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hang tight! Hello all! We took a break and did some maintenance under the hood of RPM. Hang tight and we’ll be back soon.
hang tight! Hello all! We took a break and did some maintenance under the hood of RPM. Hang tight and we’ll be back soon.
One of the most unique parts of the Hard Rock Cafe story is Live Aid. Hard Rock was there in 1985, operating the catering tents on both sides of the Atlantic and we unearthed some photos of the day!
The lasting power of The Cure and Depeche Mode is no accident. There is something soothing about losing yourself in the swirling fog of dark wave music. Guitar pedals heavy on chorus and synth-laden atmospheres dance together in sadness and everyone looks beautiful in black. We may initially fall for its sway as disaffected teens…
The National and Courtney Barnett took over St Augustine, June 17th 2019.
Since our first cafe opened in London on June 14, 1971, music has been our differentiator.
In Part 1 of our Love Is Love series, we explored some of the LGBTQ artists who were pioneers in their genres and helped open doors for today’s artists. As we continue our celebration of Pride Month, we take a look at some of today’s best new music from LGBTQ artists.
Love is love. As we mark the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising this June, Pride month is more important than ever.
The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there. – L.P. Hartley Let’s get it out in the open from the outset, Whitesnake’s Flesh & Blood is a damn fine rock-n-roll record.
Poet. Guitarist. Songwriter. Publisher. Activist. Mother. Brenda Kahn’s music career stretches from the anti-folk scene of the East Village in the early 1990s to a recently published book of poetry about parenting aptly titled The Good, The Bad, And The Laundry. Along the way, Kahn recorded with her friend Jeff Buckley, played Lilith Fair multiple…
Australia’s premiere indie/psych-rock gods Tame Impala played (for the first time in Florida!) a sold out show in the swamps of America’s oldest city, St Augustine.
The many roles a mother plays makes fitting all of our thank you’s into one day a year an impossible task.
Coachella weekend has come to a close and our taxes are due tonight. If you’re burning the candle trying to find a few more deductions, here is some great new music to listen to.
If The Dirt doesn’t kickstart a glam metal resurgence, it may never come. That won’t stop bands like L.A. Guns from continuing to carry the torch for the sleazy goodness of the Sunset Strip.
When it comes to rock-n-roll, teenagers will always be the ultimate arbiters of cool. Last night in Las Vegas, a swaying mass of youth anointed SWMRS the next big thing.
It has been a slow journey to her debut album but Lauren Jenkins rewards our patience with an album that takes us back to the crossroads where country, pop, and rock once hung out together sharing a bottle of whiskey.
The list of iconic and influential women in music stretches well past the horizon and grows longer each and every day.
Duran Duran were the video band that killed the radio stars.
We’re at the tail end of that magical time of year when pampered artistes gather together to pat themselves on the back and make pretentious speeches while wearing dubious fashion – AWARD SEASON!
Every year, it seems like the Grammy awards get just enough right to keep us coming back.
It’s written in the stars… Ah, Valentine’s Day – the holiday that comes so close to Christmas you’re probably out of money and gift ideas to give that special someone. While chocolates and flowers are both traditional and romantic Valentine’s Day gifts, we recommend going deeper. Create a personalized, love song-filled playlist that will truly…
On Saturday Night Live this week, Greta Van Fleet staked their claim to the future of classic rock-n-roll. On Sunday night in Las Vegas, Styx made a powerful case of their own with a set of new songs that more than held their own against the band’s legendary songbook.
I am still searching for David Bowie. He is everywhere but he is nowhere.
The first huge festival announcement of 2019 has arrived and Coachella has one of its deepest line-ups ever.
I’ve been waiting to write something about Pete Shelley after hearing about his passing today.
As 2018 draws to a close, we asked some members of Hard Rock’s music team to run down their favorite albums of the year. Dig it!
Magic Dance take nostalgia in a fresh direction on New Eyes by intentionally undermining the importance we attach to the canon of influence.
X and Los Lobos in San Francisco X and Los Lobos, two classic Los Angeles bands each celebrating over 40 years in the business, brought their show to the historic Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco for a two-night stand this past weekend. Another LA veteran, Jane Wiedlin of the Go-Go’s, opened the show with her…
Greta Van Fleet took over the top slot on the Billboard Top Artist album chart this week. Let that sink in for a second.
The cobwebs are being cleared this morning as another Halloween is in the books. There has been no shortage of quality music this year and the November playlist is already filling up fast. Here is another edition of Now Hear This!
In January of 1984, Duran Duran arrived in Noyers, France with director Brian Grant to film their video for “New Moon On Monday”.
On The Joy Formidable’s magnificent new record, AAARTH, the band searches for a way to reconcile the many opposing elements of today’s fractured world.
RPM writer Jason Lent is back with another First Listen?!?, this time on the Rolling Stones’ Some Girls.
