“I was unusually nervous… You may be doing exactly the same set, but it can have a completely different vibe.” When David Gilmour revisited Pompeii and faced the ghosts of Pink Floyd

“I was unusually nervous… You may be doing exactly the same set, but it can have a completely different vibe.” When David Gilmour revisited Pompeii and faced the ghosts of Pink Floyd

David Gilmour at Pompeii
(Image credit: Getty Images)

In 2017 David Gilmour released Live At Pompeii, a movie that documented his return to the scene of Pink Floyd’s 1970s triumph the previous year. In a conversation with Matt Everett, he reflected on the experience of returning to a place full of ghosts.


David Gilmour has long been known to conclude a tour with a flourish, be it playing in the middle of the lagoon in front of St Mark’s Square in Venice with Pink Floyd in 1989, or at the historic shipyards of Gdansk in 2006. However, in 2016, he surpassed himself by bringing his show to a place firmly etched in world history, and Floyd history: the amphitheatre in Pompeii, the site buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.

In 1971, of course, his old group, under the direction of Adrian Maben, shot their legendary Live At Pompeii film, which captured them playing in the amphitheatre, empty, save for the crew and a few local kids. In 2016, it couldn’t have been more different – Gilmour brought his entire touring operation along to perform a spectacular show in front of a paying audience. It was to be a time when ghosts were laid to rest.

Gilmour first had the idea of returning to Pompeii in 2015 as he was touring Europe and then South America. “I don’t get out on tour very often and I like to create a special occasion for people, so it’s nice to play in beautiful old places that have a special vibe to them,” he says. “We started at Pula in Croatia in an absolutely spectacular amphitheatre, a place I’d never been to before. We continued that idea all over Europe. In these beautiful places. There’s a whole added element of specialness that the building gives to it. Hopefully the audience will remember it forever.”

Playing venues such as this is not without enormous logistical issues. “Luckily I don’t get to hear about most of them,” he laughs. Production manager Roger Searle and lighting man Marc Brickman scope each location out,months in advance. “Roger is brilliant and completely unflappable,” Gilmour reveals. “He gets everything done and if you ask him to do something, he always says ‘yes,’ never ‘no’. We need people like him.”

David Gilmour – Rattle That Lock (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - Rattle That Lock (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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The South American leg of the Rattle That Lock tour was a key experience for Gilmour. The continent has a reputation for audience intensity and complex logistics, with tales of missing payments and concert cancellations. “Through all those years of our Pink Floyd touring, no one ever managed to convince us it was worth going through all that, so we never did,” the guitarist says.

“But times have changed and things are now far more professional. We were playing to up to 50,000 people a night, which for me as a solo artist was quite a surprise, but the audiences are so fantastically enthusiastic, polite and welcoming. There’s a more even split between men and women, which is refreshing. Many people had told me over the years how great the South American audiences are and I would go, ‘Yeah, sure – it’s just the same as everywhere else really.’ But they were right. It really was a treat.”

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The Rattle That Lock tour lent itself to extraordinary venues and, as it progressed, it seemed to lead to one in particular. “I don’t want to get completely stuck only in amphitheatres, but someone suggested we try for Pompeii again. The minute the idea was mooted I said, ‘Go for it. Absolutely.’ I said, ‘We’ll never get it.’ I didn’t think they’d allow it.

“So we sent our trusty team off to negotiate with the town of Pompeii. It turned out that the mayor and the townspeople were thrilled with the idea and were very keen to expedite it. They all made it work fantastically well.”

David Gilmour – A Boat Lies Waiting (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - A Boat Lies Waiting (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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Playing the venue was a huge statement. Although Gilmour did not watch the fabled 1972 film again, he was aware that by revisiting, and adding an audience, it would become a full-blown spectacle. “The statement element came along a little bit later. I don’t think we originally were that concerned – it was just one of a number of places we were playing. We thought, ‘We did okay with it back in ’71 without an audience – maybe it would be fun to do the DVD there.’ We recorded and filmed shows all over the world, but we thought this one would be something extra special, which indeed it was. The two shows went really well.”

We thought, “It’ll be just like Wallace & Gromit when the rocket takes off and all the mice put their sunglasses on!”

The Avis trucks that had trundled round back in 1971 were replaced with fleets of equipment, all of which had to be wheeled carefully down aged paths so as not to damage the legendary structure. “All of that had to be negotiated,” Gilmour says. “Things like the fireworks and pyro are designed to look exciting and haphazard. You want it to look dangerous, but it’s very carefully controlled and our people know exactly what they’re doing. It’s a highly professional system, and so no damage was done to the site. You have to convince people that you are that sort of organisation.

“We’ve been through that in the 70s. That stuff was, in fact, highly dangerous in those days. Health and safety didn’t exist, pretty much, and there were a lot of very shaky moments on major tours. But these days it’s very slick.”

The spectacular concerts in July 2016 obviously opened doors in the minds of the media to a Pink Floyd reunion again, but Gilmour wasn’t concerned. “You can’t worry about the media – they’re going to find something to obsess about. The story of ‘will we, won’t we’ comes up time and time again, and it will never go away, I suspect, however convincing I try to make the argument.”

David Gilmour – Wish You Were Here (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - Wish You Were Here (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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For Gilmour, walking back into that amphitheatre after a gap of 45 years was unforgettable. “It brought back all sorts of memories of the time we had there, and the Heath Robinson sort of setup. We had a Brenell 8-track tape machine sitting at the back and hundreds of little wires and a little mixing desk. It’s amazing we got anything as good sound-wise out of it as we did, doing take after take in the blazing sun. There are a lot of memories and ghosts in that place.”

