Metallica expands blood drive initiative with Give Where You Live campaign

Metallica expands blood drive initiative with Give Where You Live campaign
ABC/Randy Holmes

During Metallica‘s 2025 M72 tour, the band teamed up with the American Red Cross to set up blood drives around cities on the itinerary. Now, the metal legends are expanding the initiative nationwide with the Give Where You Live campaign.

If you sign up to participate in any Red Cross blood drive in the U.S. now through Feb. 28, 2026, you’ll receive a limited-edition Red Cross-themed Metallica T-shirt, while supplies last. You’ll also be automatically entered to win an ESP Snakebyte guitar featuring exclusive artwork and autographs by each Metallica band member.

For more info, visit RedCrossBlood.org/Metallica.

“Throughout the U.S. run of M72 shows, fans donated more than 2,000 units of blood and platelets!” Metallica says. “Each blood donation can help save more than one life; the Metallica Family is giving back and saving lives!”

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On This Day, July 30, 1988: Steve Winwood hit #1 with ‘Roll With It’

On This Day, July 30, 1988: Steve Winwood hit #1 with ‘Roll With It’

On This Day, July 30, 1988 …

Former Traffic star Steve Winwood topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart with “Roll With It,” the title track from his fifth studio album.

The track spent four weeks in the top spot and was one of two #1 hits Winwood would have during his solo career. The other was “Higher Love,” which topped the chart in August 1986.

While Winwood wrote “Roll With It” with Will Jennings, the performing rights organization BMI later gave the Motown songwriting team of Holland-Dozier-Holland – Lamont Dozier and brothers Brian Holland and Eddie Holland – credit, due to the song’s similarity to “(I’m a) Roadrunner,” which they wrote for Junior Walker.

“Roll With It” went on to earn Grammy nominations for record of the year and best male pop vocal performance. The album was also nominated for album of the year.

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Grahame Lesh talks celebrating the Grateful Dead & more with The Heart of Town shows

Grahame Lesh talks celebrating the Grateful Dead & more with The Heart of Town shows

Grahame Lesh is hosting a three-night concert series, The Heart of Town, to help celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Grateful Dead.

Lesh’s shows, taking place July 31-Aug. 2 at San Francisco’s Pier 48, coincide with Dead & Company’s three-night stand at Golden Gate Park Aug. 1-3. Lesh tells ABC Audio the weekend is about celebrating more than just the band’s music.

“The Grateful Dead is so all-encompassing,” Lesh, son of the late Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh, says. “I think every aspect of the weekend is going to celebrate some aspect of the band.”

He adds, “It’s just become this whole Bay Area wide celebration of the band, of the music, of the community and, you know, of the area honestly, of the city itself.”

Artists on board to celebrate The Dead’s legacy include Taylor Goldsmith and Griffin Goldsmith of Dawes, John Medeski and Duane Betts, with Lesh noting it wasn’t hard to find artists who’ve been influenced by The Dead.

“That sort of like just opens up this whole world of people who love to play this music or love to play adjacent music or any sort of thing like that,” he says.

Lesh says his main goal with The Heart of Town is to put on a great show, but he hopes fans leave grasping the “breadth and the depth” of the Grateful Dead’s music and its community.

And when it comes to the set, fans may be in for some surprises.

“I’m planning to play some Dead songs that I’m sure Dead & Co. is not going to do,” Lesh says. “There’s so much … they couldn’t get it all in to three nights either.” 

The Heart of the Town is presented by San Francisco Giants and Relix, and produced by Terrapin Station Entertainment and Dayglo Presents. More info can be found at mlb.com.

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Ex-Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron playing concert with Is This Real? side project

Ex-Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron playing concert with Is This Real? side project
Dave Simpson/WireImage

Following his exit from Pearl Jam, drummer Matt Cameron is getting back onstage.

Cameron has announced a show with his side project Is This Real?, which began as a tribute to the band Wipers. The concert takes place Sept. 13 at the Seattle venue The Triple Door.

The bill also includes Hiro Yamamoto, who previously played with Cameron as the original bassist for Soundgarden.