Now Hear This – September 2018 One of the highlights of working at Hard Rock Cafe is meeting music fans from all over the world. The passion and love for bands, both new and old, always inspires me to continue exploring every realm of the rock-n-roll universe. The list below reflects some of those suggestions.…
Patti Smith, Flea, Bob Weir & more at Pathway to Paris Pathway to Paris – The Masonic Auditorium – San Francisco – Sept. 14, 2018 With extreme weather events very much in the news recently, the fourth annual Pathway to Paris concert at The Masonic Auditorium in San Francisco could not have been more…
Playlist: 24 Witchy Songs To Celebrate the Fall Equinox For most, the arrival of fall is more a feeling than a temperature drop. An ethereal shift in the winds perhaps or just your inaugural pumpkin spice latte order — whatever marks the change of the season, the collective gearing up for Autumn is here. To…
Summer draws to a close and cooler nights are on the horizon. No better time to put on headphones and spend some time with new music.
Catching Up With The Regrettes The Regrettes are the most dangerous band in the world today. No, they aren’t the second coming of Guns-n-Roses, or even the Sex Pistols, and we should be thankful for that. I don’t expect The Regrettes to be milking their generation for $250 concert tickets on a bloated reunion tour…
Musical success is often attributed to sheer talent, hard work, and maybe some dumb luck. The high intelligence level associated with great musical talent, however, is rarely addressed.
Lest we forget that rock-n-roll isn’t all limousines and champagne, The Struts’ Luke Spiller listed off the band’s grueling 24 hours in Las Vegas halfway through a sweat drenched set at Brooklyn Bowl.
There are worse ways to spend a summer than supporting Foo Fighters as they make their away around North America playing some of the biggest stadiums.
I fondly remember the sense of exploring the future via the mid-century modern prism of Epcot Center in Orlando, FL as a child.
Musicians are creative types; their ability to form beauty out of sound, to build patterns from chaos, is what makes them special. Sometimes their creativity goes beyond the sonic realm into that of the visual. Hair is one of the most defining and yet malleable features of a person’s look, and one that musicians often…
Broken Social Scene in Orlando Broken Social Scene, Canada’s premier indie super-group (with members from Feist, Metric, STARS, Do Make Say Think), crashed our little corner of Southern America on an extended run of dates for their Hug of Thunder tour. RPM contributor William Powell was there to capture the show.
Devo! The Damned! it’s Burger Boogaloo 2018 in Oakland! Burger Boogaloo 2018 came roaring into Mosswood Park in Oakland, California this past weekend. Now in its ninth year, the festival brought together more than twenty bands over two days, with highlights including headlining sets from The Damned and Devo (with Fred Armisen on drums –…
Science Fiction: A Brief History Of Thompson Twins This month marks the 33rd anniversary of Live Aid and the bands that ruled that day (Queen and U2) remain as front of mind as ever in popular culture with sold-out arena tours and, in the case of Queen, a new film and Vegas residency on the…
Throughout history, the most interesting and exciting music often happens on the edges where the most marginalized artists reside.
The Pretenders at the Masonic in San Fran! The Pretenders rocked the Masonic in San Francisco on June 22nd. Our own Aaron Rubin was there to capture the show. with support from Chuck Prophet and The Mission Express
The contributions to popular music by African American artists is difficult to overstate, so we’re not even gonna try. Instead, here are some incredible pieces of history from some true legends.
In a few months, The Joy Formidable will be playing in front of packed stadiums while supporting the Foo Fighters.
School’s out for summer which means more time to listen to music!
5 Rising LGBT Artists For the month of June, the world celebrates Pride, a time for many to set aside the daily struggle and find joy in being part of the queer community. It is also a month to commemorate the 1969 Stonewall Riots and recognize and honor those fighting to end homophobia, legalize same…
As we get older, the pull of our memories often draw us back in time like a tractor beam on the Death Star.
In the 90s, the female singer-songwriter explosion brought a wave of significant alternative artists who helped re-shape the decade.
As we enter the thick of festival season, another kind of festival is heating up: the wellness festival.
This Friday, the Electric Daisy Carnival will descend upon Las Vegas like a thunderstorm of candy rain.
U2 – iNNOCENCE + eXPERIENCE Tour For almost forty years, U2 have been with us, filling stadiums with their rock-n-roll anthems while slyly holding a mirror up to us, the listener. On the current iNNOCENCE + eXPERIENCE tour, the band’s political urgency and messages of hope have taken on a distinctively different tone. Fully aware…
“While I’m alive, I’ll make tiny changes to earth.” – Scott Hutchison
Welcome back to Battery Park Welcome back to Battery Park Welcome to show day … more specifically, the premiere of Hard Rock Sioux City’s 2018 outdoor concert series. Welcome back to Battery Park. Before Post Malone hits the stage in front of the venue’s fastest sell out crowd tonight, however, let’s take a quick stroll…
Someone other than me surely remembers Elefant. Right?
