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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on May 24th, 2025

A new Freddie Mercury biography claims the late Queen frontman had a secret daughter. British biographer Lesley-Ann Jones' book Love, Freddie alleges the child was conceived accidentally during an affair by Mercury with the wife of a close friend in 1976. Mercury allegedly visited the child regularly and gave her 17 volumes of his detailed personal journals, which she kept a secret. The woman -- who is only referred to as B throughout the book and is now aged 48 and working as a medical professional -- shared the journals with Jones. According to reports by the Daily Mail UK, the book includes B's reasoning for sharing the journals after 30 years, with her writing: "After more than three decades of lies, speculation and distortion, it is time to let Freddie speak. "Those who have been aware of my existence kept his greatest secret out of loyalty to Freddie. That I choose to reveal myself in my own midlife is my decision and mine alone. I have not, at any point, been coerced into doing this," B said. "He entrusted his collection of private notebooks to me, his only child and his next of kin, the written record of his private thoughts, memories and feelings about everything he had experienced." B continued: "He adored me and was devoted to me. The circumstances of my birth may seem, by most people's standards, unusual and even outrageous. That should come as no surprise. It never detracted from his commitment to love and look after me. He cherished me like a treasured possession." Mercury allegedly started writing the diaries on June 20 1976, when he first learned about the pregnancy. He wrote his final entry in his notebook on July 31 1991, while his health was deteriorating. Mercury died aged 45 of bronchial pneumonia caused by AIDS. It is believed that only Mercury's inner circle are aware of B's existence. In 2012, Jones released another Mercury biography, Mercury: An Intimate Biography of Freddie Mercury. Her other works include Who Killed John Lennon? and Songbird: An Intimate Biography of Christine McVie. - New Musical Express, 5/24/25...... Billy JoelBilly Joel announced on May 23 that he's been forced to cancel all of his upcoming shows due to a medical condition that affects his ability to perform. In a statement shared to Instagram and other social media accounts, the 75-year-old singer said the decision comes following a "recent diagnosis" of normal pressure hydrocephalus. "This condition has been exacerbated by recent concert performances, leading to problems with hearing, vision and balance," his statement reads. "Under his doctor's instructions, Billy is undergoing specific physical therapy and has been advised to refrain from performing during this recovery period. Billy is thankful for the excellent care he is receiving and is fully committed to prioritizing his health." "He is grateful for the support from fans during this time and looks forward to the day when he can once again take the stage," the announcement continues, concluding with a message directly from Joel: "I'm sincerely sorry to disappoint our audience, and thank you for understanding." Fans with tickets to any of the "Piano Man" singer's scheduled shows will receive automatic refunds to their original payment method. According to Cleveland Clinic, normal pressure hydrocephalus is a condition that occurs when cerebrospinal fluid builds up inside the skull, pressing on the brain. It can affect "several brain-related abilities, including thinking and concentrating, memory, movement and more," with treatment involving implanting a shunt to drain the excess fluid. Joel had several shows planned throughout the summer and fall of 2025, as well as a few performances scheduled for the first half of 2026. His canceled appearances include his joint dates with Sting, Rod Stewart and Stevie Nicks, as well as his solo gigs. The 1999 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee previously delayed several of those tour dates by four months after revealing that he had recently undergone surgery. Joel did not disclose his medical condition at that time. His health update comes shortly after it was announced that his upcoming two-part documentary, Billy Joel: And So It Goes, will premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in June. Later in the summer, the project will air on HBO. - Billboard, 5/23/25...... On May 23 Neil Young announced more support acts for his July 11 headline show and London's BST Hyde Park festival. Young's BST performance with his latest band the Chrome Hearts will follow the singer-songwriter's headlining set at the UK's Glastonbury Festival in June. Earlier in 2025, it was confirmed that openers Yusuf/Cat Stevens and Van Morrison would join him on the day. The latest support acts include the recently formed Irish folk trio Amble and German-born singer-songwriter Alice Merton, along with country singer Kelly McGrath, Naima Bock, Everyone Says Hi and Our Man In The Field, among others. Young is headlining this year's edition of the London concert series along with the likes of Sabrina Carpenter, Olivia Rodrigo, Stevie Wonder, Zach Bryan, Noah Kahan and Jeff Lynne's ELO. - NME, 5/23/25...... The Who's new drummer Scott Devours has spoken out on his new gig working with the legendary English rock band after the band's acrimonious split with former drummer Zak Starkey. Posting on Instagram, Devours said he understood if fans were "gutted" by Starkey's departure, adding that "as a huge fan myself, there is a part of me that's processing this loss with a heavy heart too." However, he also said that "there are no bigger shoes to fill than those behind Pete and Roger," adding that "the weight of this responsibility is enormous and I am feeling every ounce of it." He continued: "Since this is the last time Pete [Townshend] and Roger [Daltrey] will be touring the US, playing the greatest songs ever written, I will be giving them every second of my time, every beat of my heart, and every drop of my sweat and blood. This is my ultimate goal." He concluded: "This tour isn't about me or anyone other than The Who, which IS Pete and Roger. I will give them everything I have and the rest is soon to be history Thank you for reading this. Now I'm going to go throw up, lol." Devours most recently played in Daltrey's solo band. Meanwhile, Daltrey has suggested he doesn't want to tour with Townshend after Townshend said he feels like The Who is "flogging a dead horse" in a recent interview with Sunday People Daltrey is quoted by the Daily Mail's "Eden Confidential" column as saying: "If Pete doesn't want to tour, I don't want to be back with The Who on the road, at 81, with someone who doesn't want be there -- if that's what he's saying. I won't do it with someone who is half-hearted about it. But, you know, every dog has its day and it was a wonderful ride." Townshend had told Sunday People: "The Who has gone on a bit too long with two of us dying. It does sometimes feel like flogging a dead horse." Dubbed "The Song Is Over North America Farewell Tour," it kicks off on Aug.16 at Amerant Bank Arena in Florida, and is due to wrap on Sept. 28 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. - NME/Music-News.com, 5/22/25...... Rod StewartAlthough he reached his milestone birthday of 80 on Jan. 10, Rod Stewart says he has "so much more music" to make and has no less that three new albums in the works. Speaking to AARP The Magazine, he said: "There's so much more music I want to create. I've got a covers album, a country album, and a Faces album all in the works. I just can't stop. Even when I'm spending time with my grandkids, my passion for music drives me. I feel like I've done everything I've ever wanted, but there's still more to come." Stewart also admitted he enjoys performing at concerts "more" now than when he was a young musician, and he can appreciate "how lucky [he's] been." "When I feel I might be sick enough to cancel a concert, that's when I go, 'Maybe I'm getting old.' Then a couple of days later, bang, I'm back at it again. I enjoy doing concerts more than I did back then. Maybe I've come full circle to appreciate how lucky I've been." In November, Hot Rod confirmed he will play the coveted legends slot at this year's Glastonbury festival, posting on Instagram: "I'm absolutely thrilled to announce that I'll be playing Glastonbury Festival 2025! After all these years, I'm proud and ready and more than able to take the stage again to pleasure and titillate my friends at Glastonbury in June. I'll see you there!" - Music-News.com, 5/23/25...... Sony Music Vision has announced it will produce a new Judas Priest documentary, to be co-directed by Rage Against The Machine's Tom Morello. The film, titled The Ballad Of Judas Priest, has yet to receive a release date, but will be co-directed by Morello and established heavy metal filmmaker Sam Dunn (Metal: A Headbanger's Journey). The band said in a statement, per Variety: "We have lived and breathed metal for over five decades, and finally in this documentary we are summoning our congregation to officially witness our lives uncensored, in a never-before-seen waythe cassock comes off, revealing Priest in all its metal glory!" Meanwhile, Morello will serve as "musical director" for Black Sabbath's final gig this July, however Judas Priest will not be participating, saying they were unaware of the gig until it was too late. After a show with the Scorpions in July which celebrates the German band's 60th anniversary, Priest will be hitting the road again in 2025 for a co-headline tour with Alice Cooper. It'll feature gigs across North America, Europe and the UK, and includes a stop at The O2 in London on July 25. - NME, 5/22/25...... Bruce Springsteen is doubling down on his stance that the US government is "corrupt, incompetent and treasonous," even after his remarks on the subject at a Manchester, UK concert infuriated Pres. Donald Trump. One week after criticizing the Trump administration during a speech at his European tour kickoff show in England -- leading Trump to launch into a series of vitriolic posts targeting him on his Truth Social platform -- the Boss has released a Land of Hope & Dreams EP featuring a recording of the address as its opening track. "In my home, the America I love, the America I've written about, and has been a beacon of hope and liberty for 250 years, is currently in the hands of a corrupt, incompetent and treasonous administration," he says in the audio snippet. "Tonight, we ask all who believe in democracy and the best of our American experience to rise with us, raise your voices against the authoritarianism, and let freedom ring." The New Jersey rocker then dives into 2001's "Land of Hope & Dreams," which is also the name Springsteen's ongoing tour. In addition to the politically charged speech, the six-track project also features live takes of the musician and his band performing "Long Walk Home," "My City of Ruins" and "Chimes of Freedom" in Manchester. There's also a three-and-a-half-minute recording of Springsteen once again critiquing the state of American politics later in the show. "In my country, they're taking sadistic pleasure in the pain that they inflict on American workers, they're rolling back historic civil rights legislation that led to a more just and moral society," he says in the clip. "They're abandoning our great allies and siding with dictators against those struggling for their freedom." The EP comes shortly after Trump responded to Springsteen's onstage remarks by calling him "highly overrated" and "dumb as a rock" on Truth Social, adding at the time, "This dried out 'prune' of a rocker (his skin is all atrophied!) ought to KEEP HIS MOUTH SHUT until he gets back into the Country, that's just 'standard fare.'" He later accused Springsteen -- along with Beyoncé, Oprah Winfrey and Bono -- of taking part in an "illegal election scam" for Kamala Harris, alleging that he accepted an undisclosed payment from the 2024 Democratic nominee to endorse her for president. Trump still hadn't let the matter go as of May 21, when he shared a bizarre edited video of himself golfing -- and appearing to hit and knock over Springsteen with his ball -- on Truth Social hours after the Land of Hope & Dreams EP dropped. Springsteen's new Land of Hope & Dreams EP can be streamed on Spotify.com. - Billboard, 5/21/25...... Dead & Company have announced the opening acts for the upcoming Grateful Dead 60th-anniversary concerts at San Francisco's Golden Gate Park set for Aug. 1-3. Bluegrass phenom Billy Strings will open the Aug. 1 concert, while singer/songwriter Sturgill Simpson, performing as Johnny Blue Skies, will perform Aug. 2. Trey Anastasio, frontman for Phish who performed with the surviving members of the GD for the 50th-anniversary "Fare Thee Well" concerts, is opening the Aug. 3 show with his Trey Anastasio Band. The three-day concert series will also include Participation Row, Dead & Company's fan-powered social action village hosted by national nonprofits HeadCount, which promotes citizen participation in democracy and U.S. politics, and REVERB, which organizes and promotes action at concerts and festivals to bring about a better future. - Billboard, 5/21/25...... Brian EnoBrian Eno published on open letter to Microsoft on Instagram on May 21, three decades after composing the company's iconic Windows 95 startup jingle. The former Roxy Music member and veteran record producer is calling out the company for selling technology to Israel amid the country's highly criticized war against Hamas. In a statement titled "Not in My Name: An Open Letter to Microsoft From Brian Eno," Eno began by writing, "In the mid-1990s, I was asked to compose a short piece of music for Microsoft's Windows 95 operating system. Millions -- possibly even billions -- of people have since heard that short startup chime, which represented a gateway to a promising technological future. I never would have believed that the same company could one day be implicated in the machinery of oppression and war." Eno's words come a few days after Microsoft acknowledged in an unsigned blogpost that it sold advanced artificial intelligence and cloud computing services to the Israeli military -- as well as aided in efforts to locate and rescue Israeli hostages -- amid the war in Gaza. Violence has run rampant in the city ever since Hamas attacked and killed about 1,200 Israeli people while taking more than 250 hostage on Oct. 7, 2023, and Israel's ensuing war against the terrorist group has since led to the deaths of more than 53,000 Palestinians. Eno ended his letter by pledging to donate the fee he originally received for his Windows 95 composition to support for victims of attacks in Gaza. "If a sound can signal a real change," he concluded, "let it be this one." Microsoft has yet to comment about Eno's open letter. - Billboard, 5/21/25...... Rising actress Aimee Lou Wood, best known for her roles in Sex Education and The White Lotus, has reportedly been lined up to play George Harrison's one time wife Patti Boyd in one of director Sam Mendes' upcoming Beatles biopics. Rumours linking Wood to the role have persisted for some time, particularly after she shared an image of Harrison and Boyd on their honeymoon in Barbados in 1966 on her Instagram Stories page in March. Harrison and Boyd were married between 1966 and 1977 and she was said to be the inspiration for songs including "I Need You," "If I Needed Someone," "Something" and "For You Blue." She was later married to Eric Clapton between 1979 and 1989. In addition, Mia McKenna-Bruce is rumoured to be joining the cast as Ringo Starr's first wife Maureen Starkey. Announced in 2024, the project -- titled The Beatles - A Four Film Cinematic Event -- will see Mendes direct a different film about each member of the Fab Four. - NME, 5/21/25...... In other biopic news, the release of the Michael Jackson film Michael has been pushed back to 2026. Lionsgate Studios CEO Jon Feltheimer recently shared an update on the film that stars Jackson's nephew Jaafar Jackson in his big-screen debut. "In regard to our Michael Jackson biopic, we're excited about the three and a half hours of amazing footage from producer Graham King and director Antoine Fuqua, and we will be announcing a definitive release strategy and timing in the next few weeks," he shared, adding "I would note that it is likely we will move Michael out of the fiscal year." Variety has reported that the film would likely be split into two parts, and be pushed back from the initially announced release date of Oct. 3, 2025. Michael, made with a budget of around $155 million, is a musical drama film based on the life of the legendary singer, songwriter and dancer. It is also set to star Colman Domingo and Nia Long as family heads Joe and Katherine Jackson, and All Eyez on Me star Kat Graham as Diana Ross. - Music-News.com, 5/23/25...... A new Apple TV+ documentary about legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese will feature a slew of A-list celebrities, among them Mick Jagger. Per a press release, the five-part Mr. Scorsese documentary series will chronicle Scorsese's life and legendary career through chats with the iconic filmmaker himself, along with "unrestricted access" to his private archives and "never-before-seen interviews with friends, family, and creative collaborators." Also among the star-studded roster of talent speaking to Apple TV+ for the documentary are his long-time collaborators Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio, as well as Steven Spielberg, Robbie Robertson, Daniel Day-Lewis, Margot Robbie, Sharon Stone, Jodie Foster, Cate Blanchett and more. His wife Helen Morris and his children and childhood friends will also participate. Director Rebecca Miller's documentary will also cover a large span of Scorsese's life, beginning with his student films while attending the New York University, to present day. While a release date for Mr. Scorsese has yet to be announced, Apple TV+ has teased that it is "coming soon." - NME, 5/22/25...... Roger NicholsGrammy-nominated songwriter Roger Nichols, best-known for co-writing such Carpenters hits as "We've Only Just Begun," "Rainy Days and Mondays" and "I Won't Last a Day Without You" with lyricist Paul Williams, died on May 17. He was 84. Paul Williams confirmed Mr. Nichols' death in an extended, and deeply affectionate, post on Instagram. Williams didn't list a cause of death, though he reported the basic circumstances of Mr. Nichol's passing. "Roger Nichols passed away peacefully four days ago, at home with his beautiful family his wife Terry and the daughters he was so proud of, Claire and Caitlin at his side." Williams added in part: "Roger was my writing partner and my music school a collaborator for years and a friend for life... We wrote almost every day for several years. He was as disciplined as he was talented... I wrote what I heard, note for noteword for word. The lyrics waiting in the emotion already in his music. He made it easy." Mr. Nichols signed as an artist to A&M Records in 1968, a year before Karen and Richard Carpenter were signed to the Los Angeles-based label. His debut album Roger Nichols and the Small Circle of Friends was produced by Tommy LiPuma, engineered by Bruce Botnick, and featured session contributions from Van Dyke Parks, Randy Newman and Lenny Waronker. Although the album failed to crack the Billboard Hot 200, A&M co-founder Herb Alpert thought there was something there and recommended that Mr. Nichols be hired by A&M's publishing company as a staff songwriter. It was during this period that he was introduced to Williams. One of the hottest pop songwriting teams of the early 1970s, Williams and Mr. Nichols took off as songwriters in the fall of 1970, when they had two songs in the top 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 at the same time: the Carpenters' "We've Only Just Begun" (a ballad which had originated as "soft-sell" commercial for Crocker-Citizens National Bank) and Three Dog Night's "Out in the Country." "We've Only Just Begun" went on to receive two Grammy nominations -- for song of the year and best contemporary song -- at the first live Grammy telecast in Mar. 1971. The pair continued writing songs for the Carpenters, including "Rainy Days and Mondays," a superb and remarkably adult ballad which reached No. 2 (it took Carole King's letter-perfect "It's Too Late" to keep it out of the top spot), and "I Won't Last a Day Without You," a 1972 album track that was finally released as a single in 1974, when it climbed to No. 11. Mr. Nichols also had some successes with other collaborators. He teamed with William Lane to write "Times of Your Life," which Paul Anka recorded in 1975. Like "We've Only Just Begun," this song was also adapted from a popular TV commercial -- for Kodak. Anka's recording reached No. 7 in Feb. 1976. Mr. Nichols retired soon afterwards, but his songs live on. R.E.M. covered "Out in the Country" as a B-side for their 2003 single "Bad Day," and Rumer covered "Traveling Boy" on her 2012 album Boys Don't Cry. Mr. Nichols was honored during Florida Chapter Presents The Recording Academy Honors 2006 at Loews Miami Beach Hotel in Miami. More recently he was nominated for the Songwriters Hall of Fame on Nov. 12, for the class that will be inducted on June 12. He wasn't elected (the competition is fierce every year), but the ballot listed the five songs that are probably his most famous and enduring: "We've Only Just Begun," "Rainy Days and Mondays," "I Won't Last a Day Without You," "Out in the Country," "Times of Your Life." In a comment on Williams' Instagram post, Mr. Nichols' daughter Claire wrote, "My mom, Terri, and my sisters, Caroline and Caitlin, are all so proud of the man he was, and are in awe of the legacy he leaves." - Billboard, 5/23/25.

