Posted by Administrator on February 10th, 2025
After announcing his first U.S. tour dates for 2025 at the end of January, Bob Dylan has unveiled a much lengthier list of dates for the next seven months for his ongoing "Rough and Rowdy Ways" tour, which also include a number of shows as part of the 2025 installment of the "Outlaw Music Festival" tour, where he will play alongside Willie Nelson, Billy Strings and others. Dylan's tour will kick off on Mar. 25 in Tulsa, Okla., also visiting Little Rock, Ark. (3/26), Springfield, Mo. (3/28), Witchita, Kan. (3/29) and Topeka, Kan. (3/30). April will see the folk rock icon play 15 shows in mostly medium-sized cities, with approximately half that amount in May, June, July, August and September as part of the Outlaw Music Festival. The tour will wrap on Sept. 19 in East Troy, Wisc. - New Musical Express, 2/9/25......
As part of the huge wave of releases for Record Store Day on Apr. 12, previously unreleased performances from John Lennon's post-Beatles final full-length solo concerts will be released on vinyl as Power To The People - Live At The One To One Concert, New York City, 1972. The special 180-gram yellow vinyl will feature performances by John and Yoko Ono' Plastic Ono Band, backed by the NYC group Elephant's Memory, from their pair of "One to One" benefit concerts at Madison Square Garden in New York City. John and Yoko played a matinee and evening performance to a total of 40,000 people on Aug. 30, 1972, to benefit children with special needs, and raised a whopping $1.5 million, with some of the money raised going to the Willowbrook State School in Staten Island, N.Y., which was infamous for its poor conditions. The historical event, two years after the dissolution of the Beatles, also saw performances by the likes of Stevie Wonder and Roberta Flack. Produced by the couple's son, Sean Ono Lennon, the four tracks have been remixed and re-engineered from the original multi-track tapes by Paul Hicks and Sam Gannon. They include the previously unreleased performances of "Well Well Well," "Cold Turkey" and Yoko's "Don't Worry Kyoko (Mummy's Only Looking For A Hand In The Snow)," while "Instant Karma! (We All Shine On)" has been newly remixed. The release is limited to just 5500 copies worldwide, and more info can be found on recordstoreday.com. Meanwhile, the One To One concerts are explored in great detail in the forthcoming film, One to One: John & Yoko. Directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Kevin Macdonald (The Last King of Scotland, Marley), the documentary is an expansive look at the 18 months John and Yoko spent living in Greenwich Village in the early 1970s and delivers never-before-seen material and newly restored footage of John's only full length, post-Beatles concert. The film will air on HBO in the US and will be available to stream on Max in late 2025. - Music-News.com, 2/7/25...... Celebrated Canadian singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie has had her appointment to one Canada's highest honors -- The Order of Canada -- terminated by the country's Governor General following an investigation into Indigenous ancestry. Sainte-Marie had claimed she believed she was born on the Piapot First Nation reserve in Saskatchewan and had been adopted by the Santamaria family that raised her in Wakefield, Mass., attributing her adoption to the "Sixties Scoop," a period in the 1960s when many Indigenous babies were taken from their parents and adopted by white families. In the fall of 2023, however, a CBC Fifth Estate investigation cast doubt on her claims of Indigenous ancestry. The investigation produced a birth certificate for Sainte-Marie which lists her presumed adoptive parents as her birth parents. It also features interviews with Sainte-Marie's family members calling her claim to Indigenous identity "an elaborate fabrication," and contextualizes Sainte-Marie's career within a phenomenon of high-profile public figures who have fabricated Indigenous identity. As a young adult, Sainte-Marie was adopted by Emile Piapot and Clara Starblanket Piapot of the Piapot First Nation in Saskatchewan in accordance with Cree law and customs. Sainte-Marie issued a statement around the investigation. "For a long time, I tried to discover information about my background," she wrote. "Through that research what became clear, and what I've always been honest about, is that I don't know where I'm from or who my birth parents were, and I will never know." In a follow-up statement, she affirmed her truth. "I have never lied about my identity," Sainte-Marie said, adding that the investigation included "mistakes and omissions." In her six-decade career, Sainte-Marie has won an Oscar and a Golden Globe (both for co-writing "Up Where We Belong" from An Officer and a Gentleman), the Polaris Music Prize, seven Juno Awards (including four in categories honoring aboriginal or indigenous music), and the Governor General's Performing Arts Award, in addition to her appointment to the Order of Canada. She was first appointed to the Order in 1997, and in 2019 was made a Companion of the Order, the highest level within the Order. The 83-year-old artist also had a top 40 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1972 with "Mister Can't You See." - Billboard, 2/10/25......
