Pulse Music

Zayn Writes An Open Letter To The British Prime Minister To Plea For Free School Meals

Zayn Malik has written an open letter to British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to plead for free school meals for all children from families on Universal Credit.

The former Once Direction star wrote, "I hope the government does what's right and makes the changes that are needed. Parents are already doing everything they can, but Government support is desperately needed. No parent should have to make impossible decisions like whether to buy food, turn on the heating, or go into debt."

Zayn grew up in inner city Bradford, West Yorkshire and was one of the many children who relied on free school lunches.

Cher Is Dating A Much Younger Man

Cher confirmed her relationship with 36-year-old Alexander Edwards on Twitter Sunday (November 6th).

The 76-year-old singer shared a picture of her new beau and said he treats her "like a queen" and confirmed that they both met during Paris Fashion Week.

She added that he's already met her family and that "love doesn't know math."

Metallica Salutes Early Label Heads With Special Show

Metallica saluted late-Megaforce Records founder Jon "Jonny Z" Zazula and his wife Marsha Zazula at a special show on Sunday (November 6th) at Hollywood, Florida's Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino.

The band honored the couple by performing only elections from the band's first two albums released on Megaforce -- 1983's Kill 'Em All and 1984's Ride The Lightning. As a further nod to the band's early champions, Raven -- also originally signed to Megaforce back in the day -- opened the show.

Blabbermouth reported, "Jonny Z died in February at the age of 69. Jonny died of complications of the rare neuropathic disorder chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and osteopenia. Marsha passed away of cancer in January of last year. . . A portion of the proceeds from this show are being donated in Jonny and Marsha's name to MusiCares, with Metallica's charity All Within My Hands once again supporting Feeding South Florida with a donation following the show."

Metallica's Sunday night setlist in Hollywood, Florida:

"Creeping Death"
"Ride The Lightning"
"Motorbreath"
"No Remorse"
"Trapped Under Ice"
"The Call Of Ktulu"
"Phantom Lord"
"Am I Evil?"
"Metal Militia"
"For Whom The Bell Tolls"
"Whiplash"
"Fade To Black"
"Seek & Destroy"

Encore:

"Fight Fire With Fire"
"Bliztkrieg"
"Hit The Lights"

Quickies: Ariana Grande, Kesha, Dua Lipa + More!

DR. LUKE AND KESHA HEADED TO COURT ON JULY 26TH: Dr. Luke's defamation lawsuit against Kehsa is finally going to trial. Rolling Stone reported Monday (November 11th) that a New York judge set a July 26th, 2023 trial date for the case. Jury selection for the eight-year-old case will begin on July 19th, 2023. The two have been battling it out in court since 2014 with Dr. Luke pursuing Kesha with the claim that she has smeared him with false rape allegations.

DUA LIPA OPENS UP ABOUT FIRST ACTING GIG: Dua Lipa opened up about her first big acting gig on the latest episode of her At Your Service podcast. The pop star is slated to play an undisclosed role opposite Henry Cavill in Apple TV+'s thriller Argylle. She said, "I think for me it's like baby steps. I think that's also the best way to discover yourself as well. Rather than throwing yourself in the deep end with something that maybe you can't completely tackle head on."

ARIANA GRANDE SHARES STUDIO PHOTO: Ariana Grande is back in the recording studio. The singer posted a photo from the studio of two-time Tony winner, Stephen Oremus and producer Greg Wells to her Instagram Story on Monday (November 7th).

Flashback: Boston Tops The Charts With 'Amanda'

It was 36-years-ago today (November 8th, 1986) that Boston's comeback hit, "Amanda" -- the lead single from Third Stage, hit Number One. The song, which was the band's first single since 1978, was written in 1980 and in 1984 a poor-sounding studio demo of the track briefly became the most requested AOR tune on the airwaves before a cease and desist letter had it pulled off the air.

The song, which topped the tracks for two weeks, hit Number One while Third Stage was sitting on top of the Billboard 200 albums chart during its month-long run. Amazingly, despite it being the height of MTV, no video was prepared for "Amanda," which was written by band leader Tom Scholz.

Third Stage saw the reunion of Boston co-founders Brad Delp and Tom Scholz. Delp left Scholz and Boston following the release of the band's second album, 1978's Don't Look Back, and he spent a few years working with former Boston guitarist Barry Goudreau on a number of projects, including the groups RTZ and Orion The Hunter, before returning to Boston for the sessions for Third Stage.

Boston's late-great lead vocalist Brad Delp recalled that the time off between Boston's second and third albums did not go to waste: "Hey, it's the greatest job in the world. Again, it wasn't anything that was planned, but I really took some selfish advantage of the time off -- where we were for a time, prohibited from working -- to spend time with my wife and kids. I got two kids at home and that's a luxury that doesn't happen to performers a whole lot. Usually you're out on the road and you don't see much of them." |

Flashback: Bruce Springsteen's 'The River' Hits Number One

It was 42 years ago today (November 8th, 1980) that Bruce Springsteen's fifth album, The River, started its four week ride at Number One. The album, which was released the previous October 17th, marked "The Boss'" first chart-topper and double album.

The album was co-produced by Springsteen, manager Jon Landau, Chuck Plotkin, and Steve Van Zandt -- the same team that would be behind the boards for 1984's multi-platinum Born In The U.S.A. collection. The River also gave Springsteen his first self-performed Top 10 hit, with the album's lead single, "Hungry Heart" -- featuring backing vocals by Flo & Eddie, which peaked at Number Five. The album's second single, the ballad "Fade Away," topped out at Number 20.

Sessions for The River took place at Manhattan's Power Station and ran from April 3rd, 1979 through May 9th, 1980. At one point Springsteen -- confident that he had a followup for 1978's Darkness On The Edge Of Town -- actually delivered a single-disc collection to Columbia Records for release, titled The Ties That Bind -- before pulling the album back and undertaking even more sessions with the E Street Band throughout 1980.

In 2015, in celebration of The River's 35th anniversary, Bruce Springsteen released his latest box set, The Ties That Bind: 'The River' Collection. The four-CD/three-DVD package features the full 1980 The River double album, the original 1979 The Ties That Bind single album Springsteen originally intended to release -- but scrapped, two full CD of outtakes -- a handful of which have made their way out on various Springsteen collections, a new documentary by Thom Zimny, and a live concert DVD filmed and recorded on multi-track on November 5th, 1980 in Tempe, Arizona -- plus pre-tour production rehearsal footage.