Adrian Maben was there, as well as historian Mary Beard. “Entirely coincidentally, Adrian was there with an exhibition of photos from 1971. It was not connected to our visit. It was booked to be there anyway. We had talked about getting someone there to talk about the place itself. Mary was mentioned. It turned out that she was coming to the concert anyway. Things serendipitously just fell into place. Mary paints it as rather more prosaic than our idea of what it might have been like. Somehow that makes it feel even more real and more alive than watching Spartacus or something. The audience would have been sitting there with no beers, no refreshments and no loos.”

As the original performance and film has had an indelible impact on a whole generation, Gilmour had to go through the modern-day duties of meeting local dignitaries, being whisked off into the modern town and given the freedom of the city by the mayor. “There are a number of people there who had been kids when we did the 1971 show, who had managed to wheedle their way into the amphitheatre to watch. They said what a significant memory in their childhood that was, and for me to come back was such a thrill and a treat for them.”

The strict capacity limit in the amphitheatre gave the show a special resonance, one that translates well to the film. “I was unusually nervous, but we got to the end of the first night and thought we’d cracked it. It was really good; and the second night was even better. You may be doing exactly the same set, but it can have a completely different vibe. It’s one of those weird, magical things when you really don’t know what you’re going to get.”

David Gilmour – High Hopes (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - High Hopes (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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The show – as anyone who caught the tour would testify – was outstanding: the balance of new and old, of supporting players and the star wrapped in a major league son et lumière. “Putting it all together and fitting everything into that venue was a challenge for Marc Brickman. We had drones filming from about a mile away and you see a tiny little circle in the distance with light and smoke sort of pouring out and pulsing. It’s spectacular, and beautifully shot.”

Of course, being a Gilmour show, there are some bombastic moments. “I haven’t managed to grow out of those yet!” he laughs. “I keep thinking that bombast is a thing of the past, but it still sneaks back in.” One such moment is when the band don sunglasses during Run Like Hell. But as with a great deal of Gilmour’s work, it’s borne out of practicality.

I’m dying to watch and hear it in a cinem… the sound and the occasion, having a lot of people together enjoying that moment

“There are the strobes that Marc is using at that moment and you actually cannot see a thing. With the flashing, it makes your brain do strange things and it’s easy to forget where you are. Someone wanted to wear sunglasses and we thought, ‘Yeah, let’s get everyone to do it and it’ll be just like Wallace & Gromit when the rocket takes off to go to the moon and all the mice put their sunglasses on!”

With a show in two halves that builds to a climactic finish, Gilmour added The Great Gig In The Sky to the set for Pompeii. “And of course, we did One Of These Days, which we hadn’t been playing on the tour. That’s the only song that we played there back in 1971.”

Pompeii is a place of ghosts, and it would have been impossible for Gilmour not to be touched by their presence. “There are songs that Rick Wright wrote [The Great Gig In The Sky], and there’s A Boat Lies Waiting, which is about Rick, for which I wrote the music and Polly [Samson, Gilmour’s wife] wrote the words, which we put into a sequence.

David Gilmour – Run Like Hell (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - Run Like Hell (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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Wish You Were Here always reminds me of Syd when we play it. And in a place like Pompeii, those things are heightened because of the time we spent there all those years ago, and because of the special occasion. These things all come on to you while you’re performing and hopefully heighten the emotion of the occasion for the audience as well.”

Gilmour had around six shows before Pompeii to break in his new touring band, which he introduced after the first leg of the tour, with only himself, bassist Guy Pratt and vocalist Lucita Jules remaining constant. The group gelled well.

Prog Magazine 80

This article first appeared in Prog 80 (Image credit: Future)

“There are a number of songs that have moments for improvisation. I get to do most of it, of course, but Chuck [Leavell], Greg [Phillinganes], João [Mello] and Chester [Kamen] are the new people on this leg of the tour and they all get their moments to stretch out.

“I’m into perfection in a way, but at the same time, I don’t want the songs played perfectly as on the record. I want it to be live music. I want people who play with me to have some autonomy to be able to change something that suits them and suits the mood of the moment. And, of course, if that goes wrong, we discuss it afterwards! But I would rather that we go for something and enjoy actually playing, rather than holding them tight to a format.”

One of the highlights of the tour was the sax playing of young Brazilian Mello, who handled Dick Parry’s legendary parts with great elan. “He’s a beautiful player, really good. He had his 21st birthday when we were in Brazil, playing in his home town, and it’s kind of special to think of all the different ages playing in a band and feeling like you are part of something together.”

David Gilmour – Coming Back To Life (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - Coming Back To Life (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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He thoroughly enjoyed shooting the film, and it shows. It’s directed by Gavin Elder, who helmed the capture of his 2006 show in Gdansk.“It looks fantastic,” Gilmour enthuses. “I’m dying to go in and watch and hear it in a cinema, with those big bass speakers that make sound travel through a room in a way that speakers in a small room don’t quite have the wavelength for. It’s very special.

“I’ll be sitting there in September watching it in that proper way for the first time myself. A cinema release is the best way of putting it out there – the sound and the occasion, having a lot of people together enjoying that moment. I can’t wait.”

So with the magic of Pompeii captured on film, what’s next for David Gilmour? He’s stated that he won’t tour without new music, and as we know, that takes him a while to make. “There are several songs that are close to being complete that didn’t make it onto this album for one reason or another. You never know what you’re going to do until you start; and when you do, you find that something you absolutely loved before doesn’t fit quite into what you’re trying to do now.