Current Foreigner frontman Kelly Hansen has announced he's leaving the iconic British-American rock band he's fronted since 2005. Appearing on the season finale of the NBC talent show The Voice on May 20, Hansen said: "After 20 magical years performing with this band, this will be my last year with Foreigner. This summer, a new great voice will sing these songs for you, my friend Luis Maldonado." Hansen later said in a statement that "Being the voice of Foreigner has been one of the greatest honours of my life. But it's time to pass the mic. Luis has the voice, the energy, and the soul to carry these songs into the future. I couldn't be prouder to hand this off to him," with Maldonado adding, "This music has been part of my life for as long as I can remember. I'm ready to honour Foreigner's legacy and bring my heart to every performance." In March, Foreigner confirmed that Hansen would not be performing with the band on the Canadian leg of their ongoing farewell tour this autumn. At the time, the group said that these concerts would be fronted by Broadway singer and actor Geordie Brown, although it isn't clear if this is still the case. Hansen had also revealed that he wouldn't be participating in the scheduled shows in Mexico and South America this spring -- where Maldonado previously took on frontman duties. Further dates will take place in the US this summer. Foreigner co-founder and leader Mick Jones, who no longer plays live with the band, said: "I wish Kelly great happiness in his next endeavours after our summer tour, and I look forward to welcoming Luis to his new position. Luis was my choice as a guitarist and he has already shown us what he can do on lead vocals by fronting the band in South America to incredible reviews. He will soon lead the charge that will carry us forward to new heights." - New Musical Express, 5/21/25...... Jim MorrisonFrench police have recovered a bust from late Doors frontman Jim Morrison's grave, 37 years of it was stolen. The sculpture, created by Croatian artist Mladen Mikulin, was placed on Morrison's grave in Paris' Pre Lachaise Cemetery to mark the tenth anniversary of his passing, on July 3, 1981. However, the bust was stolen seven years later, in May 1988, with Vanity Fair magazine noting that two individuals were reported to have taken the statue after being locked in the cemetery overnight. After years of rumor and innuendo surrounding its fate, Parisian police have now announced the heavily-graffiti'd bust has been recovered, with its rediscovery occurring during a search related to a fraud case. No further details regarding its whereabouts for the past 37 years have been announced, nor has word been shared as to whether it will return to its original location atop Morrison's grave. Morrison passed away in Paris on July 3, 1971 under murky circumstances at the age of 27. He was buried at the city's Pre Lachaise Cemetery where his grave site swiftly became one of the world's most-visited memorials of a late musician. In February, it was announced that the Paris City Council had decided to name a footbridge overlooking Bassin de l'Arsenal in Morrison's honor. Just weeks earlier, it was reported that the former Morrison Hotel, made famous by the Doors and their 1970 1970 album of the same name, was significantly damaged by a fire that erupted in downtown Los Angeles. - Billboard, 5/20/25...... Bruce Springsteen called out Pres. Donald Trump for a second time from the stage of his Land of Hopes and Dreams Tour on May 17 in Manchester, England. Springsteen resumed denouncing the 45th and 47th president after the latter called the rocker "highly overrated," "dumb as a rock" and a "dried out 'prune' of a rocker (his skin is all atrophied!)." "Things are happening right now that are altering the very nature of our country's democracy, and they're too important to ignore," Springsteen said to the Manchester crowd in a three-minute speech on Manchester's Co-op Live stage. "In my home, they're persecuting people for their right to free speech and voicing their dissent. That's happening now," he added, echoing what he'd spoken about at his May 14 show. "In America, the richest men are taking satisfaction in abandoning the world's poorest children to sickness and death. That's happening now. In my country, they're taking sadistic pleasure in the pain they inflict on loyal American workers." Meanwhile the Springsteen/Trump feud has motivated Neil Young to lash out at the president, accusing him of being "out of control" after his recent online rants about Springsteen and Taylor Swift. In a post on his Neil Young Archives on May 20, Young wrote that "Bruce and thousands of musicians think you are ruining America. You worry about that instead of the dyin' kids in Gaza. That's your problem. I am not scared of you. Neither are the rest of us. You shut down FEMA when we needed it most. That's your problem Trump. STOP THINKING ABOUT WHAT ROCKERS ARE SAYING. Think about saving America from the mess you made." The Canadian-American singer-songwriter continued: "Taylor Swift is right. So is Bruce. You know how I feel. You are more worried about yourself than AMERICA. You are forgetting your real job. You work for us. Wake up Republicans! This guy is out of control. We need a real president!!" Trump has also claimed Springsteen, Beyoncé, Bono and Oprah Winfrey took part in an "illegal election scam" run by 2020 Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, although there is no record of Harris paying money to any of the artists who endorsed her, and her campaign has denied doing so. Meanwhile, Springsteen's pal Eddie Vedder paid tribute to the Boss during a Pearl Jamconcert in Pittsburgh on May 17, performing a solo acoustic rendition of Springsteen's "My City of Ruins" in what appeared to be a quiet but powerful response to Trump's recent public criticism of Springsteen. - Billboard, 5/20/25...... Rod Stewart is set to receive a lifetime achievement award at the 2025 American Music Awards at the 51st annual ceremony at the Fontainebleau Las Vegas on May 26. Stewart, who co-hosted the AMAs in 1989 with Anita Baker, Kenny Rogers and others, has received several previous lifetime achievement accolades, including a Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music in 1993; a Legend Award from the World Music Awards, 1993; the Ivor Novello Awards Lifetime Achievement Award, 1999; induction into the UK Music Hall of Fame, 2006; and the ASCAP Founders Award, 2011. Sir Rod, 80, is also a two-time inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, being enshrined as a solo artist in 1994 and with Faces in 2012. The 51st edition of the AMAs, the world's largest fan-voted awards show, will air live coast to coast on May 26 at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on CBS and stream on Paramount+ in the U.S. This summer, Stewart will launch the North American leg of his "One Last Time" world tour, which ranked among the Top 20 Global Concert Tours of 2024. He'll return to The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in May-June and Sept.-Oct. 2025 with "The Encore Shows." - Billboard, 5/20/25...... Steve MillerIn other award news, Steve Miller is set to become the 2025 recipient of the Les Paul Spirit Award on June 9 during a private event at the Gibson Garage venue in Nashville. The event will take place on what would have been electric guitar pioneer and performer Les Paul's 110th birthday. Miller is the fifth recipient of the award, following co-founding Grateful Dead member Bob Weir, Nile Rodgers, U2's The Edge and Peter Frampton. "I cannot think of anyone more deserving to be honored with the Les Paul Spirit Award than Steve Miller," Michael Braunstein, executive director of LPF, said in a statement. "Not only is he an extraordinary talent and a wonderful friend of the Les Paul Foundation, Steve holds the very distinct title of being Les' godson. They had a very unique relationship which Les cherished. If anyone understands the 'spirit' of Les Paul, it's Steve." Miller and Paul were both signed to Capitol Records in their heydays, and also had a long and personal relationship. A young Miller was introduced to Paul, who gave him his first informal guitar lessons and taught him his first three chords. Miller has often recalled how these early experiences watching Paul perform and receiving personal instruction were pivotal in inspiring his own musical journey. Miller joined Paul on stage at the latter's 90th birthday concert in New York City in 2005. The annual Spirit award, created and presented by the LPF (in partnership with Gibson Gives, the philanthropic division of Gibson), goes to an individual who "exemplifies the spirit of the late Les Paul through innovation, engineering, technology and/or music." In addition to the award, a grant from the LPF will be made in the honoree's name to the charity of his choice. - Billboard, 5/20/25...... Just weeks after The Who drummer Zak Starkey was fired and subsequently rehired by the band, Who guitarist Pete Townshend has announced the band is once again parting ways with Starkey. Starkey's membership saga began in April when a spokesman for the group claimed that "the band made a collective decision to part ways with Zak after this round of shows at the Royal Albert Hall," referring to a pair of gigs the month prior. A report from those shows claimed that vocalist Roger Daltrey had stopped several songs mid-performance, citing difficulty hearing the band over the drums. Starkey later issued a statement noting he was "surprised and saddened" by the news, though Townshend later claimed Starkey was back in the band following the resolution of "communication issues." While fans were eager to reference "meet the new boss, same as the old boss" in regard to Starkey's reinstatement, the entire saga appears to have started all over again, with the band announcing a new drummer ahead of their forthcoming farewell tour. "After many years of great work on drums from Zak the time has come for a change," Townshend shared on Instagram on May 18. "A poignant time. Zak has lots of new projects in hand and I wish him the best. Scott Devours who has worked with Roger's solo band will join The Who for our Final shows. Please welcome him," Townshend added. Starkey himself responded to the announcement in his own Instagram post hours later, making it clear it was not his decision to leave the band. "I was fired two weeks after reinstatement and asked to make a statement saying I had quit the who to pursue my other musical endevours this would be a lie," he wrote. "I love the who and would never had quit. So I didn't make the statement & .quitting the who would also have let down the countless amazing people who stood up for me (thank you all a million times over and more) thru the weeks of mayhem of me going 'in an out an in an out an in an out like a bleedin squeezebox x," he added, referencing the 1975 The Who By Numbers track. Both Townshend and Daltrey also issued a more formal statement regarding Starkey's ousting via The Who's website, reiterating Devours' nascent role in the band and referring to Starkey's myriad other projects as the reason behind the lineup change. "The Who are heading for retirement, whereas Zak is 20 years younger and has a great future with his new band and other exciting projects," they wrote. "He needs to devote all his energy into making it all a success. We both wish him all the luck in the world." Notably, despite The Who's reference to Starkey being "20 years younger" and a need to focus on his other projects, Devours is himself 15 months younger than Starkey, with a similarly-busy schedule. Starkey is the son of Beatles drummer Ringo Starr and Maureen Starkey, and has also enjoyed a fruitful career outside of The Who, playing with Oasis, Johnny Marr and other acts. He currently performs in the recently-formed "supergroup" Mantra of the Cosmos. On May 19, The Who took to Instagram to announce a massive line-up of special guests will join them on their final "The Tour Is Over" North American run, including Billy Bob Thornton and The Boxmasters, Billy Idol, Booker T. Jones, Candlebox, Feist, Joe Bonamassa, The Joe Perry Project, Tom Cochrane and ZZ Ward. Additionally, the band have added a second night in Chicago's United Center on Sept. 9 due to incredible fan demand, with Joe Bonamassa acting as support on both Chicago dates. The tour is set to kick off on Aug. 16, in Sunrise, Fla. - Billboard, 5/19/25...... Justin HaywardIn a new interview with Britain's Mojo magazine, The Moody Blues frontman Justin Hayward said he doesn't expect the legendary UK rock outfit to make a comeback. The Moody Blues have been inactive since 2018, and Hayward admits he finds it difficult to see the band returning following the passing of drummer Graeme Edge -- the last surviving original member -- in 2021. "There's only me and Lodgy (bassist John Lodge) left," Hayward told Mojo. "When Graeme died, it really affected me. He loved the group so much. Me and John, we always had things outside of the band, but Graeme devoted his whole life to it. And I just think some of that particular magic is gone." Hayward continued: "I don't want to be in a tribute band -- actually, that's not fair -- I'm just saying that when Graeme passed the enthusiasm for it changed. And I'm really liking what I do now." Hayward, who has