Former SANCTUARY Guitarist SEAN BLOSL Dead At 58

Former SANCTUARY Guitarist SEAN BLOSL Dead At 58

Former Sanctuary guitarist Sean Blosl has died at the age of 58. His death occurred on August 26, 2024 in Seattle, but was formerly announced on social media on December 31, 2024 by his cousin and current Sanctuary guitarist Lenny Rutledge.

Rutledge posted on the Sanctuary Facebook page: “It is with a very heavy heart that I have to announce that Sean Blosl passed away earlier this year. He was involved in a vehicle related accident in Seattle.

“I have struggled with posting about this news. I am not a fan of the social media death announcements, but I realize that even though I think this is a private family matter, Sean was also a very important part of the Seattle music scene.

“Sean was my cousin, but to us we were much more like my brothers. We had a musical dream when we were kids that became a reality. Without Sean by my side I don’t know if I would have had the opportunity to make this musical journey.

“It is very difficult to sum up a lifetime of love, memories and experiences but I will always remember Sean as an inspiration and a teacher.

“RIP Brother. I will see you on the other side.”

Blosl played on the first two Sanctuary albums – 1988’s Refuge Denied and 1990’s Into The Mirror Black. 


FORBIDDEN Celebrating 40 Years; Unveils Reimagined Artwork Of Endless Slaughter Demo

FORBIDDEN Celebrating 40 Years; Unveils Reimagined Artwork Of Endless Slaughter Demo

2025 marks 40 years of California thrashers Forbidden. Originally formed under the name Forbidden Evil, the band formed in March 1985. To celebrate the anniversary, Forbidden has created a new design and reimagined artwork of their 1986 demo Endless Slaughter.

Says the band, “2025 marks a milestone for the band. The 40th Anniversary of the Formation of Forbidden (Evil) in March of 1985. 

“For this momentous occasion, we’ve created a brand new design: A reimagining of our Endless Slaughter demo cover by incredible artist, Beto Farris. A modern full-color reboot of the conflict between good & evil of the original black & white art. The inspiration for what would become the Forbidden Evil album cover. Every corner of this image is packed with incredible detail and symbolism. 

“Preorders for these LIMITED shirts will be available very soon. Keep an eye out over the coming days.

“Happy New Year to all of our Forbidden People!”

Sign up for the Forbidden email list at officialforbidden.com.

The June 1986 Endless Slaughter demo held four tracks including two featured on their 1989 full-length debut – “Chalice Of Blood” and “Forbidden Evil”.

Original artwork:

The demo contains the lineup of vocalist Russ Anderson, guitarist Robb Flynn, guitarist Craig Locicero, bassist John Tegio, and drummer James Pittman.


ALICE COOPER Partners With WhistlePig For Non-Alcoholic Cocktail

January 1, 2025, an hour ago

news hard rock alice cooper whistlepig

ALICE COOPER Partners With WhistlePig For Non-Alcoholic Cocktail

Alice Cooper begins 2025 with a new partnership with WhistlePig to produce their Sex, Drugs, Rock & Dry Cocktail – a non-alcoholic headliner made with 100% Rye non-whiskey, barrel-aged maple syrup, and a trio of natural ingredients.

Cooper and WhistlePig have dropped a special “Go Pig Go” bundle that comes with the cocktail and a limited-edition vinyl of Alice Cooper’s Breadcrumbs EP infused with non-whiskey rye liquid. And no – you cannot drink the vinyl.

Purchase at whistlepigwhiskey.com.


Featured Video

KINGDOM IN FLAMES – “Black Widow”

KINGDOM IN FLAMES – “Black Widow”

Latest Reviews

Partner Resources



Watch Billy Corgan sing Take Me Out To The Ballgame for 40,000 fans in an icy stadium in Chicago

Smashing Pumpkins and Billy Corgan were among the performers bringing festive cheer to the crowd at this year’s Winter Classic, the annual NHL game that takes hockey into outdoor stadiums on New Year’s Eve.

At this year’s event, held in front of 40,000 fans at Wrigley Field in Chicago – home of baseball’s Chicago Cubs – the St. Loius Blues defeated local favourites the Chicago Blackhawks 6-2, with St. Louis defenceman Can Fowler scoring twice.

Meanwhile, the entertainment was provided by Chance The Rapper, who performed during the first intermission, and Smashing Pumpkins, who played Today and Sighommi before a televised Tonight, Tonight during the player introductions. The biggest surprise, however, came when Pumpkins leader Billy Corgan led the crowd led the crowd in singing the baseball classic Take Me Out To The Ballgame before the third period, signing off with an enthusiastic “Let’s get some balls!”

