart's pauses and stammering were among his trademarks, and his wry observations were a result of his observant nature. "I tend to find humor in the macabre. I would say 85 percent of me is what you see on the show. And the other 15 percent is a very sick man with a very deranged mind," he said during a 1990 interview with Los Angeles magazine. He was inducted into the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Hall of Fame in 1992, and won Grammy Awards for Album of the Year and Best New Artist for his 1960 breakthrough record, The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart. The former accountant famously went without an Emmy Award until 2013, when he finally was given one for guest-starring as Arthur Jeffries (alias Professor Proton, former host of a children's science show) on CBS' The Big Bang Theory. Mr. Newhart and his late wife, Virginia "Ginny" Quinn who died in 2023 at age 82, were great friends with the late Don Rickles and his wife, Barbara, and the couples often vacationed together. Survivors include his children, Robert Jr., Timothy, Courtney and Jennifer, and 10 grandchildren. - The Hollywood Reporter, 7/18/24.

Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on July 15th, 2024

On July 15 Bob Dylan announced he'll kick off a UK tour in Bournemouth on Nov. 1. Other November gigs, including a trio of shows at London's historic Royal Albert Hall on Nov. 12, 13 and 14, include Liverpool (11/3), Edinburgh (11/5, 6), Nottingham (11/8), and Wolverhampton (11/9, 10). The 2024 UK leg of his "Rough and Rowdy Ways" tour is in partnership with Yondr -- which will prohibit the use of video cameras and mobile phones at the shows, making the shows even more unique. Dylan's previous UK dates in 2022 were also "non-phone events." In June, the rock icon kicked off the "Outlaw Music Festival Tour" in the States with a typically unpredictable setlist of '50s blues and country covers and deep cuts. He recently announced Bob Dylan and The Band - The 1974 Live Recordings, an extensive new box set featuring previously unreleased live performances and newly-mixed recordings. - New Musical Express, 7/15/24...... Frank ZappaFrank Zappa's canon of music features no shortage of eclectic material, but perhaps his most accessible release, 1974's Apostrophe ('), will receive a super-deluxe edition for its 50th anniversary this fall. Along with the original nine tracks, which includes classics like "Don't Eat The Yellow Snow" and "Cosmic Debris," the re-release will include bonus live material from Zappa's performances in Colorado and Ohio, new mixes, and more details from the album's recording in a 52-page booklet featuring brand-new archival photos of the cover's photographer, Sam Emerson. Fans will also receive a compilation of liner notes and essays written by British music journalist Simon Prentis and expert Zappa archivist Joe Travers. Speaking about the re-release, Travers said: "With Apostrophe ('), Zappa continued to carve out his own genre in music, while celebrating ten years in the business. Nobody sounded like Frank Zappa. This album, and specifically 'Don't Eat The Yellow Snow' brought that unique wonderful sound to the masses in a way that nobody, including Frank, would expect." Winter noted: "I'd also say this album is probably the most accessible album of Frank's. It's the one that most people who grew up in my era in the '70s, either they or their older brother and sister had the 'Apostrophe (') poster hanging up on the wall of their basement. In the pot smoking den this was this face staring out at you, this is the face most of us remember growing up and identify with the classic Zappa era." The 'Apostrophe (') re-release is due Sept. 13. - NME, 7/14/24...... Speaking of anniversary releases, former Genesis frontman and '80s solo superstar Phil Collins announced on Instagram on July 12 that a 30th anniversary vinyl box set of his 1993 album Both Sides will drop on Sept. 20 via Rhino Records. The Both Sides (All the Sides) lavish box set comes with five vinyl records - two of which are the original album remastered at half-speed by Abbey Road Studios' Miles Showell, and three feature demos, B-sides and live recordings from that era. Some of the rarities included are recordings from Collins' 1994 MTV Unplugged set, which has yet to be issued officially as a live album, along with B-sides like "Don't Call Me Ashley," "Rad Dudeski" and "For a Friend." Both Sides is notable in Collins' discography for having been self-produced and recorded by him at The Farm, the now-defunct recording studio owned by his band Genesis. Collins performed all instruments on the record. The release also includes newly written liner notes by journalist Michael Hann. "Time has magnified its virtues, and perspective has amplified its truths. Both Sides' may not have been the monster hit its predecessors were, but it might be the most important record in the Phil Collins discography," writes Hann in a liner notes excerpt shared by Rhino Records. Alongside the announcement of Both Sides (All the Sides) is the reveal of an expanded edition of Collins's 1995 EP Live From the Board: Official Bootleg, a limited-edition 10" vinyl due for release later this year on Record Store Day's Black Friday edition. - NME, 7/13/24...... Performing a headline slot at London's BST Hyde Park fest on July 12, Stevie Nicks brought out a surprise guest in the form of contemporary pop star Harry Styles for an emotional tribute of Fleetwood Mac's "Landslide" in tribute to the late Christine McVie. The pair first duetted by singing "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around," which they previously performed together during Nicks' 2019 Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame Induction. They went on to perform "Landslide" as a tribute to McVie, who died in 2022 aged 79. Before their duet, Nicks made a speech about McVie, with Styles holding her hand throughout. "Christine was Harry's girl, she was my girl, she was your girl," Nicks began. "She loved all of us, today