Cameron announced earlier in July that he’d left Pearl Jam after 27 years playing with Eddie Vedder and company. He later clarified that, despite the Pearl Jam departure, he’s “still an active musician.”

Both Cameron and Yamamoto will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as members of Soundgarden in November.

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Original Iron Maiden lead singer has died

Original Iron Maiden lead singer has died
Iron Maiden in 2003; Mick Hutson/Redferns

British singer Paul Mario Day, who was the original lead singer for Iron Maiden, has passed away at the age of 69.

Day’s death was revealed in a tribute posted on the Facebook page of British glam band Sweet, which Day joined in 1985. According to the post, Day “passed away peacefully at his home in Australia.”

“IN 1985 Mick Tucker and myself put together the first new line-up of Sweet after the hiatus of the original band,” Sweet guitarist Andy Scott writes.  “We needed a singer and when Paul arrived for the audition we looked no further.”

Day toured Australia and Europe with Sweet, and appeared on the band’s 1989 live album and DVD Live at the Marquee, with Scott noting Day’s vocals have “stood the test of time.”

Day was the lead singer of Iron Maiden from December 1975 to October 1976 before he was replaced by Dennis Wilcock. He went on to form the British heavy metal band More, before joining Sweet.

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Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison announces dates for special ‘Stop Making Sense’ screenings

Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison announces dates for special ‘Stop Making Sense’ screenings
Courtesy of Jerry Harrison

As part of the continuing celebration of the 40th anniversary of Taking Heads‘ iconic concert film, Stop Making Sense, the band’s keyboardist and guitarist Jerry Harrison is set to host a series of special screenings of the film.

In addition to showing the newly restored 4K version, the screenings will include an appearance by Harrison, who’ll share some introductory remarks, behind-the-scenes stories and sit for a Q&A with audiences.

The screenings kick off Sept. 11 in Concord, New Hampshire, and include stops in California, Texas and Florida before wrapping Jan. 17 in Bellingham, Washington.

A ticket presale begins Wednesday at 10 a.m. local time, with tickets going on sale to the general public Friday. More information and a complete list of screenings can be found at jerry-harrison.com.

Released in 1984, Stop Making Sense was recorded over three shows at Hollywood’s Pantages Theatre in December 1983. It is considered by many to be the greatest concert film of all time. In 2021, it was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Film Registry.

The newly restored 4K version of Stop Making Sense had its premiere at the 2023 Toronto Film Festival, with the four members of Talking Heads – Harrison, David Byrne, Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz — reuniting for the event. The band went on to host several other screenings of the film.

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Metallica asks for help in identifying kid in throwback photo

Metallica asks for help in identifying kid in throwback photo
ABC/Randy Holmes

Metallica is asking for your help in identifying a kid featured in a throwback photo alongside James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich.

The photo was taken in 1996 by a Metallica fan named Vincent Pugliese, who ran into Hetfield and Ulrich at New York City’s Madison Square Garden while photographing a hockey game between the New York Rangers and Pittsburgh Penguins.

Pugliese says he was outside the locker rooms when he noticed Hetfield and Ulrich were standing next to him. He then introduced himself and asked if he could take a photo of them. They agreed, though Pugliese says that Ulrich told him that because of “promotional reasons,” the photo couldn’t only feature members of Metallica. 

So, Pugliese turned to a kid wearing a Rangers shirt who also happened to be standing nearby and asked him if he’d want to be in the photo. The kid agreed, though Pugliese believes he didn’t have “any clue who they were.”

“We went on our merry ways, and every few years I think about this kid,” Pugliese says. “He’s never seen this picture because it was never published in any magazine. All these years later, Metallica is still one of the biggest bands in the world. I think it would be cool if he saw this.”

After coming across Pugliese’s story, Metallica reposted it to their Facebook page, adding, “C’mon everyone… let’s help Vincent finally get this pic to the young man in this photo! (…and we’re not talking about us!)”