“I’ve always been a fan of competitive sports, and I think the ethos of hockey fits really well with the ethos of rock music,” Corgan told the Chicago Tribune in 2017. “It’s all about overcoming adversity, being a part of a team, and dealing with the ups and downs of success.”

Smashing Pumpkins ended the night by playing a private show for NHL staff at the House Of Blues in Chicago, performing an 11-song set that included covers of U2‘s Zoo Station and David Bowie‘s Ziggy Stardust as well as Pumpkins classics like Tonight, Tonight, Bullet With Butterfly Wings, 1979 and Cherub Rock.

Billy Corgan sings Take Me Out To The Ballgame – YouTube Billy Corgan sings Take Me Out To The Ballgame - YouTube

Watch On

The Smashing Pumpkins Perform Live At 2025 Winter Classic – YouTube The Smashing Pumpkins Perform Live At 2025 Winter Classic - YouTube

Watch On

Sign up below to get the latest from Classic Rock, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox!

“Glastonbury is now under corporate control”: Neil Young pulls out of UK’s biggest festival, citing BBC interference

Neil Young has pulled out of this year’s Glastonbury Festival, citing interference by the festival’s broadcasting partner, the BBC.

Posting on the Neil Young Archives website, Young says, “The Chrome Hearts and I were looking forward to playing Glastonbury, one of my all-time favourite outdoor gigs. We were told that BBC was now a partner in Glastonbury and wanted us to do a lot of things in a way we were not interested in.

“It seems Glastonbury is now under corporate control and is not the way I remember it being. Thanks for coming to see us the last time! We will not be playing Glastonbury on this tour because it is a corporate turn-off, and not for me like it used to be. Hope to see you at one of the other venues on the tour.”

The BBC has been the official broadcast partner of the event since 1997 and has expanded its remit in the years since. The Corporation launched its “Introducing” stage in 2007 and renewed its broadcast rights in 2017. Last year’s event was the first to be broadcast globally. Young has played Glastonbury once, in 2009, when he headlined the Pyramid Stage alongside Bruce Springsteen and Blur.

This year’s Glastonbury Festival, which will be held at its traditional home at Worthy Farm in Piltdown, Somerset, England, between Jun 25 and June 29, is already sold out. Headliners have not yet been announced, but Rod Stewart will fill the traditional late-afternoon legend slot on the final day of the event. He last played at Glastonbury in 2002.

“I’m absolutely thrilled to announce that I’ll be playing Glastonbury 2025!” said Stewart. “After all these years, I’m proud and ready and more than able to take the stage again to pleasure and titillate my friends at Glastonbury in June. I’ll see you there!”

Sign up below to get the latest from Classic Rock, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox!

“The combination of music and sex was something I had never encountered in any other group”: How the Rolling Stones married sex, blues and rock’n’roll and launched themselves to notoriety

“The combination of music and sex was something I had never encountered in any other group”: How the Rolling Stones married sex, blues and rock’n’roll and launched themselves to notoriety

Rolling Stones posing for a photograph in the early 1960s

(Image credit: Chris Ware/Keystone Features/Getty Images)

Even the biggest bands in the world have to start something – and for the Rolling Stones it was in the smoky blues clubs of London in the early 1960s. In 2007, Classic Rock rolled back the years to look at the birth of the legend – and the people who fell by the wayside


It was somewhere towards the end of 1961, sitting together in a railway carriage, that Mick Jagger and Keith Richards made a deal. It was unspoken but undeniable and almost spiritual. Richards later likened it to “Robert Johnson at the crossroads”. Jagger and Richards, complete opposites in every other way, had bonded at once and forever over music.

They weren’t exactly strangers on a train. Both were born in Livingstone Hospital in Dartford, Kent, in 1943: Jagger on July 26 and Richards on December 18. As children, they were neighbours and playmates, together attending Wentworth Junior County Primary School, with Mick in the year above. They remained friends until Jagger passed his 11-plus exam and moved up to grammar school. Richards entered the local tech a year later, and they lost touch. By now, their families had moved, the Jaggers to Wilmington and the Richards to another part of Dartford.

Through their teens, their interests diverged. Mick was confident, organised, keen on basketball, cricket and football, and bright at school, where he was a prefect. Keith was shy, sensitive, unconventional, alienated by sport and bored by his education.

Jagger won a scholarship to the London School of Economics in 1961. Richards, a bit of a scruff, had already been kicked out of tech after too many days bunking off to play snooker, and had enrolled at Sidcup Art School.