was her birthday. It's taken me all this time to try and be able to deal with this situation. One thing my mom used to say to me when I was little was when I was hurt, she'd go 'Stevie when you're hurt you always run to the stage. That's what I've been doing ever since Chris passed away, is running to the stage. The only people that have been able to help me to get over this has been all of you." Fan shot footage of the performances can be viewed on YouTube. Nicks has also announced rescheduled dates for UK shows in Manchester and Glasgow. It's been confirmed that Nicks' Manchester Co-op Live concert will take place on July 16, and the Glasgow OVO Hydro gig on July 24. Just hours before Nicks was due to perform at Glasgow's OVO Hydro, it was announced that both the Glasgow and Manchester dates were being pushed back because of a leg injury. Meanwhile, founding Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood has said he would like to see a "healing" between his former bandmates Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham. In a new interview with the UK music mag Mojo, Fleetwood said: "It's no secret, it's no tittle-tattle that there is a brick wall there emotionally. Stevie's able to speak clearly about how she feels and doesn't feel, as does Lindsey. But I'll say, personally, I would love to see a healing between them -- and that doesn't have to take the shape of a tour, necessarily." Buckingham and Nicks, then romantic partners, joined FM on New Year's Eve 1974 after they'd performed in a duo called Buckingham Nicks. Both were mainstays in the lineup until 1987, when Buckingham left, before Nicks' departure in 1990. They both rejoined in 1997, before Buckingham was fired in 2018. - NME, 7/13/24...... Billy JoelAs Billy Joel prepares to wrap up his record-setting decade-long residency at Madison Square Garden on July 25, the Piano Man sat down for an interview with the Today show's Willie Geist for an interview on July 14. "Well, I'm kind of sad that it's ending," Joel says of the series that has sold more than 1.6 million tickets to date. "You know, 10 years in Madison Square Garden is beyond my dreams as a musician. We were the house band for 10 years at the Garden, which I think is the best performance venue in the world." Now, to be clear, Joel says that the end of the run doesn't mean he'll never play MSG again, just that this seemingly unbeatable record string of shows is reaching its natural end. Plus, Joel says, 150 feels like a "good round number" to bow out on. When he kicked the residency off more than a decade ago, Joel told Geist he never imagined it would last this long, assuming there would be a peak and then a slow eventual decline. "But that hasn't happened, they're buying more tickets recently than they were at the beginning," he says of the sold-out shows, noting that he could have easily kept going, but that after a decade he felt like it was "all right already" and although he's had some second thoughts about ending the residency, "I didn't want to outstay my welcome." Joel -- who released his first new pop song in 17 years, "Turn the Lights Back On" in February, played a stadium gig in Denver on July 12, and he's set to play other stadium dates in the UK, Cleveland, St. Louis, Los Angeles, San Antonio and Las Vegas that will keep him busy through November. - Billboard, 7/12/24...... Speaking to the streaming channel AXS TV, Queen's Brian May opened up about his late bandmate Freddie Mercury's last days and remembered how he "never ever saw him cry" in his final days. "We'd always said that if one of us goes, that's it. So Roger [Taylor] and I both went out kind of grieving to the max and saying it's over, we don't even want to talk about it for quite a long time," May revealed. He then went on to speak about Freddie and what he was like during his final days. "We made the last album, the Made In Heaven album with the tracks that Freddie had left us to play with and it became a real labour of love because he left some lovely little bits and pieces. He was very undramatic about it," May shared, adding: "I never ever saw him cry or go you know self-pity. He never did that, he was like 'Let's just do it, let's keep doing stuff'. Freddy was always inspiring. If he was here now, we'd be doing what we always do I'm sure." May also discussed Adam Lambert's role within the current incarnation of the band and added that the singer always provides a fresh view on things and is not afraid to be vocal about things they should try. "The songs are not fossils, they're alive and evolving with Adam which is great. Sometimes he blows my mind," May said. Meanwhile the official Queen tribute band Queen Extravaganza, with full backing from May and Taylor, have announced that they are set to embark on a 25-date UK and Ireland tour in 2025 in salute to the 50th anniversary of Queen's signature song, "Bohemian Rhapsody." - NME, 7/15/24...... In an interview with Headbanger News, ex-Slipknot drummer Jay Weinberg reflected on filling in for his dad, E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg, during Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band's concert in Barcelona, Spain on June 22. "For Bruce to basically say, like, 'All right, it's Saturday night in Barcelona. We're gonna use a shot of that energy' that I brought to the song 'Radio Nowhere', that was a true honor," Jay said. "I hadn't played with them in 15 years. But that's my family; it doesn't get more family than that. And I truly love everybody on that tour - I get to watch my dad and his friends become superheroes up there. And that's just an amazing opportunity," he added. While his father was the bandleader on The Tonight Show With Conan O'Brien in 2009, Jay filled in on several dates on Springsteen's "Working On A Dream" tour. He's currently the drummer for the band Suicidal Tendencies. - NME, 7/11/24...... Veteran music producer Glen Ballard, who has worked with the likes of Aerosmith, Barbra Streisand, Michael Jackson, Alanis Morrissette, Annie Lennox, Dave