Bruce Springsteen explained how for the first time in his career, by recording a double album for The River, he could finally incorporate all the colors of his musical pallet onto vinyl: "The River was a lot wider open. In other words, a lot of different kinds of things were going to fit. Y'know, 'Cadillac Ranch,' 'Sherry Darling' -- those things were now going to fit onto the record, I decided. How I chose in the end. . . That was a record where I could've switched a lot of things around. A lot of things that ended up as outtakes easily could've made it on to the record, or I could've taken some things on the record off, y'know?"

We caught up with Steve Van Zandt and asked him about Springsteen bumping him up from merely buddy and second guitarist in the E Street Band to co-producing The River: "At that point Bruce asked me to co-produce because it was time to make a real band album. And we had suffered the comparison between our records and our live show all along, and it was just time to fix it, y'know? It took us five albums to really figure out how to capture that live thing on record. And part of it was recording live -- but that wasn't as live as Born In The U.S.A., which was literally live."

Following the creative issues of 1975 Born To Run, and the audio troubles surrounding 1978's Darkness On The Edge Of Town, Van Zandt was adamant that the band -- who had toured extensively over the previous four years -- perform the new material as a single unit rather than overdub their parts: "We wanted to go back to something that felt live. So, I had experimented and had somebody do some research and found a live room, which was that Power Station room. My wife (Maureen) actually recommended this guy Bob Clearmountain, who she knew, who was famous for working very quickly, y'know? So, I recommended Bob Clearmountain. And then we mic'd the thing in a way that that used the room; and that combined with certain things, like the way the drums were tuned -- we got it on 'Hungry Heart' I remember the day we got it; we were using the overhead (mics) and I had Bob just push the overheads up higher than he'd ever push them before, 'till you heard that sound. And that sound was the sound of the room."

Bruce Springsteen explained in the recent documentary on The River, The Ties That Bind, that some of the material that made the final cut wasn't particularly the best that he had, but more specifically the perfect combination of songs: "I mean, I like all the outtakes from this record, but I wanted things that represented the glorified bar band that we are; I wanted to get that stuff on, and then I had a lot of ballads. Now, the ballads were the, kind of the heart and soul of the record -- 'Point Blank,' 'Stolen Car,' uh. . . 'The River,' 'Independence Day'; those are the ones that are very cinematic, but they're all slow. They're all slow, y'know? And so, y'know. . . you couldn't have that many slow songs on a single album. You had to spread it out over a couple of albums, y'know?"

One track that did make the cut on The River was "Two Hearts" -- which has turned into a blood brother love fest duet between Springsteen and Van Zandt onstage: "Yeah, I think it's become important in a way that I don't think we recognized at the time. Y'know what I mean, when we cut it, it was another one of (laughs) those 75 great songs, y'know what I mean? I mean, I don't think we were really focused on it and then we kinda made it our showcase thing between me and him through they years, y'know? (It) kinda became a thing, where. . . y'know, bigger than maybe what we had pictured when we first cut it, y'know what I mean? So, y'know, that stuff's nice when that happens."

E Street Band guitarist Nils Lofgren recalled being with Springsteen the day that he finally signed off on The River: "This is back (in) 1980, 'living in L.A. and at the Sunset Marquis, I kept running into Bruce, and y'know, one morning, he said, 'We just finished mixing The River, its a double album, I'm going to listen to the latest, final mix -- wanna tag along?' And I did. He put me down in a chair between two beautiful stereo speakers and listened to the whole double album and I thought it was beautiful. I thought it was a real step forward. Some of the live stuff, they've always done live, which I'd seen them through the years, they brought to the record. A little more, y'know, loose, reckless -- but still, of course, great songs, great band."

Steve Van Zandt told us that he's particularly thrilled that Springsteen fans will finally hear what he considers among the best music the E Street Band ever laid down on tape: "Every single outtake on The River was a lost argument. I was fighting for every single one of ‘em, y'know? I mean, he wrote, basically, three fantastic albums. Y'know, and we put out a double album, but there was that whole outtake album, which is the best E Street Band album, ever -- on Disc Two of Tracks -- and now, they found another, whatever it is, eight or 10. . . and wait 'til you hear the quality of these things. You can not believe the quality!"

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band's 140-date tour behind The River started on October 3rd, 1980 in Ann Arbor, Michigan's Crisler Arena and wrapped on September 14th, 1981 at Cincinnati's Riverfront Coliseum.

The tour played four legs -- three in North America and one in Europe that took in 34 shows marking Springsteen's first major overseas outing.

The River tour was the last to solely feature the classic 1975-1981 lineup of the E Street Band featuring Springsteen, Steve Van Zandt, Clarence Clemons, Danny Federici, Gary Tallent, Roy Bittan, and Max Weinberg.

Shortly after the release of The Ties That Bind box set, Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band hit the road performing The River in its entirety. Between January 16th, 2016 and February 25th, 2017 "The River Tour" played 89 shows over four legs, hitting North America, Europe, and Oceania.

FAST FORWARD

Bruce Springsteen has just released "Don't Play That Song," the third single and video from his upcoming R&B covers collection, titled Only The Strong Survive.

The new set, which does not feature the E Street Band, drops on Friday (November 11th).

"Don't Play That Song" was originally a 1962 single by the late, great Ben E. King, hitting Number Two on Billboard's R&B Singles chart and topping out at Number 11 on the magazine's Hot 100 list.

55 Years Ago Today: Harry Nilsson Begins Recording 'Everybody's Talkin''

It was 55 years ago today (November 8th, 1967), that Harry Nilsson began recording his first major hit, "Everybody's Talkin'." Ironically, the song -- like his 1972 Number One hit "Without You" -- wasn't written by Nilsson, who was known primarily for his songwriting.

"Everybody's Talkin'," which was written by Fred Neil, beat out Bob Dylan's "Lay Lady Lay" to become the theme song to the 1969 movie Midnight Cowboy. Bolstered by its appearance in the film after bombing on the charts the year before, "Everybody's Talkin'" peaked at Number Six upon its re-release. In 1969 it scored Nilsson his first Grammy, in the Other Pop/Rock & Roll/Contemporary or Instrumental category.

In 1988 Nilsson recalled hearing Neil's original recording while picking material for his second album, 1968's Aerial Ballet, and told Song Talk magazine, "I heard that one and I said, 'That could be a hit. I could do that one.' So (producer Rick Jerrard) let me try it and when we finished the vocal, we were crossing the street, and Rick said (jokingly), 'Be very careful crossing the street, we haven't finished overdubs yet.'"