been in the music business for 60 years, said he feels fortunate never to have felt the "pressure" of being a celebrity. "I did have my time when I would get recognised, particularly around when 'Forever Autumn' was a hit, but that passes," he said. Hayward and Lodge enjoyed the hit 'Blue Guitar' away from the Moodies and the musician joked that the colour has followed him throughout his career. "It's something that a promoter will hang on you," he joked. "But I remember right at the beginning, Mike (Pinder, keyboardist) was hung up with a record called 'Mood Indigo'. And so there was always that aura around us, of blue, that stuck. My life is colour coded, though -- certain things on certain days, and I don't think I'm unusual in that. Today is green. What's tomorrow? Orange. Is there a blue day? Oh, yes... but I'm gonna have to leave it hanging there." - Music-News.com, 5/18/25...... Seventies artists Carlos Santana and Emmylou Harris were among the music acts performing at the 2025 Grammy Hall of Fame Gala on May 16 at The Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif. Though it's not their stated purpose, the Grammy Hall of Fame serves as a second chance for the Grammys organization to honor recordings they may have missed when they were first released. Of this year's 13 honorees, 11 were released since the inception of the Grammy Awards. Of those 11, only two -- Santana's Supernatural (1999) and Harris' Wrecking Ball (1995) -- had won Grammys when they were eligible. Only one other -- Luther Vandross' Never Too Much (1981) -- had even been nominated. The Grammy Hall of Fame Gala, presented jointly by the Recording Academy and the Grammy Museum, was conceived as a way to elevate the stature of the annual Hall of Fame inductions, which had long announced with little more than a press release. The Grammy Hall of Fame was established by the Recording Academy's national trustees in 1973, initially to honor recordings that were released prior to the inception of the Grammy Awards in 1959. The selection criteria was long ago changed to include any recording that is at least 25 years old. The Grammy Hall of Fame used to be the only major institutional award to honor classic recordings, but the arrival in 2002 of the National Recording Registry, administered by the Library of Congress, means the Grammy Hall of Fame no longer has this field all to itself. - Billboard, 5/17/25...... Elton John has slammed Britain's Labour government for its approach to artificial intelligence (AI) and copyright law, calling the government "absolute losers" and saying he feels "incredibly betrayed" over plans to exempt major tech firms pursuing AI from aspects of copyright law. Appearing on the BBC show Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg on May 18, he told the host that ministers' plans to allow AI firms to use artists' content without paying would be "committing theft, thievery on a high scale." Criticising Prime Minister Keir Starmer's team, Sir Elton said they would "rob young people of their legacy and their income", adding that he thought they were "just being absolute losers, and I'm very angry about it," and also described Technology Secretary Peter Kyle as "a bit of a moron." John's intervention comes as the House of Lords aimed to force AI companies to disclose what material they were using to develop their programmes. Their proposals were rejected by the House of Commons. A government spokesperson told the BBC that "no changes" to copyright laws would be "considered unless we are completely satisfied they work for creators." The U.K. government's proposals to allow tech firms to use copyrighted material as training data have come under fire from numerous other major figures in the music industry, including Paul McCartney, Annie Lennox and Dua Lipa. - Music-News.com, 5/19/25...... During his slot at Willie Nelson's "Outlaw Music Festival Tour" stop on the North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre in Chula Vista, Calif., on May 15, Bob Dylan covered Rick Nelson's 1972 "comeback" hit "Garden Party," which includes a reference to Dylan himself. As his set came to an end, Dylan surprised fans by playing "Garden Party" for the first time. The track sees Nelson recall a Madison Square Garden oldies performance that he had played the year prior alongside Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley and Bobby Rydell. Nelson played his classic hits like "Hello Mary Lou," but faced criticism and boos from the audience after playing "Honky Tonk Women" by the Rolling Stones, and Dylan's "She Belongs To Me." "Garden Party" saw Nelson lament the expectation to succumb to nostalgia, as he sang: "If memories were all I sang, I rather drive a truck." It ended up being a Top 10 hit in the US, reaching No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart. Dylan's rendition of "Garden Party" can be checked out on YouTube. Previously on the "Outlaw Music Festival Tour," Dylan covered The Pogues' "A Rainy Night in Soho"' for the first time, and broke out the first live rendition of his classic "Mr. Tambourine Man" in 15 years. - NME, 5/17/25...... Barbra StreisandBarbra Streisand has recruited Paul McCartney to join forces for a new version of Sir Paul's 2012 single "My Valentine," which was released on May 16 via Columbia Records. "What if it rained? We didn't care/ He said that someday soon the sun was gonna shine/ And he was right, this love of mine/ My valentine," Babs coos on the opening verse, before McCartney takes over to sing, "As days and nights would pass me by/ I'd tell myself that I was waiting for a sign/ Then she appeared, a love so fine/ My valentine" over a lush combination of strings and piano. The cozy love song originally served as the lead single from the former Beatles member's 2012 solo album Kisses on the Bottom, where it was one of just two original songs on the LP and featured an assist from Eric Clapton on guitar. Now, the reimagined version for two is the second preview of Streisand's upcoming duets album, The Secret of Life: Partners, Volume Two, which is out June 27 and acts as a sequel 11 years in the making to her Grammy-nominated No. 1 LP Partners from 2014. Ahead of releasing the duet, the legendary Funny Girl star shared a snap of the longtime friends on her Instagram, writing, "What a joy it was to record 'My Valentine' with @paulmccartney. To share time with him in the studio was truly special." The new Streisand/McCartney collab can be streamed on YouTube. - Billboard, 5/16/25...... Rolling Stones guitarst Ronnie Wood says the secret to the band's longevity is they don't "over socialise." Wood, who joined the group in 1975, 13 years after they formed -- said he stays in occasional contact with bandmates Mick Jagger and Keith Richards when they're not recording or touring, but they don't "over-familiarise" themselves with one another, which he thinks has contributed to their longevity. Wood, 77, told the UK's Daily Telegraph: "We're not on the phone to each other every five minutes. When we're not touring we keep in touch, just to keep the feelers in each other's camp, but we don't over-familiarise -- we run on faith and truth. We have faith in our music, and we always have hope that people will keep turning up, and sure enough they do." The group's most recent album, 2023's Hackney Diamonds, won critical acclaim and generated their best sales, but Wood admitted the group have "no idea" about the meaning of chart places these days. He said: "In the old days we used to have the charts, and you'd be able to plot things and feel a part of it. You'd look at the Melody Maker and say, 'Look! We're number 50!' or whatever. And then you'd creep up the charts. It gave young bands so much ambition and something to look forward to. I've no idea where we are on the charts now." - Music-News.com, 5/18/25...... In the new MAX series Duster which premiered on May 15, it's 1972, and FBI agent Nina Hayes (Rachel Hilson) heads to Tuscon to take down Mob boss Ezra Saxton (Keith David). She recruits his driver Jim Ellis (Lost's Josh Holloway) to be her informant -- chiefly by suggesting that Saxton killed his brother. This series, from Lost co-creator J.J. Abrams and LaToya Morgan, doesn't break any new ground, but the '70s detail is perfect. Even during the action scenes, your mind may be conjuring up hazy memories of listening to the Eagles on a marijuana buzz. - People, 5/26/25...... Michael B Tretow, the acclaimed sound engineer for ABBA, has died at age 90. Because of Mr. Tretow's consistent hand in crafting their sound, ABBA fans had taken to dubbing him the "fifth member" of the group, with many taking to social media to pay tribute. "Without his brilliance," wrote one X/Twitter user, "the Abba sound wouldn't be what we know and love." All four members of the iconic pop group have also shared moving reflections about their time spent with the technician, who also co-owned the band's record label Polar Music. In the 1970s, Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson selected him as ABBA's sound engineer, and he went on to work on all of their albums bar 2021's Voyage. "You meant more to us four in ABBA than anyone else," Andersson told the Swedish publication Aftonbladet. "I hope and believe that you felt it throughout all the years that have passed since we worked (and continuously laughed) in the studio. Our music lives on, it seems, and you are the one who made it timeless. You were a fantastic inspirer and joy-maker, and the finest sound engineer the world has ever seen," he said, seemingly adding an in-joke: "I miss you. And I've saved all your coconuts!" - NME, 5/21/25...... Legendary Broadway composer Charles Strouse, a three-time Tony winner for "Bye Bye Birdie," "Applause" and "Annie" who also composed the iconic "Those Were The Days" opening theme for the '70s series All In the Family, died on May 15. He was 96. Even if you're not a Broadway buff, you know at least a few of Mr. Strouse's songs, which he co-wrote with lyricist Lee Adams. "Annie" spawned the instant standard "Tomorrow," which Barbra Streisand covered on her platinum album Songbird and Jay-Z had a top 15 pop hit in 1999 with "Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)," which sampled "It's the Hard Knock Life" from "Annie." "Bye Bye Birdie," about a pop star who was drafted to go into the Army (inspired by Elvis Presley), also spawned a standard -- the jaunty "Put on a Happy Face," which Dick Van Dyke performed in the musical (and in the 1963 film version). The song was covered by such artists as Nancy Wilson, Johnny Mathis, The Supremes and Tony Bennett. While Mr. Strouse is probably best known for his long partnership with Adams -- who is still living at age 100 -- he also collaborated with other lyricists. He and Martin Charnin teamed to write "Annie," which won seven Tony Awards, including best musical and best original score. Mr. Strouse, who remained active late in life and once told the AP "I work every day," died at his home in New York City, his family said. His wife, director-choreographer Barbara Siman, died in 2023. He is survived by four children, Ben, Nick, Victoria and William. - Billboard, 5/16/25...... George WendtSitcom and Broadway actor George Wendt, who played beloved barfly Norm on the hit 1980s comedy Cheers, died on the morning of May 20, his family has announced. He was 76. "George was a doting family man, a well-loved friend and confidant to all of those lucky enough to have known him," the family said in a statement. "He will be missed forever." The family has requested privacy during this time. Despite a long career of roles onstage and on TV, it was as gentle and henpecked Norm Peterson on Cheers that he was most associated, earning six straight Emmy Award nominations for best supporting actor in a comedy series from 1984-89. Wendt, who spent six years in Chicago's renowned Second City improv troupe during the 1970's before sitting on a barstool at the place where everybody knows your name, didn't have high hopes when he auditioned for Cheers. "My agent said, 'It's a small role, honey. It's one line. Actually, it's one word.' The word was 'beer.' I was having a hard time believing I was right for the role of 'the guy who looked like he wanted a beer.' So I went in, and they said, 'It's too small a role. Why don't you read this other one?' And it was a guy who never left the bar," Wendt told GQ magazine in an oral history of Cheers. Wendt became a fan favourite in and outside the bar -- his entrances were cheered with a warm "Norm!" -- and his wisecracks always landed. "How's a beer sound, Norm?" he would be asked by the bartender. "I dunno. I usually finish them before they get a word in," he'd respond. Wendt also found steady work onstage, putting on Edna Turnblad's housecoat in Broadway's "Hairspray" beginning in 2007, and appearing in the Tony Award-winning play Art in New York and London. He starred in the national tour of "12 Angry Men" and appeared in a production of David Mamet's "Lakeboat." He also starred in regional productions of "Death of a Salesman," "The Odd Couple," "Never Too Late" and "Funnyman." He is survived by his wife, Second City alum Bernadette Birkett, who voiced Norm's never-seen not-so better half, Vera, on Cheers; his children, Hilary, Joe and Daniel; and his stepchildren, Joshua and Andrew. - AP, 5/20/25.

