Category: International

  • Phish 2022 Summer Tour Includes Stops at Bethel Woods, Jones Beach

    Phish will head out on a massive 34-date 2022 Spring and Summer Tour, kicking off Memorial Day Weekend in Alabama, and including their first four-night run at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in Colorado over Labor Day. Phish will also play a pair of two-night runs in New York, with shows at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts over July 22-23, and at Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater on July 26-27.

    phish summer tour 2022

    Phish last performed at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts in May of 2011, with three memorable shows including an incredible soundcheck of “Waves.”


    Phish are no strangers to Jones Beach, having performed there 14 times since 1992, including opening up for Santana at the fabled Long Island venue. Read our look back at the two-night run at Jones Beach in 1995.

    A ticket request period is currently underway at tickets.phish.com and will end on Friday, February 25th at Noon ET. Tickets go on sale to the public beginning Friday, March 4th (continuing Saturday). Specific ticketing information for each show is available at phish.com/tours.

    Travel Packages will be offered in Bethel, Atlantic City, East Troy, and Commerce City. All packages include concert tickets and local hotel accommodations and go on sale Thursday, March 3rd beginning at 10AM ET. The Atlantic City shows will again offer a special Foundation Ticket that includes early admission, a dedicated viewing area, a Foundation lounge and bar, and early access to merchandise. A portion of proceeds from each Foundation Ticket will benefit the WaterWheel Foundation, celebrating its 25th Anniversary in 2022. For full details and pricing click here.

    Phish will take to the stage later this month with Phish: Riviera Maya set for February 24-27 and April will see Phish return to Madison Square Garden in New York City for their rescheduled four-night NYE run now taking place April 20-23, including a three-set show on April 22.

    Phish Spring and Summer 2022 Tour Dates

    5/27 The Wharf Amphitheater, Orange Beach, AL
    5/28 The Wharf Amphitheater, Orange Beach, AL
    5/29 The Wharf Amphitheater, Orange Beach, AL
    5/31 Credit One Stadium, Charleston, SC
    6/1 Credit One Stadium, Charleston, SC
    6/3 Ruoff Music Center, Noblesville, IN
    6/4 Ruoff Music Center, Noblesville, IN
    6/5 Ruoff Music Center, Noblesville, IN
    7/14 Xfinity Center, Mansfield, MA
    7/15 Xfinity Center, Mansfield, MA
    7/16 Maine Savings Amphitheater, Bangor, ME
    7/19 TD Pavilion at the Mann, Philadelphia, PA
    7/20 TD Pavilion at the Mann, Philadelphia, PA
    7/22 Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Bethel, NY
    7/23 Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Bethel, NY
    7/24 Xfinity Theatre, Hartford, CT
    7/26 Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater, Wantagh, NY
    7/27 Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater, Wantagh, NY
    7/29 Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek, Raleigh, NC
    7/30 Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD
    7/31 Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD
    8/2 Blossom Music Center, Cuyahoga Falls, OH
    8/3 Pine Knob Music Theatre, Clarkston, MI
    8/5 Atlantic City Beach, Atlantic City, NJ
    8/6 Atlantic City Beach, Atlantic City, NJ
    8/7 Atlantic City Beach, Atlantic City, NJ
    8/10 Budweiser Stage, Toronto, ON
    8/12 Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI
    8/13 Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI
    8/14 Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI
    9/1 Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, Commerce City, CO
    9/2 Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, Commerce City, CO
    9/3 Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, Commerce City, CO
    9/4 Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, Commerce City, CO

  • The Who 2022 Tour will Arrive at MSG and Bethel Woods in May, UBS Arena in October

    The Who, one of the greatest rock bands in music history, will embark on a 2022 North American Tour this spring and fall. The two final tour stops in May will be at Madison Square Garden and Bethel Woods, while the October leg of the tour brings Townshend and Daltry to UBS Arena in Belmont.

    the who 2022 tour

    The music of The Who spans generations, with Roger Daltrey’s soaring vocal prowess building off the sparks of Pete Townshend’s songwriting. These two remaining members of the original lineup join together in a shared legacy while time is passing, one found in the pages of their recent autobiographies -Townshend’s Who I Am (2012) and Daltrey’s Thanks A Lot Mr. Kibblewhite; My Story (2018) – and among their regular touring schedule. 

