Showing posts with label Rock Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rock Music. Show all posts

Jimmy Buffett Rest in Peace He was 76


Singer and songwriter Jimmy Buffett who gained millions of fans world wide with his folksy tales of living and loving on tropical sandy beaches, frozen concoction in hand, died Friday. He was 76. 

“Jimmy passed away peacefully on the night of September 1st surrounded by his family, friends, music and dogs,” a statement on his website said. “He lived his life like a song till the very last breath and will be missed beyond measure by so many.”

The statement didn't say where Buffett died or provide a cause of death. The singer had rescheduled concerts in May, and Buffett said on social media that he had been hospitalized. 

Buffett, who dubbed his brand of music “drunken Caribbean rock ‘n’ roll,” is arguably best known for “Margaritaville,” which was released in 1977 and launched him into national fame and into the history of American music.

The song went on to inspire a brand, which included restaurants and resorts, a radio station, clothing and apparel, as well as food and drink items like beer, tequila, salad dressings and salsa. It also helped make him a billionaire, with Forbes this month placing his real-time net worth at $1 billion.

But in an apparent nod to his business pursuits in the song “A Pirate Looks at Forty,” Buffett sang that he “made enough money to buy Miami, but I pissed it away so fast. Never meant to last, never meant to last.” 

Buffett was nominated for two Grammy Awards, for “Hey Good Lookin’” a cover of the Hank Williams classic and “It’s Five O’Clock Somewhere,” a duet with country superstar Alan Jackson.

Elton John was among several stars to pay tribute to Buffett, calling him a “unique and treasured entertainer,” in a post on Instagram Stories. “His fans adored him and he never let them down. This is the saddest of news, a lovely man gone way too soon,” John wrote.  Actor Miles Teller also posted several photos of him with the singer on X, formerly known as Twitter. Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys also took to X, where he wrote, “Love and Mercy, Jimmy Buffett.”  

Fans, affectionately dubbed “Parrotheads,” were also quick to pay tribute to the singer, who was born in Pascagoula, Mississippi, on Christmas Day 1946. He was brought up mainly in Mobile, Alabama. Many cited “One Particular Harbor” when remembering the singer: “But there’s one particular harbor/ So far yet so near/ Where I see the days as they fade away/ And finally disappear.”

After learning guitar at college he attended Alabama's Auburn University before graduating from the University of Southern Mississippi he began busking on the streets of New Orleans before going on to form his first band. He later moved to Nashville, Tennessee, to work for Billboard Magazine and try his luck as a singer, the biography says. But it was in Key West, Florida, in the 1970s, that Buffett “found his true voice,” according to his website.

Fellow country singer Jerry Jeff Walker first let him stay at his Coconut Grove home, and then they drove in a 1947 Packard to Key West, he told graduating students at the University of Miami, where he received an honorary doctorate in music in May 2015.

“Needless to say, my life took a big and wonderful change towards South Florida, which has a lot to do with why I’m standing here today,” he said, while wearing flip-flops below the academic robes. Touring and recording with the Coral Reefer Band, he would go on to make 27 studio albums four went platinum and eight gold in a career that spanned more than five decades.
 

Buffett also appeared on TV and movies, wrote fiction and nonfiction books, including “Tales from Margaritaville,” “A Pirate Looks At Fifty,” as well as “Where Is Joe Merchant?,” and his work became a musical.

He popped up in the film “Jurassic World” as “running park visitor with margarita drinks,” as IMDB put it. He carried two, one in each hand. And Buffett guest-starred in the Tom Selleck show “Blue Bloods,” playing both himself and a virtual double who posed as the singer and scammed people.

A Broadway show based on his music, “Jimmy Buffett’s Escape to Margaritaville,” debuted in 2017.  In a recent interview, Buffett said his life-long love of reading came from his mother, Mary Lorraine Buffett, who also wanted him to be a writer. “I think she knew that for us to read we would see the world as a bigger place than where we grew up, which was a great gift,” he said.