Monday, June 26, 2023

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on July 1st, 2023

Diana Ross's Music Legacy Tour landed at New York City's iconic Radio City Music Hall on June 29 before a sold-out room of 6,000 fans. The Motown legend's voice remains as nuanced and expressive as ever, and as if to show off her undiminished pipes, she performed segments of several songs with minimal support from her band and no backing vocalists. The 79-year-old diva presented a glorious, soaring rendition of her No. 1 '70s hit "Ain't No Mountain High Enough," and her former girl group The Supremes were well-served by four classics -- "Come See About Me," "Reflections," "You Can't Hurry Love" and "Love Child" -- early in the show. Noting that her current show was called The Music Legacy Tour because she was dusting off selections that don't often make her touring set list, Ross delivered not one, not two but three selections from her Lady Sings the Blues movie ("Fine and Mellow," "Don't Explain" and "God Bless the Child," the lattermost of which she rarely performs live), demonstrating exactly why her performance as jazz pioneer Billie Holiday received an Oscar nod. Ross will perform two more shows in the US before touring Europe, with her website promising "more dates to be added." - Billboard, 6/30/23...... Neil YoungNeil Young announced on June 30 that he'll finally release his legendary "lost" LP Chrome Dreams this summer. Originally set for release in 1977, the 12-track Chrome Dreams ended up being shelved and has never seen the light of day. The album will arrive via Reprise on Aug. 11 and presented in its original form. Four of its songs are originals, and many have never been included in any form. It includes such popular tracks as "Pocahontas," "Like a Hurricane," "Powderfinger" and "Look Out for My Love," and is the latest in a long line of new and archival releases from Young in recent years. Chrome Dreams will also sport cover art created by Rolling Stones guitarist and sometime artist Ronnie Wood in Dec. 1976. In 2022, Young released Toast, a previously shelved album he recorded with Crazy Horse back in 2001, as well as a 50th anniversary reissue of his classic 1972 LP Harvest. More recently, he released World Record, a new album with Crazy Horse, and his latest album was Barn, another effort with Crazy Horse. - New Musical Express, 7/1/23...... The estate of Joe Cocker has partnered with legendary manager Irving Azoff's Iconic Artists Group to "acquire, develop and expand the singer's "rich musical legacy to new generations," according to a press release. Cocker's output includes his cover of The Beatles' "With a Little Help From My Friends," his cover of Billy Preston's "You Are So Beautiful," and "Up Where We Belong," his duet with Jennifer Warnes that hit No. 1 on the pop charts in Nov. 1982 and also earned him a Grammy. - Billboard, 6/29/23...... Reservoir Media acquired the catalogs of four of the founding members of the R&B and pop vocal group The Spinners. The deal includes the master royalty income streams for Henry Fambrough as well as the estates of late Spinners members Billie Henderson, Pervis Jackson, and Bobbie Smith. Formed in 1954, the group earned a total of six Grammy nominations, 30 Billboard Hot 100 hits, and 40 placements on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, including six No. 1's. Their biggest hits include "It's a Shame," "I'll Be Around" and "Could It Be I'm Falling In Love." The group is slated for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in November. Meanwhile, Kool & the Gang's George Brown has sold a stake in his music publishing and writers share of his public performance royalties to Primary Wave, it was announced on June 28. The deal -- which includes classics like "Ladies Night," "Celebration," "Get Down on It," "Cherish," "Jungle Boogie," "Summer Madness" and more -- is in the multi-million dollar range, according to Primary Wave. The group broke through in 1973 with its fourth album, Wild and Peaceful, which contained hits like "Jungle Boogie" and "Hollywood Swinging." Pulling from funk, soul, R&B, disco and jazz influences, Kool & The Gang's work also played a defining role in the soundtracks for Rocky (1976) and Saturday Night Fever (1977). Kool & the Gang has received two Grammy awards, seven American Music Awards and was inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame. The group also received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, while Brown -- along with bandmates Taylor and Robert and Ronald "Kool" Bell -- was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2018. - Billboard, 6/29/23...... Graham Gouldman10cc's Graham Gouldman has announced that 10cc will be reviving their Ultimate Greatest Hits Tour in spring 2024 after a sell-out tour in 2022. 10cc -- currently comprised of Graham, Rick Fenn, Paul Burgess, Keith Hayman and Iain Hornal -- will kick off the 18-city UK tour in Bristol on Mar. 7, including a highly anticipated return to London's Royal Albert Hall on Mar. 25. The 77-year-old Gouldman, now the remaining founding member of the art-rock group, said that "in our formative years, it was all about the songs, and it's the same for us now. We play them with love and energy, hit after hit after hit... we show no mercy." 10cc have sold over 15 million albums in the UK alone, and the group's extensive catalog includes the UK No. 1 hits "Rubber Bullets," "Dreadlock Holiday" and the dreamy 1975 single "I'm Not In Love" -- which was a global smash -- and classics such as "Donna," "Art For Art's Sake" and "Good Morning Judge." The band will then tour Europe in the autumn, including Holland, Belgium and Germany. - Music-News.com, 6/27/23...... Paul McCartney has joked that Bruce Springsteen habit of playing marathon concerts has "ruined it for everyone" as fans now expect three to four-hour gigs. Speaking to Conan O'Brien on the latter's Needs a Friend podcast, Sir Paul, 81, blamed Springsteen, 73, for starting the trend of performing mammoth sets that go on for hours, unlike in the legendary Liverpool group's 60s heyday when they barely played for an hour if fans were lucky. "Then [the 1960s], it was a lot of people on the bill because nobody did long, now people will do three or four hours. I blame Bruce Springsteen -- I've told him so, I said 'it's your fault man," the former Beatle said wryly. He added: "You can't now do an hour, we used to do a half hour. That was The Beatles thing -- half an hour and we got paid for it." In 2022, Macca celebrated his 80th birthday with a three-hour headline set at Glastonbury. Meanwhile, Springsteen is set to play the BST Hyde Park festival in London not once, but twice with The E Street Band on July 6 and July 8. - Music-News.com, 6/27/23...... The L.A.-based pop duo Sparks have told Big Issue magazine that they refuse to become a nostalgia act and refuse to "rely on [their] past." Comprising brothers Russell and Ron Mael, Sparks have released 76 singles to date and they have no plans on stopping making new tunes anytime soon. "At this point, we really feel more urgent than ever," Russell told the mag. "We're even more motivated to prove a point -- that you don't have to fall into that trap of relying on your past. What you're doing now has got to be compelling and modern and forward-thinking. And if it isn't, then there's no reason to even be doing it." Asked why they keep going, Ron said: "We always feel that what we're doing is something both musically strong and unlike a lot of other things that are going on at the time. We feel that our music and our presentation is interesting, but it's not trying to be quirky or oddball and all." Actress Cate Blanchett appears in Sparks' recent music video for their new album's title track, "The Girl Is Crying in Her Latter," and they explained they first met the Tar actress when she knocked on their dressing room door at the Cesar Awards last year to say she was a fan, an encounter they described as "mind-blowing." Russell recalled: "I thought, 'Maybe she's in the wrong dressing room or something.' But she just came to introduce herself and said that she was a fan of the band... It was pretty mindblowing to both of us." - Music-News.com, 6/23/23...... Bob DylanBob Dylan covered the Grateful Dead's "Stella Blue" during a show in Barcelona, Spain on June 23. While it marked the first time the rock-folk icon performed the track originally taken from the GD's 1973 album Wake of the Flood, it continues a recent streak of Grateful Dead covers by the legendary singer-songwriter in 2023. In April, while touring Japan in support of latest album Rough and Rowdy Ways, Dylan debuted two GD covers at separate shows on the tour -- both songs taken from band's 1970 classic American Beauty. He covered "Truckin" during a show in Tokyo on Ap. 12, then played a rendition of "Brokedown Palace" during a gig in Nagoya on Apr. 18. Before 2023, Dylan had only covered four Grateful Dead songs live throughout his career: "Friend of the Devil," "West L.A. Fadeaway," "Alabama Getaway' and "Black Muddy River." The "Like a Rolling Stone" singer toured with the Grateful Dead in 1987, resulting in the live album Dylan & the Dead. Fan-shot footage of his "Stella Blue" performance can be viewed on YouTube. - NME, 6/23/23...... Streams of Elton John songs have spiked 294 per cent after the Rocket Man's performances at the UK's Glastonbury festival on June 25. According to a new Spotify round-up of this year's Glastonbury tracks and artists, streams of John's songs increased 294 per cent in the UK in the hour after his career-spanning headline set on the Pyramid Stage. Other artists who also performed during the festival, including Guns N' Roses, Yusuf/Cat Stevens, Rina Sawayama and Rick Astley, also saw selections from their catalogs increase dramatically after their Glasto appearances. Meanwhile, Elton has thanked his Glastonbury audience for making his final U.K. show one to remember. In an Instagram post on June 26, John shared photos from his headlining set on the festival's iconic Pyramid Stage the previous evening and thanked his fans for helping him go out with a bang. "Thank you, Glastonbury!" he wrote, with praying hands and heart emojis. "The energy last night was like nothing else, and I couldn't be more grateful to the crowd and the people watching at home for all your love and support. You will be in my heart and soul forever. UK, what a farewell. I love you #glastonbury," he added. - NME/Music-News.com, 6/26/23...... A huge mechanical bull that appeared at the 2022 Birmingham UK Commonwealth Games' opening ceremony has been named after Ozzy Osbourne. The name of the 33 foot (10 meter) tall sculpture was announcwed on June 22 after a public vote was revealed. The bull, now known as Ozzy, was originally meant to be dismantled, but after a public outcry it will now move to a permanent home at Birmingham New Street railway station. "I'm absolutely blown away," said the Black Sabbath frontman, who performed at the closing ceremony, to the BBC. "Thank you for all your votes. And Birmingham forever," he added. Ozzy also posted a pic of his namesake along with a thank you to fans on Twitter. The petition to save the sculpture received almost 10,000 signatures, and more than 28,000 votes were cast the rename the structure, which was originally called "Raging Bull." West Midlands mayor Andy Street said the public "couldn't have made a clearer choice." "Like people right across our region, I cannot wait to see Ozzy take pride of place in New Street Station in a triumphant homecoming this summer - proudly bearing the name of the Prince of Darkness himself," Street said in a statement. Osbourne announced his retirement from touring on Feb. 1, calling off his European and UK tour dates in the process. His retirement announcement came following a fall at his Los Angeles home which required neck surgery. - NME, 6/23/23...... Storm ThorgersonDuring the boom time of classic rock in the 1970s, English design studio Hipgnosis was known for creating iconic album sleeves for the likes of Pink Floyd (The Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here), Led Zeppelin (Houses of the Holy), T. Rex (Electric Warrior), and many more. Now Squaring the Circle, a new documentary that tells the story of how Aubrey "Po" Powell, Storm Thorgerson and later Peter Christopherson created some of the most influential artworks ever. Squaring, the first feature-length film directed by legendary photographer Anton Corbijn, will premiere at Sundance Film Festival on July 7, before being released in UK cinemas and on demand from July 14. "Growing up in the late '60s and '70s, I was obsessed with music and everything connected to it -- especially the album covers," said Corbijn. "The record sleeves were a huge part of my education and I really enjoyed making this film as it allowed me to revisit the things I loved from that time," he added. Squaring is made up of archive and new footage, along with brand new interviews with Pink Floyd's Roger Waters, David Gilmour and Nick Mason, Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, former Genesis frontman Peter Gabriel, Graham Gouldman of 10cc, and Noel Gallagher of Oasis, among many others. What I love about vinyl is the artwork," said Gallagher in the film's trailer, which has been shared on YouTube. "It's the poor man's art collection," going on to explain how Hipgnosis' work has "stood the test of time." Tickets and more information can be found on the Dogwoof.com website. - NME, 6/29/23...... Bluegrass musician Bobby Osborne, who helped popularize the song "Rocky Top," died on the morning of June 27. He was 91. Mr. Osborne and his brother Sonny made up The Osborne Brothers, and their version of the song "Rocky Top" in 1967 became an official state song of Tennessee, his website said. Mr. Osborne was also a member of the Grand Ole Opry and the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame. A native of Hyden, Kentucky, Mr. Osborne taught at the Hazard Community and Technical Colleges Kentucky School of Bluegrass and Traditional Music in Leslie County for several years. In January, he received the Governors Awards in the Arts for his dedication to sharing Kentucky's rich history in the arts around the world. Hazard Community and Technical College President Jennifer Lindon said the school was deeply saddened to learn about Mr. Osborne's death. "He was a pioneer in the Bluegrass music industry and a champion for Eastern Kentucky," she said. - Billboard, 6/27/23...... Soap star Nicolas Coster, best known for playing Lionel Lockridge on the former NBC daytime soap Santa Barbara, passed away at a Florida hospital on June 26, his daughter Dinneen confirmed on social media. He was 89. Mr. Coster appeared on the hit show Santa Barbara until its cancellation in Jan. 1993, though he did have a hiatus of just over two years due to a lack of a storyline for his alter ego. Prolific right to the end, with his final appearances including Better Things, American Crime Story and Feds, Mr. Coster famously starred in an episode of Wonder Woman as the villain Silas Lockhart and played Haftel in Star Trek. His other major credits include Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, T. J. Hooker, and Star Trek: The Next Generation. He was once married to actress/model Candace Hilligoss, 87, with whom he had two children, before divorcing in 1981. The cause of death is not known at this time. - Bang Showbiz, 6/27/23...... Alan ArkinAcclaimed and prolific actor Alan Arkin, who demonstrated his versatility in everything from farcical comedy to chilling drama as he received four Academy Award nominations and won an Oscar in 2007 for Little Miss Sunshine, died on June 29, according to his sons Adam, Mattthew and Anthony Arkin in a statement through his publicist. He was 89. A member of Chicago's famed Second City comedy troupe, Mr. Arkin was an immediate success in movies with the 1966 Cold War spoof The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming and peaked late in life with his win as Best Supporting Actor for the surprise 2006 hit Little Miss Sunshine. More than 40 years separated his first Oscar nomination, for The Russians are Coming from his nomination for playing a conniving Hollywood producer in the Oscar-winning Argo. In recent years, the actor starred opposite Michael Douglas in the Netflix comedy series The Kominsky Method, a role that earned him two Emmy nominations. In 1967's Wait Until Dark, the actor starred as a vicious drug dealer holds a blind woman (Audrey Hepburn) captive in her own apartment, believing a drug shipment is hidden there. He recalled in a 1998 interview how difficult it was to terrorize Hepburn's character. "Just awful," he said. "She was an exquisite lady, so being mean to her was hard. His rise continued in 1968 with The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, in which he played a sensitive man who could not hear or speak. His career as a character actor continued to blossom when Mike Nichols, a fellow Second City alumnus, cast him in the starring role as Yossarian, the victim of wartime red tape in 1970's Catch-22, based on Joseph Heller's million-selling novel. Through the years, Mr. Arkin turned up in such favorites as Edward Scissorhands, playing Johnny Depp's neighbor; and in the film version of David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross as a dogged real estate salesman. Other recent credits included Going in Style, a 2017 remake featuring fellow Oscar winners Michael Caine and Morgan Freeman, and The Kominsky Method. He played a Hollywood talent agent and friend of Douglas' character, a once-promising actor who ran an acting school after his career sputtered. He also was the voice of Wild Knuckles in the 2022 animated film Minions: The Rise of Gru. Born in New York City's borough of Brooklyn, he and his family, which included two younger brothers, moved to Los Angeles when he was 11. His parents found jobs as teachers, but were fired during the post-World War II Red Scare because they were Communists. "We were dirt poor so I couldn't afford to go to the movies often," he told the AP in 1998. "But I went whenever I could and focused in on movies, as they were more important than anything in my life." He studied acting at Los Angeles City College and married a fellow student, Jeremy Yaffe, and they had two sons, Adam and Matthew. After he and Yaffe divorced in 1961, Mr. Arkin married actress-writer Barbara Dana, and they had a son, Anthony. All three sons became actors, with Adam starring in the TV series Chicago Hope. Mr. Arkin was also once a member of the 1950s folk music group The Tarriers, which had a pair of hits in 1956 -- "Cindy, Oh Cindy" and "The Banana Boat Song," which later became a signature song for the late Harry Belafonte. "When I was a young actor people wanted to know if I wanted to be a serious actor or a funny one," Michael McKean tweeted in tribute to the late actor. 'I'd answer 'Which kind is Alan Arkin?' and that shut them up." - AP, 6/30/23.