That’s where he was going when he bumped into Mick Jagger at Dartford station. And what he noticed – and coveted – was the bunch of American albums Jagger was carrying under his arm: blues by Muddy Waters, R&B by Chuck Berry. Keith couldn’t afford the price of these expensive imports, although he had a few singles. This was the music he loved; it was a cult interest in the UK.

He said to Mick: “I can play that shit. I didn’t know you were into that.”

Sign up below to get the latest from Classic Rock, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox!

Jagger responded: “I’ve even got a little band.”

Rolling Stones posing for a photograph in the early 1960s

The Rolling Stones in 1963: (clockwise from left) Ian Stewart, Keith RIchards, Brian Jones, Mick Jagger, Bill Wyman, Charlie Watts (Image credit: Archive Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Both had started playing guitar. They talked excitedly about the great American gods of blues and R&B, and by the time the train stopped at Sidcup, they had already forged one of the world’s greatest musical alliances, one that would survive huge differences and hostilities as together they fronted more than 40 years of The Rolling Stones.

The cover of Classic Rock Presents Cream And The Story Of British Blues Rock

This feature originally appeared in Classic Rock Presents Cream And The Story Of British Blues Rock (April 2007) (Image credit: Future)

But it wasn’t their band to begin with: it was Brian Jones’s. Brian was a blues fanatic. Born in the Park Nursing Home in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, on February 28, 1942, he was a natural musician who had easily mastered the piano, recorder, clarinet and washboard by the age of 15. He then progressed to playing sax and guitar with various local jazz outfits.

Jones was a clever but lazy and rebellious scholar at Cheltenham Grammar. He left with a raft of qualifications and no intention of using them. Determined to make music his life, he drifted in and out of various unskilled jobs and travelled to London for weekends. There, he became besotted by the sound of the blues, but his moment of epiphany happened closer to home – at Cheltenham Town Hall – when he first heard Alexis Korner play an electric blues set.

Bursting with excitement, he introduced himself to Korner, who gave Brian his address in London and became his mentor. Now Jones bought an electric guitar and practised feverishly, working for untold hours on his slide technique and soaking up records by Elmore James, Robert Johnson and Howlin’ Wolf.

In March 1962, Alexis Korner opened a weekly R&B night at the Ealing Jazz Club in west London for his own band, Blues Incorporated. Brian Jones was among the sardines squashed into the room that first night. And when he returned the next week, he was invited onstage to play with Korner, whose line-up included harmonica legend Cyril Davies, saxophonist Dick Heckstall Smith – and drummer Charlie Watts.

On April 7, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were in the audience at Ealing to see Brian Jones once again sitting in with the band. Both were astonished by his performance of Elmore James’s Dust My Broom: it was the first time Keith had heard anyone playing electric slide guitar. Chatting later to Mick and Keith, Jones mentioned that he was putting a band together.

Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards and Mick Jagger posing for a photograph in the early 1960s

Keith Richards and Mick Jagger in the early 60s (Image credit: Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

Jagger and Richards had already formed a group called Little Boy Blue And The Blue Boys, inspired by Jimmy Reed, Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry. After their fateful meeting on the train, they’d started rehearsing upstairs at Jagger’s family home with a mutual friend, Dick Taylor. Taylor (who would come to prominence as lead guitarist with the Pretty Things) played drums. Jagger gave up the guitar to sing and play harmonica, leaving Keith to the fretboard. Other friends dropped in and out, and Dick Taylor eventually moved to bass.

Mick and Keith had each, separately, been in bands with Taylor. Jagger had met him at Dartford Grammar, and they’d formed an R&B group that rehearsed for two years but never played a gig. Jagger’s only public performance was at a church hall in 1960, singing a Buddy Holly song. Reportedly, it was completely dreadful.

Taylor next befriended Keith at the Sidcup Art School where they and another friend, Mike Ross, formed a country and western combo. They managed one gig. Richards and Ross missed the last train home and spent the night in a bus shelter.

Little Boy Blue And The Blue Boys never made it on to a stage at all, although they did make some recordings, which Jagger sent to Alexis Korner. As a result, he was invited to join Blues Incorporated in May, sharing vocals with guests including Long John Baldry and Paul Pond, later known as Paul Jones in Manfred Mann.

Brian Jones’s band, meanwhile, was coming together slowly. He recruited Ian “Stu” Stewart, a pianist from Cheam, Surrey, through an ad in Jazz News, and the pair began hiring rooms in pubs around the West End for rehearsals and auditions. They recruited a widely respected guitarist, Geoff Bradford, and singer/harmonica player Brian Knight.

Knight lasted only a few weeks before leaving to form his own band, Blues By Six. Bradford followed him into that group shortly afterwards.