Born in 2005, Soraia epitomizes raw power, unrelenting energy, chaos, and freedom.
Bowie Takes Over NYC Subway Station As the ‘David Bowie Is’ exhibit continues to blow away fans at The Brooklyn Museum (as its done around the world), the museum has teamed up with Spotify and the Metropolitan Transit Authority to give New Yorkers an added incentive to make your way over to Brooklyn. Located…
The Longshot at The Ivy Room in Albany, CA The Longshot at The Ivy Room in Albany, CA 4-20-2018 Billie Joe Armstrong is restless. Or so it seems given the flurry of new projects from the Green Day front man in recent months. Earlier this year, we saw the singer along with some of his…
Judas Priest at The Warfield Theater in San Francisco 4-19-2018 Judas Priest at The Warfield Theater in San Francisco 4-20-2018 I last saw Judas Priest over 35 years ago at the Long Beach Arena on the band’s Screaming for Vengeance tour – it was my first real concert. For me as a 15-year-old metal head…
On Friday night, HAIM wowed Las Vegas with a thrilling set of pop-rock goodness.
Review: Sunflower Bean’s Twentytwo In Blue Arriving with a fully formed aesthetic, Sunflower Bean were seemingly destined to release an album as exquisite as Twentytwo In Blue. The band’s well of influence runs deep with everything from Fleetwood Mac to The Sweet informing their sound but the exuberance and uncertainty of youth refuses to allow…
They Might Be Giants live in Orlando They Might Be Giants played the Beacham in Orlando on January 25th. Days before this show, They Might Be Giants dropped their 20th album I Like Fun. RPM contributor William Powell was there to capture it. b
The Darkness live at the Regency Ballroom The Darkness at The Regency Ballroom 3-31-2018 The late, great Lemmy Kilmister once referred to The Darkness as a novelty act and there are still those who are quick to dismiss the band as nothing more than a slightly-amusing, glam metal piss-take. A superficial listener who heard only…
12 Songs That Spell It Out For You Wu-Tang Clan – METHOD Man John Mellencamp – R.O.C.K in the U.S.A. Motörhead – R.A.M.O.N.E.S Patti Smith – Gloria Justice – D.A.N.C.E. Ramones – Slug The Kinks – Lola Daryl Hall & John Oates – Method of Modern Love Q and not U – Soft Pyramids The…
REVIEW: OMD at The Wiltern Nothing screams confidence louder then when a band decides to drop “the big hit” into the first half of their set. That scream only intensifies if you are playing Los Angeles and your biggest hit in America anchored one of the most beloved Hollywood films of the 1980s. But it…
Modern Classics: MCR’s Danger Days My Chemical Romance were a generation (or two) behind me so they didn’t register on my radar until someone slipped me a ripped CD of The Black Parade. The T. Rex riff of “Teenagers” won me over and I cautiously wandered into the shallow end of the emo-punk pool. The…
REVIEW: Mesa Lanes – High Crimes & Misdemeanors When it comes to punk, maturity can be an evil mistress but Mesa Lanes have escaped her grip on their debut High Crimes & Misdemeanors. Veterans of the Orange County punk scene, the band members have paid their dues over the decades as members of Dodge Dart,…
Now Hear This: March 2018 Only three months into the new year and 2018 is already delivering some of the best music of the decade. Not surprisingly, women are at the forefront of this wave and here is the March edition of Now Hear This! Soccer Mommy – Your Dog Sophie Allison’s debut album…
Then & Now: Groundbreaking female musicians who rocked the status quo Country: Loretta Lynn to Kacey Musgraves It’s easy to settle on the likes of Johnny Cash when asked of groundbreaking country artists but, truthfully, this label belongs to Miss Loretta Lynn. Lynn hit the music scene in the ‘60s as one of the first…
Not-so-secret-anymore Green Day side project “The Coverups” played at the Ivy Room in Albany, California on March 5th.
Alt rock icon Thurston Moore performed in San Francisco and our man Aaron Rubin captured all the action. Check it out!
Celebrating David Bowie – Review Earl Slick Featuring musicians from different eras of David Bowie’s ever-evolving career, the Celebrating David Bowie tour did more than pay tribute to the missing legend in Las Vegas. As each song unfolded throughout the night, the band’s joyous performance offered a form of musical catharsis to the audience. Anchored…
Love & Keytars – Howard Jones One of the most unique artists to conquer America during the second British Invasion, Howard Jones always set himself a little apart at the time even if I didn’t quite understand why as an awestruck 12 year old. In October, 1985, my dad took me to Miami, FL to…
Shopping – The Official Body (Review) On the cusp of stardom in the early 80s, Duran Duran’s Simon LeBon famously quipped “We want to be the band to dance to when The Bomb drops.” Fast-forward to 2018 and Shopping have perfected that mission statement on The Official Body. Produced by Edwyn Collins, the band mixes…
Spring Break is just around the corner! Just because we’re not all school-aged, doesn’t mean we can’t take advantage of this unofficial “holiday” or at least reminisce about the sun-filled glory days, right?