“You just have to wait and see what comes up. It took 10 years last time. I’m really hoping, without making any promises, that it won’t take 10 years this time, but that I will get back in soon and start working again. Then, following that, I’ll be out again.”

David Gilmour – On An Island (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - On An Island (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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And will Gilmour ever return to Pompeii? “Of course. Most of the places I played I’d go back to. Verona is such a lovely place, we played both times in 2015 and 2016; Orange; Pula; and the great places in America. We did a couple of nights at the Hollywood Bowl – it has a magic to it. Marc Brickman did some new films to project. Usually we project onto the circular screen but you can project film onto the whole of the inside of the Hollywood Bowl’s dome.

“The Chicago Auditorium is a beautiful old theatre that I’d played with Pink Floyd in the early 70s. I had a half-memory of doing it. You think, ‘God, oh I hope I was right, it wasn’t just a fantasy.’ Thankfully, it truly is a beautiful venue. Radio City Music Hall in New York, which we’d also played with Pink Floyd, is one of those special places. Madison Square Garden is always a favourite. It has a great sound and a great atmosphere.”

So, David Gilmour: Live At Pompeii claims Gilmour’s share of his old group’s legacy in the way that Roger Waters did with his live show of his portion, The Wall, several years earlier. However, ironically, the performance, in such heightened nostalgic surroundings, serves to underline the greatness of Gilmour’s music now, more than merely being frozen in time.

With the concert, film, the DVD and audio, does David Gilmour think, in a way, that doing Pompeii again was a nice way of drawing a line under that one part of his legacy?

“Let’s hope so!” he says.

David Gilmour – Comfortably Numb (Live At Pompeii) – YouTube David Gilmour - Comfortably Numb (Live At Pompeii) - YouTube

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Daryl Easlea has contributed to Prog since its first edition, and has written cover features on Pink Floyd, Genesis, Kate Bush, Peter Gabriel and Gentle Giant. After 20 years in music retail, when Daryl worked full-time at Record Collector, his broad tastes and knowledge led to him being deemed a ‘generalist.’ DJ, compere, and consultant to record companies, his books explore prog, populist African-American music and pop eccentrics. Currently writing Whatever Happened To Slade?, Daryl broadcasts Easlea Like A Sunday Morning on Ship Full Of Bombs, can be seen on Channel 5 talking about pop and hosts the M Means Music podcast.  

“Michael, come out and sing one with me please.” Watch American icons Bruce Springsteen and Michael Stipe collaborate on a cover of Patti Smith’s Because The Night and perform R.E.M. deep cut Bad Day together back in 2004

“Michael, come out and sing one with me please.” Watch American icons Bruce Springsteen and Michael Stipe collaborate on a cover of Patti Smith’s Because The Night and perform R.E.M. deep cut Bad Day together back in 2004

Stipe and Springsteen, onstage together in 2004
(Image credit: Theo Wargo/WireImage)

In October 2004, some of the biggest names in music – Bruce Springsteen, R.E.M., Pearl Jam, Neil Young, John Fogerty, Dixie Chicks, John Mellencamp and the Dave Matthews Band among them – came together for a unique undertaking, a tour designed to encourage American citizens in to register and vote in the upcoming presidential election.

The Vote For Change tour was deliberately routed across eight ‘swing’ states – Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin – in the hope that new and first-time voters could have the opportunity to help decide whether incumbent Republican President George W. Bush or his Democratic Party opponent Senator Johny Kerry would be elected on November 2, 2004.

“What is the only institution more powerful than the United States government – one that can move things in a different direction?” Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder asked in Rolling Stone magazine. “It’s the American people. It’s the voters. That’s what I feel most strongly about: encouraging people who don’t normally vote to understand their responsibility.”

Vedder was among a number of vocalists on the tour who urged voters to get behind Massachusetts Senator Kerry on election day, but ultimately George W. Bush was returned to the Oval Office, capturing 50.7% of the votes cast, and claiming 286 electoral votes compared to Kerry’s 251 votes. It was subsequently reported that each of the swing states voted in a manner consistent with pre-election (and pre-tour) polls – four for Bush, and four for Kerry – so exactly how much impact the Vote For Change concerts had upon the outcome is difficult to ascertain.

However, if nothing else, the tour did throw up some historic onstage collaborations, not least when uniting Bruce Springsteen and Michael Stipe/R.E.M.

On October 2, at the end of R.E.M.’s set at the Gund Arena, in Cleveland, Ohio, Springsteen joined the Athens, Georgia quartet onstage to play two songs, Automatic For The People-era single Man On The Moon, and deep cut Bad Day, originally recorded for 1986’s Lifes Rich Pageant, but unreleased until 2003, when it was released as the lead single from the band’s second compilation collection In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988–2003.

You can watch that performance below: Springsteen also performed the song with R.E.M. on October 3 at the Cobo Arena in Detroit, and two days later at the Xcel Energy Center, in St. Paul, Minnesota.


Throughout the tour, members of R.E.M. also joined Bruce Springsteen onstage nightly, with Michael Stipe singing Because The Night, originally written by Springsteen and recorded by Patti Smith, and Peter Buck and Mike Mills sitting in on Born To Run.

“One of the thrills we had on this tour, was getting the chance to do a week of shows with R.E.M.” Springsteen told the 16,000+ crowd attending the tour’s penultimate night, at the MCI Center in the nation’s capital, Washington, DC. “We had a great time. Michael, come out and sing one with me please.”