Back to square one, Brian and Stu immediately needed a rhythm section and a singer. And it was Stu who invited Mick Jagger to try out. Jones not only hired Jagger – he also took on his friends Keith Richards and Dick Taylor. Now all they needed was a drummer. They were still relying on temporary help by the time they played their first gig. Mick Avory, soon to join The Kinks, sat in on drums at the London Marquee club on July 12, 1962, where the band appeared under a name hastily coined by Brian: the Rollin’ Stones.

The drummer they all really wanted was Charlie Watts, although he was in a different league. Certainly, he expected to be paid for his services, or to be guaranteed regular work. The fledgling Stones decided to struggle on until they could afford to make him a realistic offer, and so they advertised for a drummer in Melody Maker. The winning candidate was Tony Chapman. He’d been playing in a London rock’n’roll band called The Cliftons alongside bassist Bill Perks, the future Bill Wyman.

Come On ((Original Single Mono Version)) – YouTube Come On ((Original Single Mono Version)) - YouTube

Watch On

The Rollin’ Stones – Brian, Mick, Keith, Stu, Dick and Tony – played once a week at the Ealing Jazz Club in a residency that stretched through to December, taking over from Alexis Korner who’d switched his operation to the Marquee. Other gigs were few and far between. They ventured out to north Cheam for a booking at the Woodstock Hotel on October 5 where, legend has it, they played to two paying punters. In November, they travelled to Sutton, Surrey, for a one-off at the Red Lion pub.

In the early 60s, the live music scene was run sternly by the jazz establishment, which disapproved of the untidy-looking blues and R&B upstarts banging at the doors. Things would change, but for now, it was impossible to find enough gigs to make a living. Come the autumn, Brian Jones made a concerted effort to drum up a decent itinerary.

Brian, Mick and Keith had moved into a £16-a-week first floor flat at 102 Edith Grove, Chelsea. They and various friends occupied two rooms that soon became almost uninhabitable. They were so poor they rarely had any shillings to feed the meter that powered the hot water and the single-bar electric heater. Keith’s mother sent emergency cash and food parcels. It was an icy winter. Sometimes Brian and Keith – both unemployed – stayed in bed all day to beat the freeze, playing guitars under the blankets or listening over and over again to albums by Elmore James, Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson and Chuck Berry, at Brian’s insistence.

Jones took his responsibilities as band leader very seriously. He wrote endless letters, promoting the Stones to anyone he thought might be able to help their career. He took charge of the money, such as it was. He was their spokesman and their negotiator. He organised regular rehearsals at the Wetherby Arms, a nearby pub in the King’s Road. And, against the odds, he succeeded in setting up an unprecedented gigging schedule for November and December, booking the band back into the Marquee and into London jazz clubs such as The Flamingo and the Piccadilly as well as out-of-town venues in Hertfordshire, Windsor and Richmond.

October wasn’t the perfect time, then, for Dick Taylor to decide that he wanted to quit music to sit his art exams.

The Rollin’ Stones carried on with a succession of temporary bass players, at the same time auditioning for a new member. Tony Chapman recommended his old Cliftons buddy, Bill Perks, who met Stu first, early in December, and was then invited to audition at the Wetherby Arms.

Rolling Stones performing onstage in 1963

The Rolling Stones onstage at Studio 51 Club, Central London, April 14 1963 (Image credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns)

Bill recalled: “I met Stu again and Mick, who was quite friendly. I was then introduced to Brian and Keith, who were at the bar… they were very cool and distant, showing little interest in knowing me. We brought my equipment in and set it up. Suddenly everyone was interested.”

Perks had a huge bass cabinet and a Vox AC 30 amp. He also had the price of a round, and he had cigarettes to share. After a rehearsal consisting of blues songs by Jimmy Reed and others, Bill played his debut gig with the Stones at the Ricky Tick Club at Windsor’s Star And Garter Hotel on December 14, changing his name to Wyman in January 1963.

This was the month that they again invited Charlie Watts to join the band, and finally got the answer they wanted. By now Watts had left Blues Incorporated to join Blues By Six with Brian Knight and Geoff Bradford – the musicians who’d abandoned Brian Jones’s first line-up of the Stones.

Watts was an accomplished jazz drummer who knew that his musical earnings would plummet by joining this band who were fighting for every gig they could get. But: “I liked their spirit and I was getting very involved with R&B. So I said okay.”

Brian Jones immediately fired Tony Chapman, and Charlie debuted with the Rollin’ Stones on January 12 at the Ealing Jazz Club. At around the same time, Stu bought a van for the band. Now they no longer had to drag their gear around town on buses.