On June 25 Patti LaBelle started off strong and confident with a rendition of Tina Turner's hit "The Best" in tribute to the late singer at the BET Awards 2023 at L.A.'s Microsoft Theater, but a few of the lyrics in the second verse escaped her. LaBelle started humming in the second half of the first verse, telling the audience during the live telecast, "Oh Lord... I can't see the words... I'm trying, y'all." Then like a pro, she launched into the chorus like nothing was wrong. According to one attendee who shared video from the moment of where the audience member was seated, LaBelle might not have been able to see the teleprompter because the section in front of it was standing, blocking the two-time Grammy winner's view. "Due to the crowd's enthusiasm, the teleprompter was obstructed, obscuring Ms. LaBelle's view of the lyrics," the BET Awards confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter. "Nonetheless, we couldn't be more grateful to Ms. LaBelle for lending her incredible talent to this moment." Moments from LaBell's BET performance have been shared on The Hollywood Reporter's twitter page, and RNB_RADAR's twitter page. Turner died at age 83 in May. Her hit "The Best" peaked at No. 15 in Nov. 1989. - Billboard, 6/26/23...... Tina TurnerMeanwhile in related news, Tina Turner is set to be honored at the Macy's 4th of July Fireworks Spectacular in New York City. During the "Golden Mile" display element of the Macy's event, thousands of golden shells will create a cascade stretching across the East River to honor the "Private Dancer" singer. The 47th annual 4th of July event will also feature headliners including Ashanti, Bebe Rexha, Ja Rule, Jelly Roll, Lainey Wilson, LL Cool J and The Roots. The Independence Day bash will take place between New York's East 26th and East 40th streets from 8:00 pm U.S. Eastern Time. In still more Tina Turner news, her son Ike Turner Jr. was arrested on crack cocaine possession charges on May 6 in Alvin, Tex. Officers with the Alvin Police Dept. pulled Ike Jr., 64, over at 12:09 am local time for "equipment violation," meaning one of the lights on his car was out, before discovering 1.7 grams of crack cocaine and 0.7 grams of methamphetamine in his possession. He was also charged with tampering with evidence for allegedly "trying to eat the drugs" before the officers could seize them from him. Ike Jr., who was adapted by Tina after she married Ike Turner in 1962, was sentenced to jail 18 days before his mother passed away at her home in Switzerland on May 24. He is currently being held at the Brazoria County Jail on $70,000 (£55,000) bail. UK fans can catch a 20-city "What's Love Got To Do With It - A Tina Turner Tribute" this summer beginning June 29. - Music-News.com, 6/25/23...... On June 21 Rod Stewart clarified rumors regarding his recent statement that he intended "to leave the rock 'n' roll stuff behind, for a while." In an Instagram post, Hot Rod told fans they can rest assured that he's not giving up the genre for good. "I. 'd like to clear up any confusion that I may have caused with my dear fans and the media. I shall never retire! I was put on this Earth to be a singer and will keep doing so for as long as the good Lord lets me," Stewart explained. "I'll be playing the hits as advertised for the U.K., U.S., South America and Vegas and into 2024 but no retirement as such." He continued: "During recent interviews, I've mentioned my newest passion is big band/swing music and when we wrap this greatest hits tour, its something I'm very eager to share with you. I could never turn my back on the songs that I've written and sung over the last six decades. They are like my children. I created them and I love them. I'll always come back to them, just like I did after The Great American Songbook series, which I shall boastfully add, sold 26 million albums!" In the BBC interview, Stewart stated that he is working on a "swing album with Jools Holland" that will arrive sometime in 2024. "Everything has to come to an end sooner or later," the "Maggie May" singer told the outlet, likely prompting the retirement rumors. He concluded the optimistic message with a promise for what lies ahead: "I look forward to seeing you on the road with all the hits and I can't wait to introduce you to my swing album next year." - Billboard, 6/22/23...... Meanwhile, Paul McCartney is clarifying how Artificial Intelligence (AI) will be used in what he describes as "the final Beatles song." "Can't say too much at this stage but to be clear, nothing has been artificially or synthetically created," Sir Paul said in a June 22 tweet. "It's all real and we all play on it. We cleaned up some existing recordings - a process which has gone on for years. No one is more excited than us to be sharing something with you later in the year," McCartney continued in his post. "We hope you love it as much as we do." As he explained in an interview with BBC Radio 4's Today that aired June 13, AI would be used to separate vocal tracks from background noise and instruments, not to create new material. McCartney said during the chat that he had been using AI to "extricate" late bandmate John Lennon's vocals from an old recording for use on the untitled track. It has been speculated that the project could be a recording of "Now and Then," a somber love song written by John in 1978. - Billboard, 6/22/23...... Elsewhere on the Fab Four front, the rock & roll memorabilia dealer Gotta Have Rock and Roll is auctioning one of the most significant pieces in both Beatles and music history -- the actual Beatles break-up contract. The typed two-page document signed by "Paul McCartney" and "R. Starkey", twice signed by "George Harrison" and "John Lennon"; "Apple Corps Limited, dated 29 December 1974," is now for sale, and the document can be viewed and bids can be entered on the gottahaverockandroll website. The auction for the contract which released each band member from their obligation to record as the group known as "The Beatles," with an estimated value of $500,000, is set to end on June 30. - Music-News.com, 6/25/23...... BMG Music has acquired Paul Simon royalty income and neighboring rights income to the full recorded Simon & Garfunkel catalog, including songs like "The Sound of Silence" and "Mrs. Robinson." The sale includes the Grammy winner and two-time Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee's royalty income for all of S&G's recorded music as well as his neighboring rights income to that music as well. Apart from their successful singles, S&G is also revered for soundtracking Mike Nichols' 1967 hit film The Graduate. Featuring "The Sound of Silence" and "Mrs. Robinson," both songs went on to be inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. Within the past year, BMG has also acquired more than 45 new catalogs from such major artists as Tina Turner, John Legend, Mötley Crüe, ZZ Top, Peter Frampton, Harry Nilsson and The Hollies. - Billboard, 6/22/23...... Barry GibbLegendary '70s artists Barry Gibb of The Bee Gees and Dionne Warwick are among the five artists chosen for this year's edition of the prestigious Kennedy Center Honors awards. The 2023 ceremony will tape on Dec. 3, on the Kennedy Center Opera House stage in Washington, D.C., for broadcast later that month on CBS. In a statement, Gibb said the honor was "one of the most special moments in my life and something that I will always cherish," while Warwick -- who coincidentally scored a Top 10 1982 hit with the Gibb brothers-penned tune "Heartbreaker" -- said that "it's very exciting to be recognized for my contributions to the music industry for the past 60 years." Gloria Estefan, a 2017 Kennedy Center honoree, returns as host of the Kennedy Center Honors for the third time. The show will air on CBS for the 46th year and stream on Paramount+. Each year, honorees are confirmed by the executive committee of the Kennedy Center's board of trustees. The honors are not designated by art form or category of artistic achievement. Other KCH honorees this year include actor/comedian Billy Crystal; soprano singer Rene Fleming; and singer/actress Queen Latifah. - Billboard, 6/22/23...... Rocky actor Sylvester Stallone recently told The Wall Street Journal that removing a Rocky statue that overlooks the pool by his recently sold Beverly Hills mansion was almost a dealbreaker for buyer Adele. When asked by the WSJ if he didn't want to take the statue of his famous underdog prizefigher franchise with him when he sold the home for Adele for $58 million in early 2022. "I did. But she said, 'That's a no deal. That's gonna blow the whole deal,'" Stallone explained. "She wanted the statue. I like what she's doing; she's making it gorgeous." The "Rolling in the Deep" singer paid $22 million less for the 3.47-acre property than Stallone's original asking price of $80 million. Stallone created the Rocky franchise, which began with a 1976 film co-written by and starring the actor. He most recently played the role of boxer Rocky Balboa in 2018's Creed II, which he also co-wrote. - Billboard, 6/21/23...... A24 Studios is producing a new movie about Priscilla Presley's love story with her King of Rock & Roll husband Elvis Presley, and shared a trailer for it on YouTube. Actress Cailee Spaeny, who stars as the titular character with Euphoria's Jacob Elrodi as The King, is shown meeting the icon for the first time, attending a party in Germany as he plays the piano for a cheering crowd, then sharing intimate moments with the singer taking Polaroid images after visiting Graceland. Scenes then flash of Priscilla and Elvis getting married and her pregnancy with their daughter Lisa Marie Presley after the musician's career fully takes off. The trailer concludes with Priscilla's mother asking, "Priscilla, what about boys at school? Must be some handsome ones." A younger Priscilla looks worriedly at her mother, and the trailer cuts to the actress and Elvis sharing a passionate kiss on their wedding day. Priscilla is the latest in a long, seemingly never-ending films about Presley's life, including 2022's Baz Lurhrmann-directed and critically acclaimed movie Elvis. Based on Priscilla and Sandra Harmon's book Elvis and Me, Priscilla is directed by Sofia Coppola (Lost in Translation, Marie Antoinette, The Bling Ring), and a release date is yet to be announced. - Billboard, 6/21/23...... Elton JohnElton John performed a headlining set -- and what he has described as his "final UK performance" -- at Glastonbury 2023 on the evening of June 25, breaking viewing figures on the BBC as millions of viewers across the UK watched the simulcast. According to Overnights.tv, the set was watched by 7.3 million viewers across the BBC, three times that which saw Paul McCartney's headlining 2022 set and the most-viewed set on television in the festival's history. The Rocket Man's hit-packed set at Worthy Farm also brought one of the biggest crowds the festival's Pyramid Stage has ever seen. During the show, John was joined by Gabriels frontman Jacob Lusk, up-and-comer Stephen Sanchez, Rina Sawayama and The Killers' Brandon Flowers, though rumors prior to the rendition of "Tiny Dancer" included Britney Spears, who collaborated with Sir Elton on a remake of the song in 2022. In an Instagram post on June 26, Elton shared photos from his headlining set. "Thank you, Glastonbury!" he wrote, with praying hands and heart emojis. "The energy last night was like nothing else, and I couldn't be more grateful to the crowd and the people watching at home for all your love and support. You will be in my heart and soul forever. UK, what a farewell. I love you #glastonbury." VIP onlookers near the stage include Sir Paul McCartney, Kate Hudson, Sam and Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and Rocket Man Elton biopic actor Taron Egerton. "There aren't really words to describe how good that was," Egerton said in his own Instagram post. "The Rocketman did it again." Meanwhile, Elton has announced a collectible, limited edition vinyl release of his Diamonds greatest hits collection. Diamonds (Pyramid Edition) features tracklisting personally selected by John which "reflects last night's historic [Glastonbury] setlist," according to a press release. It will feature highlights from Diamonds, his 2017 greatest hits collection, and pressed on coloured vinyl. The new release also includes a commemorative 1010 print. - New Musical Express, 6/26/23...... In more Elton news, John and his band have received a Billboard Boxscore award for making touring history. His "Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour" has grossed more than $887 million and sold 5.7 million tickets, with over 300 shows in 20 countries, becoming the top-grossing tour of all time, according to Billboard Boxscore. Also, Elton has become the highest-grossing solo artist and top ticket-selling solo artist ever, grossing nearly $2 billion and selling over 20 million tickets since Billboard Boxscore started tracking data 40 years ago. John and his band -- Davey Johnstone, Nigel Olsson, Matt Bissonette, John Mahon, Kim Bullard and Ray Cooper, along with his longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin -- accepted the award during a ceremony in the garden of his expansive estate in Windsor, UK, on June 21. - Billboard, 6/21/23...... After Debbie Harry revealed that David Bowie once showed her his penis in her 2019 autobiography FACE IT, the Blondie frontwoman has defended Bowie in a new interview with London's The Sunday TImes. When asked whether some women may have felt uncomfortable by Bowie's forwardness by showing her his penis after he and Iggy Pop were presented with a free hit of cocaine by the "Call Me" singer, Harry responded: "I think you should rethink that. Most women would really die to be in that room ... You have to consider the context -- I was a consenting adult, shall we say. I believe that that is really the borderline." - NME, 6/21/23...... Veteran Black music exec Varnell Harris Johnson, who held senior executive roles at Capitol-EMI, Blue Note, Jive, Island, Elektra Records and more throughout his career in music and who was president of the Living Legends Foundation, died on June 21 of congestive heart failure. He was 76. Johnson has been credited for recruiting many Black executives, including several women, into key music industry positions. He had an ear for talent and had a hand in bringing Tina Turner over to Capitol Records as a solo artist, and brought the Isley Brothers with him from Elektra to Island. With his knowledge of how influential gospel music was to the community, he helped establish the gospel-focused Verity Records. As vice president of A&R at Capitol, he worked with artists including Turner, A Taste of Honey, Maze, George Clinton, Freddie Jackson, Natalie Cole, Peabo Bryson, Roberta Flack and Ashford & Simpson. As VP of marketing and promotion at Jive Records beginning in 1992, he worked with R. Kelly, A Tribe Called Quest, KRS One and Aaliyah. He went on to run Junes Entertainment Inc., his own consulting firm, and most recently resided in New Jersey. He is survived by his wife Darlene, son Varnell, (nicknamed "June") and daughter Tracey. - Billboard, 6/24/23...... AerosmithIn an interview with Classic Rock magazine, Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry said he would love to make a follow-up to Aerosmith's last studio album, 2012's Music From Another Dimension!, but he's not sure it's going to happen. Perry, 72, said it takes "a lot" to make a record and he and his bandmates aren't getting any younger. Perry, who is also a member of Alice Cooper's supergroup The Hollywood Vampires, admitted touring is more important at this stage in his career. He said: "I don't know. At this point, I want to tour as much as we can. I want to get out and play to the fans. That's really the focus right now, to get out and play live. If we get time to work on some new music, that would be great, but knowing [singer] Steven [Tyler] and knowing our age and what it takes to do an album... I don't know. I'm always playing, I'm always writing stuff, but at this stage, I can't say. I just want to get through this next tour and play live and give something back to the fans." But Perry says it's impossible to rule out another Aerosmith LP: "I don't know. At this point, I want to tour as much as we can. I want to get out and play to the fans. That's really the focus right now, to get out and play live. If we get time to work on some new music, that would be great, but knowing [singer] Steven [Tyler] and knowing our age and what it takes to do an album... I don't know. I'm always playing, I'm always writing stuff, but at this stage, I can't say. I just want to get through this next tour and play live and give something back to the fans." Aerosmith has announced they'll kick off their "Peace Out" farewell tour this September. - Music-News.com, 6/21/23...... Tony- and Grammy Award-winning lyricist Sheldon Harnick, who with composer Jerry Bock made up one of the premier musical-theater songwriting duos of the 1950s and 1960s with shows such as "Fiddler on the Roof," "Fiorello!" and "The Apple Tree," died in his sleep on June 23 of natural causes in New York City. He was 99. Based on stories by Sholom Aleichem that were adapted into a libretto by Stein, "Fiddler" dealt with the experience of Eastern European Orthodox Jews in the Russian village of Anatevka in the year 1905. It starred Zero Mostel as Teyve, had an almost eight year run and offered the world such stunning songs as "Sunrise, Sunset," "If I Were a Rich Man" and "Matchmaker, Matchmaker." The most recent Broadway revival starred Danny Burstein as Tevye and earned a best revival Tony nomination. Mr. Harnick went on to collaborate with Michel Legrand on "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg" in 1979 and a musical of A Christmas Carol in 1981; Mary Rodgers on a version of "Pinocchio" in 1973; Arnold Black on a musical of "The Phantom Tollbooth"; and Richard Rodgers on the score to "Rex" in 1976, a Broadway musical about Henry VIII. - Billboard, 6/24/23.