Watch Stipe fronting the E Street Band for Because The Night below:

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A music writer since 1993, formerly Editor of Kerrang! and Planet Rock magazine (RIP), Paul Brannigan is a Contributing Editor to Louder. Having previously written books on Lemmy, Dave Grohl (the Sunday Times best-seller This Is A Call) and Metallica (Birth School Metallica Death, co-authored with Ian Winwood), his Eddie Van Halen biography (Eruption in the UK, Unchained in the US) emerged in 2021. He has written for Rolling Stone, Mojo and Q, hung out with Fugazi at Dischord House, flown on Ozzy Osbourne’s private jet, played Angus Young’s Gibson SG, and interviewed everyone from Aerosmith and Beastie Boys to Young Gods and ZZ Top. Born in the North of Ireland, Brannigan lives in North London and supports The Arsenal.

Someone’s made a wide-eyed Bobby Liebling puppet amidst all the Pentagram memes and I desperately want to buy it

Amidst all those memes where Pentagram singer Bobby Liebling looks like he can taste your thoughts, one TikTok creator has gone above and beyond and turned him into a puppet.

For those who don’t know, on Friday (February 28), Instagram user aloe_boa uploaded a short clip of a Pentagram show they attended. The intense stare and wild hair that frontman and founding member Bobby Liebling has in the video captured the internet’s imagination. It went wildly viral and continues to spawn many, many memes across social media, some of which playfully claim that Liebling resembles a Muppet.

Pushing the joke to its furthest possible extent, TikToker gravina.art actually made a crazy-haired, wide-eyed Liebling puppet, sharing the result of her labour on Monday (March 3). One video of the puppet has more than 1.5 million views at time of writing, plus a comment section full of appreciative observers.

“Bobby has taken over my FYP and now in puppet form!” one user writes.

“Yall to fast and creative [sic]” adds another.

“FINALLY, someone matched the master’s aura” another says.

Gravina.art is seemingly making a habit of turning zeitgeist figures into puppets, as her profile also has many videos depicting a Muppet-like take on Count Orlok from Robert Eggers’ 2024 horror hit Nosferatu.

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Pentagram formed in the US in 1971 and are now hailed as one of the defining doom metal bands. They released their latest album, Lightning In A Bottle, in January and have just wrapped a tour of North America. A run of South American shows starts in Guadalajara, Mexico, on March 14 and wraps in Santiago, Chile, on March 23.

Liebling is yet to comment on his newfound status as an internet icon at age 71 but, as if prophetically, the band uploaded a compilation of the weird and wonderful faces he makes onstage to social media last month.

@gravina.art ♬ оригінальний звук – LiveMetal
@gravina.art ♬ original sound – Rapperholics

Stunning new 4K trailer for Pink Floyd At Pompeii – MCMLXXII revealed

Pink Floyd have shared a brand new 4K trailer for their upcoming Pink Floyd At Pompeii – MCMLXXII, which is being released to cinemas worldwide on April 24.

The band announced last month that Adrian Maben’s groundbreaking 1972 film had been digitally re-mastered in 4K from the original 35mm footage, with enhanced audio newly mixed by Steven Wilson.

Tickets go on sale today for the cinema release and the soundtrack is to be released as a full-length live vinyl record for the very first time. The 2025 remix by Steven Wilson will also be available on CD/Blu-ray/DVD/Digital Audio and Dolby Atmos from May 2.

The new version of the film has been hand restored, frame-by-frame, from the original 35mm negative, which was discovered within Pink Floyd’s archives by Lana Topham, Director of Restoration for Pink Floyd. The film was scanned in 4K using advanced techniques to ensure the finest, sharpest detail.

“Since 1994, I have searched for the elusive film rushes of Pink Floyd At Pompeii, so the recent discovery of the 1972 original 35mm cut negative was a very special moment,” says Topham. “The newly restored version presents the first full 90-minute cut, combining the 60-minute source edit of the performance with the additional Abbey Road Studios documentary segments filmed shortly after.”

Pink Floyd At Pompeii famously presented the band prior to their commercial breakthrough with The Dark Side Of The Moon, capturing them against the backdrop of the ruins of Pompeii’s iconic Roman Amphitheatre.

Pink Floyd: Live At Pompeii is a rare and unique document of the band performing live in the period prior to The Dark Side Of The Moon,” adds drummer Nick Mason.

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Pre-order Pink Floyd: Live At Pompeii.

Get tickets.

Pink Floyd at Pompeii – MCMLXXII – Official Trailer – YouTube Pink Floyd at Pompeii – MCMLXXII - Official Trailer - YouTube

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Pink Floyd At Pompeii

(Image credit: Sony Music)

“A 10cc reunion? It’s a hard no to that, I’m afraid”: Why Graham Gouldman is one of Britain’s greatest songwriters – even if people don’t know it

Graham Gouldman is one of Britain’s greatest songwriters. Even before he co-founded the legendary 10cc, he had written songs for The Hollies, Herman‘s Hermits and The Yardbirds. He digs deep into his illustrious back catalogue with those bands – and his post-10cc solo career – on his current UK tour, appropriately titled Heart Full Of Songs.

Classic Rock divider

Is Heart Full Of Songs purely an acoustic undertaking?

No. We use a plugged-in keyboard and bass, but otherwise it’s completely acoustic.

You’ve been doing this tour on and off for more than a decade. How do you keep the format fresh?

I do change things up. There are some numbers I’d like to do, like [10cc’s] Rubber Bullets, but they wouldn’t work in that format. I’ve released two solo albums over the last few years and I add some of those, but they must be ones that people will get immediately. There’s no room for slow burners in this show.