Matthews Band and Wilson Phillips, became the 2,374th recipient of a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on July 11 with a little help from the members of Wilson Phillips, whose self-titled 1990 debut album produced by and co-written with Ballard went on to sell 10 million copies worldwide and cemented the friendship between the producer and the trio. Wilson Phillips' Carnie Wilson who called Ballard "the most humble human being I've ever met" and the "fourth member" of Wilson Phillips, gave a little history lesson, taking the audience back to the trio and Ballard sitting in a his studio in Encino, Calif., "eating our chopped salads and pasta from Emilio's five days a week for two years," while they crafted the album. "You understood our need to sing harmony, our blend. We heard and spoke the same language." Ballard has also had a number of theatrical successes, including "Back to the Future," which is running on Broadway and London's West End. Tony winner Roger Bart, who plays Doc Brown in the Broadway version, also feted Ballard, praising his collaborative spirit. - Billboard, 7/11/24...... Rod ArgentAfter suffering a stroke during the first week of July, The Zombies' principal Rod Argent has announced he is retiring from touring effective immediately. According to a press release from the band's managers, the 79-year-old Zombies keyboardist is currently recovering at home after an overnight hospital stay, with doctors advising several months of rest and recuperation. Argent reportedly had spent a weekend in London with his wife Cathy to celebrate their 52nd wedding anniversary as well as his birthday before his hospitalization. All upcoming performances on The Zombies' schedule have now been canceled, including the band's two festival shows in the U.K. slated for later in July. A fall 2024 U.S. tour had also been in the works prior to his stroke. "He was already preparing to wind down his live performance schedule after health scares on recent tours," the announcement read. "However, the stroke was an unmistakable warning sign that the risks are too great." Though he will no longer be performing with the English rock trailblazers, who got their start in the early 1960s, Argent plans to continue writing and recording with bandmates Colin Blunstone, Tom Toomey, Sren Koch and Steve Rodford. According to the press release, Rod's "already been back at his piano for some much-needed "'Bach therapy.'" Argent had previously stepped away from The Zombies in 1975 in order to focus on his family and being a songwriter, but agreed to temporarily fill in for a few shows in 1999 -- something that turned into 25 more years of touring and recording with the band. The group has had two albums chart on the Billboard Hot 200 album chart -- 1965's self-titled release and 1969's Odessey & Oracle -- as well as five Hot 100 pop hits over the course of its career, including "Hold Your Head Up" from his band's 1972 LP All Together Now. - Billboard, 7/11/24...... Mick Jagger got a sneak preview of the reception that might await Justin Trudeau at the ballot box in 2025 when he mentioned the Canadian prime minister during a Rolling Stones show in Vancouver on July 5. Jagger, 80, got the crowd at B.C. Place riled up when he said he's a fan of Canada's deeply unpopular Liberal leader. "We love your Mr. Trudeau. I mean, his family's always been such big fans of our band," Jagger quipped, making a nod to the prime minister's mother, who partied with the Stones back in the late 1970s after she had split from Justin's father, Pierre Trudeau. After a brief pause, Jagger knew he was losing the room but quickly recovered, pivoting to Canada's national men's soccer team, who had recently advanced to the semifinals of the Copa America. "By the way, congratulations to the Canadian soccer team getting to the semifinals!" the vocalist yelled as jeers turned to applause. In the days since the remark, fan-captured clips of the moment have gone viral on X and Instagram, raking up hundreds of thousands of views. "(Jagger) hasn't been paying attention," one person remarked, with another adding, "Mick Jagger has no clue how unpopular Justin Trudeau is." Meanwhile, others praised the Stones singer for being able to get the audience back on his side so quickly. Margaret Trudeau's association with the Stones dates back nearly 50 years and made headlines when the band played a club show in Toronto and the wife of then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau was spotted stepping out with the band. "We played dice until about five in the morning, in my hotel suite," Margaret said of the encounter. "Smoked some dope, talked. It was a good night, and it was my new world. But no one knew I was separated from my husband yet, and it brought a huge scandal." - Canoe.com, 7/10/24...... A month ahead of his formal induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Peter Frampton will help honor an International Tennis Hall of Famer when the guitar god joins the party at the 2024 City Parks Foundation Dinner & Concert Benefit. At the SummerStage venue in Manhattan's Central Park on Sept. 26, the City Parks Foundation (CPF) will jointly honor John McEnroe and Patrick McEnroe with the City Parks Foundation Icon Award. Also performing will be John McEnroe's wife, "The Warrior" singer Patty Smyth. Tickets for the concert and dinner benefit event are available on City Parks Foundation's site. CPF presents free arts and cultural programs in NYC parks throughout the year and helps make the city's green spaces accessible for all people. - Billboard, 7/10/24...... Richard SimmonsFitness guru Richard Simmons, whose flamboyant, relentlessly positive persona helped him build a multi-faceted fitness empire included at least 12 books, 10 CDs and 22 DVDs, including five volumes of his signature Sweatin' to the Oldies, died on July 13 at his home in the Hollywood Hills. His death, which appears to be from natural causes, came one day after his 76th birthday. Simmons had a platinum album in 1982 with