I Want To Be Loved (Mono) – YouTube I Want To Be Loved (Mono) - YouTube

Watch On

Things were beginning to change on the live circuit. Cyril Davies had taken over Alexis Korner’s Marquee residency, with Korner moving to the Flamingo, and the Stones had started supporting Davies. At the end of January, he sacked them, explaining that, “they are not very authentic and not very good”.

Jazzman Chris Barber told Bill Wyman years later: “We were all a bit highbrow at that time, and the Stones’ attitude to R&B was to us rather poppy. We were a bit snooty about it.”

Wyman later reflected that the “jazz mafia” had it in for the band. But although they lost their Marquee and Flamingo residencies, they hustled extra gigs at the Ealing Jazz Club, they continued at the Ricky Tick and the Red Lion, and they found new venues at the Haringay Jazz Club and the Wooden Bridge Hotel in Guildford, Surrey. But even more exciting opportunities were just around the corner, largely thanks to Brian’s incessant networking.

One night at the Marquee, he was introduced to promoter Giorgio Gomelsky, who ran his own club in the Station Hotel, Richmond. He arranged gigs for the Stones – now spelling Rolling with a “g” – at the hotel (February 24), Studio 51, Ken Colyer’s Soho jazz club (March 3) and Twickenham Eel Pie Island (April 24). These were the places where the Stones began to build both their audiences and their legend.

“You could boil an egg in the atmosphere,” said The Daily Mirror, reporting on one Stones gig at the Richmond club, now named the Crawdaddy, in June, where 500 people were packed into the 100-capacity room to hear the band play Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed, Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry and Elmore James.

“The combination of music and sex was something I had never encountered in any other group,” said Andrew Loog Oldham upon seeing the Stones for the first time, at the Crawdaddy. In those days, Brian Jones was the band’s sex symbol, the showman with the shiny blond hair and mysterious glamour.

At the beginning of May 1963, Jones signed the Stones to management and recording deals with Oldham and his partner Eric Easton. Within days, the pair’s Impact Sound had contracted the band to Decca.

Oldham made his presence felt immediately. He announced that Stu didn’t look like a Rolling Stone and must therefore stand down from live performance. Brian proposed an arrangement by which Stewart would continue as the Stones’ roadie and also play on studio recordings, a deal the keyboardist accepted.

Rolling Stones posing for a photograph on the banks of the River Thames in the early 1960s

The Stones by the River Thames in 1963 (Image credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Image was very important to Oldham, who also set about switching the focus from Jones to Mick Jagger and building a media profile in which the Stones were pitched as the “bad boy” alternative to The Beatles. Much was made of their rebelliousness, their “ugliness” and long hair.

Their debut single, a cover of Chuck Berry’s Come On, was released in June 1963. It eventually reached Number 21. But the Stones didn’t like it. Mick Jagger called it “shit” and “a hype”. Bill Wyman explained that compared to earlier material they’d recorded, Come On was “pure pop. In truth we would not have got a recording deal if we had carried on with the blues material. We still wanted to play the blues: they were our roots, so we played them live.”

Record Mirror said of the single: “It’s good, catchy, punchy and commercial but it’s not the fanatical R&B sound that their audiences wait hours to hear.”

The Stones had reached the point where they could no longer have it all their own way. Their hearts were in their live shows, and for some time they refused to play Come On. They were, however, thrilled with their next single, the Lennon/McCartney composition I Wanna Be Your Man, a No. 12 hit.

Come On had hurled the band into a whole new world overnight. Their Crawdaddy days were over. In the second half of 1963, they toured theatres and ballrooms the length and breadth of Britain, both headlining and supporting, in Stu’s van. Accordingly, the nature of their material changed. Ditching the deep blues which had been their trademark in the clubs, they developed a vigorous R&B sound that better filled the halls.

In the autumn, the Stones participated in a quaint old 60s institution: the package tour. This couldn’t have been more exciting, because their co-stars were Bo Diddley, Little Richard and the Everly Brothers, whom they regularly upstaged.

Keith later enthused: “What an education – like going to rock’n’roll university.”

And then they were back on the road in their own right until the end of the year and beyond, trying to come to terms with the hysteria of their fans. There were those who simply screamed, fainted and jostled for autographs. There were others who would steal instruments, number plates, anything they could lay their hands on. The Stones got mobbed. Girls ripped at their hair, their clothes, their buttons. Keith Richards soon learned not to wear anything round his neck.