    Some shows on The Who’s 2022 tour were originally planned for 2019 but delayed due to a vocal ailment Daltrey was suffering from, while some others on the tour are a substitute for those canceled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Commenting on The Who Hits Back! 2022 tour, Roger Daltrey said:

    Pete and I said we’d be back, but we didn’t think we’d have to wait for two years for the privilege. This is making the chance to perform feel even more special this time around. So many livelihoods have been impacted due to Covid, so we are thrilled to get everyone back together – the band, the crew and the fans.  We’re gearing up for a great show that hits back in the only way The Who know how.  By giving it everything we got.

    Roger Daltrey

    The Who Hits Back! Tour features a pure and easy lineup including guitarist and backup singer Simon Townshend (Pete’s brother), keyboardist Loren Gold, second keyboardist Emily Marshall, bassist Jon Button, drummer Zak Starkey and backing vocals by Billy Nicholls. Lead violinist Katie Jacoby and lead cellist Audrey Snyder will be getting in tune with orchestra conductor Keith Levenson, delivering many of The Who’s classics, as well as songs from their most recent album, WHO.

    Regarding the inclusion of local orchestras and strings for each show, Townshend spoke to Rolling Stone, saying:

    It gives me a chance to make sure what I play, what I do, where I look, how I behave on the stage, is more connected with the people around me, and with the audience, and with, to get prosaic about it, an inner sense. In other words, I don’t lose myself the way I did when I used to jump around, have a big adrenaline rush, and then come off the stage and someone would say, ‘Great show,’ or someone would say, ‘Terrible show,’ and I wouldn’t really know what I had done, to be honest, since I was like someone running a marathon. So the orchestra gives me space.

    Pete Townshend

    The Who’s show at Bethel Woods also marks their return to the site of the original Woodstock Festival, where the group performed a memorable set that began at 5 AM on Sunday, August 17, 1969.

    the who the clash
    The Who at Rich Stadium, Buffalo, 1982. Photo by Marc Starcke

    American Express® Card Members can purchase tickets in select markets before the general public beginning today, Monday, February 7 at 10 am through Thursday, February 10 at 10 pm. The Who’s fan club presale starts Wednesday, February 9 at 10 am and runs through Thursday, February 10 at 10 pm.

    For more information visit LiveNation.com or thewho.com.

    The Who Hits Back! 2022 Tour Dates

    SPRING

    April 22 / Hard Rock Live / Hollywood, FL

    April 24 / VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena / Jacksonville, FL

    April 27 / Amalie Arena / Tampa, FL

    April 30 / New Orleans Jazz Festival

    May 3 / Moody Center ATX / Austin, TX

    May 5 / American Airlines Center / Dallas, TX

    May 8 / the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion / The Woodlands, TX

    May 10 / Paycom Center / Oklahoma City, OK

    May 13 / FedEx Forum / Memphis, TN

    May 15 / TQL Stadium / Cincinnati, OH

    May 18 / TD Garden / Boston, MA

    May 20 / Wells Fargo Center / Philadelphia, PA

    May 23 / Capital One Arena / Washington, D.C.