The legendary Mike Nesmith of the Monkees played a rare gig in San Francisco on January 28, 2018 and was joined by surprise guest Ben Gibbard. Our man Aaron Rubin was on the scene with his trusty camera.
Heads or Tails? Sometimes the flip of a coin can literally be the difference between life and death.
Early Influences: The DuCaines Who are your influences? When you are mixing with like-minded music people that question inevitably comes up. As much as I like to think it is Bowie, Velvet Underground, and Joy Division, the only real answer for me has always been the DuCaines out of New York City. If it wasn’t…
Now Hear This! (January 2018) The Grammy’s are over. The popular kids won a lot of awards while we tried not to fall asleep. Here’s some new music that is worth your time in the latest edition of Now Hear This! Saxon – They Played Rock And Roll The world has gone to hell since…
Fall Out Boy – M A N I A The new Fall Out Boy is titled M A N I A and the all-caps, shouting-in-your-face title might be the most subtle part of the entire record. Arriving with an album cover that looks like the set from The 1975’s recent videos, FOB breathlessly cram every…
There is little I could say about Jack Antonoff that has not already been said.
If you are one of those people who stream music (and by all recent accounts, that is most of you), listen up! Def Leppard has finally joined the party!!
Not being on a major label doesn’t mean you’re not a major player – and if there’s any band that can prove it, it’s Spoon.
On July 5, 1993 I went to the Fern Park Station in Casselberry, FL to see power-pop legends The Posies. Upon arriving, I headed to the bar to get a drink and there stood a beautiful young woman with close-cropped hair. It was Dolores O’Riordan.
Ask my music-centric friends and they will tell you that I have some stupefying blind spots when it comes to the rock-n-roll canon. It wasn’t until a few months ago that I learned that Joe Walsh was in a band named James Gang which even had a song (“Funk #49”) that I knew. I had…
Music has a huge impact on brain health and in turn, mental and physical health; so it makes sense that rhythm and music is an integral part of wellness routines of all types.
Singer-songwriter Sam Beam brought his neo-folk act Iron & Wine to perform at the Beacham in Downtown Orlando in support of their new collection of songs Beast Epic.
Today, we send a happy birthday out into space hoping it finds David Bowie; or at least Major Tom, who might be so kind as to pass along the message.
A few years back, we acquired some absolutely amazing gear directly from the Rush camp. Here’s one of Geddy’s iconic Rickenbacker basses.
Best Albums Of 2017 As we shake off the cobwebs from the champagne on New Year’s Eve, we take one last look back at 2017 with some of our favorite albums…. INHEAVEN – INHEAVEN INHEAVEN’s debut album sounds as subtle as a chainsaw and rips through your speakers in under 40 minutes. This is the…
Psychedelic icon Country Joe McDonald gave a rare performance at The Chapel in San Francisco. Our man Aaron Rubin was there with his trusty camera.
Richard Thompson brought his solo acoustic, all-request act to Berkeley for four sold out shows at the Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse. Our photographer Aaron Rubin was there.
RPM contributor Jeff Yih reviews the Pixies’ epic performance at the Fox Theater in Oakland and Aaron Rubin provides some incredible photos.
It always warms our hearts when musicians get together, using their talents to raise money for a great cause through the release of a charity album. The charity album trend peaked in the ’80s with all-star releases like “We are the World” and “Do they know it’s Christmas?” but thankfully many artists continue to use…
In a year when I’ve seen everyone from Bob Dylan to Iron Maiden, I went into last night’s Lady Gaga show in Las Vegas expecting an entertaining but scripted pop concert. I underestimated her.
The spirit of Robert Johnson would come to haunt – and serve as creative fuel – for one of the best bands New York City (and rock n roll) has ever produced.
Legendary art pop duo Sparks made a rare appearance at The Chapel in San Francisco. RPM’s Aaron Rubin captured all the action with his trusty camera.
U2 – Songs Of Experience (Review) In 2014, U2 quietly placed Songs Of Innocence on every I-phone in the world and most of the world went ballistic. With Songs Of Experience, the band seeks to even the score by pissing off those of us who really enjoyed their free copy of Innocence. Restrained to a…
I have been told many times to not meet my heroes – that it is either not all it’s cracked up to be or that I will come face to face with an interaction that will leave me largely unsatisfied. It is a tale that has been passed down, a sort of innate understanding that…
The idea of Morrissey often eclipses the reality of Morrissey.
Unlike boxing, rock and roll is not renowned for great comebacks. A few missteps and then it’s usually farewell, have a good life, who are you again?
November is halfway over and (in the US) elastic-waisted pants are ready for Thanksgiving – which means everyone is technically allowed to start listening to Holiday music, right?