Nilsson's reading of the song inspired cover versions by such diverse artists as Dion; Crosby, Stills & Nash; Chet Atkins; Tony Bennett; Jimmy Buffett; and the Four Tops, among others.

Filmmaker John Scheinfeld, who directed the recent documentary Who Is Harry Nilsson (And Why Is Everybody Talkin' About Him)?, says that the best way to paint the truest portrait of Nilsson as an artist and a man was to have his closest family and friends talk frankly about his life and career: "You look at what all of the people in our film said, and they did love Harry for what he was and they loved him for what he wasn't. And that's really important. And you see that, you feel it -- it's a visceral kind of response in the film. I think that's what lends some power to this, that you might not get if you were taking to a rock critic who was talking about Harry's music, y'know?"

FAST FORWARD

2019 saw the release of a new Harry Nilsson album, titled Losst And Founnd. The collection, which featured Nilsson's final recordings, was finished by producer Mark Hudson and includes appearances by such Nilsson intimates as Van Dyke Parks, Jimmy Webb, and Jim Keltner -- with newly added bass work by Nilsson's son Kiefo Nilsson.

Ozzy Osbourne Is Having Second Thoughts About Leaving The U.S.

Ozzy Osbourne is having second thoughts about leaving the U.S. Back in September, Ozzy said that he was "fed up" with America and that his family was heading back to England because of the string of mass shootings in the U.S. He said, "Everything's f—ing ridiculous there. I'm fed up with people getting killed every day. God knows how many people have been shot in school shootings."

But it seems that he has had a change of heart. During an interview with The Observer, he said, "I'm getting a bit of flack from people." He added, "To be honest with you, if I had my way, I'd stay in America. I'm American now."

Osbourne gave a bit of context for the decision, saying that wife Sharon Osbourne getting fired from The Talk was one of the reasons the couple no longer wanted to live in the states. As previously reported, Sharon defended her friend, TV personality Piers Morgan, who had made disparaging comments about Meghan Markle.

He explained, "When my wife got called a racist on The Talk, she is absolutely not a racist. Her friend is Piers Morgan… She didn't say, ‘I agree with him.' She just respected his ability to have freedom of speech. That's all that she said. And she got a lot of flak from that, so we actually had to have f–king armed guards and all that."

2022 Rock Hall Inducts Duran Duran, Judas Priest, Pat Benatar, Lionel Richie & More!!!

Saturday night (November 5th) was a night to remember with The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducting its 2022 members at L.A.'s Microsoft Theater, with an edited version of the event set to air on November 19th on HBO.

This year's Rock Hall inductees are Duran Duran, Pat Benatar, Eurythmics, Dolly Parton, Lionel Richie, Carly Simon, and Eminem. 2022's Musical Excellence Awards went to Judas Priest along with producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.

Early Influence Awards were awarded to Harry Belafonte and Elizabeth Cotten, with Ahmet Ertegun Awards going to recording engineer, producer, and executive Jimmy Iovine, R&B singer and Sugar Hill Records founder Sylvia Robinson, and attorney, Allen Grubman.

Sadly three inductees could not attend, with co-founding Duran Duran guitarist Andy Taylor revealing he is suffering from stage 4 prostate cancer. Carly Simon, who is currently in mourning after losing her two older sisters within a day of each other last month, also did not make the ceremony. The great Harry Belafonte is now 95 and too frail to travel to the ceremony.

The evening was an all-star gala with several surprise guest appearances, including Dave Grohl performing "Easy" with Lionel Richie, both Steven Tyler and Ed Sheeran appearing with Eminem, along with Pat Benatar, Simon LeBon, and Rob Halford all performing with Dolly Parton on her signature tune, "Jolene."

Appearing with Priest were former members K.K. Downing and drummer Les Binks, as well as sidelined guitarist Glenn Tipton, who has been battling Parkinson's disease.

Inductors Bruce Springsteen and John Mellencamp saluted the late-Jerry Lee Lewis with a show-closing medley of "The Killer's" "High School Hop" and "Great Balls Of Fire."

In one of the more memorable moments of the night, during his induction speech to entertainment lawyer Allen Grubman, John Mellencamp took time out to slam rapper Kanye West for his recent anti-Semitic remarks. Mellencamp said in part: "Guys I cannot tell you how f***ing important it is to speak out if you're an artist. Whenever you hear hate speech or something derogatory about someone else. We're all human things. I don't give a f*** if you're Jewish, black, quiet, tutti frutti, I don't care! Here's the trick: silence is complicity. I'm standing here tonight loudly and proudly and in solidarity with Allen, his family, all of my Jewish friends and the entire Jewish people of the world. F*** Antisemitism and f***anybody who says anything in that manner."

The Rock Hall streamed exclusive interviews from the event's red carpet, with Judas Priest frontman Rob Halford explaining that he looks back with pride and towards the future with equal amounts of excitement: "It's a lot of conviction, dedication, faith in what you believe in. We have this phrase in heavy metal -- 'Keep The Faith.' And that's what we've been doing for 50 years and we're still going strong and feeling pride to have that mantra working for Judas Priest."

Eurythmics singer Annie Lenox explained that the group were never confined by traditional musical boundaries: "Our influences, are again, they're really eclectic. And I think people, sort of, think that you have to be in one genre of music and you only like that genre. For our taste, it could be up for anything."

Simon LeBon is nothing but humbled by Duran Duran finally gaining entree into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: "We always thought it was a club that we'd never be part of. But -- things change and suddenly, y'know, Duran Duran's time seems to be coming 'round again. And we are welcomed as we welcome it -- with open arms."

THE EVENING INDUCTIONS AND PERFORMANCES

Duran Duran - inducted by Robert Downey, Jr.
"Girls On Film," "Hungry Like The Wolf," and "Ordinary World"

Pat Benatar - inducted by Sheryl Crow
"All Fired Up," "Love Is A Battlefield," and "Heartbreaker"

Eurythmics - inducted by The Edge
"Would I Lie to You?," "Missionary Man," and "Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)"

Lionel Richie - inducted by Lenny Kravitz
"Hello," "Easy" - with Dave Grohl, and "All Night Long (All Night)"

Carly Simon - inducted by Sara Bareilles
Sara Bareilles: "Nobody Does It Better
Olivia Rodrigo: "You're So Vain"

Eminem - inducted by Dr. Dre
"My Name Is," "Rap God," "Sing For The Moment" - with Steven Tyler, "Stan" - with Ed Sheeran, "Forever," and "Not Afraid."