The mania was fanned not only by the band’s primitively exciting and sexual live shows but by their TV appearances. They’d already become regulars on Thank Your Lucky Stars and the endlessly cool Ready Steady Go! The Stones had not set out to be pop stars. They were a rhythm and blues band, whose only mission had been to bring that music to a wider audience and get paid for doing it.

The balance of power was changing. Brian Jones was being sidelined by his own group – and, gallingly, by the managers he’d himself appointed. Andrew Loog Oldham had removed his authority as a decision-maker, and Eric Easton had taken over the finances and the bookings. Jones was now rarely consulted about anything. At the same time, Oldham, Jagger and Richards were forming an increasingly tight alliance, having all moved together into a flat at 33 Mapesbury Road, West Hampstead. They were taking charge.

Oldham saw obvious limitations in the Stones’ policy of playing only covers, and he ordered Mick and Keith to start writing their own songs. Jones, isolated in Windsor with a girlfriend, could only sneer from the sidelines at their earliest efforts.

Throughout 1964, however, The Rolling Stones clung on to their roots. They toured briefly with The Ronettes and extensively with leading lights from the British pop scene, also appearing many times on Top Of The Pops.

Not Fade Away – a Top 3 single in the UK and a breaker in the States at No. 48 in February that year – was an urgently exciting recording, with Jagger’s arrogant vocal riding a sparse but insistent Bo Diddley rhythm, nodding to Buddy Holly along the way. An album followed in April: with breathtaking audacity, The Rolling Stones was released with no name or title on the front sleeve, and it rushed to UK No.1.

Produced by Oldham, it includes a Jagger/Richards song, Tell Me (You’re Coming Back) and two group compositions, Now I’ve Got A Witness (Like Uncle Phil And Uncle Gene) and Little By Little, as well as a selection of songs by Willie Dixon, Jimmy Reed, Slim Harpo, Chuck Berry, Rufus Thomas and, of course, Diddley. Route 66, with which they usually opened their live show, and Carol later became set staples for any self-respecting R&B band.

The Stones were satisfied they’d captured their essential sound on the album. Rolling Stone magazine drooled: “This is the hardest rhythm and blues the Stones (or anyone) ever recorded.”

They were met by 500 rabid fans at Kennedy Airport in June 1964, arriving in America for the first time. There they enjoyed the luxury of limos and posh hotels, but other than in New York and San Antonio, Texas, they faced endless rows of empty seats. The highlight of the trip was the chance to record in Chicago’s legendary Chess Studios where they were visited by their own heroes: Willie Dixon, guitarist Buddy Guy, Chuck Berry and Muddy Waters, who said of Brian: “That guitar player ain’t bad.”

Rolling Stones posing for a photograph in New York in 1964

The Rolling Stones in New York in (Image credit: Express Newspapers/Getty Images)

It’s All Over Now, a track from the Chess sessions, was released as a single that same month. A UK No.1, it reached No. 26 in the US, and found the Stones exhibiting country qualities in the 12-string guitar and harmonies. All of the band loved it, except for Brian, a strict hardliner.

Back home, touring Britain and Europe, the Stones were playing to crowds of up to 3,000, and there were full-scale riots at tour dates in Blackpool and Le Hague in Holland, with the audiences wrecking the venues. The Daily Mirror fumed: “These performers are a menace to law and order.” From now on, squads of cops were on hand at every gig to protect the band from marauding fans.

After another, better-organised American tour in the autumn, during which they appeared on the renowned Ed Sullivan Show, also recording at LA’s RCA Studios and again at Chess, The Rolling Stones released a cover of Willie Dixon’s Little Red Rooster. It was their purest blues single to date, with Jagger’s sensual drawl and Jones’s exquisite slide guitar creating a lazy, lascivious atmosphere that propelled it to No.1 in November.

They followed that with a chart-topping album, The Rolling Stones No 2, in January 1965. Including tracks recorded in Hollywood and Chicago, it captures an authenticity rare in white bands of the time. Mersey Beat magazine said the Stones were “well into their rootsy, true R&B style, with no concessions made to commercialism or the hit parade”.

In this, it was something of a “last hurrah”. As they toured Australia, New Zealand and Singapore in January and February 1965, Mick and Keith were about to give the band a No.1 single with one of their own compositions. The Last Time was poppier, rockier than anything the Stones had done before. With Satisfaction and Get Off Of My Cloud bringing up the rear, and the Stones investing their R&B blueprint with influences from soul and pop, they were well on the way to rock’n’roll world domination.

Jagger & Richards were making good their silent pledge on the train to Sidcup. For blues angel Brian Jones, disappearing into a drink and drugs-induced oblivion, the dream was over, bar the shouting.

