Blondie frontwoman Debbie Harry stars in a new campaign for fashion brand Gucci.
The campaign, We Will Always Have London, was shot by famed photographer Nan Golden. It’s described as “an ode to the timeless allure of London,” which is the city where the collection debuted.
The ad was shot in various locations throughout London, aimed at promoting “the spirit of the Gucci Blondie bag and Cruise 2025 collection.”
Harry is seen in the ad riding in the back seat of a car, wearing a red leather jacket and holding the Gucci bag. The whole clip is soundtracked by a haunting version of the Blondie hit “Heart of Glass.”
This is the second fashion campaign Harry has headlined in recent weeks. She was recently featured in a new campaign for British luxury eyewear brand Cutler and Gross.
Stevie Nicks‘ new song “The Lighthouse” is here, and according to the music legend, it might be not only the most important song she’s ever written, but the most important thing she’s ever done.
Stevie describes the song, about women’s rights, as an “anthem.” She’s the one leading the charge, singing, “I wanna be The Lighthouse/ Bring all of you together.” In a note, she explains she started the song a few months after Roe v. Wade was overturned.
“It seemed like overnight, people were saying ‘what can we, as a collective force, do about this,'” she recalls. “For me, it was to write a song. It took a while because I was on the road. Then early one morning, I was watching the news on TV and a certain newscaster said something that felt like she was talking to me, explaining what the loss of Roe v Wade would come to mean.”
“I wrote the song the next morning and recorded it that night,” she continues. “That was September 6, 2022. I have been working on it ever since. I have often said to myself, ‘This may be the most important thing I ever do. To stand up for the women of the United States and their daughters and granddaughters and the men that love them.'”
Elsewhere in the song, Stevie sings, “They’ll take your soul, they’ll take your power/ Unless you save it/ … I wanna teach ’em to fight/ I wanna tell ’em this has happened before/ Don’t let it happen again.”
“The Lighthouse” is Stevie’s first new music since she released a cover of Buffalo Springfield‘s “For What It’s Worth” and her first new original song since 2020’s “Show Them the Way.” She’ll perform on Saturday Night Live on Oct. 12.
Peter Frampton is clearing the air over comments he made blaming Megadeth for him having to cancel a show in Virginia.
During his Sept. 19 concert in Philadelphia, Frampton said he canceled his Sept. 17 show at Virginia Credit Union Live in Richmond partially due to weather and partially due structural damage to the stage, which he suggested may have happened during Megadeth’s soundcheck a few days before.
Megadeth responded that Frampton was misinformed, saying they didn’t even soundcheck due to damage to the venue’s grid system. “It’s disappointing when someone you admire talks out their a** about you,” the band’s frontman, Dave Mustaine, said.
Frampton is now setting the record straight, telling ABC Audio his comments were simply a joke and he feels bad about it.
“I sent them an apology. It was just one of those things that people took me serious. … I made it all up just for the comedy,” he says. “I turned into Don Rickles for a minute there.”
And Frampton, who’s set to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Oct. 19, understands why Mustaine was angry.
“If I were Dave Mustaine and the guys in Megadeth, I would be p***** too,” Frampton says. “So, you know, he says I talked out of my a**. Well, yeah, that’s where it came from.”
“I didn’t mean any harm at all, but it was a very, very serious situation and I made light of it not knowing the facts,” Frampton continued. “So that was a huge lesson for me and I apologized to them.”
As for Mustaine saying he admired Frampton, the guitar great notes, “He is a good guy,” adding that after Megadeth finishes touring he needs to “take him out for a meal or something.”
Queen has released a performance video of the track “Son and Daughter,” recorded live at Hammersmith Odeon on Dec. 24, 1975.
The performance is one of the rare live tracks featured on the upcoming six-CD + one-LP collector’s edition reissue, Queen I, which revisits the band’s 1973 self-titled debut album.
The set, made up of 63 tracks with 43 brand-new mixes, will include the original album with a new track listing, along with its originally intended running order and the addition of “Mad the Swine,” a song that was absent from the 1973 release. There are also alternative takes, demos and rare live tracks, along with “fly-on-the-wall audio” that gives fans a behind-the-scenes look at Queen in the studio.
In addition to the box set, Queen I will be released as a single CD and two-CD deluxe edition, as well as on vinyl, picture disc and cassette.
Elton John‘s “Tiny Dancer” is about a woman who hangs around with musicians — Bernie Taupin has said it was about his wife at the time. But now the classic tune has been used to soundtrack the trailer for a movie about a woman who hangs around with guns, knives and anything else you can use to kill someone in gnarly fashion.
The movie isFrom the World of John Wick: Ballerina, a spin-off of the Keanu Reeves action movies. It starts with a young girl listening to a music box, which features a ballerina spinning to an instrumental version of “Tiny Dancer.” We then see that young girl, now bloodied and beaten, led away by John Wick star Ian McShane, who promises to take her to a school where they “teach dancers.”