Musical Excellence Award
Judas Priest - inducted by Alice Cooper
"You've Got Another Thing Comin'," "Breaking The Law," and "Living After Midnight."
Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis - inducted by Janet Jackson

Early Influence Awards
Harry Belafonte - video salute
Elizabeth Cotten - video salute

Ahmet Ertegun Awards
Jimmy Iovine - inducted by Bruce Springsteen
Sylvia Robinson
- video salute
Allen Grubman - inducted by John Mellencamp

Dolly Parton - inducted by Pink
Sheryl Crow & Zac Brown Band: "9 To 5"
Dolly Parton: "Rockin'" and "Jolene" - with other inductees

Jerry Lee Lewis salute
Bruce Springsteen & John Mellencamp with Roy Bittan: "Great Balls Of Fire"

Nick Carter Breaks Down On Stage In The Wake Of Aaron Carter's Death

Nick Carter broke down in tears on stage in the wake of his brother's death.

According to TMZ, the Backstreet Boy became emotional while performing at the O2 Arena in London Sunday night.

As Kevin Richardson dedicated the song "Breathe" to Aaron Carter, the rest of the band embraced Nick. Richardson told the crowd, "Tonight we have a little bit of heavy hearts because we lost one of our family members yesterday."

Aaron was found dead in his Los Angeles home Saturday (November 5th) morning after police received a 911 call reporting a man who drowned in a bathtub.

The 34-year-old former child star previously said he struggled with multiple personality disorder, schizophrenia, acute anxiety, and bipolar disorder. He also stuggled with his sobriety and, according to TMZ, was pulled over for driving erratically as recently as November 1st.

Nick previously addressed the loss on Instagram, writing, "My heart is broken. Even though my brother and I have had a complicated relationship, my love for him has never ever faded. I have always held on to the hope that he would somehow, someday want to walk a healthy path and eventually find the help that he so desperately needed.

"Sometimes we want to blame someone or something for a loss, but the truth is that addiction and mental illness is the real villain here. I will miss my brother more than anyone will ever know. I love you Chizz. Now you can finally have the peace you could never find here on earth….I love you baby brother."

Hillary Duff, who dated Aaron on and off from 2001 to 2004 also paid tribute to the pop-star turned rapper. She wrote, "I'm deeply sorry that life was so hard for you and that you had to struggle in-front of the whole world. You had a charm that was absolutely effervescent…boy did my teenage self love you deeply. Sending love to your family at this time. Rest easy."

Aaron was survived by his 11-month-old son Prince and the baby's mother, Melanie Martin.

Bruce Springsteen Taps 1996 Acoustic Show For New Vault Release

Bruce Springsteen has just issued Asbury Park, NJ - 11/26/96, the latest official bootleg of his ongoing monthly archive series. The show, recorded in New Jersey's Paramount Theatre, was culled from his 1995/1997 solo acoustic tour behind his 1995 Grammy Award-winning album, The Ghost Of Tom Joad.

The set marks "The Boss'" sixth dip into the soundboards from the historic tour, which has also seen the release of Freehold, NJ - November 8th, 1996; Belfast, UK - March 19th, 1996; Asbury Park, NJ - November 26th, 1996; Nice, France - May 18th, 1997; and Upper Darby, PA - 12/9/95.

The new concert release features guest appearances by E Street Band co-founders Danny Federici and "Mad Dog" Vini Lopez, Steve Van Zandt, Patti Scialfa and Soozie Tyrell, early-Springsteen session percussionist Richard Blackwell, and Asbury Park local legend Big Danny Gallagher.

The tracklisting to Bruce Springsteen's Asbury Park - 11/26/96 is: "For You," "It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City," "Atlantic City," "Straight Time," "Tougher Than The Rest," "Darkness On The Edge Of Town," "Johnny 99," "All That Heaven Will Allow," "Wild Billy's Circus Story," "Red Headed Woman," "Two Hearts," "When You're Alone," "Shut Out The Light," "Born In The U.S.A.," "The Ghost Of Tom Joad," "Sinaloa Cowboys," "The Line," "Racing In The Street," "Across The Border," "I Don't Want To Go Home," "Spirit In The Night," "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)," "This Hard Land," and "4th Of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)."

While on the road behind The Ghost Of Tom Joad, Bruce Springsteen spoke frankly about how it felt to be taking his show on the road as a solo act: "It's different, y'know? It's a little more lonely, I guess. But at the moment, I sort of, heard more my folk voice inside my head and I had a collection of songs that were about very specific subjects and the best way to, sort of, communicate those things was by myself with a guitar. They come out of the folk tradition, blues tradition -- Robert Johnson, Woody Guthrie, y'know (Bob) Dylan, Hank Williams."

Kanye West News

OWNERS OF 'WHITE LIVES MATTER' TRADEMARK WILLING TO SELL PHRASE TO YE FOR $1 BILLION

Ramses Ja, one of the owners of the White Lives Matter trademark said that he and his radio show host Quinton Ward are willing to sell the phrase to Kanye West for $1 billion. According to TMZ, Ramses said they are not looking to sell the trademark but any potential buyer would have to come up with a $1 billion offer to make them consider selling.

Ramses said that the most important thing is helping organizations fighting for Black people's rights, so a $1 billion dollar offer would make them reconsider their desire not to sell, because they could do so much good with that kind of money.

REPORT: YE BLAMED RIHANNA FOR DOMESTIC ABUSE DURING LETTERMAN INTERVIEW

In other news, Netflix and David Letterman's production company edited out comments by Ye that referenced Nazis and blamed Rihanna for her domestic abuse with Chris Brown during a 2019 interview.

According to The Wrap, during season two of Letterman's Netflix talk show "My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman," Ye repeated right-wing conspiracy theories, observed that liberals treated anyone wearing a red pro-Trump cap "like they were Nazis" and noted that Rihanna, a former victim of domestic abuse, must have done something to deserve what happened to her.

Audience member Noah Reice told the publication,"It was shocking to see that Kanye West could share harmful alt-right beliefs, conspiracy theory after conspiracy and misogynistic beliefs about women for the majority of the interview and end up with an edit that removed all those items in favor of celebrity fluff content."

YE AND KIM KARDASHIAN BACK ON SPEAKING TERMS?