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Favorite Seventies Artists In The News

Posted by Administrator on December 22nd, 2022

Documentaries produced in 2022 on '70s artists David Bowie and Leonard Cohen are among the 15 documentaries that were shortlisted for the Oscar for Best Documentary Film on Dec. 21. Moonage Daydream explore's the creative and musical journey of David Bowie, while Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, A Song looks at the life of Leonard Cohen through the prism of "Hallelujah," one of the most beloved songs of modern times. Although among the 144 films eligible, a film about Don McLean's "American Pie" failed to make the shortlist. Members of the documentary branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences will vote to determine the shortlist and the nominees. Meanwhile, Star Wars composer John Williams made the shortlist of 15 original scores that are vying for Best Film Score. If nominated, Williams' score for the Steven Spielberg-directed The Fabelmans would be his record-extending 48th nomination in an Oscar scoring category, and should he win, the 90-year-old Williams would become the oldest winner in any competitive category. Nominations for the 95th Oscars will be announced on Tuesday Jan. 24, 2023. The telecast, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, will take place on March 12, 2023, airing live on ABC from the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood. - Billboard, 12/21/22...... Ozzy OsbourneOzzy Osbourne has earned four Grammy nominations for his 2022 album Patient Number 9, and tells Billboard that the nods were an unexpected, yet welcome, surprise. "The whole thing shocked me," Ozzy says. "I mean, if I won anything for the album I'll be floored. That's what I like about the business. It's never short of -- I love surprise." Osbourne has been nominated for Best Rock Album for Patient, which topped the Billboard Top Rock Albums chart in September. He's also nominated for Best Rock Song and Best Rock Performance, for the LP's title track which features Jeff Beck, as well as Best Metal Performance for "Degradation Rules" with his former Black Sabbath bandmate Tony Iommi. Although Ozzy admits he "isn't good at making speeches," he's "sure my wife (Sharon Osbourne) will have it worked out. Behind me is my wife. My wife pulls my strings." Speaking of Sharon, the 70-year-old music manager and TV personality has returned home after being hospitalized in Ventura, Calif. on Dec. 16. Sharon experienced an unspecified medical emergency while filming the family's Travel channel series The Osbournes: Night of Terror, according to an Instagram post by her son Jack Osbourne. "She has been given the all clear from her medical team and is now home," Jack wrote. "As to what happened to my mum -- I'm gonna leave it to her to share about when she is ready." Sharon revealed in Nov. 2012 that she had undergone a double mastectomy due to her predisposed risk for breast cancer. In 2002, she underwent surgery for colon cancer, and her health journey was featured on the family's MTV unscripted series, The Osbournes. - Billboard/The Hollywood Reporter, 12/21/22......Theodora Richards, the daughter of Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards and his wife, Patti Hansen, celebrated the 39th anniversary of her parents on Dec. 19 with a photo posted on Instagram from Keith and Patti's 1983 wedding alongside a photo taken in the present day in which they recreated a kiss from their nuptials. "My parents had a party where we celebrated my dad being another year older and that my parents have been married for 39 years," Theodora posted. "We've been through a lot but the love is so strong and powerful that it carries us forever forward on a cloud of compassion and courage. I love you mom and dad. You guys are my inspiration," she added, also wishing her dad, who turned 79 on Dec. 18, a happy birthday. Richards also took to Instagram to share a photo from his wedding to Hansen, which featured him serenading her with a guitar while she was in her gown. "Happy Anniversary, Patricia. Love, Keith. @pattihansen," the rocker captioned the sweet black-and-white picture. Richards and Hansen met in 1979 and tied the knot on his 40th birthday in 1983; they welcomed daughters Theodora and Alexandra Nicole in 1985 and 1986, respectively. In related news, Shirley Watts, the wife of late Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts, died on Dec. 16 at her home in Devon, UK, after a short illness. She was 84. "We will miss you so much, but take comfort that you are reunited with your beloved Charlie," Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood wrote on Facebook. While Wood, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards all have had multiple wives and girlfriends, Charlie and Shirley Watts remained together for more than 50 years, until Charlie died in 2021. Their only known crisis happened in the mid-1980s, when Charlie struggled with heroin addiction, a time he would later say nearly cost him his marriage. He was otherwise regarded as so devoted to his wife, and daughter Seraphina, that journalists essentially left him alone. The London-born Shirley Ann Watts, a former art student and prominent breeder of Arabian horses who met drummer Charlie Watts well before he joined the Rolling Stones, reportedly "died peacefully surrounded by her family." - Billboard/AP, 12/19/22...... In a new rare interview with The Wall Street Journal, Bob Dylan hit out against modern TV, saying he only watches the British soap opera Coronation Street, the BBC One detective series Father Brown, and the classic TV series The Twilight Zone. When asked what form of technology he uses to relax, and whether he enjoys streaming on Netflix, Dylan said that even "two or three hours" of binge watching is too much for him. "Coronation Street, Father Brown, and some early Twilight Zones," Dylan named as shows he has enjoyed bingeing. "I know they're old-fashioned, but they make me feel at home. I'm no fan of packaged programs or news shows. I never watch anything foul-smelling or evil. Nothing disgusting, nothing dog ass." In the same interview, Dylan said he was a fan of fellow musicians Eminem and Wu-Tang Clan, as well as Royal Blood, Celeste, Leonard Cohen and Nick Cave. Although he says he does listen to some music via online platforms, he much prefers vinyl, CDs, and radio. "Everything's too easy. Just one stroke of the ring finger, middle finger, one little click, that's all it takes. We've dropped the coin right into the slot," he said. "It's all too easy, too democratic. You need a solar X-ray detector just to find somebody's heart, see if they still have one." Dylan is currently promoting his new book The Philosophy Of Modern Song, which contains commentary on 66 songs by other artists. - New Musical Express/Music-News.com, 12/20/22...... Paul McCartneyPaul McCartney has shared new reflections on the "magical" experience of headlining the Saturday night edition of the UK's Glastonbury 2022 festival on the BBC's website. Sir Paul reflected on the experience and shared new backstage photos from the night, alongside footage of his band rehearsing ahead of the set. He wrote: "Festivals are special, but Glastonbury is particularly so and it's a big event in lots of people's year. Because it had been cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to Covid, it became more important to pull it off. I'd asked Bruce Springsteen in 2020 if he'd be happy to come onboard and he said yes, and he kept his promise two years later. So that was very exciting, having him and Dave Grohl up on the stage." Of the Glastonbury atmosphere, he added: "It's a pretty impressive scene for people in the audience, but we get the whole view up on the stage with the flags and the hills going back forever, so it was quite a big deal that they said yes to joining me in that experience. Of course, up on stage I can't really see people's reactions but I love to hear them because I've found myself doing that at concerts. I went to see James Taylor once and started blubbing because it was just so lovely! I was thinking, 'Oh, I love this guy' -- I'm getting emotional even now! It's a magical thing, knowing music can do that to people." Macca continued, "We're the only animal on the planet that does that. Then you've got the spirituality of the place, knowing about the ley lines and everything else. When you have an event like Glastonbury and everyone comes together with good vibes and energy, I'm very happy to be part of that." Meanwhile, authors Allan Kozinn and Adrian Sinclair have discovered unpublished contracts in the archives of a university in the United States which appear to show that the producers of the 1973 James Bond film Live and Let Die wanted McCartney to sing the movie's theme song (which he also composed), despite McCartney and producer George Martin both telling the story that the film's producers wanted to replace Paul with a female singer on the track, assuming that the version presented to them was just a demo. "Martin wouldn't have been familiar with the terms of that contract, but Paul certainly would have," Kozinn says. "One of the things we discovered is that, if it's a good story, Paul will go with it. He didn't have any reason to assume that anybody would see that contract." - NME, 12/20/22...... While a number of musicians including Elton John, Trent Reznor, Moby, Jack White, Liz Phair and Toni Braxton have stepped away from Twitter since its takeover by controversial billionaire Elon Musk, Dionne Warwick says she wants to have a conversation with the new Twitter CEO to get an understanding of his intentions for the popular social media platform. "I have to meet him," Warwick, a beloved figure on Twitter who just celebrated her 82nd birthday, recently told People magazine. "I know a lot of people have walked away from Twitter. That's prior to knowing exactly what he's going to do. He's new to the game. His attitude is freedom of speech, which is mine as well. However, there's a way to do it," she added. "That's one of the conversations I'm going to have with him," said Warwick, whose documentary Dionne Warwick: Don't Make Me Over will be aired on CNN on New Year's Day (and will be available on streamer HBO Max after that). "What is your true intent? I understand your freedom of speech attitude but how are you going to contain it, so it does not get out of hand?," Warwick added. On Dec. 18, Musk tweeted a poll, asking users to decide if he should step down as head of Twitter. "I will abide by the results of this poll," he wrote. The results: More than half (57.5%) of the 17.5 million people to respond voted that he should step down. In a back-and-forth with followers on Sunday, Musk commented that any prospective new CEO "must like pain a lot" to run Twitter, which "has been in the fast lane to bankruptcy." Rapper Snoop Dogg also polled Twitter on Dec. 18, musing whether he should be the one to take over the job of CEO. Over 2.3 million users responsed, with 81% -- or approximately 1.7 million users -- voting that the rap giant should be the new Twitter CEO. - Billboard, 12/19/22...... The musical stage adaptation of director Cameron Crowe's '70s-themed film Almost Famous will play its final Broadway performance on Jan. 8, the production announced on Dec. 19. The musical began previews at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre on Oct. 3 and opened on Nov. 3. The closing notices of "Almost Famous" as well as other productions including "KPOP" and "Ain't No Mo" come as tourism remains down in New York and as Broadway shows grapple with higher running costs and changing audience behavior. "Almost Famous" also received mixed to poor reviews, with The Hollywood Reporter's David Rooney highlighting its "infectious energy" while asking, "Did it need to become a stage musical? Debatable." Grosses have been fairly average, with the musical bringing in $765,060 in the week ended Dec. 11, but while playing to theaters at 74% capacity. "'Almost Famous', like the music it celebrates, will endure," said producers Lia Vollack and Michael Cassel. "We look forward to the release of the cast recording on March 17, and to the many productions in communities across the country and world, for years to come," they added. The musical features a story based on a book by Crowe, a score by Tom Kitt, direction by Jeremy Herrin and choreography by Sarah O'Gleby. - The Hollywood Reporter, 12/19/22...... Stevie WonderStevie Wonder presented his annual House Full of Toys Benefit Concert at L.A.'s Microsoft Theater on Dec. 17 to a sold-out audience with special guests Trombone Shorty, Gregory Porter and Jody Watley. Now in its 24th year, the event featured Trombone Shorty who had attendees second-lining a la his native New Orleans when he joined Wonder onstage for an exuberant romp through Stevie's 1976 hit "Sir Duke." Prior to that, Jody Watley took fans on her own nostalgia tour, performing her 1989 R&B/pop hit "Real Love" before segueing into a classic from the traditional holiday special A Charlie Brown Christmas, "Christmas Time Is Here." However the night belonged to Wonder, as the Motown legend gave as good as he got from an already enthusiastic audience that became more ecstatic each time he sat down at the keyboards or piano and simply sang. Early in the show, he boosted the festive spirit already resonating around the venue when he performed "What Christmas Means to Me," singing to the original instrumental track recorded back in the '60s. Wonder also celebrated the 50th anniversary of his 1972 album Talking Book. Beginning with "You Are the Sunshine of My Life," he then saluted his late ex-wife and co-writer Syreeta Wright ("Such a wonderful spirit") with the moving "Blame It on the Sun" before closing the Book suite with an emotional turn on "You and I (We Can Conquer the World)." Before walking offstage to "Another Star," a smiling Wonder said, "I wanted to give you all everything I could give you ... I love you; God bless you -- and we are done!" House Full of Toys, presented through Wonder's nonprofit We Are You Foundation, benefits children, people with disabilities and families in need with concertgoers donating an unwrapped toy. - Billboard, 12/18/22...... Billy Joel informed his fans on Twitter on Dec. 18 that he's been forced to cancel his last concert of 2022 due to sickness and has been advised to rest his voice. "I'm disappointed to share that I'm under doctor's orders for vocal rest due to a viral infection so unfortunately, I must postpone my Monday, December 19th concert at Madison Square Garden to June," Joel wrote on his Twitter and Instagram pages. "I'm so sorry to let you know so close to show day, but I was hoping to be closer to a full recovery by now," he added. "Sadly, that hasn't happened. I look forward to seeing you in the New Year." An additional update from a spokesperson for Joel that was posted on his official website confirms that the Dec. 19 concert is currently rescheduled for June 2, 2023, and is "subject to change if it conflicts with a playoff game." Joel's upcoming list of tour dates can also be viewed on his Twitter post. - Billboard, 12/18/22...... Pink Floyd have quietly uploaded 18 archival live albums from before the band's Dark Side Of The Moon era -- as well as a five-song EP of "alternative tracks" from 1972 -- to streaming services. All 18 of the live albums are pulled from concert recordings over the year of 1972, when the prog-rockers were touring in support of their sixth and seventh albums -- Meddle (1971) and Obscured By Clouds (1972), respectively -- and, most notably, road-testing and refining songs from the following year's seminal Dark Side Of The Moon album. Six of the concerts were performed in the UK -- the first at the Southampton Guildhall on January 23, 1972, then four back-to-back shows at London's Rainbow Theatre over Feb. 17-20, and finally another London show (this time at Empire Pool in Wembley) on Oct. 21. Elsewhere, three of the albums were tracked at shows that Pink Floyd played in the US (New York, Chicago and Los Angeles), another three come from shows in Japan, two each come from shows in France and Germany, and the last two come from the band's respective shows in Belgium and Switzerland. Meanwhile, the compilation EP -- titled simply Alternative Tracks 1972 -- comprises trance remixes of "Any Colour You Like" and a mash-up of"'Speak To Me" and "Breathe (In The Air)," a demo version of "On The Run," and "ultra rare alternative versions" of "Us And Them" and a reprisal mash-up of "Time" and "Breathe (In The Air)." Pink Floyd made a similar move exactly a year ago, uploading 12 rare concert recordings -- spanning January of 1970 to November of 1971 - to streaming services on Dec. 16, 2021. With these new 18 album going live recently, last year's batch were deleted from the band's streaming catalogue. It's unknown if they plan to have these be similarly limited -- none of the band's members have spoken publicly about the release. 