Reach, which rode the Billboard Hot 200 for 40 weeks. The album consisted of Simmons singing motivational songs such as "What Are You Waiting For?," "You Can Do It," "Wake Up," "Reach" and "Live It." Simmons' colorful personality made him a natural for television, where he achieved his greatest fame. From 1980-84, he headlined his own daytime talk show The Richard Simmons Show, focusing on personal health, fitness, exercise, and healthy cooking. He also made frequent appearances as himself on General Hospital and many other programs. He was also a frequent guest of late-night television and radio talk shows, such as David Letterman's late night talk shows on NBC and CBS as well as The Howard Stern Show, where those hosts knew just how far they could tease Simmons without crossing the line into cruelty. Simmons, dressed in his signature Dolphin shorts and sparkly tank-tops, always seemed to be in on the joke. Born on July 12, 1948, in New Orleans, Simmons grew up in the French Quarter, where, he noted in his biography, "lard was a food group and dessert mandatory." He struggled with his weight from an early age. He reportedly weighed 268 pounds when he graduated high school. Upon moving to Los Angeles in the 1970s, Simmons developed an interest in fitness. He opened an exercise studio, the Anatomy Asylum, later renamed Slimmons. His interest in fitness helped him lose more than 100 pounds. In 2010, he proudly announced that he had kept that weight off for 42 years. Simmons didn't make any major public appearances after 2014. In February 2017, the podcast Missing Richard Simmons launched, investigating why Simmons left public life so suddenly. In Aug. 2022, in response to continued rumors and a TMZ documentary, What Really Happened to Richard Simmons, Simmons issued a statement to the New York Post that he "is happy, healthy, and living the life he has chosen to live." In March 2024, Simmons revealed that he had been diagnosed with basal cell carcinoma, located underneath his right eye. That same month, he issued a statement clarifying that he is not dying, after a cryptic Facebook post he had written drew public concern. "I am & dying," Simmons had written on Facebook. "Oh I can see your faces now. The truth is we all are dying. Every day we live we are getting closer to our death. Why am I telling you this? Because I want you to enjoy your life to the fullest every single day. Get up in the morning and look at the sky & count your blessings and enjoy." Earlier in 2024, actor Pauly Shore portrayed Simmons in a short film called The Court Jester, which premiered at Sundance Film Festival. In promoting the movie, Shore teased the production of a larger biopic on the fitness icon. Simmons, however, made it clear that he was not on board with the film. "You may have heard they may be doing a movie about me with Pauly Shore," Simmons wrote in a post. "I have never given my permission for this movie. So don't believe everything you read." - Billboard, 7/14/24...... Shelley DuvallShelley Duvall, the saucer-eyed, rail-thin waif who starred in seven films directed by her mentor, Robert Altman, and avoided the ax wielded by an unhinged Jack Nicholson in Stanley Kubrick's 1980 horror classic The Shining, died in her sleep of complications from diabetes at her home in Blanco, Tex., on July 11. She was 75. "My dear, sweet, wonderful life partner and friend left us. Too much suffering lately, now she's free. Fly away, beautiful Shelley," said Dan Gilroy, her life partner since 1989. Born Shelley Alexis Duvall in Fort Worth on July 7, 1949, Duvall was discovered by Altman staff members while attending junior college in her hometown of Houston and talked into taking a screen test. She then made her onscreen debut as teenage seductress and Astrodome tour guide Suzanne Davis in Brewster McCloud (1970). A decade later, Duvall sang and starred opposite Robin Williams as the iconic comic-strip character Olive Oyl, the strong-willed damsel in distress, in Altman's live-action adaptation of Popeye. In between, the childlike star collaborated with Altman as a mail-order bride in McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971); as the woman who has a Mississippi romance with bank robber Keith Carradine in Thieves Like Us (1974); as the groupie L.A. Joan, fond of hot pants and platform shoes, inNashville (1975); as the wife of President Grover Cleveland in Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson (1976); and as Millie Lamoureaux, a fantasizing attendant at a Palm Springs health spa for the elderly, in 3 Women (1977). Memorable every time she showed up onscreen, Duvall also portrayed a spacy rock journalist in Woody Allen's Annie Hall (1977); appeared as Pansy in funny scenes with Michael Palin in Terry Gilliam's Time Bandits (1981); and played Steve Martin's supportive pal Dixie in Roxanne (1987). Before she fled Hollywood for her native Texas in the mid-1990s, Duvall had a thriving career as a versatile, one-of-a-kind actress and head of her own production company, Think Entertainment, which created star-studded, innovative children's programming for cable television that netted her two Emmy Award nominations. Roger Ebert wrote in 1980 that Duvall "looks and sounds like almost nobody else -- and has possibly played more really different kinds of characters than almost any other young actress of the 1970s". In Nov. 2016, a disheveled Duvall appeared on an episode of the syndicated talk show Dr. Phil and revealed that she was suffering from mental illness. "I am very sick. I need help," she said. Survivors include her brothers, Scott, Stewart and Shane. - The Hollywood Reporter, 7/11/24...... Dave LogginsDave Loggins, the Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter best known for his 1974 hit "Please Come to Boston," died on July 10 at Alive Hospice in Nashville of as yet undisclosed causes. He was 76 years old. Loggins, born in Shady Valley, Tenn., and raised in Bristol, Tenn., moved to Nashville where he became one of the most prolific songwriters of his