Do you think quite a few people in the audience are surprised that a song they hear was written by you?

I often hear the phrase:“I had no idea you wrote that.” I accept that people know the artists that perform the songs, but not necessarily the writers. That’s okay.

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If you really had to pick an all-time favourite of your songs, which would it be?

I’ve a great fondness for Bus Stop, which I wrote for The Hollies [in 1966]. That’s the one I chose to perform when I was inducted into the Songwriters Hall Of Fame in 2014.

Which of your songs that didn’t become a hit do you think should have been?

I wrote a song called Right Between The Eyes with Andrew Gold [late singer-songwriter] in our band from the 1980s called Wax. It was successful in Spain but nowhere else, and I always believed it should have done much better internationally.

Is there a song of yours that surprised you with its popularity?

Strangely enough, when we [10cc] recorded I’m Not In Love its commercial potential wasn’t even discussed by the band. It was everyone else that told us it would be a complete smash.

Can you cherry-pick three of the best moments from your career?

One was hearing that The Yardbirds were going to record For Your Love [in 1965]. Another was Donna [10cc’s first single] going into the charts [in ’72]. And going on Top Of The Pops with Andrew Gold [in Wax] and Bridge To Your Heart [’87], after the break-up of the original 10cc, was a major, major moment for me.

It seems almost surreal that you produced an album for the Ramones.

[Chuckles] Strange bedfellows, weren’t we? But it all worked out really well. Subsequently Johnny Ramone said he hated it, but I got no impression of that at the time. I’m very proud to have that album [1981’s Pleasant Dreams] on my CV.

What do you make of modern trends in songwriting? For example, with brevity now so crucial, some of the most popular songs go straight to the hook.

[Nodding] They start with the chorus. I’d rather take you on a journey before hitting you with that. There are some good examples of [that method] working, but it’s not my way of doing things.

Graham Gouldman – Dancing Days (Heart Full of Songs acoustic) – YouTube Graham Gouldman - Dancing Days (Heart Full of Songs acoustic) - YouTube

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A song like Hotel California would probably never be written now.

And that would be a shame. I love the guitar solo in that song.

With all of the four members of the classic 10cc line-up still alive, could there be a reunion?

I spoke to Lol [Creme] around a decade ago, and we had a very nice chat. Kevin Godley and I have worked together and are going to do something further, but I haven’t seen Eric [Stewart] for decades. So it’s a hard no to that, I’m afraid. DL

Graham Gouldman’s UK tour begins on March 5 at Lowther Pavilion, Lytham St Annes. Tickets are on sale now

The best Black Sabbath songs that don’t feature Ozzy Osbourne or Ronnie James Dio

Live fill-ins notwithstanding, 10 men have fronted Black Sabbath since their 1968 founding, in stints of wildly varying length. The assortment of songs sung by Ozzy Osbourne and Ronnie James Dio traditionally hog the glory among fans – at the expense of some first-class material from less fashionable and commercially successful line-ups. Here, Metal Hammer salutes the best of the rest from heavy metal’s godfathers.

A divider for Metal Hammer

Disturbing The Priest (Born Again, 1983)

It may be infamous for its dogshit cover, but there’s a gleefully devilish abandon to Ian Gillan’s sole Sabbath album. Side-two opener Disturbing The Priest makes artful use of both loudness and ambience, the feeling of madness and evil remaining thick throughout. The spooky mid-section and Tony Iommi’s pinch harmonic squeals sound a decade ahead of their time, while Bill Ward’s polyrhythmic beats and Ian’s OTT screams add to the derangement.


Zero The Hero (Born Again, 1983)

Arguably Tony’s most flat-out hypnotic riff, Zero The Hero is all about delirious circularity, the experience akin to doing doughnuts in a massage chair. Cannibal Corpse and Godflesh’s covers made prime use of its marauding motif – so did Guns N’ Roses, who took influence from it when writing the verses of Paradise City if ex-member Tracii Guns is to be believed. Geezer Butler’s ominous bass chimes also warrant mention.


The Shining (The Eternal Idol, 1987)

This single introduced fans to the heroic pipes of Tony ‘The Cat’ Martin. The Shining had already clinched him the job at his audition, and he couldn’t ask for a stronger showcase. The solemn chords, iron-hard riffing, bluesy doom passages, mystical lyrics, infectious hooks and even Bob Daisley’s fretless bass wanderings are upstaged by the power and class of this gifted unknown, steadying the ship after several uncertain years.


Ancient Warrior (The Eternal Idol, 1987)

Tony Martin howls about a “king of all kings” who “holds eternity’s wings” during The Eternal Idol’s second song. Even more bombastic is the music, as Geoff Nicholls’ spacey synths give way to Tony Iommi’s crunching guitar, which plays a grand, pseudo-Egyptian melody. It may be just a bit overblown, but there’s no denying the god-like power that the mixture lends the listener, capped off by some truly thunderous drum mixing.


Headless Cross (Headless Cross, 1989)

Hammered into life with a dead-simple drum beat, announcing the arrival of heavy-hitter Cozy Powell to Sabbath’s ranks, this hulking, pulsing anthem is overloaded with gothic drama and high harmonies. Reaching for a slick structural simplicity but finessed to elegant perfection, this was the Tony Martin song that really made everyone sit up and take notice, confirming Sabbath’s creative resurgence at the end of a tricky decade.