2022 has been a busy year for Pink Floyd, starting with the release of their Ukraine benefit single, "Hey Hey Rise Up," back in April (with a subsequent CD and vinyl release). September then saw the long-awaited release of Pink Floyd's Animals remaster, four years after it was first announced. A month prior, it was reported that Pink Floyd would be selling their back-catalogue for £400 million. - NME, 12/18/22...... A private jet owned by Elvis Presley will be auctioned off in January. The King bought the 1962 Lockheed JetStar in 1976 for $840,000 -- the equivalent of $4.4 million in today's dollars. It seats nine and has a Kenmore microwave and a TV with a VCR on board. - People, 12/19/22...... Kim_SimmondsKim Simmonds, founder of the British blues-rock band Savoy Brown died on Dec. 13, according to a statement released by the band on Twitter. He was 75 years old. "Kim Simmonds passed away peacefully in the evening of December 13th -- may he rest in peace. You've gone away/ We'll get by somehow/ Just right now/ All we can do is cry," the group shared. "Please note one of Kim's last requests was to thank the fans of Savoy Brown -- your support was and shall always be immensely appreciated." While Simmonds initially formed The Savoy Brown Blues Band in 1965 with singer Brice Portius, bassist Ray Chappell, drummer Leo Mannings, keyboard player Trevor Jeavons and harmonica player John O'Leary, he remained the sole constant member of the band throughout nearly six decades of lineup changes. Throughout their career, the band released more than 40 studio albums -- with 1972's Hellbound Train their best seller in the US at No. 34 -- and their two most recent -- Ain't Done Yet and Taking the Blues Back Home: Live in America -- arrived in 2020. In August, Simmonds announced that he had been fighting stage 4 colon cancer -- specifically, a a rare form called signet cell colon cancer -- for more than a year. He noted that the chemotherapy he was receiving had made it difficult for him to play his instrument due to the side effect of "peripheral neuropathy which has now deadened the nerves in my fingers and hands (feet too)." At the time, Simmonds explained that his type of cancer "is rarely found early enough to provide a chance for cure, and occurs in less than one percent of cases." - Billboard, 12/19/22...... Rick Anderson, bassist and founding member of the San Francisco-based rock band The Tubes, died on Dec. 16, according to a statement shared by the band on Instagram. He was 75. "We lost our brother on 12/16/22," the band captioned a series of photos on Dec. 18. "Rick brought a steady and kind presence to the band for 50 years. His love came through his bass. RIP." The statement did not offer any additional details regarding Anderson's death, which comes eight months after the April passing of Tubes member Re Styles, who sang with the group. The Tubes formed on March 22, 1972, in San Francisco, and was the combined forces of two Phoenix bands that came from the city to California in 1969. The first band, called The Beans, included Anderson as well as other members Bill Spooner, Vince Welnick and Bob McIntosh. The second band, the Red White and Blues Band, featured members Prairie Prince, Roger Steen, and David Killingsworth. With The Tubes, Anderson opened for Led Zeppelin in 1973. Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman was instrumental in helping the band get signed, suggesting to the group's A&R to pitch to his own solo label, A&M Records. After getting signed, The Tubes released its self-titled debut album in 1975. Tracks "White Punks on Dope" and "What Do You Want From Life?" became staples in the band's catalogue, with the former being covered by Mötley Crüe in 2000. - Billboard, 12/20/22...... Terry Hall, the charismatic lead vocalist of British ska revivalists The Specials, has died at 63. The band announced Hall's death on Instagram on Dec. 19, revealing that the singer died after an undisclosed "brief illness." "It is with great sadness that we announce the passing, following a brief illness, of Terry, our beautiful friend, brother and one of the most brilliant singers, songwriters and lyricists this country has ever produced, the band said in a statement. "Terry was a wonderful husband and father and one of the kindest, funniest, and most genuine of souls. His music and his performances encapsulated the very essence of life & the joy, the pain, the humour, the fight for justice, but mostly the love. He will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him and leaves behind the gift of his remarkable music and profound humanity." One of the leading lights of the late '70s British ska revival, The Specials (originally billed as Special AKA) formed in Coventry, England, in 1977, with Hall replacing original singer Tim Strickland in the group notable for its multiracial makeup. Coinciding with the burgeoning "Rock Against Racism" movement in the U.K. at the time, the band members made a statement in their rude boy two-tone suits and porkpie hats and blasted out of the gate on their Elvis Costello-produced self-titled debut on their 2 Tone label, which featured their signature cover of Dandy Livingstone's 1967 single "A Message to You Rudy." Terence Edward Hall was born on March 19, 1959, in Coventry and began his singing career in local punk bands as a teenager before joining The Specials and splitting vocal duties with the excitable Neville Staple. Among those paying tribute to Hall on social media include Staple, Costello, Billy Bragg, Boy George, Belinda Carlisle and Jane Wiedlin. - Billboard, 12/20/22...... Charlie Gracie, an early rockabilly singer and guitarist best known for his 1957 No. 1 pop hit "Butterfly" and who influenced a generation of 1960s rock stars, died of as yet undisclosed causes on Dec. 16. He was 86. Mr. Gracie's death was confirmed by ABKCO Records, which is home to the catalog of Cameo Records, the Philadelphia label that Gracie recorded his biggest hits for. The South Philadelphia native, born Charles Antony Graci on May 14, 1936, was discovered by Cadillac Records owner Graham Prince after the then 15-year-old singer performed on a local radio show, leading to a series of early singles ("Rockin' n' Rollin'," "Boogie Woogie Blues," "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter" and a deal with Cameo, which released his breakthrough 1957 Billboard No. 1 pop chart hit and signature tune, the rockabilly burner "Butterfly." The song led to tours with Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry, The Everly Brothers, Bo Diddley and Eddie Cochran, as well as a starring role in the 1957 musical romance Jamboree as himself. The hits continued apace, with late 1950s charting tracks including "Fabulous," "Ninety-Nine Ways" and "Cool Baby" charting in the U.S. and England, where Mr. Gracie would take his place as an early influence on a generation of soon-to-be global superstars. Following his run on Cameo, Mr. Gracie cycled through a series of smaller label homes and kept touring for the next 50+ years, including opening a handful of dates for Van Morrison on his 2000 U.S. West coast tour and releasing his last album, Angel on My Shoulder, in 2015. He was also the subject of a PBS documentary, Fabulous!, in 2007. - Billboard, 12/19/22...... Franco HarrisNFL legend Franco Harris, the Pittsburgh Steeler eternally known for his "Immaculate Reception" during an AFC Divisional NFL football playoff game in Pittsburgh on Dec. 23, 1972, died on the morning of Dec. 21. He was 72, just two days before the 50th anniversary of his legendary catch. Harris' son, Dok, told the AP that his father died overnight, and no cause of death was given. Harris ran for 12,120 yards and won four Super Bowl rings with the Steelers in the 1970s, a dynasty that began in earnest when Harris decided to keep running during a last-second heave by Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw in a playoff game against Oakland in 1972. "That play really represents our teams of the '70s," Harris said after the "Immaculate Reception" was voted the greatest play in the league's first 100 years in 2020. While the Steelers fell the next week to Miami in the AFC championship, Pittsburgh was on its way to becoming the dominant team of the 1970s, twice winning back-to-back Super Bowls, first after the 1974 and 1975 seasons and again after the 1978 and 1979 seasons. Born in Fort Dix, N.J., on March 7, 1950, Harris played collegiately at Penn State, where his primary job was to open holes for backfield mate Lydell Mitchell. The Steelers, in the final stages of a rebuild led by Hall of Fame coach Chuck Noll, saw enough in Harris to make him the 13th overall pick in the 1972 draft. Despite all of his success, his time in Pittsburgh ended acrimoniously when the Steelers cut him after he held out during training camp before the 1984 season. Noll, who leaned on Harris so heavily for so long, famously answered "Franco who?" when asked about Harris' absence from the team's camp. Harris signed with Seattle, running for just 170 yards in eight games before being released in midseason. He retired as the NFL's third all-time leading rusher behind Walter Payton and Jim Brown. "I don't even think about that (anymore)," Harris said in 2006. "I'm still black and gold." Harris remained in Pittsburgh following his retirement, opening a bakery and becoming heavily involved in several charities, including serving as the chairman of "Pittsburgh Promise," which provides college scholarship opportunities for Pittsburgh Public School students. "From his rookie season, which included the Immaculate Reception, through the next 50 years, Franco brought joy to people on and off the field. He never stopped giving back in so many ways. He touched so many, and he was loved by so many," team President Art Rooney II said in a statement. - AP, 12/20/22.

Elton John has shared his favorite music from 2022 on his Apple Music 1 Rocket Hour radio show, which airs live on Saturdays at 5:00 p.m. GMT. Sir Elton included his best-of-the-year picks in a playlist as a way to round off the year, with tracks by Burna Boy, Let's Eat Grandma, Marcus Mumford, Stormzy, Oliver Slim, Cat Burns and The Linda Lindas making the list. "With the Rocket Hour we just try and give people exposure by playing and interviewing them. It's something I've been doing now for over six years. I haven't grown tired of it. I love it," John said. "The new music makes me feel fantastic. It inspires me. So I have to thank all the new artists, and all the old artists that we play on the show, because we don't just play new artists. But every week that I do the show is such a pleasure for me, so thank you," he added. Meanwhile, as the 75-year-old musician seeks new ways to connect with fans as he looks ahead to the end of his touring life in Sept. 2023, he has announced he's teamed up with Roblox for a 10-minute virtual live experience called "Elton John Presents: Beyond the Yellow Brick Road." Elton says he thinks the metaverse is "perfect" for the next stage of his career: "Throughout my career, I've always been interested in finding new ways to connect with my fans worldwide. As I finish touring, Roblox and the metaverse are perfect for this next stage of my life; it's a new, innovative way for me to express my love of music, fashion, and the limitless creativity that comes from both." Elton added he was introduced to the platform by his and husband David Furnish's young sons, Zachary, 11, and Elijah, nine, and he's very excited about what he can do with it. He told Hype Beast: "I was first introduced to the platform through my two sons and thought it was incredibly inspiring; I had never seen anything like it!" - New Musical Express/Music-News.com, 12/16/22...... Daisy Edgar-Jones and Carole KingActress Daisy-Edgar Jones, who gained notoriety starring in the 2020 Irish romantic psychological drama Normal People, is set to play legendary singer-songwriter Carole King in a new King biopic titled Beautiful. "Daisy has a spirit and energy that I recognised as myself when I was younger," King told Variety of Edgar-Jones' casting in the film. "She's a tremendous talent and I know she's going to give a great performance." Beautiful features many of King's hits, including "One Fine Day," "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman," "I Feel The Earth Move," "You've Got A Friend And More" among many others, and producer Sony has obtained rights to use both King's songs and life rights for the artist and others featured in the show. The film is set to be directed by Lisa Cholodenko (The Kids Are Alright, Laurel Canyon, Cavedweller), from a script by Cholodenko and Stuart Blumberg. Edgar-Jones most recently starred in Sony's Where The Crawdads Sing, based on the 2018 book by Delia Owens. - NME, 12/16/22...... Ozzy Osbourne has narrated the opening to a new holiday charity single by Evamore called "The Christmas Time." Ozzy speaks for the nearly three-minute long intro to the song, which features musical accompaniment from Pink Floyd and ex-Duran Duran members and has been shared on YouTube. Evamore is a concept band created by The Evamore Project "to record unique, atmospheric songs utilising narrative, lyrics and musicianship to convey true stories," and "The Christmas Time" is its latest work for the UK's Cancer Awareness Trust. The organization premiered the song on its website ahead of the song's release, and it has since been shared on the organisation's cancer resource website and app The Cancer Platform alongside information on how to show your support. "This Christmas Time" was recorded at Abbey Road, and features Nick Mason (Pink Floyd), Andy Taylor (ex-Duran Duran), and Noddy Holder (Slade), among others. The Cancer Platform is a free-to-use global website and app for everyone affected by cancer that puts trusted information, services and products all in one place. The full platform will launch in 2023. - NME, 12/16/22...... The Rolling Stones announced on Dec. 16 that they'll be livestreaming a star-studded 2012 gig to celebrate the release of their forthcoming GRRR Live! concert album. The show, which took place in December 2012 at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., was originally broadcast as the pay-per-view event The Rolling Stones: One More Shot. It has now been re-mixed and re-edited for a new release, which will be released as a double-album CD and a triple-album vinyl on Feb. 10. GRRR Live! will also be released on DVD and Blu-Ray. The show was notable for its long list of special guests, including Lady Gaga, The Black Keys, Bruce Springsteen, John Mayer and Gary Clark, and on Feb. 2, 2023 the entire show will be broadcast online via live stream company Kiswe, marking the first time that it'll be available to watch in more than a decade. A trailer for GRRR Live! has been shared on YouTube. - NME, 12/16/22...... Rod Stewart and Penny LancasterRod Stewart, who was previously married to actress Alana Collins from 1979 to 1984 and to model Rachel Hunter between 1990 and 2006, has revealed his current wife, model and TV star Penny Lancaster, is his first spouse to go through menopause while still married to him. Stewart, who married Lancaster in 2007, told Reader's Digest that "I hadn't seen (the menopause) before because my marriages didn't last that long. So Penny was the first." Stewart, now 77, recalled how his 51-year-old current wife would get into "blinding fits of rage" while battling her symptoms. "One night she threw utensils, so me and the boys (Alastair, 17, and Aiden, 11) gave her a hug -- and since then she has worked to let people know what it is," he revealed. Rod, who supports Penny's Let's #ChatMenopause campaign to raise awareness of menopausal symptoms, went on to encourage other men to help their partners who are going through those hormonal changes. "Men have to understand, and not just go down the pub," he said. - Music-News.com, 12/14/22...... The Pretenders have announced a short, intimate UK tour for Independent Venues Week in early 2023. Chrissie Hynde & Co.'s run of gigs kicks off at The Deaf Institute in Manchester on Feb. 5, 2023 before stops in Newcastle (Feb. 6), London (Feb. 7), Brighton (Feb. 9) and Bristol (Feb. 10). On May 25, they'll play Stornoway's Lewis Castle. The Pretenders are due to release their 12th album, Relentless, also in 2023. No release date has been given for the follow-up to 2020's Hate For Sale. Hynde last released her own work in 2021 with Pretenders' lead guitarist James Walbourne. Standing In The Doorway is a cover album of Bob Dylan songs. - NME, 12/15/22...... Cher has provided more info on the death of her actress/singer mother, Georgia Holt, on