generation. He crafted five decades' worth of hit songs for a long list of artists, including Three Dog Night, Joan Baez, Toby Keith, Johnny Cash, Wynonna Judd, Smokey Robinson, Ray Charles, Reba McEntire, Tanya Tucker, Kenny Rogers and Willie Nelson. Born on Nov. 10, 1947 in Mountain City, Tenn., Loggins, a cousin of pop star Kenny Loggins, achieved fame with "Please Come to Boston," which topped Billboard's Easy Listening chart and reached No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1974. The song earned him a Grammy nomination for best pop male vocal performance, marking the first of his four Grammy nods. In 1986, Loggins made history by winning a CMA Award for vocal duo of the year with Anne Murray for their duet "Nobody Loves Me Like You Do," making him the only artist to receive the award without being signed to a major label. One of Loggins' most enduring contributions to music is "Augusta," the theme song for the Augusta Masters Golf Tournament that debuted in 1982, with the Nashville Tennessean hailing it as "the longest-running sports theme in history." Loggins, who was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1995, is survived by his three sons, Quinn, Kyle, and Dylan, and his grandson, Braxton. In accordance with his wishes, there will be no funeral. - Billboard, 7/12/24...... Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the sex therapist, talk show host and author, died peacefully at her home in New York City on July 12 surrounded by her loving family, just over a month after celebrating her 96th birthday. "It is with immense personal sorrow that I announce the passing of the iconic Dr. Ruth K Westheimer at the age of 96, whose 'Minister of Communications' I've been since 1981," her publicist said in a statement to ABC News. For decades, the witty, diminutive Ms. Westheimer -- popularly known as Dr. Ruth -- was one of America's most trusted and popular voices on the topic of sex. She rose to fame in the early 1980s with her radio show "Sexually Speaking," a live show where she answered call-in questions from listeners. Her popularity and expertise soon spread to television, books and even board games. She hosted several TV shows throughout the 1980s -- The Dr. Ruth Show, Ask Dr. Ruth and The All New Dr. Ruth Show. She also became a staple on game shows like Hollywood Squares and late-night talk programs including The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and Late Night with David Letterman. She was also the author of dozens of best-selling books including Dr. Ruth's Guide to Good Sex, Dr. Ruth's Guide for Married Lovers and her autobiography All in a Lifetime. The beloved German-American therapist was born Karola Ruth Siegel in the village of Wiesenfeld, now Karlstadt am Main, Germany, in 1928. The only child of Orthodox Jewish parents, she was sent by her family to a Swiss orphanage to escape the Nazis. She later learned her parents died in the Holocaust. After World War II, Ms. Westheimer immigrated to British-controlled Palestine where she trained as a member of the Haganah, a Jewish militia fighting for Israeli independence. She later moved to Paris and New York, where she earned a master's degree in sociology from the New School and a doctorate in education from Columbia University. She trained as a sex therapist at the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center. In 1967, she married fellow Holocaust survivor Manfred "Fred" Westheimer after two previous marriages. She worked for Planned Parenthood, as a college professor and in private practice before launching her media career. Despite her fame, Ms. Westheimer remained in the same Manhattan apartment for 50 years, raising her two children. "Life itself has been the greatest gift, she once told ABC News. "Hitler is dead and my grandchildren are alive and I'm very successful," she said. Ms. Westheimer is survived by her children, Joel and Miriam, and four grandchildren. - ABC News, 7/13/24.

A wildfire that started in the hills and mountains of Santa Barbara County, Calif. in the first week of July is threatening homes and businesses including the former estate of Michael Jackson, which was known as Neverland Ranch. According to CAL FIRE, the Lake Fire has burned more than 18,000 acres since it began on July 5 and is less than ten percent contained. The blaze is mostly burning in rural areas around the Los Padres National Forest, but a significant drive to the south or west could force flames into more populated communities. A record-breaking heat wave across the West, coupled with increasingly dry conditions, has fueled the growth of several major fires. "A heat wave this intense, this long, has not been experienced in this region in 20 years," National Weather Service meteorologists said. Jackson bought the 2,600-acre property in 1987 and renamed the estate "Neverland Ranch" after the fictional "Neverland" in the Peter Pan fairy tale. The property once housed amusement park rides, a petting zoo and other entertainment, but it is unclear what the current owners plan to do with the multi-million-dollar property. Investigators have also not determined what sparked the blaze and have not ruled out human causes. - FOX9 News, 7/8/24...... Bob DylanOn July 9 Columbia/Legacy Recordings announced a mammoth 27-disc, 431-track live box set of Bob Dylan's shows with The Band will be released on Sept. 20. Bob Dylan and The Band - The 1974 Live Recordings will include 417 unreleased performances, with fans already getting a sneak peek via a never-released version of "Forever Young" recorded in Seattle on Feb. 9, 1974. The set's release is timed to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Dylan's return to touring that year, after he retired from the road following a 1966 motorcycle accident. The 40-city North American outing was Dylan's first tour in eight years and it resulted in the live double album Before the Flood. Barnstorming across North America while playing 30 shows in 42 days -- sometimes performing two sets per day -- the Dylan/The Band