David Johansen, the co-founder and frontman of the iconic '70s punk band The New York Dolls, has revealed that he is battling a brain tumor and stage four cancer. The news came via a Sweet Relief Fund in his name seeking to raise money for the singer's ongoing care in which his daughter, Leah Hennessey, revealed the extent of her 75-year-old father's health issues. "Five years ago at the beginning of the pandemic we discovered that David's cancer had progressed and he had a brain tumor," Leah wrote. "There have been complications ever since. He's never made his diagnosis public, as he and my mother Mara are generally very private people, but we feel compelled to share this now, due to the increasingly severe financial burden our family is facing." She noted that in a further blow, the singer known for his outrageous, high-energy stage persona, fell down a flight of stairs after Thanksgiving and broke his back in two places. Following a week-long hospital stay and a successful surgery, Leah said her dad has been bedridden and incapacitated since then and "due to the trauma, David's illness has progressed exponentially and my mother is caring for him around the clock." The family said that their most immediate needs are for full-time nursing, physical therapy and funding for day-to-day vital living expenses, aimed at helping Johansen regain "some mobility and independence." Donations to Johansen can be made via the Sweet Relief Musicians Fund at sweetrelief.org. Johansen has long been a beloved figure on the New York scene, beginning with his time as the lead singer and provocateur of the gender-bending New York Dolls. That band -- which also featured guitarists Johnny Thunders and Sylvain Sylvain, bassist Arthur Kane and drummer Jerry Nolan -- emerged from the fertile underground New York rock scene in the early 1970s, releasing a pair of albums in 1973 and 1974 that helped set the template for the punk revolution and, later, inspired the lipstick and Aqua Net late 1980s hair metal scene. In addition to the occasional reunion with the Dolls over the years, Johansen also hosted a freewheeling Sirius satellite radio show, David Johansen's Mansion of Fun and acted in projects including the HBO series Oz and the movies Scrooged, Let It Ride, Freejack, Mr. Nanny and others. He was also the subject of the 2020 Martin Scorsese and David Tedeschi-directed Showtime documentary feature Personality Crisis: One Night Only, which told the singer's life story and chronicled one of his freewheeling shows at New York's Café Carlyle. - Billboard, 2/10/25...... On Feb. 7 the estate of Prince and Netflix announced a new "mutual agreement" and the cancellation of a long-awaited documentary on the late musical legend. The estate took to social media to announce its new partnership with Netflix, which will allow the estate to "develop and produce a new documentary featuring exclusive content from Prince's archive." The statement also confirmed the cancellation of Ezra Edelman's planned Prince documentary for Netflix, which had been in development for over four years. Edelman -- best known for his work on the O.J.: Made In America documentary -- had been working on the film for the past four years after he replaced Ava DuVernay and was given extensive access to Prince's archives. In July 2024, however, it was reported that Edelman's product had been blocked and "dead in the water" after multiple disputes with Prince's estate. The late artist's estate claimed a first cut of the Netflix film was filled with "dramatic" factual inaccuracies and "sensationalised" renderings of certain events from his life, according to Variety. The deal for the documentary also called for a six-hour series but Edelman reportedly delivered nine hours, which is said to be a violation of the agreement. Prince died of a fentanyl overdose in 2016, and as he had no will, his six heirs were left to inherit equal parts in his estate. It also sparked a long legal battle over how the estate would be managed going forward. He was posthumously inducted into the Songwriters Hall Of Fame in 2024. - NME, 2/7/25......
On Feb. 5 it was revealed that the most iconic lineup of Black Sabbath -- frontman Ozzy Osbourne, guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Ward -- will play live together for the first time in two decades on July 5 at Villa Park in their hometown of Birmingham, UK. The news of the final live show, dubbed "Back To The Beginning," was announced at the home of Aston Villa by Iommi and Sharon Osbourne, the manager and wife of the iconic Sabbath frontman Ozzy, as well as on X/Twitter. All profits will go to the charities Cure Parkinson's, Birmingham Children's Hospital and Acorn Children's Hospice -- a Children's Hospice supported by Aston Villa. Fans immediately took to X/Twitter to express their excitement about the long-awaited reunion. One said: "I will be doing anything to get this ticket. Sabbath and Ozzy have raised me since a teen. They are my soundtrack to this day. And the foundation of most of the music I ever listen to. God bless all 4 of you." Other acts on the bill include Metallica, Slayer, Pantera, Gojira, Halestorm, Alice in Chains, Lamb of God, Anthrax and Mastodon, and special appearances from Billy Corgan, Duff McKagan and Slash of Guns, among many more. Black Sabbath played the final show of their last farewell tour back in 2017, wrapping up the stint at Birmingham's arena. However, in May 2024 Osbourne said that he was somewhat disappointed that the last date they played didn't include Bill Ward. The drummer had parted ways with the metal legends in 2012, due to what he claimed was an "unreasonable contract." Ozzy also addressed his declining health and shared that he might have to "accept the fact" that a live comeback would potentially not be possible due to issues such as his battle with Parkinson's disease and recovery from multiple surgeries. Speaking to the BBC, Osbourne's wife and manager Sharon explained that the show was a chance for Osbourne to end a career which has been affected in recent years by numerous cancellations and health issues. "He's doing great. He's doing really great," she said. "He's so excited about this, about being with the guys again and all his friends. It's exciting for everyone. Ozzy didn't have a chance to say goodbye to his friends, to his fans, and he feels there's no been no full stop. This is his full stop." The news of the final Sabbath show comes as the 76-year-old Osbourne revealed he can no longer walk during his SiriusXM program Ozzy's Boneyard "I have made it to 2025. I can't walk, but you know what I was thinking over the holidays? For all my complaining, I'm still alive," he said. "I may be moaning that I can't walk, but I look down the road, and there's people that didn't do half as much as me and didn't make it." NME/Billboard/Music-News.com, 2/5/25...... The new Led Zeppelin documentary Becoming Led Zeppelin premiered in IMAX theaters in the UK on Feb. 7. In May 2019, Becoming Led Zeppelin was announced via an excitable press release featuring quotes from each member. After that: radio silence -- except for news of a 7-inch vinyl "Immigrant Song" single that was confirmed in Oct. 2020 but abruptly cancelled without explanation a day before it was due out. On top of that, neither Robert Plant, Jimmy Page nor John Paul Jones attended the film's premiere events in Los Angeles and London earlier in 2025. Director/co-writer Bernard MacMahon says the involvement of the surviving Zeppelin members was "a miracle" and there's no way of telling whether the film could precipitate a potential band reunion. "That's the exciting thing about Zeppelin. There's no way of telling what's gonna happen or what's gonna go on. There's nothing predictable about them -- and that's what makes them interesting." The official trailer for Becoming Led Zeppelin has been shared on YouTube. - NME, 2/7/25...... Rod Stewart revealed on Feb. 9 that his friend and old Faces bandmate Ronnie Wood will be joining him during his prestigious Sunday afternoon Legends slot performance at the 2025 Glastonbury Festival this summer. "Rod is really excited about his big Worthy Farm gig and wanted to give a nod to the beginning of his career, so thought it would be fitting to bring out Ronnie," a source close to Sir Rod told the UK paper The Sun's Bizarre column. "He knows the pair of them together will be a huge crowd pleaser," the source added. Stewart, 80, previously declared that he is "proud, ready and more than able to pleasure and titillate my friends at Glastonbury" next summer. He wrote 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!" Rod will become the first artist to have headlined Glastonbury and later been given the Legends slot after he previously topped the bill at the festival in 2002 alongside Coldplay and Stereophonics. Fans in America can catch Stewart at Atlantic City's Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Feb. 23. - Music-News.com, 2/9/25......