Except, it’s not exactly a ballet school. It’s a school for assassins. We see the little girl, Eve, played as a grown woman by Ana de Armas, undergoing training in various deadly arts. As we hear Elton’s song — with its line “Ballerina, you must’ve seen her” — she interacts with other fixtures of the John Wick universe, including the Continental Hotel, its concierge, Charon, and McShane’s character, Winston.
Then, there’s a lot of killing, as Eve dispatches various opponents with firearms, a flamethrower, knives and even an ice skate. At the end, she comes face to face with John Wick himself.
Billy Joel has announced a handful of co-headlining dates for 2025.
The Rock & Roll Hall of Famer is set to play four shows with Sting: Feb. 8 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, April 11 at JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse, New York, May 10 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina, and May 23 at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Utah.
But that’s not all. Joel and Stevie Nicks have also booked a co-headlining date, March 29 at Detroit’s Ford Field.
Citi presales for all shows begin Monday at 10 a.m. ET, with tickets going on sale to the general public starting Oct. 4 at 9 a.m. ET.
In addition to these co-headlining shows, Billy has a few solo gigs on his schedule for 2025, including New Year’s Eve at the UBS Arena in New York for the second year in a row and a Jan. 17 show in Seminole, Florida.
Joel’s next show is a co-headlining date with Sting on Friday in St. Louis. A complete list of dates can be found at billyjoel.com.
The tracks follow the Guns N’ Roses and Velvet Revolver bassist’s latest solo album, 2023’s Lighthouse.
“We thought it was good idea to put out a couple of fresh songs right here on the eve of the Lighthouse tour,” McKagan says. “Choosing David Bowie’s ‘Heroes’ seemed to be a natural subject matter for me (I am of course, a massive history nerd)…star-crossed lovers in the shadow of the mid-’70s cold-war era Berlin Wall.”
He adds, “To try and compliment this era, I chose a sort of ’70s glam-rock song that I wrote some time last year, ‘True to the Death Rock N’ Roll Ballad,’ another lyric where love and lust and time are the central figures.”
Actress Shailene Woodley recently revealed that she’s been working with songwriter Linda Perry to develop her voice for the upcoming Janis Joplin biopic, and now Perry is sharing some more details on the film.
Perry tells Entertainment Weekly she’s “been waiting decades for this movie to be made” and is honored to be a part of it. She describes the movie as “a raw and honest look into Janis Joplin’s last days.”
”Shailene Woodley’s emotional commitment and dedication to Janis is inspiring,” Perry adds. “I believe her! Shailene lives for the art and I can’t think of a better person to portray such a powerful, emotional, and complex artist.”
Joplin died Oct. 4, 1970, at the age of 27.
Woodley’s plan to produce and star in a Joplin biopic was revealed in early September. During an interview Wednesday on Live with Kelly and Mark she said she’s been putting the film together for six years.
Lynyrd Skynyrd has canceled four more shows following the news of Skynyrd frontman Johnny Van Zant’s family emergency.
The band originally canceled their Sept. 24 concert in Anchorage, sharing that Van Zant’s daughter had to “undergo emergency surgery.” Now they’ve canceled their shows Thursday in West Valley, Utah; Friday in Loveland, Colorado; Saturday in Colorado Springs; and Sunday in Albuquerque.
In a post on social media, Skynyrd says Van Zant has left the tour to be with his daughter “while they continue testing, diagnosis and treatment.” Refunds will be given to all ticketholders.
The canceled dates where the last four shows on Skynyrd’s Sharp Dressed Simple Man tour with ZZ Top. Their next scheduled show is at the Field & Stream Festival in Winnsboro Mills, South Carolina, taking place Oct. 4-6.
Foo Fighters have pulled out of the 2024 Soundside Music Festival, set to take place Sept. 28-29 in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
A statement to the “Everlong” band’s Facebook simply reads, “Foo Fighters will no longer be appearing at this weekend’s Soundside Music Festival.”
Notably, Soundside was set to be the first Foo Fighters show following the news that frontman Dave Grohl had fathered a child outside of his marriage. Grohl and his wife, Jordyn Blum, have been married since 2003, and they share three daughters.
“I love my wife and my children, and I am doing everything I can to regain their trust and earn their forgiveness,” Grohl wrote in a Sept. 10 Instagram post. “We’re grateful for your consideration toward all the children involved, as we move forward together.”
Meanwhile, Soundside has announced that Jack White and Greta Van Fleet have joined the bill in the Foos’ place. The festival had previously replaced Queens of the Stone Age with Bleachers after the former dropped out due to frontman Josh Homme‘s health.