He also dedicated some of his time to charity, starting the “Save the Manatee Club,” a nonprofit group that seeks to protect the large, docile marine mammals from boating injuries and harm by the actions of people.

In a 2017 interview with Men’s Journal, Buffett was asked what remained on his bucket list. “I have four things: Learn to hang ten. Go to space. Go to Pitcairn Island, where my Buffett ancestors are from. And go to Antarctica,” he said. 

The singer is survived by his wife, Jane Slagsvol, two daughters, Savannah and Sarah, and son, Cameron.



Beach Boy Mike Love afraid to perform the band’s hit “Surfer Girl,” fearing backlash!


Wow so one of ROCK-N-ROLL's greatest ever former Beach Boy Mike Love announced at a recent concert that he was afraid to perform the band’s hit song “Surfer Girl,” fearing backlash because the lyrics were “gender specific.” 

Mike Love expressed concern with a jab aimed at Anheuser-Busch (makes sense! HAHA) and the recent brouhaha surrounding the company’s brief but ill-fated partnership with trans-identifying influencer Dylan Mulvaney joking that he hoped there wasn’t “anyone from Budweiser” once again! HAHA! Love Mike Love... lol Wait... Never mind lol   “At any rate, this next song. I’m a little concerned about doing, on account of … it’s gender specific,” he began, prompting laughter and applause from the crowd. “And … I hope there’s nobody from Budweiser here … or the FBI.”

“Sorry, I apologize in advance for anything I might say or do … it’s a family tradition, you know what I’m saying?” Love joked, before adding, “This is dedicated to all the ladies.” 

 “Good for #MikeLove, who is clearly kidding here but the threat of ruinous bullying is very real for Americans who refuse to bend the knee to today’s gender mafia,” Mark Davis tweeted in response to the video. 

“The real fear is Jonah Hill bursting onto the stage like the Kool Aid man because Mike Love had the audacity to sing about his woman,” another joked.



The Jonah Hill joke appeared to be a reference to the actor’s recently-leaked text messages, in which he listed “surfing with men” as an activity that his ideal partner would not do.


On that list, Hill also included “boundaryless inappropriate friendships with men,” a need “to post pictures of yourself in a bathing suit,” and “friendships with women who are in unstable places and from your wild recent past beyond getting a lunch or coffee or something respectful.”

Critics attacked Hill for first pursuing a woman who had posted such photos of herself, calling his stance hypocritical but as Daily Wire host Candace Owens pointed out, Hill had not criticized her for posting them before but had instead asked the woman to stop posting such photos after they got together.






Aerosmith Return To Boston With Record-Breaking Fenway Park Show

The Four-time Grammy-winning and Diamond-certified rock legends Aerosmith officially kicked off their 50th anniversary celebrations at the iconic Fenway Park in their hometown of Boston, MA last night. With over 38,700 people in attendance, it was the most tickets sold to date for a show at the iconic venue.

The night prior to the show, Steven Tyler surprised fans and residents of 1325 Commonwealth Ave when he made an impromptu visit to the building, which was home to the original five members of the iconic band. Known as the “Aerosmith Apartment,” the building was one of several that hosted flashing Aerosmith-themed projections ahead of the Fenway show. The light display returned to the apartment building after the show on Thursday night and visited other locations on Boylston Street and in the Seaport District.

On September 14, Aerosmith will return to Vegas to continue their wildly successful “Aerosmith: Deuces Are Wild” residency at Dolby Live at Park MGM. Aerosmith: Deuces Are Wild is an electrifying 90-minute live performance from the band who continues to deliver one of the most innovative and thrilling performances in music. The band goes beyond the average concert, taking fans on a deep dive of their groundbreaking career with exclusive, unreleased audio and never-before-seen visuals from Aerosmith’s archives. Tickets can be purchased online at the Ticketmaster website.

Most recently, Aerosmith aired the fifth and final installment of their five-week archival streaming concert series, 50 Years Live!: From the Aerosmith Vaults, featuring rare and unreleased archival concert films from the band’s legendary archives. The concert series followed the release of Aerosmith – 1971: The Road Starts Hear (UMe). This rare recording from 1971 was recently discovered in Aerosmith’s Vindaloo Vaults and was originally only available as a limited-edition cassette and vinyl release for Record Store Day in 2021.