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Ian Anderson on Mick Jagger’s vocals: ‘(He) didn’t set the bar very high’

Ian Anderson on Mick Jagger’s vocals: ‘(He) didn’t set the bar very high’
Frank Hoensch/Redferns

Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson doesn’t seem all that impressed with Mick Jagger.

The 77-year-old rocker criticized the Rolling Stones frontman’s singing in an interview with Now Spinning Magazine as he was addressing what it physically takes to perform at his age.

Discussing the challenges faced by artists, Anderson, who sings and plays the flute onstage, said “it depends what you do.” He adds, “You can be physically animated, but there’s a degree to which you can only do so much if you’re playing a flute.”

He then compared it to what the now-82-year-old Jagger does onstage, suggesting it doesn’t take much to perform like him since he “didn’t set the bar very high in terms of vocal skills right from the very beginning.” Anderson did say he meant “no disrespect.”

“He’s a shouter, and he doesn’t have to really hit the notes or necessarily be terribly great on intonation or phrasing or anything,” Anderson said. “He runs around in a very animated way, and that’s great for someone who’s, you know, whatever, a couple of years older than me, or three years older than me. That’s fine.”

Anderson added that what he does is “not easy” and that “there is a limit to what you can do” when playing the flute.

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Zakk Wylde shares final text message he received from Ozzy Osbourne

Zakk Wylde shares final text message he received from Ozzy Osbourne
Jason Merritt/FilmMagic

Zakk Wylde, who long played guitar in Ozzy Osbourne‘s solo band, has shared the final text message he received from the late metal legend.

Wylde tells Guitar World that he received the text following the Back to the Beginning concert on July 5, which was announced ahead of time as the final live performance by both Ozzy and the original Black Sabbath lineup. In addition to playing during Ozzy’s solo set, Wylde performed at Back to the Beginning with Pantera.

“Everybody and their mother were in the backstage dressing room and I just wanted to give [Ozzy] a break,” Wylde recalls of the scene right after Back to the Beginning concluded. “I figured we’d see him later on – the next day or whatever. But no.”

Ozzy died just over two weeks later, on July 22.

“The last text I got from Oz was saying, ‘Zakky, sorry, it was like a madhouse back there. I didn’t see you,'” Wylde says. “He goes, ‘Thanks for everything.’ It was just us talking, saying, ‘I love you, buddy.’ That was it.”

Pantera has since canceled and postponed tour dates so that the band can take “time and space to grieve” Ozzy’s loss. 

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David Gilmour’s Luck and Strange tour captured for concert film and live album

David Gilmour’s Luck and Strange tour captured for concert film and live album
Sony Music Vision and Trafalgar Releasing

David Gilmour released the solo album Luck and Strange in 2024 and hit the road on a solo tour, and now one of those shows is coming to theaters.

Live at the Circus Maximus, Rome captures one of the Pink Floyd rocker’s shows at the famed Italian venue set against the backdrop of the ancient ruins of Rome. The concert film will hit theaters and IMAX on Sept. 17 for a limited time.

Tickets go on sale Aug. 6 at 9 a.m. ET. at DavidGilmour.film.

Then, on Oct. 17, Gilmour will release The Luck and Strange Concerts, a four-LP or two-CD set featuring 23 tracks recorded during the tour. It features live performances of songs from the album, as well as classic Pink Floyd tracks like “Wish You Were Here” and “Comfortably Numb.” There will also be a super deluxe edition that includes a 120-page book, David Gilmour Luck and Strange Live, that features tour photos taken by Gilmour’s wife, Polly Samson.

Live at the Circus Maximus, Rome will also be released on Oct. 17 as a two-Blu-ray and three-DVD set, with bonus footage and The Luck and Strange Concerts.

As a preview of the album and film, Gilmour has released a performance of the Pink Floyd track “Sorrow” to digital services, along with a performance video.

The Luck and Strange Concerts and Live at the Circus Maximus, Rome are available for preorder now.

Luck and Strange was Gimour’s first album of new material in nine years. The album debuted at #10 in the U.S. and at #1 in the U.K. The subsequent tour included rehearsal shows in Brighton, England, followed by multinight stands in Italy, London, New York and Los Angeles.

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