tour kicked off in Chicago on Jan. 3, 1974. The group performed many songs for the first time on the tour, including such beloved tracks as "All Along the Watchtower," "Forever Young" and "Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I'll Go Mine)" as well as such rarities including "Ballad of Hollis Brown," "Song to Woody" and "Nobody 'Cept You." Dylan, 83, is currently on the road as part of his "Never Ending Tour," with his next show slated for July 29 at the North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre in Chula Vista, Calif. - Billboard, 7/9/24...... An Ohio woman is claiming she was scammed out of over $122,000 by someone impersonating former Journey frontman Steve Perry. The 75-year-old woman told police she had been exchanging Facebook messages with someone claiming to be Perry since January, and the impersonator said he had a "business opportunity" and "needed a woman in his life." Over the next few months, the woman and scammer corresponded by text and WhatsApp messages, and the victim sent thousands of dollars to who she thought was the former frontman. She says she sent $72,000 via bank wire transfers to "various persons in various different states, designated by 'Perry'," and sent an additional $50,000 in gift cards to the Perry imposter. When the scammer asked for photos of her IDs and "became more demanding", the woman realized that she was perhaps being conned. After the pair went their "separate ways," the woman reported the impersonator to the police. The police told her to file a complaint with the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center. The case is still being investigated by the Westlake Police Department as of July 10. Meanwhile, the real Steve Perry recently told Rolling Stone that he has signed to a new record label and is contemplating a return to music. "I'm very excited about it, and I'll have an opportunity very soon to work with these very, very musically creative people," he told the magazine. Journey, with their new lead singer, will be launching a 50th anniversary UK and Ireland arena tour on Oct. 30 in Cardiff. They'll hit nine other major cities in the UK and Ireland before wrapping on Nov. 17 at London's O2 Arena. In 2022, the arena rock band released Freedom, their first full-length LP in over a decade. - New Musical Express, 7/10/24...... A Queen tribute band personally curated by co-founding members Brian May and Roger Taylor is set to embark on a UK and Ireland tour in 2025. Announced on X on July 10, the "Queen Extravaganza" tour will see them visit 25 venues during 2025, beginning at the Liverpool Empire on Jan. 28, and mark the 50th anniversary of their seminal song "Bohemian Rhapsody" from their classic 1975 A Night at the Opera album. "We hand-pick the most incredible musicians for Queen Extravaganza -- and they do a fantastic job honouring our songs. It's a great show, designed to celebrate the legacy of Queen for fans of all ages," Roger Taylor said in a statement, while May added that "QuEx is something unique -- not just a tribute band, but an extension of the Queen family, whose dedication to excellence is now legendary. The Queen Extravaganza Will Rock You!" - NME, 7/10/24...... Patti LaBellePatti LaBelle, 80, is celebrating 65 years in the entertainment industry with an "8065" US tour representing her Grammy-winning music career that began in the early '60s as frontwoman for Patti Labelle & the Bluebelles, which evolved into the innovative trio LaBelle in the '70s with Nona Hendryx and the late Sarah Dash before LaBelle embarked on a solo career. On a recent date at the Hollywood Bowl, her soaring vocals especially took center stage on the ballad "If Only You Knew" -- eliciting a standing ovation -- and on show closer "Lady Marmalade." For the latter, she chose several males from the audience to join her onstage and try their hand at singing the hit themselves, which met with audience cheers and laughter. Her nearly 90-minute performance also included classics such as "Love, Need and Want You," "On My Own" (her duet with Michael McDonald) and "You Are My Friend." Upcoming stops on LaBelle's 8065 junket include Sacramento (7/20), Phoenix (8/11) and Memphis (9/12). In between, she's still busy with her successful food company, Patti's Good Life, which recently added a new pancake and waffle mix to its menu. She's also planning to introduce her own Patti LaBelle Wines. Patti says she has no plans to retire anytime soon. "How do you spell it? [laughs]. That's not in my book," she says. - Billboard, 7/8/24...... On July 7 Stevie Nicks's team posted a message on X saying the Fleetwood Mac star was forced to postpone her July 8 show in Glasgow and her July 9 show in Manchester, UK, after sustaining a leg injury. Nicks did confirm that her BST Hyde Park show in London on July 12 is still scheduled to go ahead, but said she would have to move the two preceding gigs as she requires a "minor surgical procedure." Her team advised all ticket holders for Glasgow and Manchester to "hold on to their tickets" as rescheduled dates would be announced soon. Nicks had completed one show in Dublin on her current UK and European tour. After the Hyde Park show, during which she will pay tribute to her late Fleetwood Mac bandmate Christine McVie and her "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" collaborator Tom Petty, she has remaining dates scheduled for Antwerp on July 16 and Amsterdam on July 19. In June, Nicks also had to cancel a US show in Hershey, Penn. due to an "illness in the band." Meanwhile, toymaker Mattel announced on Instagram on July 8 that it has restocked its hugely popular Stevie Nicks Barbie doll. "The encore you've been waiting for... The legendary @StevieNicks Barbie doll is back by popular demand with a limited re-release! Don't miss your chance to join in on the music," the company revealed on Instagram, which Nicks reposted to her account. Nicks announced the initial Barbie release in 2023 during her concert at New York's Madison Square Garden. The doll was