When the flannel soldiers of Seattle stormed mainstream music in the early 90s, glam metal bands and their fans were sent scurrying back underground as popular culture shifted its attention away from big hair and bigger ballads.
Alt rock darlings Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett threw down at the historic Fox Theater in Oakland on October 18th. Our pal Aaron Rubin was there with his trusty camera.
This guitar is quite possibly the single most important piece of music history in the Hard Rock collection.
I’ve been listening to Bob Dylan far longer than I’ve been listening to Bob Dylan.
Whether you realize it or not, you need more glam rock in your daily life. That is what I figured out back in February when the Glam Skanks delivered a dose of their glitter stomp on Las Vegas in support of Adam Ant.
With Halloween right around the corner, we’ve been revisiting our favorite spooky TV cameos by some legendary musicians. WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE!
In anticipation of Dirty Heads’ 6th album, Swim Team, singer/guitarist Duddy B chatted with Jeff Nolan about the state of the group.
Tom Petty went to the Great Gig in the Sky last night. He was only 66 years old. RPM’s Jason Lent and Earl Douglas share their thoughts.
It was April 20, 2004 when I walked into a bar in Denver, CO to see The Killers supporting Stellastarr*. Both bands had one song on YouTube and I incorrectly assumed The Killers were from the UK.
Welcome to PRETENTIOUS POETRY – where we take a look at classic rock lyrics as paraphrased by a sophomore English major. Today’s installment is the AC/DC classic “Back in Black”. Brace yourself for true idiocy.
For a brief, magical period in the late ’60s through the mid 70s, there was this unique, fruitful and mind-blowing fusion of country, pop and rhythm & blues.
Music and film have shared a close relationship since the golden era of Hollywood.
In the early 1990s, every college town had “that” band. The one that seemed destined to break into the big time. The one that sounded as good playing originals as they did covering Stone Temple Pilots in a crowded bar.
I fell in love with Julien Baker in a small club with 300 strangers.
Chris Cornell’s exceptional skill as a songwriter was unmistakable. By utilizing alternate guitar tunings and some of the weirdest chords you’ll ever hear, songs like “Black Hole Sun,” “Like a Stone,” and “Say Hello to Heaven” cemented Cornell’s place in rock history as one of the most poignant writers of his generation.
For someone who have been in the business for close to 50 years, Garland Jeffreys is working at a pace faster than most artists who are a fraction of his age. 14 Steps To Harlem is his third album in 6 years, which like other masterpieces such as Ghost Writer, Escape Artist and The King…
Las Vegas and Bryan Ferry are a perfectly blended cocktail of mystery and seduction. Equal parts old-school crooner and art-rock pioneer, Ferry’s infallible legacy in music needs little introduction.
The 40th anniversary of his death got me to thinking – Does Elvis Presley still matter in the 21st century? The answer is yes, but with a few caveats.
On the eve of the release of posthumous covers album, Under Cöver, drummer Mikkey Dee chatted with Jeff Nolan about life after Lemmy.
Band names are almost impossibly hard to choose — they should be easy to say but not forgettable, original but not obscure, catchy but not too commercial.
The last few years have been an emotional hell for Kesha and Rainbow attempts to make some sense of her journey.
It is Duran Duran Appreciation Day around the world and you’re probably wondering if I made that up. I wish I had!
In advance of the upcoming their covers album, Under Cöver, a video was just released of Motörhead covering David Bowie’s “Heroes”. It’s both glorious and poignant.
Some rides are so fast, so wild, so vertiginous that you never want to get off. And when they do end, they’re all the more dizzying once you’ve disembarked.
Rock-n-roll has always celebrated unchecked bravado. So, when Echo & the Bunnymen’s Ian McCulloch declared (often) that “The Killing Moon” was the greatest song ever written, we might not have agreed with him but we certainly didn’t allow his over-confidence to lessen our appreciation for the band’s work.
As we celebrate the 20th anniversary of OK Computer, the album’s influence continues to cast an icy shadow across modern rock ‘n’ roll.
You can dance if you want to, you can leave your friends behind – or on this sweltering summer Saturday in Las Vegas, you can bring your friends along.
Summer is here, so it’s time to lock in with some kickass songs to get yourself to and from the beach. We put together a few songs from around the globe that may not be getting airplay on your home radio station but they are huge in other parts of the world.
Here’s some grunge archaeology for you. This video is Nirvana playing at a Radio Shack store in Aberdeen on January 24th, 1988. HOLY MOLY.
Here’s one of those pieces of memorabilia that seems too good to be true – a December, 1960 letter from George Harrison to Stu Sutcliffe.
Linkin Park is an outlier. The band’s risky creative choices—swinging wildly from song to song, album to album—are a hallmark of their career.
How do you replace the most exciting and innovative frontman in rock-n-roll history? You simply don’t.