Kill In The Spirit World (Headless Cross, 1989)

Suffused in that synth-glazed, hair-sprayed 80s production that proved so divisive to Sabbath purists, these upbeat verses nail the air-punching euphoria of classic AOR as hard as Journey or Survivor. However, the dreamy chorus is true epic doom with a mystical tinge, and the exuberant gloss falls away in the middle for a wave of ambient atmospherics, cueing a bluesy solo of rare grace and sensitivity.

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The Law Maker (Tyr, 1990)

It says much about Sabbath’s creative prowess that a song as strong as this ended up falling through the cracks of a monumental discography. For many well-known power metal bands, The Law Maker would be the best song of their career. Cozy hammers down the propulsive momentum, even the bridge has a diamond hook, and Tony Martin’s voice again possesses the song with expressive conviction.


Jerusalem (Tyr, 1990)

Stately grandeur with a rugged swagger, Jerusalem is another under-celebrated Sabbath banger. It should be a daily mainstay of rock radio, its simple but mighty riff borne aloft on an armour-plated marching rhythm. Tony Martin’s dramatic harmonies and Geoff Nicholls’ icy synth textures further ennoble the tune to majestic proportions, while its “whoa-oh-oh” chorus is surely the best of its kind not written by Steve Harris.


Cross Of Thorns (Cross Purposes, 1994)

Arguably Sabbath’s mightiest power ballad, this Cross Purposes highlight sees Tony Martin continuing to explore his versatility while the band voice the breadth of their light and shade dynamics. The quiet parts brood with gothic gloom just as oppressively as the thunderous doom passages, and the core of Sabbathian darkness remains hard as iron on a song that in lesser hands would be a girlfriend-baiting lighter-waver.

Watch Ghost’s new video Satanized and meet new frontman Papa V Perpetua as the band officially announce brand new album Skeletá

Papa V Perpetua
(Image credit: Ghost)

Ghost have officially kicked off their next chapter with a brand new single and devilishly daft new music video to go with it. Titled Satanized, the track is a mid-paced rock ‘n’ roll stomper and serves as the first cut from the Swedish spooks’ upcoming sixth studio album, Skeletá, confirmed to be arriving next month.

The video, predominantly in black and white, features a stressed-out monk confessing something rather nefarious and becoming overcome by possession, all while a mysterious clergy joyously jam the hell out of the track around him. Fans have already gone into meltdown speculating that that the actors playing the musicians in the video are in fact Ghost’s beloved Nameless Ghouls, officially unmasked on video for the first time. Could it be?!

Either way, at the end of the video, Ghost’s new cast of characters are unveiled, with new-look Ghouls and a ‘brand new’ frontman, Papa V Perpetua, a dazzling vision in metal and purple.

Skeletá follows on from 2022’s critically acclaimed Impera, and arrives on April 25 via Loma Vista, right as Ghost are set to head out on their latest world tour, which will take in dozens of dates that will include stops in Europe, the UK, North America and Mexico.

Watch the video for Satanized below and see Ghost’s full list of upcoming tour dates below that. Papa V Perpetua is also due to appear at this summer’s blockbuster Black Sabbath farewell show.

Ghost – Satanized (Official Music Video) – YouTube Ghost - Satanized (Official Music Video) - YouTube

Watch On

Ghost world tour dates 2025

UK:
Apr 15: Manchester AO Arena
Apr 16: Glasgow OVO Hydro
Apr 19: London The O2
Apr 20: Birmingham Utilita Arena

Europe:
Apr 22: Antwerp Sportpaleis, Belgium
Apr 23: Frankfurt Festhalle, Germany
Apr 24: Munich Olympiahalle, Germany
Apr 26: Lyon LDLC Arena, France
Apr 27: Toulouse Zenith Metropole, France
Apr 29: Lisbon MEO Arena, Portugal
Apr 30: Madrid Palacio Vistalegre, Spain
May 03: Zurich AG Hallenstadion, Switzerland
May 04: Milan Unipol Forum, Italy
May 07: Berlin Uber Arena, Germany
May 08: Amsterdam Ziggo Dome, Netherlands
May 10: Lodz Atlas Arena, Poland
May 11: Prague O2 Arena, Czech Republic
May 13: Paris Accor Arena, France
May 14: Oberhausen Rudolph Weber Arena, Germany
May 15: Hannover ZAG Arena, Germany
May 17: Copenhagen Royal Arena, Denmark
May 20: Tampere Nokia Arena, Finland
May 22: Linköping Saab Arena, Sweden
May 23: Sandviken Göransson Arena, Sweden
May 24: Oslo Spektrum, Norway

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USA:
Jul 09: Baltimore CFG Bank Arena, MD
Jul 11: Atlanta State Farm Arena, GA
Jul 12: Tampa Amalie Arena, FL
Jul 13: Miami Kaseya Center, FL
Jul 15: Raleigh PNC Arena, NC
Jul 17: Cleveland Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse, OH
Jul 18: Pittsburgh PPG Paints Arena, PA
Jul 19: Philadelphia Wells Fargo Center, PA
Jul 21: Boston TD Garden, MA
Jul 22: New York Madison Square Garden, NY
Jul 24: Detroit Little Caesars Arena, MI
Jul 25: Louisville KFC Yum! Center, KY
Jul 26: Nashville Bridgestone Arena, TN
Jul 28: Grand Rapids Van Andel Arena, MI
Jul 29: Milwaukee Fiserv Forum, WI
Jul 30: St Louis Enterprise Center, MO
Aug 01: Rosemont Allstate Arena, IL
Aug 02: Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center, MN
Aug 03: Omaha CHI Health Center, NE
Aug 05: Kansas City T-Mobile Center, MO
Aug 07: Denver Ball Arena, CO
Aug 09: Las Vegas MGM Grand Garden Arena, NV
Aug 10: San Diego Viejas Arena, CA
Aug 11: Phoenix Footprint Center, AZ
Aug 14: Austin Moody Center ATX, TX
Aug 15: Fort Worth Dickies Arena, TX
Aug 16: Houston Toyota Center, TX