Dec. 10. After posting that her mom wasn't able to "sleep very well," Cher tweeted that she had "The truth.... She's been Sick & rallying, she then got bad, She was in so much pain. Finally she coded on way to [the hospital]. By time we Got to Hosp....The Woman who Who Was MY KICK A- MOM was No [longer] Here." Cher, 76, did not reveal any additional details surrounding her mother's illness. Cher added that she isn't sad about mother's passing because it "set her free" from her pain. "I'm not sad.... We set her free. She is no longer crying out in Pain 24/7. She is her happy,funny, Insane, beautiful Self (sic)." Born Jackie Jean Crouch in 1926, Ms. Holt appeared in several TV shows and films in the 1950s, including an episode of I Love Lucy in 1956. Cher is the daughter of Holt and John Sarkisian, who died in 1985. - Billboard/Music-News.com, 12/14/22...... Speaking of Cher, the "Believe" singer and Bee Gee Barry Gibb are among those intrigued by ABBA's Voyage hologram show, currently showing at a purpose-built arena in Stratford, east London. The younger selves of Bjorn Ulvaeus and his bandmates, Agnetha Flatskog, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad, have been turned into "Abba-tar"s (holograms) for the experience and some of their contemporaries including Cher and Gibb are now said to be considering having their own hologram show. "I know Barry Gibb has been to see it," Ulvaeus told Radio Times magazine. "I hear rumours about Metallica. I don't think Mick Jagger has been yet, but he has said something about it. Cher was going. So many of my contemporaries are now thinking, 'Is there a way we can do it?'" The 90-minute show features pre-recorded ABBA classics mixed with the band's new numbers such as "Don't Shut Me Down." ABBA played their last concert just over 41 years ago. - Music-News.com, 12/13/22...... Sting, Stevie Wonder, Garth Brooks, Dave Matthews, Brad Paisley, Susanna Hoffs and the Jonas Brothers are among the performers in an upcoming televised tribute to Paul Simon. The 81-year-old music legend and songwriting genius will be saluted by the Grammys and a star-studded bill of artists, who performed at the Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles back in April for the pre-recorded Homeward Bound: A Grammy Salute to the Songs of Paul Simon. Special appearances included Simon himself, Sofia Carson, Herbie Hancock, Woody Harrelson, Dustin Hoffman, Elton John and Oprah Winfrey. The special will air on CBS on Dec. 21 from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. ET/PT and will also be available for live stream and on demand on Paramount+. - Music-News, 12/14/22...... Gary Glitter'70s glam rocker Gary Glitter will reportedly be released from jail within the next few months after serving half of his 16-year sentence. Glitter, real name Paul Gadd and now 78 years old, who was imprisoned in England in 2015 for sex offences on three girls between the ages of eight and 13, is also set to be electronically tagged as part of his release conditions, according to Britain's The Sun newspaper. The Sun reported on Dec. 16 that Glitter may move back into his London apartment as he still has a fortune in the bank from his '70s glam rock hits. "[He] has kept his nose clean in prison and toed the line and now his sentence is almost over," a source told the paper. "The nature of his determinate sentence means the case won't go to the Parole Board. It simply means that as soon as his sentence is over, he is free to walk out of the prison gates," the source added. It is thought Glitter could be freed as early as February. "Sex offenders released from prison are closely monitored by the police and Probation Service and may be recalled to jail if they breach strict licence conditions," the UK Ministry of Justice was quoted in the paper. The publication said the Parole Board confirmed it would not be considering his case, but added Glitter will be forced to wear a tag on release. Glitter's offences range from 1975 to 1980 and included sex with a girl under 13, attempted rape of an eight-year-old, and repeatedly molesting a third girl. In 1999, he was jailed for four months for possessing 4,000 indecent images of children and in 2006 was put behind bars in Vietnam for three years after sex attacks in the country before being released in 2008. - Bang Showbiz/Canoe.com, 12/16/22...... Appearing on comedian Kevin Nealon's podcast Hiking With Kevin, John Lennon's eldest son Julian Lennon said while he loved the Beatles-themed film Yesterday, he thought the "weird" scene which showed John as an old man ruined the film for him. In the film, Lennon is played by Robert Carlyle and meets Himesh Patel's Jack in the remote countryside after he's taken a road trip. "I actually loved that film Yesterday, until they put that weird bit of an impression of what Dad would look like in his seventies and eighties or whatever, up on a Scottish or Irish island," Julian told Nealon. "It kind of threw the whole film off for me," he continued. "I didn't get [it]. It wasn't necessary for me, I don't think. And it was just weird." The entire interview can be viewed on YouTube. - NME, 12/13/22...... Peter Frampton and Paul Rodgers of Free and Bad Company will be among those celebrating A&M Records co-founder Jerry Moss set for The Music Center's Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles on Jan. 14, 2023. The show will feature performances by Rodgers, whose rock anthem "All Right Now" was a top five hit for Free on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1970, and Peter Frampton, whose double-live album Frampton Comes Alive! topped the Billboard 200 for 10 nonconsecutive weeks in 1976. "Jerry Moss has always been a music lover first," Frampton said in a statement. "If it weren't for him, Humble Pie and my own solo career might never have happened. Jerry has been a champion of mine my entire life and I treasure our friendship." The show will also feature performances by Dionne Warwick, who never recorded for A&M, but is forever linked to Burt Bacharach, who did; and Amy Grant, whose poppy smash "Baby Baby" topped the Hot 100 for two weeks in 1991. 2022 marks the 60th anniversary of A&M Records, the legendary label that Moss and Herb Alpert co-founded on a handshake and an investment of $200 from both men. Over 25 years, A&M grew into the world's largest independent record label, signing such iconic stars as The Police, Carpenters, Janet Jackson and Joe Cocker. The Moss tribute was originally scheduled for February 2022 but postponed due to rising Covid-19 cases at that time. - Billboard, 12/12/22...... Iggy PopIggy Pop has shared "Strung Out Johnny," the second single from his upcoming 19th solo album Every Loser, on YouTube. "Strung Out Johnny" paints an unflinching picture of life with addiction, detailing how seemingly innocent experiments turn into something more dangerous. "First time you do it with a friend, second time you do it in a bed, third time you can't get enough and a life gets all f---ed up," Pop sings. 'Every Loser' is due for release on January 6 and features contributions from a variety of big names, including members of Guns N' Roses and Red Hot Chili Peppers. Iggy will be supporting Red Hot Chilli Peppers on select dates of their 2023 stadium tour. Meanwhile, Pop has recalled the time he was pranked by Elton John who donned a "huge" gorilla costume while he was "really out of it" and gave him a shock. "I was really out of it. I'd done too much on the downside the night before, so I had to be injected madly to get to the point where I could just barely stand up straight and hold the mike. And then I saw this gorilla. I realised it wasn't a real gorilla, but anyone who puts on a gorilla suit looks huge," Pop recently told Mojo magazine. He then went on to admit that he felt as if the "gorilla" could "kill" him as he had no clue that it was Elton. "You don't know who's in there. It could be Billy Bob and he's going to kill me." However, Iggy said he realised it was the Rocket Man himself playing a trick on him. "He just picked me up for a little bit and gave me a little carry around. It was very funny," Pop added. - NME/Music-News.com, 12/12/22...... Rare footage of a live-action Sega game featuring Michael Jackson that was believed to be lost has been rediscovered at a car boot sale. The 1993 game, called Scramble Training -- a mix between an arcade shooter and interactive ride created for Sega World theme parks -- featured Jackson as a narrator who guided players. Jackson had a long relationship with the Japanese game company, including his inspiration for the Moonwalker franchise created by Sega based on the singer's film of the same name. Now, footage from Scramble Training is available to watch on YouTube after a tape recording was discovered at a car boot sale in the UK, according to gaming blog Gaming Alexandria. It is reportedly the first-known copy of Scramble Training's game play, with the actual game itself still shrouded in mystery. Earlier in 2022, former Sonic Team head Yuji Naka also confirmed that Jackson created music for Sonic The Hedgehog 3. - NME, 12/13/22...... Shirley Eikhard, songwriter of Bonnie Raitt's 1991 hit "Something to Talk About," has died at 67, her publicist announced on Dec. 15. The musician passed away at the Orangeville Hospital in Ontario, Canada, surrounded by family. The New Brunswick born singer-songwriter first rose to prominence during the '70s. At age 15, Eikhard's song "It Takes Time" was recorded by country/pop singer Anne Murray in 1971, and later became a hit in her native Canada. Eikhard released her self-titled debut album the following year in 1972. Several songs of Eikhard's would go on to be covered by popular musicians, most notably Bonnie Raitt and Cher, and she struck gold after penning "Something to Talk About" in the '80s. Raitt released the song as the first single from her 1991 album, Luck of the Draw. The track was a hit and spent a total of 20 weeks on the all-genre Billboard Hot 100 hit, peaking at No. 5 on the tally. The tune would ultimately win Raitt the best pop vocal performance, female award at the 1991 Grammy Awards, and was also nominated in the record of the year category. For Cher, Eikhard's track "Born With the Hunger" would be rerecorded and released for the singer's 2000 album Not Commercial. Eikhard also wrote "Lovers Forever" with Cher for the 1994 film Interview With the Vampire; the track is featured on Cher's 2013 studio album Closer to the Truth. Eikhard's songwriting ability earned her two JUNO Awards for best country female artist in 1973 and 1974. "Something to Talk About" led to her induction into the Canadian Songwriter's Hall of Fame in Oct. 2020. - Billboard, 12/15/22...... Dino DanelliDrummer Dino Danelli, an original member of 1960s New Jersey rock group The Rascals, has died at 78. His death was confirmed by Rascals archivist and friend Joe Russo on Danelli's Facebook page. "To know Dino, you must understand that art was his life. Art, music and film consumed his mind and his heart," Russo wrote. "He was an insomniac, sometimes staying awake for days, because he was always writing, reading, painting, drawing, watching films. He was beyond private and for someone who many consider one of the greatest drummers of all time, humble to a fault," Russo added. Russo said the drummer who manned the kit for the Rascals from 1965-1971 -- and also performed with E Street Band member and solo rocker "Little" Steven Van Zandt's Disciples of Soul from 1982-1984 -- was the "most private person I knew." While he did not disclose a cause of death, Russo wrote that Danelli was "acutely disappointed" about the "abrupt" conclusion of the Rascals' 2013 "Once Upon a Dream" reunion tour and he noted that after it fell apart the drummer was "almost obsessed" with trying to find a way to "keep the ball rolling" as his health began to decline. Born in Jersey City on July 23, 1944 and formed the Young Rascals (as they were originally known) with singer Eddie Brigati, keyboardist Felix Cavaliere and guitarist Gene Cornish in 1964. Driven by Danelli's swinging, high-energy drum sound, the band scored nine Billboard Hot 100 singles, including their signature No. 1 1966 hit "Good Lovin'," as well as the 1967 No. 1 "Groovin'," and 1968's chart-topping civil rights anthem "People Got to Be Free," written by Brigati and Cavaliere, which touched a nerve in the wake of the assassinations that spring of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy. The band -- who shortened their name to just The Rascals in 1968 as they moved away from their more eclectic garage soul vibe to a more psychedelic sound -- was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. After the departure of Brigati and Cornish in the early 1970s, Danelli and Cavaliere carried on and released two more albums to diminishing returns before breaking up in 1971. Danelli formed the group Bulldog with Cornish that year and the duo released a pair of albums before breaking up three years later. Danelli then bounced around, playing with Mountain's Leslie West and the short-lived power pop act Fotomaker before joining Van Zandt's band in the early 1980s and playing on the groups first two records, 1982's Men Without Women and 1984's Voice of America. The Rascals reformed in 1988 briefly, with all four original members on hand for their Rock Hall induction in 1997 and then again for a run of shows entitled "One Upon a Dream" in 2012-2013 -- which was co-produced and co-written by Van Zandt -- before taking that show on the road for a North American run. In a Facebook message, Cornish wrote, "It is with a broken heart that I must tell you of the passing of Dino Danelli. He was my brother and the greatest drummer I've ever seen. I am devastated at this moment. Rest In Peace Dino I love you brother." - Billboard, 12/16/22...... Stuart MargolinActor Stuart Margolin, who won back-to-back Emmys for his recurring role as Evelyn "Angel" Martin in The Rockford Files and racked up more than 120 career screen credits, died on Dec. 12, his stepson Max Martini said on social media. He was 82. In an Instagram post, Martini said Mr. Margolin was a "profoundly gifted step-father that was always there with love and support for his family. RIP Pappy. Keep 'em cold." He did not provide a cause of death or other details, however it has been reported by other sources Mr. Margolin died of complications from pancreatic cancer. Mr. Margolin won Emmys in 1979 and 1980 for the respective fifth and sixth seasons of NBC's The Rockford Files, playing the former cellmate of Jim Rockford (James Garner). Appeared in more than three dozen episodes, including the series' first and last, his shady-but-endearing character constantly sought Rockford's help after getting mixed up with former criminal associates. He also appeared with Garner on the short-lived Western Nichols, which last one season on NBC in 1971-72. Mr. Margolin and Garner would also reteam for another NBC Western after Rockford, ended. Bret Maverick was based on Maverick, the 1957-62 series starring Garner -- who left in 1960 -- as a wisecracking, dapper ladies man and cardsharp. Mr. Margolin co-starred as Philo Sandine, an Indian scout-slash-con man that wasn't too far removed from his later Angel character. The series lasted one season in 1981-82 and aired in reruns on NBC in 1990. Mr. Margolin began his career in the early 1960s, doing guest shots on such popular series as The Fugitive, Ben Casey and Alfred Hitchcock Presents. He continued to appear on TV throughout that decade in memorable and enduring shows including Ironside, The Virginian, The Monkees, Bewitched, The F.B.I. and The Partridge Family. He also became a familiar face on the randy anthology comedy Love, American Style, appearing in more than two dozen episodes from 1966-73. Mr. Margolin landed another 1980s series-regular role in the NBC sitcom Mr. Smith, playing the boss of a character who was charged with keeping track of the title character -- a talking orangutan who is America s latest secret weapon. The high-concept but low-rated show lasted a handful of episodes in fall 1983. After that, Mr. Margolin settled into mostly character-actor mode, guesting on such series as Hill Street Blues, Crazy Like a Fox and The Tracey Ullman Show. He did land one more regular role, on the Canadian dramedy Mom, P.I., playing a cynical private investigator who hires a widowed waitress (Rosemary Dunsmore) as an assistant. It aired two seasons from 1990-92. Mr. Margolin continued to work in TV for the next three decades, with guest credits on popular shows including Touched by an Angel, 30 Rock and NCIS, along with a recurring role on Beggars and Choosers. He also did some film work, mostly during the 2000s and 2010s. Among his final credits was a role in 2018 -- the revived Fox sci-fi drama The X Files. - Deadline.com, 12/12/22.