It was 50 years ago that Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play – and it was released roughly 18 years before I was born.
Opposing tides flowed into each other in Las Vegas on Friday evening as the candy-colored festival goers heading north to the Electric Daisy Carnival walked through a mass of faded Pink Floyd t-shirts in the queue outside T-Mobile Arena.
Perfect weather and late spring wanderlust means only one thing: it’s time for a road trip.
The Hard Rock Rising global battle of the bands has concluded and we have an absolutely amazing grand prize winner – Alex Boyé of Park City, Utah.
Though it’s been nearly forty seven years since his tragic death at age 27, the power of Jimi Hendrix’s music resonates as strongly today as ever.
All roads have led us here. On their sleek new album Last Young Renegade, All Time Low establish themselves at the forefront of contemporary music by daring to shake off pop-punk expectations.
The 262-mile road trip from Las Vegas to Pasadena, CA includes a stretch along the hip of Mojave National Preserve. With all due respect to the impeccably attired Lumineers, the real opening act for U2’s return to the Rose Bowl was the miles upon miles of Joshua trees stretching around us as my wife and…
Teenage girls have always been pretty smart when it comes to sifting through their teen idols and spotting the real deal. The early Beatles concerts? All teenage girls.
We woke this morning to the shocking and sad news that Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell died in Detroit. He was only 52 years old.
Ladies and gents, summer’s here and it’s festival season. Time to saddle up, grab a comfy pair of shoes and go see some live music.
I have always had a passion for crafting playlists; starting back in the day with my two-cassette boombox.
Longtime Col. Bruce road manager Tony Hume shares his thoughts on the passing of his friend and Bruce’s indelible influence on the jam band scene.
The Twitterverse and teen/industrial complex is exploding today because Harry Styles did a failed stage dive. What no one seems to be mentioning is he appears to have a vintage Gibson ES-350 around his neck. Huh?
Blondie has nothing left to prove after four decades in the business.
Sheryl Crow just released her 10th studio album, Be Myself, and I’m kinda blown away. Is there another artist of her stature and longevity still able to make a truly compelling rock ‘n’ roll album?
I hate to seem like I’m piling on, but holy moly is this whole Fyre Festival debacle insane or what?
Let’s take a look at some of the coolest, most ostentatious pieces of wardrobe the universe has ever seen – NUDIE SUITS.
Robert Smith turns 58 today. Let’s rank every single Cure album from worst to first, shall we?
What can push a French bloke to go outside his comfort zone and book tickets for a concert in London when he knows he’s gonna see the same show in Paris a few days before? TWO WORDS: Blackberry Smoke.
So I went and saw Dinosaur Jr. a couple nights ago. Holy moly is J Mascis ever a badass.
If Gram Parsons ever sat drinking with Tom Petty at a roadside bar outside 29 Palms, Jerry Leger’s Nonsense and Heartache would be playing on the jukebox.
One universal truth is the fact that everyone looks hilarious in their high school yearbooks. Dated fashions, bad hair, goofy expressions – no one is immune. That’s why we love to look at the old yearbooks of rock legends. Let’s check out a few.
With the recent unveiling of this year’s Warped Tour line-up, old school punk is again in the air as California legends The Adolescents, The Dickies and T.S.O.L are heading out with bands that weren’t even born when they put California punk on the map in the late ‘70s/early ‘80s. Inspired by the music coming out…
Here’s one of those pieces of memorabilia that seems too good to be true – a letter from George Harrison to Stu Sutcliffe.
When an artist achieves fame while still in their teens, it usually spells doom for any hope of a long-lasting career in the fickle world of popular music. One big hit and then they disappear as soon as the cuteness factor wanes. Michelle Branch has been a very conspicuous exception to this rule; which is why…
Armed with a cupboard full of trophies, including two NME awards for Best British Band, Biffy Clyro kicked off their U.S. tour in the intimate confines of Vinyl at the Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas.
Blak Emoji is the latest project from singer-songwriter-musician Kelsey Warren and they’ve just released a new EP called Intro.
They say a picture is worth a thousand words. Anyone who has ever sketched the KISS letters in a school notebook or safety-pinned a Ramones patch onto the back of their jacket knows that a great band logo resonates with fans and reveals their love for those artists.
With over 20 studio albums under each band’s belt, UFO and Saxon represent the old-school rock and roll approach to life. Write some songs, record an album and then tour the hell out of it. At the end of the tour, hopefully you made a little money.
Seeing Kyle Eastwood’s band live is a very unique experience. Let’s start with the obvious – when you’re the son of one of the most iconic actor/directors in the history of cinema, it’s difficult to carve out a first name for yourself. Especially when you are the spitting image of your dad.
Elvis wasn’t even close. Chuck Berry wrote the libretto for the opera that is the life of the teenager and in the process changed the face of modern culture.