Mexico:
Sep 24: Mexico City Palacio De Los Deportes

Merlin moved into his role as Executive Editor of Louder in early 2022, following over ten years working at Metal Hammer. While there, he served as Online Editor and Deputy Editor, before being promoted to Editor in 2016. Before joining Metal Hammer, Merlin worked as Associate Editor at Terrorizer Magazine and has previously written for the likes of Classic Rock, Rock Sound, eFestivals and others. Across his career he has interviewed legends including Ozzy Osbourne, Lemmy, Metallica, Iron Maiden (including getting a trip on Ed Force One courtesy of Bruce Dickinson), Guns N’ Roses, KISS, Slipknot, System Of A Down and Meat Loaf. He has also presented and produced the Metal Hammer Podcast, presented the Metal Hammer Radio Show and is probably responsible for 90% of all nu metal-related content making it onto the site. 

What Kiss’ Ace Frehley and Bruce Kulick Think of Vinnie Vincent

Like many of us, Bruce Kulick and Ace Frehley don’t seem to have Vinnie Vincent figured out quite yet.

In separate recent interviews, the two former Kiss lead guitarists shared their thoughts on the famously reclusive Vincent, who replaced Frehley in the group in 1982 but was dismissed early in 1984 over creative and personal differences.

“Vinnie Vincent played too fast,” Frehley told Guitar Player. “I never paid much attention to him as far as anything else. I know that Paul [Stanley] used to complain to me about Vinnie. He said that he was like a loose cannon and that he played things too fast, and they couldn’t control him.”

Read More: Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons’ Sons Are Recording Together

Frehley, Vincent and Kulick played together for the first (and as you’ll soon read, probably last) time at a May 2022 show in Nashville, trading riffs and solos over the backing tracks to Kiss’ “Deuce” and “Cold Gin.”

Although Vincent wowed the crowd with a 15-minute opening unaccompanied guitar solo, Frehley remains less than impressed by his replacement’s playing style. “The problem with shredding is that it’s not really memorable, you know? When you put 64 notes in a bar or two bars, you don’t really know what the guy is playing.”

Why Bruce Kulick Won’t Perform With Vinnie Vincent Again

Kulick, who served as Kiss’ lead guitarist from 1984 until their 1996 original lineup reunion, looked back on that same 2022 Nashville concert in an Ultimate Guitar interview, explaining that several important things didn’t happen the way he had been promised.

Unknown to him, the stage was built to include a replica of the military tank from Vincent’s two tours with Kiss, with Vincent towering above Frehley and Kulick, who were positioned down on ground level. The promised live drummer also wasn’t delivered and was replaced by backing tapes.

“I had no clue the tank would be rolled out,” Kulick explained. “Vinnie would be on the top, and then I’m over here, and then Ace would follow me. … Ace said, ‘What the hell is going on? Where’s the drummer?’ I said, ‘I don’t know but all we have is this track. I know the track works but what do you want to do?’ We were both in a weird situation… I always tend to take the high road and not focus on anything [like] ‘you lied to me! It was supposed to be this.'”

Kulick and Frehley decided to go along with the less than ideal conditions for the benefit of the fans in attendance, but the performance was marred by technical snafus and audio drop-outs that left Kulick performing by himself by the end of the brief set.

“It’s questionable how much Vinnie really played or didn’t,” Kulick recalled. “It was a surreal experience. I don’t wish anything against Vinnie, but I don’t have any interest in really trying to work with him in any capacity.”

Kiss Solo Albums Ranked Worst to Best

Counting down solo albums released by various members of Kiss.

Gallery Credit: Matthew Wilkening

“A band who could contend with Bring Me The Horizon and Sleep Token as the next zeitgeist-setting metal act.” Spiritbox have unleashed another absolute stunner with Tsunami Sea

You can trust Louder Our experienced team has worked for some of the biggest brands in music. From testing headphones to reviewing albums, our experts aim to create reviews you can trust. Find out more about how we review.

Spiritbox were making waves even before they released an album. Their breakthrough track, 2020’s Holy Roller, mixed clanging tech metal, explosive choruses and thrumming electronica with the crushing breakdowns so beloved of the metalcore scene they emerged from, inspiring a raft of imitators. The following year, debut album Eternal Blue expanded upon those sounds, adding more styles to their repertoire; the title-track was a fine slab of modern prog metal, Hurt You had echoes of an early 2000s nu metal club banger, and We Live In A Strange World was electronic pop-adjacent.

Admittedly, in hindsight that stylistic variance didn’t always come together coherently. But the album’s standout moments – Hurt You, Silk In The Strings, Secret Garden, Circle With Me, Yellowjacket (featuring Sam Carter) – were of world-beating quality, under- pinned by vocalist Courtney LaPlante’s emotionally candid lyrics, which connected with audiences on a visceral level.

Four years, two EPs and a Megan Thee Stallion remix/collaboration later – yeah, we didn’t see those coming either – they’ve reached a new high. On Tsunami Sea, the riffs are tighter and the mosh- calls more bilious – Courtney’s snarl of ‘You all deserve each other!’ during Soft Spine is one of the most venomous the band have dropped to date. The electronic techniques used on older tracks such as We Live In A Strange World and Angel Eyes, which were expanded on throughout those EPs (Rotoscope and The Fear Of Fear), have been folded into the band’s core sound in a thrilling way, and are now deployed with a confidence that makes them a fully-fledged part of their toolkit.