In other news, TMZ obtained photos of Ye and ex-wife Kim Kardashian talking at their son Saint's game at Sierra Canyon School. Sources close to Ye and Kim say that Kim stopped speaking to Ye after he wrote a "White Lives Matter" t-shirt and made comments about Jewish people.

Taylor Swift Adds Eight New Dates To 'The Eras Tour'

Tickets haven't even gone on sale yet, and Taylor Swift has already added eight new shows to The Eras Tour.

On Friday (Nov. 4th), the singer tweeted, "UM. Looks like I'll get to see more of your beautiful faces than previously expected."

Additional shows have been added in Tampa,Fl; Nashville, TN; Philadelphia, PA; Foxborough, MA; East Rutherford, NJ; Seattle, WA; Santa Clara, CA; and Los Angeles, CA.

Presale begins on November 15th.

Billie Eilish Encourages Fans To Vote

Billie Eilish took to Instagram Saturday (November 5th) to encourage fans to vote.

The 20-year-old artist said in a video, "Our rights, our freedoms, and our futures are on the line, and if we don't show up, there is a good chance we will see a national ban on abortion, with no exceptions."

She added, "They also wanna take away the freedom to marry who we love, restrict voting rights, and enact laws that threaten the progress that must be made on climate change… It scares me."

The caption included a link to BallotReady, which assists with polling locations and other voting information.

Paul Stanley Salutes Taylor Hawkins

Paul Stanley took time out to salute late-Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins while onboard the Kiss Kruise. Blabbermouth transcribed some of Stanley's comments on the beloved drummer during the "On This Day In KISStory" Q&A where the band talks about the backstory behind various photos.

Stanley was quoted as saying, "The beauty of a great band is the chemistry between at least of the people. And Foo Fighters, that's Dave (Grohl) and Taylor. Taylor was as close to Dave as a brother. And Taylor, besides being a phenomenal drummer. . . I remember when I saw him with Alanis Morissette, I was, like, 'Jesus. Who is this guy?' And he was also a super, super guy -- one of those people that really, really loved music. And it's a tragedy; it's a terrible loss.

Regarding the photo showing them, he added: "I will remember that forever. We did a couple of things together. We did 'Do You Love Me?' and we did 'Detroit Rock City'. And Taylor kicked it in the ass. Taylor was a big fan (of Kiss). And again, nobody loved music like he did."

QUICKIES: Selena Gomez, Harry Styles, Jin + More!

SELENA GOMEZ ON WHY SHE DIDN'T MENTION FRANCIA RAISAS IN HER 'ROLLING STONE' INTERVIEW: Selena Gomez told Rolling Stone last week that Taylor Swift is her only friend in the industry, but what about Francia Raisas? The 34-year-old actress has been friends with Gomez for 15 years and famously donated a kidney to the Rare Beauty founder. According to US Magazine, Raisa commented with "Interesting" underneath a post highlighting the Rolling Stone quote. The Only Murders In The Building actress responded to a TikTok video of Stephanie Tleiji explaining the perceived drama between the two performers. Gomez wrote, "Sorry I didn't mention every person I know."

JIN IS READY TO ENLIST: Jin is reportedly looking to cancel the postponement of his military enlistment. According to Seoul-based Yonhap News Agency, the BTS singer no longer wishes to delay his mandatory military service until the end of the year. Last month, Big Hit Music announced that all members of the K-pop group would accept their military duties, with Jin, who turns 30 this year, being the first.

HARRY STYLES POSTPONES MORE LA CONCERT DATES: Harry Styles has postponed more Los Angeles concert dates because of the flu. The singer wrote in his Instagram Story, "Towards the end of the show on Wednesday I started feeling ill and I've been in bed with the flu ever since. I've been doing everything I can to be able to sing tonight, but I'm leaving the doctor now and I'm devastated that it's just not possible. Until very recently I haven't had to postpone a show due to illness in the 12 years I've been touring." Styles added that his Kia Forum concerts on Nov. 5th, 6th and 7th are postponed until Jan. 26th, 27th and 29th in 2023.

Harry Styles' Gucci Collection Revealed

Images from Harry Styles' collection with Gucci, HA HA HA, dropped Thursday (November 3rd).

According to the design house, the collection represents a "dream wardrobe" by Alessandro Michele and Styles, who said, "I'm so happy to see this project finally come to life. I've known Alessandro for years now, and he's always been one of my favorite people. I'm always inspired watching him work, so doing this collaboration with my friend was very special to me."

Meanwhile, the "Watermelon Sugar" singer's Friday (November 4th) concert in Los Angles has been postponed to Sunday (November 6th). According to an official statement from the venue, the date was pushed back "due to band illness."

John Mellencamp Releases Deluxe 'Scarecrow' Reissue

Released today (November 4th) is the deluxe reissue of John Mellencamp's 1985 classic, Scarecrow. The new box set includes two CD's of newly remixed and remastered songs -- plus previously unreleased bonus tracks and alternate versions, a booklet full of rare photographs and all new liner notes by acclaimed author and music critic Anthony DeCurtis.

The set features an Atmos and new hi-resolution stereo mix of the album, along with bonus tracks in hi-resolution stereo on Blu-ray Disc, a 180g half-speed LP, an original picture sleeve of the "Small Town" seven-inch single, lithographs, and poster.

Scarecrow was released on August 5th, 1985 and spent a whopping 28 weeks in the Billboard Top 10. The album, which was an FM, AM, and MTV staple, spent three weeks at Number Two. The album featured three Top 10 hits -- "R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A." (#2); "Lonely Ol' Night" and "Small Town" (#6). Two other tracks were MTV staples and major Top 30 hits -- "Rain On The Scarecrow" (#21) and "Rumbleseat" (#28).

Mellencamp says that he's always aimed for the higher ground when writing his songs: "I have been trying to write inspirational songs, in the way of. . . not Irving Berlin, but more in the way of Woody Guthrie, to try to make people feel good about themselves."

John Mellencamp said he prides himself on being able to connect to his audience on a multitude of levels: "There was a while that a lot of the songs I wrote I made sure that just anybody that picked up a guitar could play 'em. 'Cause I think that's very important that the songs aren't so complicated and obtuse, that your normal kid who knows six chords can't play a song. I mean, I don't think it's important for all type of songwriters, but it's very important for me."

John Mellencamp kicks off his 76-date North American tour on February 5th and 6th in his hometown, Bloomington, Indiana at the Indiana University Auditorium.