When Pure Heroine turned Lorde into a pop sensation in 2013, it gave voice to sheltered teens who paid attention in English class and saw beyond the hollowness of growing up on social media.
Our man in Vegas – Jason Lent – runs down his nominees for the ten greatest soundtrack albums of all time. RPM editor Jeff Nolan provides the rebuttal. Enjoy…
We’ve all been there… someone you trust enthuses about a contemporary album while you’re having beers in your local pub (“Dude, you’ve never heard of them?”), but you forget to check them out. That’s why RPM’s man in Paris – Guillaume LaFon – put together a list of five albums you probably missed for your…
With their Motown-influenced blend of pop and soul, Los Angeles-based duo Electric Guest are the perfect group to be featured in Hard Rock Cafes worldwide as our Artist of the Month for March 2017.
From time to time, some of our more passionate guests will get worked-up over certain pieces of memorabilia in our collection and try to take us to task over them. Usually, this stems from someone assuming that a joint called the Hard Rock should exclusively display memorabilia that fits into their personal definition of what…
Bon Jovi arrived in Las Vegas last night in support of their feisty new album, This House Is Not For Sale. After seeing them in September of 1989 at the Miami Arena (thanks mom!) and wearing out my New Jersey cassette, I’ve stayed faintly aware of them over the decades as they (d)evolved from one…
The Filth & the Fury – Punk Rock in Seventies England, Forty Years Later Attending an all-boys school in West London in the mid-seventies was an experience. You didn’t know how many fights you’d see in the school yard on a daily basis or if you were going to be in one of them. It…
Somewhere between 2012’s stellar Celebration Rock and 2017’s Near To the Wild Heart of Life, Vancouver duo Japandroids grew up. The band returns from the five year break with eight new songs that are more polished than anything they’ve ever done.
When you’re in a band, selecting the proper jam for an encore is critical to maximize your chances to crush your enemies, see them driven before you and hear the lamentations of their women. Everybody knows that.
This is it. This is the one. Our greatest piece of Beatles wardrobe.
This guitar is an absolutely perfect piece of memorabilia. It’s rare, beautiful and it belonged to a legend.
The show must go on. After losing guitarist and band leader Tom Edwards a few weeks ago, Adam Ant and the rest of his band circled the wagons and found a way to push on with the magnificent Kings of the Wild Frontier tour.
Katy Perry served up “Chained to the Rhythm” today, but maybe she should have kept it baking in Max Martin’s Swedish disco kitchen a little longer.
With an album cover reminiscent of Queen II, there is little doubt where Hollywood-based mascara merchants Glam Skanks are headed on Glitter City. They’re currently on their first major tour opening for Adam Ant, so I thought I’d give their album a spin.
This completely over-the-top quinceanera dress was worn by Katy Perry during her appearance on MTV’s Los Premios awards show in 2008. She famously dove into a giant birthday cake while wearing it and performing her first smash single, “I Kissed a Girl”.
Though rock ‘n’ roll music is now over 60 years old, it remains predominantly a boy’s club. Why is that? Is the swagger necessary for good rock music inherently masculine? Are electric guitars too phallic? It can’t be that simple.
In some ways, Brooklyn-based pop phenom Bebe Rexha personifies the 21st century music biz ideal – she’s predominantly known as a guest singer, she ignores the old-school concept of an album release, her image is perfectly crafted for Instagram and her voice is manipulated into what is essentially a computer noise. In short, she’s a…
Paul Kossoff was one of the truly inspired guitarists to emerge from the late ’60s British blues scene and his group, Free, had a soulful, laid-back groove that made their hard rock punch all the more powerful.Think of the half-time swagger of “Fire and Water” or the amazing vibrato of the timeless “All Right Now”.…
Nostalgia for the most plastic of decades – the 1980s – simply refuses to wane. The Microsoft Theater in downtown Los Angeles played host to its third sold-out ‘80s Weekend concert on Saturday night and I got to witness the time warp firsthand.
Last week, I queued up in cyberspace to drop the better part of a week’s pay on tickets to see U2 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, CA. Much like they did 30 years ago, U2 are selling out stadiums and playing songs from The Joshua Tree. For a band so wary of using nostalgia…
New York, New York. It’s been said that New York City is so nice they named it twice. Our first look at iconic album cover locales of NYC was so well received, we decided to dig further into the album crate, hit the streets and present more sites that have become part of our rock…
Ed Sheeran’s success as a pop star has always been a bit of a head-scratcher to me. As a pop writer, I get it – he’s got an undeniable ability to tap into the current zeitgeist and crafts a 3-minute earworm as well as anyone this side of Sweden – but as a performer he…
A truly seismic shift in popular culture happened 26 years ago today – but no one involved had any idea that what they were doing would fundamentally change the world, spell the commercial death of an entire musical genre and usher in what was the last true rock ‘n’ roll youth movement. On this date…
Damn you 2016. We thought you had your fill. You couldn’t leave us alone on Christmas Day.