The heavily sought-after RSD release quickly sold out and debuted on the Billboard 200, hitting No. 2 on the Top Hard Rock Albums chart, No. 12 on the Top Rock Albums chart, No. 13 on the Vinyl Albums chart, and No. 19 on the Top Album Sales chart. In addition, the band’s official online store now features a new 1971 collection of exclusive merchandise.

Celebrating their 50th anniversary, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame members Aerosmith have sold more than 150 million albums around the world, produced genre-defining music videos such as “Amazing,” “Crazy,” “Janie’s Got A Gun,” “Livin’ On The Edge,” and “Love In An Elevator,” and launched extravagant record-shattering global tours, most recently with their smash hit Las Vegas residency.

The band has broken numerous boundaries, including becoming the first rock band with a massive commercially successful hip-hop collaboration with Run DMC on “Walk This Way” and the first hard rock band to appear during a Super Bowl Halftime Show with their 2001 performance, and in 1999, Aerosmith became the first band to have their own themed attraction at Disney World in Florida and later Paris with the launch of the Rock ‘N’ Roller coaster starring Aerosmith. – YAHOO

Singer Marilyn Manson agrees to surrender for alleged assault charges

Marilyn Manson the shock rock singer has essentially agreed peacefully to surrender in L.A. on New Hampshire arrest warrant for alleged assault, police said in statement. In a statement Friday, Gilford Police Chief Anthony Bean Burpee said Manson, whose real name is Brian Hugh Warner, will turn himself in to the Los Angeles Police Department. The arrest warrant was issued on Oct. 8, 2019.

The warrant, which the department made public on May 25, charges Manson with two misdemeanor counts of simple assault connected to an Aug. 18, 2019, incident at the Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion, an amphitheater in Gilford where Manson had performed.

Police said a videographer contracted to film the concert was in the stage pit area when she was allegedly assaulted, specifying that the incident was not sexual in nature. Burpee said the videographer had reported the alleged crime the day after the concert but that it took several months to complete the investigation.

Eddie Van Halen, legendary guitarist of Van Halen, dies from cancer at 65

My goodness another major loss for the world of music as Eddie Van Halen, legendary guitarist of Van Halen, passes away from cancer at 65… For me growing in the 80s Van Halen were GODS! I literally wanted to be Eddie for a while as I went out, and got me a Guitar like his, and started to learn how to play. I haven’t played since 1991 but that’s another story. But the bottom line is that Group along with AC/DC, Led Zeplin, and Queen were the rock bands to end all rock bands. They were it. I never got into KISS or Rolling Stones, and I was into the Beetles for a bit, and I do like other non rock bands that were soft rock & Pop groups like the Beetles, Monkeys, and later on Bon Jovi, and Guns & Roses but for me when I got into hip hop RUN DMC, Beastie Boys, Kool MOE D, Digital Underground, Tupac, Ghetto Boys, NWA, BONE THUGS, WU Tang, and well you Rap became my number 1 love. But nobody moved me musically without ever saying a word as a lead singer was Eddie Van Halen, and he was also a phenominal human being, and an overall great guy his son, Wolf Van Halen, called him “the best father I could ever ask for.” I know most of us who love our dads will say that but you NEVER heard bad things about Eddie in the press! He was for the most part a very music oriented person, and his love of music is what drove him, and when it comes to Guitarists folks I can’t think of many better. Can you?

Van Halen, helped define the rock genre from the late 1970s through much of the 1980s, and a staple of the core of the 70s and 80s rock sound, and it was copied by a lot of bands! They were real rock pioneers, and icons! So with the loss Tuesday following a bout with cancer this is just sad. “I can’t believe I’m having to write this, but my father, Edward Lodewijk Van Halen, has lost his long arduous battle with cancer this morning,” he wrote. “He was the best father I could ever ask for. Every moment I’ve shared with him on and off stage was a gift. My heart is broken and I don’t think I’ll ever fully recover from this loss.” Neither will the rest of us man… Neither will the rest of us.