The UK's Royal Mail announced on Feb. 6 that they will celebrate Australia's AC/DC with an official series of 12 special Royal Mail stamps. The stamps will mark the 50th anniversary of the band's debut album High Voltage and will depict the group in live performances in venues around the world. There will be 12 stamps in total, with four of them featuring the covers of four of the band's classic albums - High Voltage, Highway To Hell, Back In Black and Power Up. That band line-up will also be presented in a miniature sheet together. David Gold, director of external affairs and policy at Royal Mail, said: "AC/DC is one of the most successful rock bands in the world. Over the past half century, they have recorded some of the best-known rock anthems and have given us 'Back In Black' -- the biggest-selling rock album of all time. These stamps capture a sample of their electrifying live performances, along with some of their most iconic album covers, and celebrate their significant contribution to the world of rock music." AC/DC become the eighth artist to be honoured with their own dedicated Royal Mail stamp range, following on from The Beatles, Pink Floyd, Queen, The Rolling Stones, Iron Maiden, Spice Girls and The Who. The AC/DC stamps can be viewed and pre-orderd at shop.royalmail.com/acdc. AC/DC recently announced a new European tour for 2025, consisting of 12 dates across 10 countries. Kicking off in Prague on June 26, it runs through to Edinburgh's Murrayfield Stadium on Aug. 21, their first Scottish show in a decade. - NME, 2/6/25...... The heirs of two former member of the Jimi Hendrix Experience say Sony owes them millions, and now their lawsuit is headed to trial after a UK court rejected Sony's appeal. The estates of bassist Noel Redding and drummer Mitch Mitchell say they own a share of the rights to three albums created by the trio's JHE, and they've been battling in court with Sony and Experience Hendrix LLC for more than three years to prove it. In a ruling on Feb. 6, the U.K.'s Court of Appeal upheld a decision issued in 2024 that said the dispute must be decided at trial, rejecting Sony's request to overturn that ruling and dismiss the case: "In my judgment the judge was correct," Lord Justice Richard Arnold wrote in the new ruling. In a statement celebrating that ruling, a rep for Redding and Mitchell's heirs say that their case is now scheduled to proceed to trial in December -- more than four years after they first sued. "Noel and Mitch first issued their complaint in November 2021 and after the latest delaying tactic of Sony to deny them justice the case now moves to a full trial," said Edward Adams, a director for the heirs. "We retain our faith in the justice system that they and [Experience Hendrix] will be finally held fully to account at that time." A spokesperson for Sony did not immediately return a request for comment on the ruling. - Billboard, 2/6/25...... Neil Young announced on his website on Feb. 5 that he's eying an April release for his debut album with his new band The Chrome Hearts. The Chrome Hearts, as Young himself describes, "reconfigures musicians he has worked with before," with guitarist Micah Nelson, bassist Corey McCormick, drummer Anthony Logerfo, and organist Spooner Oldham comprising the lineup. While Nelson, McCormick, and Logerfo have performed with Young as members of Promise of the Real, Oldham has worked with Young for decades, appearing on records such as 1978's Comes a Time and 1992's Harvest Moon. Young added that the record is now in the mastering stage for vinyl, CD, and digital copies that are expected to be released in only a couple of months. "I am very happy and relieved to have ths [sic] done in the short time it took," he explained. "The album art has been completed and handed in with Jenice Heo. I am working on the lyric sheets now, hoping to hand-write the words and get them in, in time. It is a happy feeling I have today, knowing I have made an album I think people will enjoy. I hope it's out in April. That would be pretty fast," he added. Young and The Chrome Hearts will also be performing at England's Glastonbury Festival in June. - Billboard, 2/5/25......