    May 26 / Madison Square Garden / New York City, NY

    May 28 / Bethel Woods Center of the Arts / Bethel, NY

    FALL

    Oct 2 / Scotiabank Arena / Toronto, ON

    Oct 4 / Little Caesars Arena / Detroit, MI

    Oct 7 / UBS Arena / Belmont Park, NY

    Oct 9 / Schottenstein Center / Columbus, OH

    Oct 12 / United Center / Chicago, IL

    Oct 14 / Enterprise Center / St. Louis, MO

    Oct 17 / Ball Arena / Denver, CO

    Oct 20 / Moda Center / Portland, OR

    Oct 22 / Climate Pledge Arena / Seattle, WA

    Oct 26 / Golden 1 Center / Sacramento, CA

    Oct 28 / Honda Center / Anaheim, CA

    Nov 1 / Hollywood Bowl / Los Angeles, CA

    Nov 4 + 5 / Dolby Live at Park MGM / Las Vegas, NV

  • The Sounds of the 1980 Winter Olympics: Chuck Mangione’s “Give it All You Got” and the Crane School of Music Compose a Soundtrack for Lake Placid

    As the XXIV Olympic Winter Games take place in Beijing, China, we look back 42 years to the XIII Olympic Winter Games held in Lake Placid from February 13, 1980 to February 24, 1980. Home of the Miracle on Ice and speedskater Eric Heiden winning five gold medals, the Lake Placid Winter Olympics brought together 1,072 athletes from 37 countries to take part in 38 official events in February 1980.

    1980 Winter Olympics
    Opening ceremony photo courtesy Lake Placid Olympic Sites

    The games also featured a theme song, in the form of Rochester Jazz legend Chuck Mangione’s “Give it All You Got,” a tune released a week before the games, that would chart as high as #1 on the Adult Contemporary, #18 on the Billboard 100 and #32 on the R&B chart, and recently named by Billboard as the #1 Olympics theme song of all time. ”Give it All You Got” was Mangione’s second single to reach #1 on the Adult Contemporary chart, after “Feels So Good” achieved that feat in 1978.

    Mangione was asked by Roone Arledge, then ABC Sports president, to craft a song for the Winter Olympiad. ABC had used Mangione’s recordings, including “Chase The Clouds Away,” four years earlier during their coverage of the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal. Featuring a lineup of Charles Meks (bass), James Bradley Jr. (drums), Grant Geissman (guitar), and Chris Vadalla (saxophone), Mangione, America’s most famous flugelhorn player wrote the Grammy-nominated song for his 1979 album Fun and Games. 

    Richard Challen wrote in 2020 about “Give It All You Got”:

    This is fusion jazz at its most peppy and pristine, the network TV version of “gritty.” Mangione and saxophonist Chris Vadala volley the theme back and forth for nearly half the track’s six-minute runtime, content to let that breezy melody do most of the work. There’s some inspired composition going on beneath the surface: the way the chord structure keeps dancing between major and minor, the spots where flugelhorn and sax each converge in twin harmony. Throw in Charles Meeks’ slippery bassline and some Nile-Rodgers-style rhythm work from Geissman, and you’ve got the perfect soundtrack for cruising L.A. in a ’74 Stingray convertible.

    Mangione told Wesley Hyatt for his 1999 book The Billboard Book of No. 1 Adult Contemporary Hits about the process of composing the music for the instrumental, saying: 

    (my) vision was to think about the athletes and their efforts to do their best now. They’re giving it all they’ve got. And we almost got to be like the athletes because we also got to perform the song at the ceremonies.

    “Give It All You Got” was nominated for best instrumental composition at the 1981 Grammy Awards, losing out to John Williams’ score for The Empire Strikes Back

    Mangione would perform “Give it All You Got” live at the Winter Olympics closing ceremony (as well as the song “Pina Colada”) on Sunday, February 24, 1980, just hours after the conclusion of the gold medal hockey victory for Team USA over Finland along with the Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra from Ontario, Canada.

    In addition to Mangione, the Crane School of Music at SUNY Potsdam contributed to the Lake Placid Winter Olympics as well. A 600-member Olympic chorus and orchestra, a 50 member wind ensemble and three Olympic bands of 50 members each, who were bused in daily and wore weather appropriate parkas and boots, instead of the typical tuxedos and gowns. Brass performers tested their instruments in the meat freezer of the local supermarket in Potsdam as they prepared for the Games.