Originally published in Classic Rock Presents Cream And The Story Of British Blues Rock, April 2007

Carol Clerk wrote extensively for Melody Maker in the 80s and 90s, and then for Uncut and Classic Rock. In 1985 she won a journalist of the year award from the Professional Publishers Association for her coverage of the Live Aid concert at Wembley. She ghostwrote gangster Reggie Kray’s autobiography and was the author of books about Madonna, the Pogues, Hawkind and others, as well as Vintage Tattoos: The Book of Old-School Skin Art. She died in March 2010.

RUSH – GEDDY LEE To Hold “My Effin’ Life In Conversation” Event In Charlotte

RUSH – GEDDY LEE To Hold

Geddy Lee will hold a special edition of My Effin’ Life In Conversation on Monday, January 27, 2025 at Sarah Belk Gambrell Center for the Arts & Civic Engagement presented by the Stan Greenspon Centre.

The Rush frontman will have a special merch table with limited number of signed books and posters for sale, in addition to other specialty items. Get tickets here.

Geddy Lee’s My Effin’ Life memoir is available now via Harper Collins. Order here.

My Effin’ Life description: The long-awaited memoir, generously illustrated with never-before-seen photos, from the iconic Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, Rush bassist, and bestselling author of Geddy Lee’s Big Beautiful Book of Bass.

Geddy Lee is one of rock and roll’s most respected bassists. For nearly five decades, his playing and work as co-writer, vocalist and keyboardist has been an essential part of the success story of Canadian progressive rock trio Rush. Here for the first time is his account of life inside and outside the band.

Long before Rush accumulated more consecutive gold and platinum records than any rock band after the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, before the seven Grammy nominations or the countless electrifying live performances across the globe, Geddy Lee was Gershon Eliezer Weinrib, after his grandfather murdered in the Holocaust.

As he recounts the transformation, Lee looks back on his family, in particular his loving parents and their horrific experiences as teenagers during World War II.

He talks candidly about his childhood and the pursuit of music that led him to drop out of high school.

He tracks the history of Rush which, after early struggles, exploded into one of the most beloved bands of all time.

He shares intimate stories of his lifelong friendships with bandmates Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart—deeply mourning Peart’s recent passing—and reveals his obsessions in music and beyond.

This rich brew of honesty, humor, and loss makes for a uniquely poignant memoir.


ZAKK SABBATH Streaming Live Concert Tonight On SiriusXM’s Ozzy’s Boneyard

ZAKK SABBATH Streaming Live Concert Tonight On SiriusXM’s Ozzy’s Boneyard

Ring in the New Year with an epic tribute to the mighty Black Sabbath. Hear Zakk Wylde and his powerhouse band, Zakk Sabbath live from The Fillmore in Silver Spring, MD tonight!

The show will start at approximately 10:30 PM ET on SiriusXM’s Ozzy’s Boneyard ch. 38 or anytime on the SiriusXM App.

Zakk Sabbath, the Black Sabbath tribute band led by vocalist / guitarist Zakk Wylde (Black Label Society, Ozzy Osbourne, Pantera), postponed its concerts in Little Rock, Arkansas on December 14 at The Hall, and New Orleans, Louisiana on December 15 at The Fillmore.

According to a social media post from Zakk Sabbath: “Unfortunately, Zakk has lost his voice and, under medical advice, cannot perform. We want to ensure you experience the best possible show, and performing under these conditions would not meet the standards you deserve. We understand how disappointing this news is and sincerely apologize for any inconvenience caused. Thank you for your understanding and patience. We love and appreciate you all and we will see you soon!”

The Little Rock show will now take place on January 15, and the New Orleans show will be held on January 14. All tickets for the two concerts will remain valid for the rescheduled dates, so please hold on to them. For those unable to attend the new dates, refunds will be available at the point of purchase.

Remaining dates on Zakk Sabbath’s King Of The Monstrous US Tour 2024/25 (with Zoso, The Iron Maidens) are as listed:

December
31 – Silver Spring, MD – The Fillmore

January
2 – Portland, ME – State Theatre
3 – Providence, RI – The Strand
4 – Huntington, NY – The Paramount
5 – Buffalo, NY – Buffalo River Works
7 – Grand Rapids, MI – The Intersection
9 – Milwaukee, WI – The Rave
10 – East Moline, IN – The Rust Belt
11 – Sauget, IL – Pop’s
12 – Oklahoma City, OK – Diamond Ballroom
14 – New Orleans, LA – The Fillmore
15 – Little Rock, AR – The Hall

This past September, Zakk Sabbath went digital! The preeminent Black Sabbath tribute band on the planet featuring guitarist and singer Zakk Wylde (Black Label Society, Ozzy Osbourne, Pantera), bassist Blasko (Rob Zombie, Ozzy Osbourne), and drummer Joey “C” Castillo (Danzig, Queens Of The Stone Age) heard their fans clamouring for an official digital release, and now the wait is over: Greatest Riffs is online.