Donny Osmond is set to share the stage with a younger version of himself from 1972 "thanks to some mind-blowing AI and CGI technology." The Osmonds star, 67, has shared introduced his new "co-star" for the remaining dates of his solo residency at Harrah's Las Vegas -- an avatar of 14-year-old teenage heartthrob Donny. In an Instagram video introducing "AI Donny," he said: "I have a new co-star at my Las Vegas residency, and we are going to be making history together. Can you imagine sharing the stage with your 14-year-old-self? Well, it's happening, thanks to some mind-blowing AI and CGI technology, I'm going to be talking and singing with Donny Osmond, you know the one from 1972." Donny is then joined by the avatar and asks him: "What does it feel like to sing with yourself 50 years in the future?" The young Donny said it was like performing with his "grandpa." To which, the real Donny replied: "You're my grandson, Daxton Osmond." At a click of the fingers, Donny and Daxton's faces interchanged. The "Puppy Love" hitmaker started his residency at Harrah's in Las Vegas back in 2021 and it will wrap in June. Speaking about the rise in the use of AI (artificial intelligence), Donny previously told Fox News Digital: "AI is a tool, not a substitute. So, I love the prospects of AI. I love what it can do for me as a producer, as an artist -- as a tool. And that's it." - Music-News.com, 2/7/25...... Guitarist Mike Ratledge, a co-founder of the British psych-rock band Soft Machine, died on Feb. 5. He was 81. The news of his passing was shared by his former Soft Machine bandmate John Etheridge, who explained that the death was related to a recent illness. "Incredibly sad news that my great friend and Soft Machine legend passed away two hours ago after a brief illness," he wrote. "Mike was the backbone of Soft Machine in the early years and a man with an absolutely incisive mind -- a marvellous composer and keyboardist. A real renaissance man -- so talented, cultured, charming -- and a wonderful companion. We used to meet every few weeks for over 40 yrs -- a treat for me. What a loss to all of us and his sisters and wonderful girlfriend Elena, who were with him at the end." Mr. Ratledge was born in Kent in 1943 and began his time in the music industry as a teenager when he Daevid Allen and joined his band the Daevid Allen Trio. As well as that, he grew up learning piano and clarinet and went on to get a degree in psychology and philosophy from Oxford's University College. He formed Soft Machine with Allen, Robert Wyatt and Kevin Ayers in 1966, and although the members would shift over the years, he remained the longest-serving member. He left the group in 1976. The band would make a name for themselves through their psych-pop, progressive sound and blend of jazz fusion. Alongside his work with Soft Machine, Mr. Ratledge also took on work as a composer and producer, working on various projects on television and in the theatre. He also famously joined forces with composer Karl Jenkins for his Adiemus: Songs Of Sanctuary album, and continued to work with Jenkins in the following years. - NME, 2/6/25.
A year-long celebration of the legacy of Bob Marley will kick off Feb. 6 with an "Uprising Bob Marley Tribute Concert" livestream from the Marley family's Tuff Gong Studios in Kingston, Jamaica. In memory of what would have been the 80th birthday of the reggae icon, the concert features a slew of popular and new Jamaican entertainers, including Mortimer, Bugle, Kumar Fyah, Naomi Cowan, Quan Dajai, Kelly Shane, and Alexx A-Game, several of whom were featured in the 2024 Bob Marley: One Love movie. Other highlights featured in the livestream will be a countdown of the best live performances from past birthdays, stand-alone performances paying tribute, a showcase of the ongoing impact of his charitable Bob Marley Foundation organization, and more. The livestream happens on Feb. 6 from 3:00 pm ET-7:00 pm ET on Tuff Gong TV's official YouTube channel. Additional festivities include the premiere episode of Bob Marley & I on Tuff Gong TV's livestream, with more episodes being showcased throughout the year. Additional information on MARLEY 80 events will be revealed soon. One-quarter of all reggae music listened to in the US is Bob Marley's, and his Bob Marley's Legend compilation was recently re-certified 18x platinum by the RIAA. Legendis the fourteenth-biggest-selling album of all time and the third-biggest-selling Greatest Hits package in United States history. - Music-News.com, 2/5/25......
On Feb. 5 Elton John and Brandi Carlile announced details of a new collaborative album called Who Believes In Angels? that is set to drop on Apr. 4 via Island EMI. According to a press release, the album was started in Los Angeles back in Oct. 2023 and came together in less than three weeks. As for the sound, it is set to "draw comparisons with some of Elton's very finest works [as] ballads co-exist with raw rock and roll, pop songs and country-hued Americana rub shoulders with synth-heavy psychedelia." The album sees the artists join forces with long-time collaborators Andrew Watt -- who produced the record -- and John's longtime songwriting partner Bernie Taupin. Other contributors include Red Hot Chili Peppers' drummer Chad Smith, Pino Palladino (Nine Inch Nails, Gary Numan and David Gilmour) and Josh Klinghoffer (Pearl Jam, Beck). The album will also feature the 2025 Oscar-nominated song "Never Too Late," which was created especially for the Disney+ Elton documentary of the same name. The title track of Who Believes in Angels? and a making-of film can be viewed on YouTube. John and Carlile have also confirmed a special one-off concert showcasing the album at The London Palladium on on Mar. 26. Elton's last album was 2021's The Lockdown Sessions, and his last album of original material was 2016's Wonderful Crazy Night. - New Musical Express, 2/5/25...... MTV has announced a new feature-length Eric Clapton special of Clapton's 1992 MTV Unplugged performance. An all-new extended, remixed and remastered edition of the iconic session, Eric Clapton Unplugged - Over 30 Years Later, will be available to stream globally on Paramount+ beginning Feb. 12. It will also include exclusive content of the legendary guitarist/singer discussing the inspiration behind specific songs and performances with the crew just before he took the stage at Bray Studios in Windsor, Berkshire for the show, seamlessly integrated with the performance footage. A subsequently released live album of the session, Eric Clapton: Unplugged, sold over 26million copies and would also go on to become the best-selling live album of all time. The new 90-minute Over 30 Years Later film premiered in select UK and US cinemas in January, and its official trailer can be streamed on YouTube. Meanwhile, Clapton is readying to head out on the road in the UK this May, in support of his 22nd and latest album Meanwhile. He'll play three headline shows at the historic Royal Albert Hall in London, and perform at the Motorpoint Arena in Nottingham. The forthcoming dates are set to be Clapton's only UK gigs of 2025. His stop in Nottingham will mark his first visit to the city since 2008. - NME, 2/5/25...... On Feb. 5 heavy metal pioneers Black Sabbath announced details of their final-ever live show, set for July 5 in Villa Park in their hometown of Birmingham, England. During a press conference in Villa Park, Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi and Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne's wife/manager Sharon Osbourne said the show has been dubbed "Black Sabbath - Back To The Beginning" and in addition to Ozzy and Iommi will feature the other two members of the band's classic lineup, bassist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Ward, with the quartet playing together fir the first time in two decades. "It's my time to go 'Back To The Beginning' time for me to give back to the place where I was born," Ozzy said in a statement. "How blessed am I to do it with the help of people whom I love. Birmingham is the true home of metal. Birmingham Forever." Alongside Black Sabbath reuniting, the gig will play host to performances from dozens more icons of the genre, including sets from Metallica, Slayer and Anthrax, as well as the likes of Pantera, Lamb Of God, Mastodon, Alice In Chains, Halestorm and recent Grammy Award-winners Gojira. Profits from the show will go to the following charities: Cure Parkinson's, Birmingham Children's Hospital and Acorn Children's Hospice, a Children's Hospice supported by Villa Park and Aston Villa. - Billboard, 2/5/25......