    1980 winter olympics
    photo by Christopher Lenney

    Feb. 9, 1980 featured the Collegiate Singers, directed by Brock McElheran, as they performed for the International Olympic Committee, along with visiting dignitaries from participating nations.

    1980 winter olympics
    photo via the Crane School of Music

    Four Crane School of Music faculty members composed original works for the Olympic Games, including Elliot Del Borgo, Arthur Frackenpohl, William Maul and Robert Washburn. When American gold medal winners, including speedskater Eric Heiden, received their medals, they were accompanied by an arrangement of the “Star Spangled Banner” by Frackenpohl, who also arranged the Greek and Yugoslavian national anthems.  Washburn composed “Parade of Nations” for the opening ceremonies, while Del Borgo wrote the piece played during the closing, “When Dreams Are Dreamed and Dreams Are Won,” and Maul composed “March of the Athletes,” used for the closing ceremonies.

    photo via the Crane School of Music

    Crane School bands would provide music for the award ceremonies each evening, with Professor Emerita Rebekah Covell leading the Crane Symphonic Band for 14 performances over 14 days. With an added degree of difficulty, Covell and the musicians would often have less than an hour to rehearse national anthems needed for the medal award ceremonies, prior to playing the songs outdoors, often in freezing temperatures. Notably, Robert Mero, a former technical assistant at Crane, came out of retirement to assist musicians with technical services during the Games, per Robert Gibbs, a professor and emeritus member of the Crane School alumni board.

    Between Chuck Mangione and students and faculty at the Crane School of Music, all music for the 1980 Winter Olympics can be credited to talented born and/or raised New Yorkers. Here’s to the Winter Olympics returning to Lake Placid in the coming years, perhaps split with Montreal.

  • Bad Bunny Announces Tour, Yankee Stadium Concert in August and Latin America Tour in October

    Global superstar, Bad Bunny will begin his first stadium tour this August of 2022. Promoted by Live Nation and CMN, “Bad Bunny: World’s Hottest Tour”, will be first located in cities across the U.S. including a stop at Yankee Stadium in The Bronx, followed by Latin America in October.

    "Bad Bunny: World's Hottest Tour"

    The artist has already pushed boundaries by breaking the record at Ticketmaster, in April 2021 for the most tickets sales for a tour on its first day, when promoting his “El Último Tour Del Mundo 2022”. Additionally, for a consecutive second year in a row, Bad Bunny has been proclaimed to be the most listened to artist in the world on Spotify. Furthermore, he earned the title of #1 Latin Artist in the U.S. by Billboard for three consecutive years. With that being said, there is no doubt that, “Bad Bunny: World’s Hottest Tour”, will be a huge success and transcend his career.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LP4aY8kzK44

    Bad Bunny will be joined by Grammy nominated DJ and Record Producer, Alesso, along with ten-time Grammy nominated artist, Diplo.

    The “Bad Bunny: World’s Hottest Tour” will stop at Yankee Stadium in The Bronx on August 27. By Wednesday, January 26, pre-sale tickets for the tour will begin at 12 pm. Subsequently, they will go on sale to the general public by Friday, January 28 at 12pm on worldshottesttour.com.