Greatest Riffs features select songs from the chart-storming Zakk Sabbath albums Vertigo (2020) and Doomed Forever Forever Doomed (2024). Originally, the tribute band elected to release these albums in physical formats only to hearken back to the originals. Yet their fans kept asking for an official digital release, so at long last the band has agreed to publish a hand-picked collection assembled in homage to one of Black Sabbath’s most ubiquitous releases, We Sold Our Soul For Rock ‘N Roll, the ultimate greatest hits album!

Greatest Riffs tracklisting:

“The Wizard”
“N.I.B.”
“Iron Man”
“Fairies Wear Boots”
“War Pigs”
“Sweet Leaf”
“Into The Void”
“Solitude”


THE DEAD DAISIES – “Happy New Year 2025!”; Video

December 31, 2024, 9 hours ago

news hard rock the dead daisies

THE DEAD DAISIES -

The Dead Daises have released the new video below, stating, “Wishing you all a very happy, safe, prosperous, healthy, wealthy New Year along with all the good stuff! 🎉🎉 Thank you for all your support in 2024! See you on the road in 2025!!” 😘😘

The Dead Daisies’ new album, Light ‘Em Up, landed at #29 on our BravePicks 2024 Top 30. Follow the countdown here. The release is available to order here.

Light ‘Em Up tracklisting:

“Light ‘Em Up”
“Times Are Changing”
“I Wanna Be Your Bitch”
“I’m Gonna Ride”
“Back To Zero”
“Way Back Home”
“Take A Long Line”
“My Way And The Highway”
“Love That’ll Never Be”
“Take My Soul”

“I’m Gonna Ride” (Revamped) video:

“I Wanna Be Your Bitch” video:

“I’m Gonna Ride” video:

“Light ‘Em Up” video:


STEPHEN PEARCY Performs RATT’s “Reach For The Sky” Live In Michigan; Video

STEPHEN PEARCY Performs RATT's

Back on November 8, BMG, in partnership with Rhino Entertainment, released Out Of The Cellar 40th Anniversary, celebrating Ratt’s massively successful first studio album. Limited Edition versions include the unreleased track, “Reach For The Sky”, recorded during the 1983 Out Of The Cellar sessions.

Ratt frontman, Stephen Pearcy, performed “Reach For The Sky” for the first time during his concert at Soaring Eagle Casino in Mount Pleasant, Michigan on December 29. Watch fan-filmed video below:

Formed in Los Angeles, Ratt was featured as an unsigned act on Uncle Joe Benson’s Local Licks Drive Time Show on KLOS-FM. This was their first time on radio and led to their signing to Atlantic Records.

Featuring the classic line up of Stephen Pearcy (vocals), Warren DeMartini (guitars), Robbin Crosby (guitars), Juan Croucier (bass/vocals), and Bobby Blotzer (drums), Ratt exploded on to the national scene in 1984 with the release of Out Of The Cellar.

Featuring an undeniable hook and legendary music video, the lead single “Round And Round” hit #12 on the Billboard Hot 100, while Out Of The Cellar reached #7 on the Billboard Top 200 and was certified triple platinum. Two more charting singles followed with “Back For More” and “Wanted Man”.

Out Of The Cellar became a huge success, and after the album was released, the band went on a world tour, selling out stadiums and arenas worldwide and sharing a stage with acts such as Ozzy Osborne, Iron Maiden, Mötley Crüe, Twisted Sister and more.

This Limited Edition of Out Of The Cellar is available in red and black splatter vinyl with a lenticular cover and an additional neon orange 7” with the unreleased track “Reach For The Sky”, as well as a Limited Edition CD format with lenticular cover and unreleased track.

Out Of The Cellar tracklisting:

“Wanted Man” (Cristofanilli/Crosby/Pearcy)
“You’re In Trouble” (DeMartini/Pearcy/Crosby)
“Round And Round” (DeMartini/Pearcy/Crosby)
“In Your Direction” (Pearcy)
“She Wants Money” (Croucier)
“Lack Of Communication” (Croucier/Pearcy)
“Back For More” (Pearcy/Crosby)
“The Morning After” (DeMartini/Pearcy/Crosby)
“I’m Insane” (Crosby)
“Scene Of The Crime” (Crosby/Croucier)

Bonus Track:
“Reach For The Sky” (Crosby/Pearcy/Torien)