Cheap Trick will be among the headliners at the upcoming Pure Imagination Fest on May 17 in Prescott, Ariz. Other headliners include Grammy-nominated artist Matisyahu, and Grammy winning hip-hop group Arrested Development. Also on the bill is the 80s ska, pop, soul, reggae and punk outfit English Beat, as well as Gone Gone Beyond, Kelsey Waldon, Ponderosa Grove, Bird and Byron, Kids In America, Pijama Piyama and Dutch Holly. Since its debut in 2022, the female-founded and curated Pure Imagination Fest has become a standout experience, seamlessly merging music, nature, and culture with an eco-conscious ethos in the traditional lands of several Native American tribes. "Pure Imagination is about more than just music," event founder Candace Devine says. "It's about creating an unforgettable experience where people can connect, be inspired, and celebrate the power of art in one of the most beautiful places in the world." The event's 2024 promo video can be viewed on YouTube, and tickets are on sale now at www.pureimaginationfestival.com. - Billboard, 2/4/25...... Van Morrison has announced he'll launch a brief UK headline tour at the Royal Concert Hall in Nottingham on Mar. 18, then visiting Birmingham's Symphony Hall (Mar. 19), the New Theatre Oxford (23) and The Subscription Rooms in Stroud (24). The forthcoming tour is described as a "unique opportunity to experience Van Morrison live" in intimate, "specially selected venues." The Celtic crooner had previously announced two homecoming shows at Whitla Hall in Belfast on Feb. 21 and 22, as well as European headline gigs in Antwerp, Brussels and The Hague. Morrison is supporting his latest album, 2024's New Arrangements And Duets, comprised of unreleased material the Rock & Roll Hall Of Famer had in his catalogue. The collection boasts collaborations with the likes of Willie Nelson, Joss Stone, Curtis Stigers and Kurt Elling. Morrison last performed live in the UK in Sept. 2024, and played a show at London's historic Royal Albert Hall last summer. - NME, 2/5/25...... On Feb. 4 The Doobie Brothers shared details on Instagram of a new 2025 UK and Ireland summer tour that kicks off on July 11 in Glasgow, also visiting London's BST Hyde Park on July 13 (opening for Jeff Lynne's ELO), Manchester (July 15), Birmingham (July 17) and London's The O2 (July 19) before wrapping at 3Arena in Dublin on July 21. The Doobies are touring behind their forthcoming studio effort, Walk This Road, set for June 6. It sees the band feature the reunited line-up of Tom Johnson, Patrick Simmons, Michael McDonald and John McFee, and will be their first LP since 2021's Libert. That band is scheduled to be inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame later in 2025. They were first inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2020, and then added to the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2004. Speaking of Jeff Lynne's ELO, support acts for the band's headlining London BST Hyde Park set on July 13 have been confirmed. In addition to the Doobie Brothers, Steve Winwood and Dhani Harrison will also be opening for Lynne and his band. Winwood is expected to break out songs from his time with bands like Spencer Davis Group, Traffic, and Blind Faith, and Harrison is expected to play selections from his famous dad George Harrison's catalogue, alond with songs from his two albums IN///PARALLEL and INNERSTANDING. In other Jeff Lynne news, ELO has also shared news of more farewell shows, taking place across the rest of the UK later in 2025. Two dates were confirmed, with the first being held on July 5 at the Utilita Arena in Birmingham, and the second at the Co-op Live Arena in Manchester on July 9. - NME, 2/4/25......