Selena Gomez Is Planning To Disappear From The Public Eye For A While

Selena Gomez told Rolling Stone that she's planning on taking a break from the public eye once she's done promoting the documentary, My Mind and Me.

She said, "This is probably the most you'll hear about me for a while. I want this to come out, but I also want this behind me. Every now and then it's important to just disappear."

Gomez also revealed for the outlet's latest cover story, published on Thursday (November 3rd) that she threw herself a wedding-themed thirtieth birthday party in July because she though she'd "be married by now." The guest list included Miley Cyrus, Olivia Rodrigo, Francia Raisa, Camila Cabello and Billie Eilish.

Despite the impressive group of invitees, the Only Murders In The Building star says she "never fit in with a cool group of girls that were celebrities" and her "only friend in the industry really is Taylor Swift."

Billy Joel News

Released today (November 4th) on CD, streaming services, and Blu-ray is Billy Joel: Live At Yankee Stadium. The collection contains 22 performances from the "Piano Man's" historic two-day run at "The House That Ruth Built" on June 22nd and 23rd, 1990. All tracks have been remixed from the original multi-tracks and feature 11 completely unreleased performances, including "Uptown Girl," "Only The Good Die Young," "Allentown" and more.

The re-edited 1990 concert shot in 16mm color film, now features new music and unseen behind-the-scenes footage.

Billy Joel, who was born in the Bronx, recalled his emotions of actually playing the hallowed stadium back in 1990: "Yeah, Yankee Stadium was a whole jump in the level of things. I don't think we had headlined stadiums before that. But that, I think, was our first major stadium gig. And no one had really played Yankee Stadium. We were, I think, the first major headline act to sell a concert at Yankee Stadium on our own. It was really, really exciting. I mean, this is in 'the House the Ruth built' -- there you are, you're playing there! They're comin' to see you -- not the Yankees. It was huge. . . just the hugeness of it all was staggering, I remember that."

For Billy Joel -- who recently celebrated his 60th year as a professional musician -- hitting the road and taking the stage just after eight p.m. has always been in his blood: "I'm from the old school, I started out as a performer. Before I ever made a record, I was playing in bands in clubs and bars, and dances, Sweet 16's; so that's what I do. I don't think anything really replaces a live performance."

IN OTHER BILLY JOEL NEWS

Billy Joel and Steve Nicks have tagged two new stops on what is amounting to a joint spring 2023 stadium tour.

In addition to the Houston date announced earlier this week, the pair will now also play on March 10th at L.A.'s Sofi Stadium and May 19th at Nashville's Nissan Stadium.

UPDATED: Billy Joel tour dates (subject to change):

November 11 - Atlanta, GA - ATLIVE at Mercedes-Benz Stadium (with Lionel Richie and Sheryl Crow)
November 23 - New York, NY - Madison Square Garden
December 3 - Auckland, New Zealand - Eden Park
December 10 - Melbourne, Australia - Melbourne Cricket Ground
December 19 - New York, NY - Madison Square Garden
January 13 - New York, NY - Madison Square Garden
January 27 - Hollywood, FL - Hard Rock Live
February 14 - New York, NY - Madison Square Garden
March 10 - Los Angeles, CA - Sofi Stadium (with Stevie Nicks)
March 26 - New York, NY - Madison Square Garden
April 8 - Arlington, TX - AT&T Stadium (with Stevie Nicks)
May 19 - Nashville, TN - Nissan Stadium (with Stevie Nicks)
July 7 - London, England - BST Hyde Park

Kanye West Is Going On A 'Verbal Fast'

Kanye West has announced that he is going on a 30 day "verbal fast" with no porn or sex. He tweeted yesterday (November 3rd), "I'm taking a 30 day cleanse. A verbal fast. No alcohol. No adult films. No intercourse." He added, "In God we praise. Amen. But my Twitter still lit."

He later called out personal trainer Harley Pasternak, posting screenshots of a text conversation they had. Ye tweeted, "You can't be anti-Semite when you know you are Semite."

Quick Takes: Van Halen, Robert Plant & Donovan, Bono

  • During a recent chat on SiriusXM's Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk, Sammy Hagar commented on Wolfgang Van Halen's remark that Van Halen was too dysfunctional to play a tribute show for Eddie Van Halen. Blabbermouth transcribed Hagar explaining, "Alex Van Halen and I don't talk. . . I reached out to Alex again recently. Mikey (Anthony) had a sad thing happen in his family, and I reached out to Al, and he wouldn't return my call or my e-mail. And so I said, 'You know what? F*** it.' It's not on the top of my list, my agenda. I think Eddie deserves, definitely, a tribute. . . And the whole world would show up and the whole world would do it. I don't know why people put it on (David Lee) Roth. I don't talk to Dave. And if he did it, he'd wanna do it without me. I'm sure that's part of the dysfunction that Wolfie's talking about."
    • Hagar went on to say: "I'll make a statement that I don't know is true or not, but what do you wanna bet that he goes, 'I will only do it if Hagar's not there.' And if that were the case, that's typical Roth, and that's part of the dysfunction. It's not like he controls it; it's just (that) he doesn't play well with others. And like I said, if Alex came to me and wanted to do it, I'm in. Absolutely -- let's go (and) do it somehow. But Alex has got a stick up his ass about something with me still, and he's gonna take it to his grave, I guess. (I made peace with Eddie before he died but) I don't think I made peace with Al. And I don't think I'm going to unless he reaches back out to me. I've done it about five times now." (Blabbermouth)

  • Donovan joined Robert Plant and his band Saving Grace on stage on November 3rd to perform his 1966 autumnal classic "Season Of The Witch." Donovan, who enlisted the help of a pre-Led Zeppelin Jimmy Page during his legendary '60s sessions, hopped on stage at Ireland's Wexford Spiegeltent Festival to perform the Sunshine Superman favorite. Plant and his band have been also performing the Donovan standard, "Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness)" during their recent shows. (Ultimate Classic Rock)

  • Bono kicked off his musical and aural "Stories Of Surrender" book tour on November 3rd at Manhattan's Beacon Theatre. The 14-city trek is in support of his new memoir, Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story.
  • The U2 frontman, who interspersed a handful of songs between his chat, was backed by cellist Kate Ellis, harpist Gemma Doherty and producer Jacknife Lee. He joked, "I'm never without my band. But I have their permission for one night." Among the notables in the audience were audience that included former President Bill Clinton, Tom Hanks, Katie Holmes, Ed Burns and Christy Turlington. (USA Today)
    • Bono's North American 'Surrender' book tour dates (subject to change):
      November 4 - Boston, MA - Orpheum Theatre
      November 6 - Toronto, ON - Meridian Hall
      November 8 - Chicago, IL - The Chicago Theatre
      November 9 - Nashville, TN - Ryman Auditorium
      November 12 - San Francisco, CA - Orpheum Theatre
      November 13 - Los Angeles, CA - The Orpheum Theatre

Rock Hall This Saturday: Honors Still Divides Rockers & Fans

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame will induct it's 2022 members on Saturday night (November 5th) at L.A.'s Microsoft Theater, with an edited version of the event airing on November 19th on HBO.