Let’s be honest – 2016 was a bona fide annus horribilis, but there were still some pretty kickass records released in the year that shall be forever forgotten. We had the RPM contributors compile a list of their favorite albums of the year.
December 8th has been cemented forever in the history of popular culture as a BAD DAY. On that date in 1980, John Lennon was senselessly murdered by some loser whose name I don’t remember. Twenty-four years later – to the day – another nameless loser climbed onstage at the Alrosa nightclub in Columbus, Ohio and…
It’s that time of year again, kids! Gather round while we celebrate the commercial achievements of the usual suspects (many of whom are genuinely talented) and give token nominations to “arty” projects in order to preserve a veneer of credibility. It’s the 2016 Grammy® Awards!
New York City has its fair share of landmarks – the Empire State Building, the Statue of Liberty, Yankee Stadium, the Brooklyn Bridge… it’s overwhelming at times. But the streets of New York have also been the backdrop for some of the most memorable and iconic album covers of all time. RPM’s Earl Douglas –…
Recorded on November 27, 1987, Cowboy Junkies’ groundbreaking sophomore album The Trinity Session has lost none of its mystery or beauty in the three decades that have passed since the band dropped around $250 on a day of recording at a downtown Toronto church.
In addition to wacky cat videos, pictures of food and annoying political posts, the internet is chock-full of amazing isolated tracks from some truly iconic music. The wealth of isolated Led Zeppelin material online is fairly staggering – especially since so much of it is focused on the genius of John Henry Bonham.
Bon Jovi’s Slippery When Wet (1986) and New Jersey (1988) were pivotal cassettes for those of us raised on MTV and their longevity isn’t surprising to anyone who was paying attention back then. Less dangerous than Mötley Crüe and unafraid of a pop hook (or three), Bon Jovi’s sound made for one of the easiest…
You found the vibrations that made a generation of women too smart for their own good want to raise their boys to be gentle souls. Like so many wayward fathers, when we found you years later on our own, you told us the dark truth hidden in the folds of those verses.
October 25th 2016 – Brooklyn Bowl Las Vegas Bringing together three distinctly different bands for one night, a small crowd in Las Vegas was treated to an eclectic blend of rock and roll that showcased three bands comfortable in their own skin.
Day 2 | Day 3 Adjusting to the California desert is a process for a swamp-dweller such as myself. It’s a bit like transforming into a vampire. You expel all life-giving moisture and replace it with the primordial dust from Gram Parsons’s funeral pyre that has blown over from Joshua Tree. So many Desert Trip…
When a pop star announces that their new album is the most “personal” of their career, I steel myself for what will probably be a pulverizingly self-important exercise in showing the fans what a deep and tortured artist they are. It’s usually a recipe for unlistenability. Lady Gaga’s newest album, Joanne, is the most personal…
Day 1 | Day 3 If you followed online reports from Desert Trip, you’ve almost certainly seen a million cell phone photos of the gigantic harvest moon rising over the mountains behind the stage during the second weekend. This was one of those singular moments that was so freakin’ perfect that it seemed surreal. And…
The biggest-selling live acts of 2016 are Adele and Coldplay. In 2016 we like torch ballads about getting dumped and we like stadium shows that literally have fireworks explosions and confetti cannons at the moments where we’re meant to clap – like flashing a light at a chimpanzee so he knows it’s feeding time. In 2016…
Four years have passed since Two Door Cinema Club released their sophomore album, Beacon. In today’s world of disposable pop music, waiting four years between albums can be risky. For Two Door Cinema Club, the timing wasn’t so much an artistic choice as a physical and mental necessity after the album cycle of recording, promotion…
Day 1 | Day 2 By day three, the Desert Trip crowd were seasoned veterans. Those who overindulged early on in the festival were now pacing themselves a bit better – or switching from alcohol to other inebriants in anticipation of the lysergic immersion of Roger Waters. But first up – The Who.
Remember that relationship you were in once? You know the one. It was good for a bit. Really good. Then it went tits-up. But you didn’t break up. You stayed together and tried to work it out. You tried to recapture when you were happiest even though you knew in your heart it was over.…
We’ve all seen it a million times – a dingy club, maybe twenty disinterested patrons and a band of dubious talent hacking through some forgettable, derivative material. Inevitably, they finish their set and then huddle up on the side of the stage before making their triumphant, 6-foot walk back to their instruments like the conquering…
PRINCE ROGER NELSON 1958 – 2016 While you’re sifting through all the “man, 2016 sucks” posts in your social media feeds, take a moment to put the shocking death of Prince in a larger context. We’re living in a transitional time. A time of real change. The old guard is gone. The template of rock…
SCOTT RICHARD WEILAND 10/27/67 – 12/3/15 I woke up today to 17 missed calls and 43 text messages. “Scott’s gone”