    Bad Bunny: World’s Hottest TourUnited States Tour Dates

    “Bad Bunny: World’s Hottest Tour” 

    United States Tour Dates

    5-Aug Orlando, FL Camping World Stadium

    9-Aug Atlanta, GA Truist Park^

    12-Aug Miami, FL Hard Rock Stadium^ – SOLD OUT

    13-Aug Miami, FL Hard Rock Stadium> – ADDED DATE

    18-Aug Boston, MA Fenway Park^

    20-Aug Chicago, IL  Soldier Field

    23-Aug Washington, DC Nationals Park^

    27-Aug New York, NY Yankee Stadium> – SOLD OUT

    28-Aug New York, NY Yankee Stadium> – ADDED DATE

    1-Sept Houston, TX Minute Maid Park^ – SOLD OUT

    2-Sept Houston, TX Minute Maid Park^ – ADDED DATE

    7-Sept San Antonio, TX Alamodome^

    9-Sept Dallas, TX AT&T Stadium^

    14-Sept Oakland, CA RingCentral Coliseum^

    17-Sept San Diego, CA PETCO Park^ – SOLD OUT

    18-Sept San Diego, CA PETCO Park^ – ADDED DATE

    23-Sept Las Vegas, NV Allegiant Stadium^ – SOLD OUT

    24-Sept Las Vegas, NV Allegiant Stadium^ – ADDED DATE

    28-Sept Phoenix, AZ Chase Field^

    30-Sept Los Angeles, CA SoFi Stadium> – SOLD OUT

    1-Oct Los Angeles, CA SoFi Stadium> – ADDED DATE

    ^ with special guest Alesso  

    > with special guest Diplo 

    Latin America Tour Dates

    Date City/Country Venue

    21-Oct Santo Domingo, DR Estadio Olímpico Félix Sánchez

    28-Oct Santiago, Chile  Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos

    4-Nov Buenos Aires, Argentina Estadio de Vélez – José Amalfitani

    11-Nov Asuncion, Paraguay Estadio La Nueva Olla

    13-Nov Lima, Peru Estadio Nacional

    16-Nov Quito, Ecuador Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa

    18-Nov Medellin, Colombia Estadio Atanasio Girardot

    22-Nov Panama City, Panama Estadio Rommel Fernández Gutiérrez

    24-Nov San Jose, Costa Rica Estadio Nacional

    26-Nov San Salvador, El Salvador Estadio Cuscatlán

    29-Nov San Pedro Sula, Honduras Estadio Olímpico Metropolitano

    1-Dec Guatemala City, Guatemala Explanada Cardales de Cayalá

    3-Dec Monterrey, Mexico Estadio BBVA

    9-Dec Mexico City, Mexico Estadio Azteca

  • Whole Lotta Zeppelin in Bob Spitz’s Epic-Length Biography

    In 2005, music manager turned biographer Bob Spitz fashioned 1,000 pages to craft the definitive biography of The Beatles, the music- and culture-quaking foursome who reshaped the Sixties. Now, Spitz has put his superior skills as a researcher, storyteller and music industry analyst to work creating another definitive, doorstopper-sized music biog.  This one is dedicated to the Brit foursome who, like The Beatles before them, ruled supreme in their decade, 1970s mighty Led Zeppelin. This was a group that not only revolutionized how rock music was recorded and performed. They also rewrote the rules about how stars could wield their fame to new levels of drug- and sex-addled offstage excess, a brand of heavy metal debauchery that would never fly in today’s “me-too” era.

    zeppelin biography

    Just like his best-selling biographies of The Beatles, Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan, Led Zeppelin: The Biography (Penguin Press) unearths mountains of fresh facts and stories missed in the multitude of books that came before it. Spitz also rights many erroneous facts and legends about the secretive and somewhat paranoid Zep, ones that have been carried along for decades by lazy rock journos and, in many cases, the band itself.

    Spitz conducted 150 interviews with Zep’s fellow music makers, record execs, concert promoters, longtime friends and groupies to put together this nearly 700-page epic.  They share eyewitness accounts of the band’s legendary exploits – everything from who really stole the money at the infamous Drake Hotel robbery to the step-by-step creation of their masterful albums and songs, more than a few  initially “lifted” – sans credit and cash compensation – from the American blues artists they claimed to idolize. 

    zeppelin biography bob spitz
    author Robert Spitz

    Any book about Zeppelin must start with Jimmy Page, the band’s founder, guitar god, groundbreaking producer and magician – literal and figurative.