This year's Rock Hall inductees are Duran Duran, Pat Benatar, Eurythmics, Dolly Parton, Lionel Richie, Carly Simon, and Eminem. 2022's Musical Excellence Award will go to Judas Priest along with producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.

Early Influence Awards will go to Harry Belafonte and Elizabeth Cotten, with Ahmet Ertegun Awards going to recording engineer, producer, and executive Jimmy Iovine, R&B singer and Sugar Hill Records founder Sylvia Robinson, and attorney, Allen Grubman.

During a recent chat with Forbes, Rock Hall Chairman John Sykes revealed the event will include appearances and inductions by Bruce Springsteen, John Mellencamp, The Edge, Sheryl Crow, Alanis Morissette, Pink, Olivia Rodrigo, Maren Morris, and Zac Brown.

The 2022 Rock Hall nominees that did not make the final cut are Beck, Kate Bush, Devo, Fela Kuti, MC5, New York Dolls, A Tribe Called Quest, and Dionne Warwick.

Artists are eligible for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 25 years after their debut release. For every handful of acts that enter the Hall each year, there are dozens that never make it past the final ballot and hundreds more who aren't even in the running.

We recently asked singer Kate Pierson how she felt about the B-52's being passed over for induction every year since 2003: "I think we should be in it -- that's how I feel (laughs). I mean, I really kind of think it should be more inclusive and they should include everyone (laughs). I don't know, it just seems kind of silly to me to have this Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, y'know, they only -- it's like a little club, or something. And I guess you have to lobby to get in and, yeah, it'd be great, but I'm not saying I don't wanna be in that club (laughs) but (laughs), y'know, I don't know what it takes to get in there."

With Styx still a top live concert draw -- not to mention having their name now gracing moons on neighboring planets -- we asked guitarist J.Y. Young how he feels about the band's chances in finally getting inducted into the Hall of Fame in view of hard rockers Journey, Yes, Rush, and Heart recently getting the nod: "Rush is something I wouldn't have expected. But because they're sort of non-traditional. They're a little more arty than the rest of us it seems. But Heart, the fact that the one sister was married to Cameron Crowe, who was obviously. . . wrote for (Rolling Stone publisher) Jann Wenner. Jann Wenner plays such a very big role in the selection process, that Heart makes sense in being the first act -- and it's women, so it's unique. Yeah, Heart and Rush have now opened the door for the possibility in the future. But really, at this point (laughs), Tommy (Shaw) and I really don't care."

J. Geils Band frontman Peter Wolf is closely associated to the Rock Hall and in recent years has made it onto the Hall's shortlist a few times: "I'm someone that, y'know, appreciates what the Hall of Fame does, so, I'm honored. Also, for me, what I think the Geils Band has accomplished -- besides putting on the 'hellified' shows we tried to do night after night -- we really tried hard to give an awareness to artists that we worshiped and adored. I really think at the end of the day, we turned a lot of people on to John Lee Hooker, to Smokey Robinson. We turned a lot of people on to, y'know, so many artists that have gone unrecognized."

Judas Priest will finally see induction this year, albeit in the "Musical Excellence Award" category -- as opposed to a straight on rank and file vote, which is how Ringo Starr was able to gain entry as a solo artist. Lead singer Rob Halford -- told us even getting on the preliminary list made him proud to have the band considered part of the fabric that connects the best of rock: "It's just fantastic to be in the same category of all the other extraordinary talent is a thrill. And it just re-emphasizes the broad spectrum of what the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame represents. It's a little bit of everybody, again."

Backstage at their 2014 Rock Hall induction, Daryl Hall -- who has been openly critical of Hall & Oates being ignored by the Hall of Fame for so long -- was asked about how he felt to finally be inducted: "Y'know what I think? I think it's all about the past and we're about the present, if you want to know the truth. I got so much going on personally — and I know John does, too. I actually had to take time off to do this, ‘cause I got so many other projects going on. I mean, that's not blowing smoke, it's really true. I got two television shows (laughs), touring (growls) -- on and on and on."

Despite "The Twist" being one of the biggest and most influential hits of the rock era, Chubby Checker, who has been eligible since the Rock Hall's inaugural in 1986, is resigned to the fact that he won't be inducted: "It's not a big deal. I mean, it's not completed without me anyway. I just like to talk about what we've done in the music business and what is still being done as a result of our being in the music industry and that will just put the Hall of Fame to shame. We don't need to talk about them. It's no sense. The Hall is not completed without Chubby Checker. What we've done is so incredible. It's okay."

Three Dog Night has been eligible for induction since 1993. Co-founder Chuck Negron says they've consistently been passed over simply because the group didn't write their biggest hits: "It's a very strange thing. For some reason Three Dog Night has been stuck with this stigma that we weren't innovative and that's mind-boggling. Based all on the fact that we didn't write (our own material). We changed the music . . . the landscape of the touring business, we created stadium tours. And, y'know, if you're going to talk about writing, Elvis Presley didn't write a song."

A while back, Eric Carmen said that although the Raspberries have long been cited as "power pop" innovators and have been eligible for induction since 1997, they simply lack the political clout to get into the Rock Hall: "Having been in the music business now for 35 years, or whatever it is, and having had situations where I've bumped into Jann Wenner and some of the powers that be over there, there is so much politics involved in anybody actually getting into the Rock Hall."

Cleveland's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame recently ran an exhibit on Graham Nash, titled, Touching The Flame. We asked Nash, who has been inducted twice as a member of both the Holies and Crosby, Stills, & Nash, about the possibility of Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young being inducted anytime soon: "Not only that -- what about me? I'd like to see me in there! I'm a pretty historical figure regardless of my relationship with the Hollies or CSN or CSNY. And I definitely think CSNY is a completely different band than Crosby, Stills, & Nash -- and why shouldn't they be in there?"