The Grammy Awards in Los Angeles on Feb. 2 featured a star-studded tribute performance recognizing producer/composer/instrumentalist Quincy Jones's varied musical achievements throughout the decades. The performance was introduced by actor Will Smith, who acknowledged his career would not be what it is without Jones, who produced Smith's debut acting gig TV series The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. The musical portion of the tribute to Jones began with legendary jazz pianist Herbie Hancock playing Jones' classic '60s instrumental "Killer Joe." Hancock was then joined by vocal powerhouse Cynthia Erivo for a show-stopping performance of "Fly Me to the Moon," which became a signature song for Frank Sinatra with Jones arranging his performance. The duo were then replaced by country star Lainey Wilson for a rollicking performance of Jones' '90s rave-up "Let the Good Times Roll." After that, Hancock was welcomed back to the keys, along with all-time great Stevie Wonder on harmonica for a rendition of Jones' version of jazz staple "Bluesette." Wonder then capped the tribute by introducing (and leading the crowd in a singalong of) "We Are the World," the all-star USA for Africa charity single that Jones produced 40 years earlier in 1985. Jones is one of the most decorated figures in the history of the Grammys, winning 28 awards over the course of his generation-spanning career -- including two album of the year wins for Micheal Jackson's Thriller (1984) and his own Back on the Block (1991). Also during the Grammys, The Rolling Stones picked up a Best Rock Album award for their 2024 album Hackney Diamonds. Accepting the trophy on the Stones' behalf, Andrew Watt, producer of Hackney Diamonds, said: "Talked to Mick [Jagger] yesterday and he just wanted to say a big thank you to the Academy from the entire band. The legendary Frankie Valli of The Four Seasons was also honored with a Special Merit Award by the Recording Academy on Feb. 1. Valli made note of how long it took the Recording Academy to get around to him. Valli has never won a Grammy, on his own or in the Four Seasons, which landed their first three No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1962-63. "This has been an incredible evening," he said. "I don't know what took so long, but that's the way it goes." - Billboard, 2/2/25...... As he attended the Janie's Fund Grammys viewing party in Los Angeles on Feb. 2, Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood opened up to US Weekly about his former bandmates Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham "I always have a fantasy that [Stevie] and Lindsay would pal up a bit more and just say everything's OK for them both. But we've had such an incredible career," Fleetwood told the magazine. This is not the first time Fleetwood has opened up about wanting Nicks and Buckingham to be friendlier. In 2024, he spoke to Mojo and shared: "It's no secret, it's no tittle-tattle that there is a brick wall there emotionally. Stevie's able to speak clearly about how she feels and doesn't feel, as does Lindsey. But I'll say, personally, I would love to see a healing between them -- and that doesn't have to take the shape of a tour, necessarily." In 2024, Buckingham shared that he would rejoin the Fleetwood Mac line-up "in a heartbeat," and Nicks has said there's "no reason" for the band to get together after the passing of Christine McVie. It was announced in 2024 that a "fully authorised," "definitive" Fleetwood Mac documentary to chronicle the history of the legendary band is in the works. - NME, 2/4/25......
Also at the Janie's Fund Grammy Viewing Party at the Hollywood Paladium, former Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler made his first return to the stage since Aerosmith's announcement that they were retiring from touring. Performing with Extreme's Nuno Bettencourt, Tyler's six-song set featured a rendition of Aerosmith's "Toys in the Attic", Extreme's "More Than Words" with Mick Fleetwood, and "Dream On" with Lainey Wilson. Joined by Aerosmith bassist Tom Hamilton and the Black Crowes' Chris Robinson for performances of "Sweet Emotion," and "Walk This Way," the high-profile set closed out with a cover of Led Zeppelin's "Heartbreaker." The performance was only Tyler's second time appearing on stage since his vocal injury. In May 2024 -- months before Aerosmith announced their retirement from touring -- Tyler performed "Mama Kin" with the Black Crowes in London. At the time, the Black Crowes were planning to resume their role as the opening act for Aerosmith's then-postponed "Peace Out" tour later in the year. While performing in Elmont, NY on Sept. 9 of that year, Tyler fractured his larynx, necessitating the postponement of shows on their "Peace Out" tour. Ultimately, these shows were canceled entirely when the band announced their retirement from touring in Aug. 2024. It's currently unclear whether Tyler's return to the live stage could result in anything more in the future, though Hamilton did speak to Boston's WBUR in January to give an update on the possibility of one-off Aerosmith appearances down the line. "Steven's healing process is going really, really well, but it goes at its own pace," Hamilton told the station. "Maybe Aerosmith will do something in the future, but it's a big if and the last thing I want to be doing is to try and push Steven in that direction. If we do anything in the future, it would come from him." - Billboard, 2/3/25...... AC/DC announced on Instagram on Feb. 3 that they're bringing their "PWR UP" tour back to Europe this summer with a 12-date run of shows as part of their ongoing global tour. The new shows will kick off on June 26 at LetHany Airport in Prague, Czech Republic, and touch down in stadiums in Germany, Poland, Spain, Italy, Estonia, Sweden, Norway and France before winding down at Edinburgh's Murrayfield Stadium on Aug. 21. The new European dates join the Aussie headbangers' first planned U.S. tour in nine years. That run is slated to hit 13 stadiums across the nation from April 10 