    With Page, Spitz goes back to the beginning. He commences by sharing how Pagey got his started in his guitar journey by devouring a copy of Bert Weedon’s Play in a Day instructional book, his appearance as a 13-year-old playing skiffle on a BBC-TV children’s show and his teenage apprenticeship in a multitude of early bands, one under the stage name “Nelson Storm.” Spitz also clarifies some of the facts about Page’s illustrious pre-Zeppelin career as a session guitarist.  This is a guy who was featured on smash hits like Petula Clarke’s “Downtown,” Marianne Faithfull’s “As Tears Go By,” Tom Jones’ “It’s Not Usual,” the theme from the James Bond film Goldfinger and his rhythm guitar (not lead as is sometimes stated) on The Kinks’ “You Really Got Me” and The Who’s “I Can’t Explain.”  Something I had never heard before was of his dalliance in something he dubbed “rocketry” – playing solo guitar behind the Beat verse of poet Royston Ellis. Also referenced in his early experience producing four definitive tracks with Brit blues godhead John Mayall and Eric Clapton.  Also noteworthy is his discovery, at age 11, of pagan mystic Aleister Crowley and his book Magick in Theory and Practice, something that will figure largely in Zeppelin’s music and Page’s hedonist lifestyle.

    The road to Zeppelin was set when Page tired of studio work and joined The Yardbirds, first to play bass behind his childhood friend Jeff Beck’s lead guitar. Page ultimately joined Beck on dual leads for a short, sensational time, until Beck departed and Page essentially assumed musical leadership of a band that was on its last legs.  At this point, Zep manager-to-be Peter Grant enters the picture. Spitz paints a detailed portrait of the 300-plus-pound Grant’s road to Zep’s mega-manager. This includes his stints as a professional wrestler known as “His Royal Highness Count Bruno Alessio of Milan,” as a debt enforcer for notorious Soho gangs to, finally, his earliest management experiences with an unsuccessful band called The Flintstones and The New Vaudeville Band, a 1920s parody act that scored a global novelty hit with “Winchester Cathedral.”

    It is with Grant’s invaluable support and muscle that Page makes his move to create the unique blues- and folk-powered band he had long envisioned, with veteran studio multi-instrumentalist and arranger John Paul Jones and two Northern newcomers to the big time, in singer Robert Plant and earthshaking drummer John “Bonzo” Bonham.  Spitz’s wordsmithery literally puts you in the room as the foursome get together for the first time on a sweltering day in August 1968 to jam. It creates a moment of such brilliances and power that they all break down into laughter after the first number.

    Spitz follows the halcyon days of the band, from their contractually obligated debut on a Scandinavian tour as “The New Yardbirds” to their breakup after the death of drummer John Bonham in September 1980.  The book will delight musicians who will hear the stories of the writing of classics like “Stairway to Heaven” and “Kashmir,” how they used the studio to conjur magical sounds like the thunderous drums on “Moby Dick” and the skinny on all their controversial “appropriation” of riffs and words from bluesmen like Willie Dixon and Howlin’ Wolf on tunes like “Whole Lotta Love” and “The Lemon Song.” 

    What is sometimes lost to the mists of time is their huge unpopularity and subsequent war with the press, especially the critics at Rolling Stone Magazine.  Right out of the box, their debut album was criticized as a pale imitation of Jeff Beck’s Truth and the criticisms just grew with each platinum album and sold-out tour. After several years declining every request for interview, the band enlisted a heavyweight PR agency to tackle the matter with limited success.  A Hollywood press event meant to draw a bevy of celebs only drew Lloyd Bridges, father of actor Jeff, perhaps best known for his stint as an aqualung wearing detective in the late 1950s TV series, Sea Hunt. In another star-studded moment, the band engages in a food fight with none other than TV’s Kojack, actor Telly Savalas!  The A-list was off on tour with the Rolling Stones, whose press coverage infuriated the maybe even more successful Zeppelin.