Back in 2013, 11 long years after becoming eligible, Heart was finally inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame. Lead singer Ann Wilson shed some light on the fine line between being consistently passed over and finally being accepted into the Hall: "We've had occasions to go in when we're in Cleveland and do various little things at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, y'know, little musical events and stuff like that. I've been there a few times and seen all the cool items they have there. I know people tend to do go, when they don't get inducted into the Rock Hall, they're like, 'Oh, well it doesn't mean anything' -- and then when they do, all of a sudden: 'Yeah! It's great!' It's such a hard thing for a musician, because the thing that makes you do it is the music itself."

Elvis Costello, who was inducted with the Attractions into the Rock Hall back in 2003, remains adamant that the event and honor really means very little in the grand scheme of things: "It's a box with some old things in, let's get it straight. It's a trip to the fun fair, that's all it is. It was great to sit around and see, y'know, the guys in my band's families have a night out where we celebrated that we, y'know, we've lived long enough to, y'know, have joined this crazy club. But really, in the long run, the people who put us in there I don't have any respect for."

Steve Miller, who had been critical of the Hall before he was picked for inclusion in 2016, was asked by the press what he would change about the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame -- and even lashed out at a publicist trying to stymie his tirade: "Uh, yeah. Everything. The whole process is unpleasant. The whole process needs to be changed, from the top to the bottom. 'Doesn't need to be this hard, there's nothing fancy going on out there that requires all of this stuff. They need to get their legal work straight, they need to respect the artists they say they're honoring, which they don't -- I don't have any of my paper work. . . is signed. I have no licensing agreements with these people, they're trying to steal my footage, they're tying to make me indemnify them. When they told me I was inducted, they said 'You can have two tickets; one for your wife and one for yourself. Want another one? It's $10,000 dollars. Sorry, that's the way it goes.' I said, 'I'm playing here, what about my band? What about their wives?' What about. . . They make this so unpleasant that they came this close. . . (to publicist) No, we're not going to wrap this one up! I'm going to wrap you up. You're going to sit over there and learn something. So, here's what you need to know. . . This is how close this whole show came to not happening because of the way the artists are actually being treated right now. So, I'll wrap it up right now (applause)." (1:31 OC: . . . up right now)

Back in 2016, Rock Hall favorite Steve Van Zandt was asked backstage about the long and slow process for classic artists to finally gain entry into the Hall: "But, it's tough, man. It's tough to get in. Y'know, it's not easy to get in. (Laughs) That's why when people don't show up at this thing, man, I get crazy! because it's so hard to get in. It's a pretty big list -- J.Geils Band, y'know, high on my list. There's quite a few, still."

There have been several times during the Rock Hall's induction ceremonies that band members have been inducted but due to politics and bad blood between group members are forced to sit on the sidelines during the inductees' performances.

The first occurrence took place in 1993 when John Fogerty refused to share the stage with Creedence Clearwater Revival members Stu Cook and Doug Clifford: "(Doug Clifford): That was our night too. For the band. The band was inducted. And to have that happen, all of our children were there, including Tom's son who was going to fill in for his dad (Tom Fogerty). And then when we called John on it, he says, 'I don't like you. I won't play with you. You didn't help me get out of my contract 25 years ago.' What?! (Stu Cook): You're the guy who signed it without a lawyer! (Doug Clifford): Yeah, well."

In 2006 ousted Blondie guitarist Frank Infante tried to embarrass Debbie Harry and the other members into letting him and former bassist Nigel Harrison perform with the group, Harry made it clear they weren't welcome and afterwards said it was a tense situation: "I actually sort of expected much worse, if the truth must be known. I don't know if there's any way to really handle a situation like that. There's been, y'know, some bad feeling for a long time -- there's been lawsuits -- and, y'know, it's a bad feeling, really."

Stu Cook believes bad scenes between former bandmates will probably continue to happen as long as the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame forces estranged musicians back together under the spotlight: "Creedence (Clearwater Revival), Blondie, Sly (& The Family Stone), you know all these misadventures that the Hall has had trying to push their agenda. . . Somebody's going to get hurt, y'know, their feelings hurt or there's going to be some kind of a scene. I guess they always thought that they could control it. I don't know, our induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wasn't very satisfying, needless to say."

Shortly before his 2004 death, Ramones guitarist Johnny Ramone told us he was confused by a few of some of the inductees to the Hall over the years. "I'm not sure what they consider. . . It's the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but you have Isaac Hayes, and Isaac Hayes is not rock 'n' roll. You have Paul Simon in and he's not rock 'n' roll. I don't really get it right at all times because I see people that are not rock n' roll."

THE FOLLOWING ARTISTS ARE NOT IN THE ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME

Peter Frampton, Jethro Tull, Foreigner, Bad Company, Boston, the Monkees, Joe Cocker, Sonny & Cher, Bernie Taupin, Brian Wilson, Gram Parsons, Grand Funk Railroad, Frankie Avalon, Squeeze, Todd Rundgren, Badfinger, Big Star, the Flying Burrito Brothers, Sting, Humble Pie, Eddie Money, Harry Nilsson, Beatles recording engineers Norman Smith and Geoff Emerick, Styx, Free, Billy Idol, Duran Duran, Rockpile, Culture Club, Lenny Kravitz, the Runaways, rock photographers Jim Marshall, Ethan Russell, Gered Mankowitz, Dezo Hoffman, Astrid Kirchherr, Annie Leibovitz, Henry Diltz, and Bob Gruen; Chubby Checker, the Guess Who, rock journalist Lester Bangs, the Turtles, Phil Collins, Rolling Stones pianist and co-founder Ian Stewart, Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels, Kansas, Ronnie Lane, Thin Lizzy, Joe Walsh, Delaney & Bonnie, Poco, the Dictators, Brian Eno, Television, Phil Ramone, Meat Loaf, America, XTC, the Searchers, Leslie Gore, the Raspberries, the B-52s, Paul Revere & The Raiders, Herman's Hermits, Mountain, Blue Oyster Cult, Chic, the New York Dolls, and many more.

Avril Lavigne and Yungblud Drop 'I'm A Mess'

Avril Lavigne released her latest single "I'm A Mess (with Yungblud)" via Travis Barker's DTA Records on Thursday (November 3rd).

The official music video for "I'm A Mess (with Yungblud)," written by Lavigne, Barker, Yungblud, and John Feldmann, also dropped Thursday.

The visual, directed by P Tracy, was filmed in both London and Los Angeles.