through May 28. The shows will kick off on April 10 at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, MN, before moving on to Arlington, TX, Pasadena (CA), Vancouver, Las Vegas, Detroit, Foxborough (MA), Pittsburgh, Landover (MD), Tampa, Nashville and Chicago before winding down on May 28 at Huntington Bank Field in Cleveland. - Billboard, 2/3/25...... A special vinyl edition of David Bowie's 2003 concert album Ready, Set, Go! set for release on Record Store Day (Apr. 12) via Parlophone Records. The limited edition double vinyl LP is a live recording of Bowie's Sept. 8, 2003 interactive satellite event which took place at Riverside Studios in Hammersmith, London. The event aired in 86 theatres across 26 countries and featured a Q&A segment with Bowie himself. The one-off concert saw the rock icon perform his album Reality in its entirety for the first time ever. - NME, 1/31/25...... Paul McCartney has paid tribute to the late "beautiful, sweet" UK singer Marianne Faithfull who passed away in London on Jan. 30 at age 78. The following day Sir Paul took to his official Instagram account o share a black and white photo of him alongside Faithfull, writing. "What sad news that Marianne Faithfull has passed away." He continued: "She came into my life in the Sixties and was a beautiful, sweet 17 year old who radiated innocent joy. Then through the years I was lucky enough to run into her and to become a life-long friend. It's very sad to think that I won't be meeting her again but my memories of our encounters over the years will always bring me joy. May god bless you Marianne and guide you in the next steps of your journey - Paul." Faithfull was a key figure in the 'Swinging London' arts and music scene in the '60s, becoming one of the leading female artists during the British Invasion era. She is remembered for hits including 'As Tears Go By' and for her roles on stage and screen, and also for her four-year relationship with The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger. - NME, 1/31/25...... Speaking of The Rolling Stones, the band has reportedly scrapped plans for a 2025 UK and European tour citing complications with venues and travel. According to various reports from outlets including London's The Times, the iconic group opted against a return to touring later in 2025 following a proposed multi-million pound stop at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium being rejected, amid other shows across Europe. The outlets state that the band's remaining members, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood, were presented with multiple-date options for shows in 2025, but these were soon dismissed due to complications around suitable venues, travel and pre-existing commitments. These reportedly included visits to Paris, Barcelona, Rome and four gigs at the aforementioned Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London. - NME, 1/31/25...... An auction featuring items once belonging to the late Leonard Cohen is set to take place on February 28 in Los Angeles via Julien's Auction. The lot is comprised of 164 items, with the majority of them coming from the collections of Cohen's longtime friend Aviva Layton and romantic and creative partner Anjani Thomas. Among the items in the collection set to go under the hammer are various typed and handwritten works by Cohen including lyrics, letters, poems, postcards and manuscripts. Those items are expected to be bought for prices within the low thousands. One of the more impressive pieces that is included in the lot is one of the legendary musician's personal notebooks from 2007 which features 76 pages of notes, poems, and drafts of lyrics. The notebook is expected to sell within the $8,000-$12,000 range. An announcement of the auction has been shared on Julien's Instagram page. - NME, 1/31/25......
Joni Mitchell made a rare live appearance at the LA FireAid benefit show at the Kia Forum on Jan. 30. At the event to provide financial support for the victims of the recent devastating Los Angeles wildfires, one of the most memorable moments came as the 81-year-old iconic singer-songwriter took to the stage for a moving rendition of her hit "Both Sides Now" from her 1969 album Clouds. The singer remained seated on a gold throne as she broke out the track, and was joined by Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes, as well as Lucius, Taylor MacKall, Blake Mills, and Abe Rounds. Footage of the performance can be viewed on X and YouTube. The appearance of Mitchell comes after the legendary artist has only made a select few live performances in recent years. The most recent of which was a set called the "Joni Jam" -- her first headline show in Los Angeles in 24 years, where she broke out rarities that had not been played live in decades. Before then, she delivered a moving set at the 2024 Grammy Awards ceremony, which led to a standing ovation from the audience. - NME, 1/31/25...... Brian Murphy, the UK actor and comedian best known for his role in the 1970s British sitcoms Man About the House and George and Mildred, passed away at his home in Kent on Feb. 2. He was 92. Born on the Isle of Wight in 1932, Mr. Murphy's acting career began in the 1950s when he became a member of the pioneering Theatre Workshop. Founded by Joan Littlewood and her partner Gerry Raffles, it was dedicated to modernising theatre and reaching working-class audiences. Mr. Murphy performed in many Shakespeare productions directed by Littlewood, and acted in her only feature film, the kitchen sink comedy Sparrows Can't Sing. Mr. Murphy was best known for his role in Man About the House, an ITV sitcom exploring the dynamics of one man and two women sharing a flat together in the 1970's, which later became the inspiration for a hit American spin-off, Three's Company. He went on to star in the spin-off George and Mildred, in which Mr. Murphy played a henpecked George Roper opposite fellow Theatre Workshop actress Yootha Joyce as his wife. He is survived by his wife, Hi-de-Hi! actress Linda Regan, and his two sons. - BBC.com, 2/5/25.