Wolf Van Halen’s mother, actress Valerie Bertinelli, responded to her son’s statement on Twitter with a series of broken heart emojis. Bertinelli and Eddie Van Halen had a tumultuous relationship spanning decades until their divorce in 2007. Bertinelli later tweeted a statement on her ex-husband’s death, noting that her life changed “forever” when she met Eddie Van Halen. The actress said she would see him “in our next life my love.”

“You gave me the one true light in my life, our song, Wolfgang” Bertinelli wrote. “Through all your challenging treatments for lung cancer, you kept your gorgeous spirit and that impish grin. I’m so grateful Wolfie and I were able to hold you in your last moments.”


Bertinelli detailed some of the couple’s marital issues in her memoir, “Losing It: And Gaining My Life Back One Pound at a Time.” She wrote that she and her former husband struggled with drug addiction and engaged in extramarital affairs. Bertinelli was 20 when the two married after less than a year of dating.

“The priest we tapped to perform the ceremony gave us questionnaires so he could get to know us better and offer more personal words,” Bertinelli said on NBC’s “Today” show in 2008. “As we filled out the forms at home, we each held a little vial of coke.”

Sammy Hagar, the band’s lead vocalist after the departure of its original frontman, David Lee Roth, tweeted a photo of the pair smiling and embracing.

“Heartbroken and speechless,” Hagar wrote. “My love to the family.”


KISS frontman Gene Simmons mourned the loss of his rock contemporary. “My heart is broken,” Simmons wrote in a statement Tuesday. “Eddie was not only a Guitar God, but a genuinely beautiful soul. Rest in peace, Eddie!” Another contemporary band, Aerosmith, posted a picture of Van Halen between fellow legends Joe Perry and Steven Tyler. “Rest In Peace,” the group said, calling Van Halen a “legend.” “You will be missed!”


The band was nominated for three Grammy Awards and took home the honor for best hard rock performance with vocal in 1991 for the album “For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge.” It was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2007. “Van Halen’s jarring stage presence and virtuosic skill kicked the American rock scene into high gear,” according to the Hall of Fame. “They delivered their music with an unrelenting intensity and musicality that audiences devoured, launching them to superstardom and restoring hard rock to the forefront of the music scene.”

The group’s 1984 album, appropriately titled “1984,” included the hits “Jump,” “Panama” and “Hot for Teacher” — songs that dominated radio and MTV throughout the decade and are now considered rock classics. Rolling Stone magazine named Van Halen the eighth greatest guitarist in modern music history, sandwiched between fellow legends Duane Allman and Chuck Berry.Another guitarist named one of the greatest by Rolling Stone, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine, called Van Halen an “apex talent.”

“An unparalleled titan in the annals of rock n roll,” Morello said on Twitter. “One of the greatest musicians in the history of mankind. Rest In Peace, King Edward.”

Edward Lodewijk Van Halen was born Jan. 26, 1955, in Amsterdam. He was 7 when his family immigrated to the Los Angeles suburb of Pasadena, setting the stage for his rise to become one of America’s most iconic performers. The family didn’t even speak English when they arrived in sunny Southern California, but they all shared of love of music.

“We showed up here with the equivalent of $50 and a piano,” Eddie Van Halen said in 2015. “We came halfway around the world without money, without a set job, no place to live and couldn’t even speak the language.” Van Halen recalled that, when he was a child, his original love was for percussion. But his older brother, Alex, coveted a drum set of his — so he begrudgingly decided to pick up a guitar. “I never wanted to play guitar,” he told fans at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History in 2015. “I said: ‘Go ahead, take my drums. I’ll play your damn guitar.'” Eddie Van Halen is survived by his wife, Janie Liszewski; his son, Wolfgang Van Halen: and his brother, Alex Van Halen, who was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame with him in 2007.