    Any book about Led Zeppelin would be sinfully incomplete without a deep dive into their depravity on the road.  Here, the Marquis de Sade/whips & chains lovin’ Page and booze-soaked Bonzo are the stars. 

    The author clarifies some points about Page’s infamous relationship with “baby groupie” Lori Mattix, who was his LA lady for a few years between his stateside romantic dalliances with Pamela Des Barres and Bebe Buell.  Mattix became Page’s main squeeze for his tours in the U.S. at age 15, but not before losing her virginity to David Bowie at 12, according to the book.  Bonzo’s exploits are even more gruesome and Spitz recounts a cornucopia of golden hits of depravity. These include the famous Mudshark episode while on tour with Vanilla Fudge immortalized in song by Frank Zappa, his trying to coax a Great Dane into having sex with a groupie at the Chateau Marmont, his doing a #2 in the purse of Page’s Japanese girlfriend and monumental consumption of drink and cocaine which often spurred his to sudden acts of violence.  The latter was an addiction shared by all the band and its manager.  In one morbidly humorous episode, Grant is so coked up that he mistakes a TV remote for a sandwich and breaks a tooth. In another, fountain pen ink leaks into their stash, but they sniff it nonetheless and gain blue nostrils which they proudly carry for a few days. By their 1977 tour,  the wheels are coming off the bus with Page’s serious heroin addiction. It especially infuriates Plant as Page sometimes screws up on his famed double-necked guitar, by fingering one neck and picking the other.

    There is more detail on their battles with the descendants of airship inventor Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, who at first would not let any “babbling apes” make money off her family name or by using its image on their first two albums cover art.  Speaking of cover art, there’s some fun details on their various makings and controversy, including how they sprayed naked children with gold auto paint for the cover of House of the Holy.  Also explored are their successes and misses with their record label, Swan Song.  It’s Zeppelin we have to thank for the litany of classic rock classics by the hard rocking Bad Company.  But Spitz is the first author I’ve heard to divulge their passing on the opportunity to sign both Queen and Heart.

    But the heart of Spitz’s book is an exploration of both the making of the music and Led Zeppelin as the touring juggernaut, that one that brought rock from small clubs to stadiums.  With 300 million albums sold, with their creativity with studio sound and song form, with their hundreds of performances over 30 global spanning tours and their colorful excesses, Led Zeppelin is a band deserving such a sprawling tome.  As usual, the mighty Spitz has truly written, and perhaps closed the book forever, on the heaviest rock band of its era.

  • From Budapest to Brooklyn, The Hellfreaks stun with cover of Beastie Boys’ ‘Sabotage’

    Hungarian Punk-Metal band The Hellfreaks are here to prove themselves with their cover of ‘Sabotage’ by NYC legends, the Beastie Boys. 

    cover art

    Following their recent signing to Napalm Records and the release of their single ‘Old Tomorrow,’ the group have focused on finding ways to showcase their full potential. ‘Sabotage’ serves as the kickstart to their upcoming full-length album.

    The four members of the group worked hard to find a sound that would work for all of them and they struck gold after agreeing to do a Beastie Boys cover. The song perfectly encapsulates each member’s musical prowess while allowing them to incorporate their own special twist.

    We love to challenge ourselves and see this mindset as the oil for our engine, that is why we decided to do something we never did before – to cover a song that represents a legendary piece of rock music history. 

    The Hellfreaks

    Instead of recording each part of the song instrument by instrument or section by section, it was recorded with all the members together. The method of live recording ensured that they would keep the essence of the Beastie Boys without making an exact replica of their hit song. As homage to the rap icons’ hometown pride, The Hellfreaks recorded the music video in their hometown of Budapest.

    ‘Sabotage’ is now available on youtube, all streaming platforms and at Napalm Records.