first released in Nov. 2023 and sold out almost immediately. Channeling the heyday of Fleetwood Mac, the Stevie Nicks Barbie is outfitted in a flowing black dress inspired by her outfit on the album cover for the band's 1977 LP Rumours. The doll also wears a replica of Nicks' signature golden moon necklace along with black knee-high boots and carries a tambourine with red and black ribbons. The Stevie Nicks Barbie doll retails for $55 and is currently sold out at Mattel and Target. The doll is available for resale on sites such as Amazon and Walmart. - NME/Billboard, 7/7/24...... On July 5 Prince's former business advisors won a key ruling in their ongoing legal battle with several of the pop legend's heirs over the management of his estate. In her decision, a Delaware judge ruled that advisors L. Londell McMillan and Charles Spicer Jr. could not be ousted as managers of Prince Legacy LLC, a company created to operate half of Prince's lucrative estate. Four of Prince's family members, led by his sister Sharon Nelson, had argued they could amend the LLC agreement to remove McMillan and Spicer from their leadership positions, but the judge ruled that such efforts were clearly invalid under the terms of the agreement. "The LLC agreement is unambiguous and [McMillan and Spicer]'s interpretation is the only reasonable one," Chancellor Kathaleen St. Jude McCormick wrote in the decision. Ruling that Prince's heirs had vested the two advisors with "broad and exclusive management authority," the judge said Nelson could not now amend the agreement simply because she "came to regret this decision." An attorney for Sharon Nelson and the other defendants have yet to comment on the ruling. Prince had no will when he died of a fentanyl overdose in 2016, leaving six heirs to inherit equal shares in his valuable estate and sparking a long legal battle in Minnesota probate court over how the estate would be managed in the future. - Billboard, 7/8/24....... Deep PurpleOn Dec. 4, 1971, Deep Purple were in Montreux, Switzerland to record their latest album, which would go on to be 1972's Machine Head, using the Rolling Stones' mobile recording studio to start on the record. However, the band were forced out of their hotel rooms at Montreux Jazz Festival's Casino venue during a Frank Zappa concert by the smoke, and the apocalyptic scenes they saw inspired one of the most iconic tracks in rock history, "Smoke on the Water." On July 8, the band returned for their 58th edition of the Montreux Jazz Festival for their 10th show in Montreux, but this time, they performed on the festival's brand-new Lake Stage -- constructed in a breathtaking setting on the surface of Lake -- opened with the scintillating track "Highway Star," with its long, classically inspired guitar and organ solos. The set moved to explore other classics including "Space Truckin," "Anya" and "Into the Fire," plus others from their forthcoming album, =1. As the iconic riff of "Smoke on the Water" was heard, the curtain at the back of the stage was lifted, fittingly revealing a glistening Lake Geneva cloaked in smoke. Midway through, frontman Ian Gillan instructed the crowd to take over singing duties on the hook, to which the 5,000-capacity crowd eagerly obliged, getting louder and louder with each rendition until the jolt of guitars and drums came crashing in. Earlier in the festival, the band hosted an exclusive Q&A panel where they discussed their memories of the 1971 fire and shared the unheard stories behind their most famous track. Bassist Roger Glover, speaking about the Casino fire: "It burned all afternoon, all evening, all through the night. We went and looked at it the next morning and there it was, gone. It was a frightening thing. The following morning, I was in my room alone and I woke up with those words on my lips, and I said them out to an empty room. And then I kind of really woke up and I said 'what did I just say? Smoke on the Water?' No idea what it meant. I mentioned it to Ian [Gillan] and he said, 'Yeah, sounds like a drug song, we better not do that.'" On recording the 'Smoke on the Water' riff in Montreux: "Our roadies were keeping the doors shut because the police were trying to get in to stop us because we were keeping the entire town of Montreux awake. Deep Purple will kick off a 20-city tour of the US and UK behind =1 on Aug. 14 at the Hard Rock Live in Hollywood, Fla. Hitting such markets as Tampa (8/16), Fort Worth (8/19), Cincinnati (8/21), Atlantic City (8/31), and Saratoga Springs (9/4), the band will wrap with a show at London's O2 Arena on Nov. 6. The band has also shared its latest single, "Lazy Sod," on YouTube. - Music-News.com, 7/9/24...... A new Brian Eno documentary, Eno, will play in Picturehouse Cinemas across the UK beginning on July 12, with a different version of the film emerging on screen each day. For the past 50 years, Eno has been at the forefront of musical creativity, technology, and artistic innovation. The hugely influential British musician, producer, activist, visual artist and self-described "sonic landscaper" began his career as an original member of the legendary Roxy Music in the early 1970s. Eno has since released over 40 solo and collaboration records, and pioneered the genre of ambient music with his 1978 album Ambient 1: Music for Airports. As a producer, he's helped define and reinvent the sound of some of the most important artists in music, including David Bowie, U2, Talking Heads, Coldplay and dozens of others. He also composed what may be the most heard piece of music in the world: the startup sound for Microsoft Windows. Eno is a UK/US co-production directed by Gary Hustwit. Hustwit's collaboration with Eno began in 2017, when Eno created an original score for Hustwit's film Rams, about the German designer Dieter Rams. "I think of Eno as an art film about creativity, with the output of Brian's 50-year career as its raw material. What I'm trying to do is to create a cinematic experience that's as innovative as Brian's approach to music and art," Hustwit