Tsunami Sea contains both lyrical and musical throughlines that affirm it as Spiritbox’s most focused artistic statement to date. Even the title is perfectly chosen, reflecting the album’s conceptual edge. Whether it’s the crashing, calamitous riffs of opener Fata Morgana mimicking a destructive wave sweeping away all it touches, the oceanic depths of the melodies in the title-track, or the frequent, water-based lyrical metaphors used to explore the depression and anxiety Courtney has contended with, there’s a sense of continuity that ties even the most disparate tracks of Tsunami Sea together.

That doesn’t come at the cost of killer songs, either. From the concussive Black Rainbow to the trance-meets-metal mash-up of Crystal Roses and the gloomy low-end of Ride The Wave – a song that carries echoes of Korn and more balladic Slipknot fare like Vermilion – Spiritbox are still crafting massive anthems. Perfect Soul and Keep Sweet may tread close to modern metalcore staples such as Architects’ Doomsday or While She Sleeps’ Silence Speaks, but Spiritbox’s canny ear for mixing elements in fresh new ways ensures the tracks are elevated beyond simple genre conventions.

Whether they will continue to influence wider trends across the metalcore and
alt metal landscape remains to be seen. But Tsunami Sea feels like the moment Spiritbox firmly step into their own as a band who could contend with the likes of Bring Me The Horizon and Sleep Token, as the next zeitgeist-setting act.

Tsunami Sea is out this Friday, March 7. Order Metal Hammer’s Spiritbox issue to find out the story behind the album

Staff writer for Metal Hammer, Rich has never met a feature he didn’t fancy, which is just as well when it comes to covering everything rock, punk and metal for both print and online, be it legendary events like Rock In Rio or Clash Of The Titans or seeking out exciting new bands like Nine Treasures, Jinjer and Sleep Token. 

The Offspring announces every punk rock-lover’s dream tour with Jimmy Eat World and New Found Glory

The Offspring
(Image credit: Press)

The Offspring have announced a 2025 North American summer tour.

Joining the Californian punk rockers on the road will be special guests Jimmy Eat World and New Found Glory.

The newly-announced dates are part of the band’s Supercharged Worldwide In ’25 tour, and will commence from July 11 in West Palm Beach, Florida. They’ll then move on to Georgia, North Carolina, Toronto and more before wrapping up on September 7 in Colorado.

Tickets for the shows will kick off with a presale on March 4 at 10am local time. The artist presale begins March 5 at 10am local time, and additional pre-sales will open throughout the week before the general on-sale on March 7, 10am local time at Live Nation.

Last October, The Offspring released their eleventh studio album, Supercharged. Louder writer Paul Brannigan gave the record 3.5 stars, and described it as “a triumph, and a late-career highlight”, adding that the band “are clearly still have a blast and are still smashing it in their 40th year. How many bands can say the same?”.

View Supercharged Worldwide In ’25 North American tour dates below:

Jul 11: West Palm Beach iThink Financial Amphitheatre, FL
Jul 12: Tampa MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre, FL
Jul 15: Alpharetta Ameris Bank Amphitheatre, GA
Jul 16: Raleigh Coastal Credit Union Music Park, NC
Jul 18: Virginia Beach Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater, VA
Jul 19: Bristow Jiffy Lube Live, VA
Jul 20: Scranton The Pavilion at Montage Mountain, PA
Jul 22: Syracuse Empower Federal Credit Union Amphitheater at Lakeview, NY
Jul 23: Toronto Budweiser Stage, ON
Jul 25: Cincinnati Riverbend Music Center, OH
Jul 26: Noblesville Ruoff Music Center, IN
Jul 27: Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre, MI
Jul 29: Camden Freedom Mortgage Pavilion, NJ
Jul 30: Mansfield Xfinity Center, MA
Aug 01: Bethel Bethel Woods Center for The Arts, NY
Aug 02: Holmdel PNC Bank Arts Center, NJ
Aug 03: Wantagh Northwell at Jones Beach Theater, NY
Aug 13: Cuyahoga Falls Blossom Music Center, OH
Aug 15: Minneapolis Target Center, MN
Aug 16: Tinley Park Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre, IL
Aug 17: Maryland Heights Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre, MO
Aug 20: Ridgedale Thunder Ridge Nature Arena, MO
Aug 22: Dallas Dos Equis Pavilion, TX
Aug 23: The Woodlands The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, TX
Aug 24: Austin Germania Insurance Amphitheater, TX
Aug 26: Albuquerque Isleta Amphitheater, NM
Aug 27: Phoenix Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre, AZ
Aug 29: Inglewood Kia Forum, CA**
Aug 30 Mountain View Shoreline Amphitheatre, CA
Aug 31: Wheatland Toyota Amphitheatre, CA
Sep 03: Auburn White River Amphitheatre, WA
Sep 04: Ridgefield Cascades Amphitheater, WA
Sep 06: West Valley City Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre, UT
Sep 07: Denver Ball Arena, CO

The latest news, features and interviews direct to your inbox, from the global home of alternative music.

** no Jimmy Eat World

Liz works on keeping the Louder sites up to date with the latest news from the world of rock and metal. Prior to joining Louder as a full time staff writer, she completed a Diploma with the National Council for the Training of Journalists and received a First Class Honours Degree in Popular Music Journalism. She enjoys writing about anything from neo-glam rock to stoner, doom and progressive metal, and loves celebrating women in music.