As Jethro Tull released
Heart's Ann Wilson has been performing in a wheelchair on Heart's "Royal Flush" tour because she suffered a nasty fall five days before her tour kicked off. Wilson, 74, postponed Heart's 2024 tour last summer after being diagnosed with an unspecified form of cancer and undergoing surgery, but she has since completed treatment and revealed her current health woes are down to a recent tumble. During a recent episode of her After Dinner Thinks With Ann Wilson podcast, she explained: "I think some people thought that I was in a wheelchair because of cancer, which I just kicked its ass and I'm nice and clear now. It's not about cancer. It's about me being a klutz and missing a step and falling into a parking lot and busting my elbow in three places and then having to have it pinned back together with screws and all that kind of stuff." She went on to add: "In other ways, I'm perfectly fine. It's just I don't have the use of my left arm right now. So it's hard to navigate when you just have one hand and your other whole arm is in a sling. And you don't have the same balance. So I had to get used to that. And singing on stage, I really think that the pain level is still way too high for me to take it out of the sling so I chose to sit because then I can just concentrate on singing and not on keeping my balance and having somebody out there catching me when I reel to the side." Heart kicked off its current tour in Las Vegas on Feb. 28 and they will continue performing across North America this spring and summer until they wrap with a set at The Great Allentown Fair in Allentown, Penn. on Aug. 27. - Music-News.com, 3/7/25...... On Mar. 5 Pink Floyd released the trailer for the newly restored version of their concert film Pink Floyd At Pompeii MCMLXXII on
Paul McCartney is giving a little help to his late friend Joe Cocker as the "blue-eyed soul" singer is a contender for the class of 2025
Trailblazing "Godfather of Soul" James Brown has placed a new song on a Billboard chart for the first time since 1993 as "Bad," his co-billed collaboration with rapper 310babii, has reached No. 37 on the music industry outlet's Rhythmic Airplay chart dated Mar. 8. The new single samples Brown's "The Boss" from his 1973 album, Black Caesar. For Brown, who died in 2006 at age 73, "Bad" is the legend's maiden appearance on the Rhythmic Airplay chart, which launched in Oct. 1992. It's his first new recording on any Billboard songs chart since 1993's "Can't Get Any Harder," which netted a No. 76 high on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. Some of his best-known recordings, including "I Got You (I Feel Good)," "Living in America" and "Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto" banked time on digital song sales or other charts in recent years due to commercial syncs or holiday-fueled consumption. From 1958-1986, Brown accumulated his 91 Billboard Hot 100 hits, with a No. 3 career high through "I Got You (I Feel Good)" in 1965. Thanks to his storied career, Brown was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's inaugural 1986 class alongside legends such as Chuck Berry, Ray Charles, Elvis Presley and Little Richard. The official video of 310babii & James Brown's "Bad" can be viewed on
Dan Fogelberg's breakthrough 1974 second album
Joey Molland, the guitarist and last surviving member of the Beatlesque '70s rock band Badfinger, passed away on Mar. 1 while surrounded by his longtime partner, Mary, his two sons and other family members, according to a post on Badfinger's Facebook page. He was 77. While a cause of death was not specified, Molland had faced ongoing health challenges in recent years, including a recent battle with pneumonia. "Thank you, Joey for keeping the band's music alive for so long and for being a friend to us all," the Facebook post read. The Welsh band Badfinger, originally known as The Iveys, was one of the first acts signed by The Beatles' Apple Records. Molland joined the group in 1969, after the recording of their debut album, Magic Christian Music, which featured the Paul McCartney-written hit "Come and Get It." The song reached No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in 1970. Molland's first album with Badfinger was 1971's
Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page and The Black Crowes are revisiting their 1999 collaboration with an
Nick Simmons and Evan Stanley, the sons of KISS' Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, have recorded 10 songs together, and the pair recently shared photos with fans on
As the divisiveness in American politics grows increasingly sharper, veteran classic rock producer Bob Ezrin has said he plans to renounce his US citizenship and make a full return to his native country of Canada from his most recent US base, Nashville. Ezrin explained to the UK paper The Globe that the current polarized state of American politics and society is the driving force behind this move. "In the last few years, it seems as if America is split in half," Ezrin says. "The voices of a radical right have become so much louder. Conspiracy theories abound, people are armed to the teeth, and it's just a different place than the place I went to." Already a member of the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, Ezrin was recently named as a recipient of the lifetime artistic achievement award by The Governor General's Performing Arts Awards Foundation, honoured for a legendary discography that includes milestone albums by such international stars as Alice Cooper, Peter Gabriel, Pink Floyd, U2, Deep Purple, Rod Stewart, Nine Inch Nails, Kiss, Lou Reed, Taylor Swift and many more. He received a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year in 1981 as producer of Pink Floyd's
Robert John, the Brooklyn-born singer-songwriter whose inimitable voice lent itself to a number of Billboard Hot 100 hits including
David Johansen, frontman with glam rock band New York Dolls, died on Mar. 1 at his home in New York City. He was 75. "David Johansen died at home in NYC on Friday afternoon holding hands with his wife, Mara Hennessey, and daughter Leah, surrounded by music, flowers and love," his rep said in a statement. "He died of natural causes after nearly a decade of illness." The news of Johansen's death comes after the punk pioneer announced in early February that he was battling stage 4 cancer and a brain tumor. The musician was diagnosed in 2020, and after a fall that broke his back in two places in Nov. 2024, he decided to share his story. "We've been living with my illness for a long time, still having fun, seeing friends and family, carrying on, but this tumble the day after Thanksgiving really brought us to a whole new level of debilitation," revealed Johansen, who also acted and has appeared in films such as Scrooged and TV shows including Oz. "This is the worst pain I've ever experienced in my entire life. I've never been one to ask for help, but this is an emergency. Thank you." The Staten Island-born Johansen joined the Dolls in 1971, playing his first show with the group at a homeless shelter on Christmas Eve that year. Favoring simple, sloppy rock n' roll over the increasingly complex and conceptual rock music of the early '70s, New York Dolls made up for what they lacked in technical mastery and professionalism with attitude, gender-bending fashion (women's clothes and high heels) and gobs of lipstick. Gigging around Manhattan in 1972, the group steadily increasing in popularity among young, disaffected audiences looking for something different and the NYC art crowd. The group's self-titled 1973 album is a no-notes distillation of their rough-and-tumble, campy take on the straight-forward, blues-boosted rock n' roll of the '50s. "Personality Crisis" is a wild, careening send-up of self-obsessed people manufacturing drama for attention that rings as true today as it did half a century ago; "Looking for a Kiss" opens with a cheeky reference to The Shangri-Las; and while the Dolls weren't renowned for their lyricism, "Frankenstein" is a clever metaphor for the lumbering, confused and patched-together New York City of the '70s. Despite inspiring countless punks, glam rockers, heavy metal bands and Morrissey (who cites seeing the band on TV as a watershed moment in his life),