said. - Music-News.com, 7/10/24...... Longtime Oak Ridge Boys member Joe Bonsall died on July 9 in Hendersonville, Tenn. from complications of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), the group announced on its website, Instagram and other social media accounts. He was 76. The tenor singer had announced his retirement from touring at the beginning of 2024. In 1973, Bonsall left his position with gospel group The Keystones to join The Oak Ridge Boys. The ORB, in which Bonsall teamed with Duane Allen, William Lee Golden and Richard Sterban, first found success as a gospel group. They segued into country music in 1977 with "Y'All Come Back Saloon," their first of 34 top 10 hits on Billboard's Top Country Songs chart. The quartet landed 17 No. 1 hits on that chart, the third-highest total among duos and groups after Alabama (33) and Brooks & Dunn (20). Two of the ORB's country chart-toppers became top 20 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart -- "Elvira" (No. 5 in 1981) and "Bobbie Sue" (No. 12 in 1982). The ORB won five Grammys. The first four were in gospel categories; the fifth in country, for "Elvira." That platinum-selling smash won best country performance by a duo or group with vocal. The group also won two CMA awards -- vocal group of the year in 1978 and single of the year in 1981 for "Elvira." As a 50-year member of the The Oak Ridge Boys, Bonsall was a member of the Grand Ole Opry and was inducted into the Philadelphia Music Hall of Fame, the Gospel Music Hall of Fame, the Vocal Group Hall of Fame, and the Country Music Hall of Fame, the latter in 2015. Bonsall's final show with the Oaks was on Dec. 17, 2023. In January, he revealed that he had battled the slow onset of a neuromuscular disorder for more than four years. "I am now at a point where walking is impossible, so I have basically retired from the road. It has just gotten too difficult," he said in a statement. "It has been a great 50 years, and I am thankful to all the Oak Ridge Boys band crew and staff for the constant love and support shown to me through it all. I will never forget, and for those of you who have been constantly holding me up in prayer, I thank you and ask for you to keep on praying." "This has been a week of sadness with the loss of my son, Rusty Golden, and now the loss of our brother and our partner of over 50 years, Joe Bonsall," William Lee Golden said in a statement. "Thankfully we have the memories made and the songs that we've sang together to get us through. It gives me comfort to know that Joe and Rusty are together again. Our prayers are with his family." - Billboard, 7/9/24...... Joe EganScottish folk rock musician Joe Egan, who co-founded and co-fronted the Scottish band Stealers Wheel with Gerry Rafferty, died on July 6. He was 77. The news was confirmed on the Facebook page of the late Rafferty, who died in 2011. Rafferty's daughter Martha, who runs the official page, shared a series of images of Rafferty and Egan together alongside her message. "Very sad news that the other half of Stealers Wheel, Joe Egan, passed away peacefully yesterday afternoon," Martha posted on July 7. Born on Oct. 18, 1946 in Renfrewshire, Scotland, Egan played in various smaller British bands, such as The Sensors and The Maverix, and worked as a session musician, before forming Stealers Wheel with Rafferty in 1972. Stealers Wheel was best known for their 1973 debut single, "Stuck In The Middle With You," from its eponymous debut LP, which reached No. 6 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and No. 8 on the UK Singles Chart. Its initial chart success was amplified decades later when it featured in a pivotal scene in director Quentin Tarantino's 1992 film Reservoir Dogs. After charting another US Top 40 single in 1974, "Star" (No. 29), Stealers Wheel disbanded in 1975, with Egan and Raffety both going on to pursue solo ventures. Egan released his debut album, Out of Nowhere, in 1979, which was followed by Map in 1981. Tributes to the late musician poured in after news of his death spread, including posts from his fellow musicians and friends Thomas Walsh, Martin Heron and Marco Rossi. - NME, 7/8/24...... Mary Martin, a veteran manager and A&R exec who guided the careers of Van Morrison, Vince Gill and others, died on July 4. She was 85. Ms. Martin was known as a fierce artist champion and musical connector, and became an influential A&R rep at labels including RCA, Warner Bros. and Mercury Records starting in the 1970s. Born on June 15, 1939, Ms. Martin, a Toronto native, studied briefly at the University of British Columbia before moving to New York in the 1960s and working as an executive assistant to Albert Grossman, a manager for Bob Dylan, Gordon Lightfoot, Todd Rundgren and Peter, Paul and Mary. After returning to Toronto, Ms. Martin got involved with the folk music scene and became aware of the band The Hawks, which included members Levon Helm, Garth Hudson and Rick Danko. The group would later become known as The Band, and Ms. Martin is credited with connecting the group with Dylan in the mid-1960s. She went on to become an artist manager for artists including Leonard Cohen, who would later release songs including "Suzanne" and "Sisters of Mercy." She began managing Morrison just as he released such seminal albums as Astral Weeks, Moondance and Tupelo Honey. Throughout much of the 1970s, Ms. Martin worked as an influential A&R executive for Warner Bros. Records, signing and developing the careers of artists including Emmylou Harris and Leon Redbone. Ms. Martin was also a survivor of sexual assault and became a strong advocate for justice for fellow survivors. In 2007, she was given a lifetime achievement award by the Nashville music industry group SOURCE and celebrated with the Americana Music Association's Jack Emerson Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2009, she was honored by the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum as part of the Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum. - Billboard, 7/5/24.