Jimi Hendrix is to battle a tyrannical intergalactic force in an official graphic novel

Jimi Hendrix: Purple Haze cover art

(Image credit: Titan Comics)

An official Jimi Hendrix graphic novel is to hit stores this November. Titled Jimi Hendrix: Purple Haze, it’s been put together by Titan Comics – the team behind publications from franchises like Blade Runner, Tank Girl and Doctor Who – alongside Experience Hendrix, L.L.C., the company headed by Jimi’s sister, Janie Hendrix.

The graphic novel promises to mix classic sci-fi pulp and and Afro-futurism, taking the reader on psychedelic journey that follows Hendrix as he embarks on “a perilous quest to the very centre of the universe in search of a magical talisman powerful enough to unlock the incredible latent power of his trademark sound, so that he can free a diverse population starved of rock‘n’roll by a tyrannical intergalactic force hellbent on silencing music and enslaving all life.”

Which all sounds perfectly reasonable. 

“Jimi transcended time and space with his music, leaping generations into the future,“ says Janie Hendrix. “There was an otherworldliness about him that was a true fascination for many. It’s thrilling to have a Sci-Fi story told introducing Jimi as a time traveller, freedom fighter, and magical musician. 

“This graphic novel is an amazing depiction of what Jimi’s music, his songs, his art conveyed with futuristic imagination! Fans of Jimi, illustrated storytelling, and science fiction will be enthralled!”

The Hendrix Estate worked on Purple Haze with Titan co-writers Mellow Brown (American Gods, Blade Runner: Origins) and DJ Benhameen (producer and host of the For All Nerds Show podcast), alongside famed DC illustrator Tom Mandrake (Batman, Superman, Justice League of America, Avengers, Swamp Thing and more).

“Jimi Hendrix is an icon like no other,” add Titan’s Vivian Cheung-Landau and Nick Landau. “We are so thrilled to be working with Janie and the Hendrix estate to bring Jimi’s legend to life in a brand-new, exciting graphic novel for both long-time fans, and new, to experience.”

Jimi Hendrix: Purple Haze will be published on November 7, and can be pre-ordered from Penguin Random House (opens in new tab) in the US, and from Forbidden Planet (opens in new tab) in Europe.

Jimi Hendrix: Purple Haze graphic novel front cover

(Image credit: Titan Comics)

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Online Editor at Louder/Classic Rock magazine since 2014. 37 years in music industry, online for 24. Also bylines for: Metal Hammer, Prog Magazine, The Word Magazine, The Guardian, The New Statesman, Saga, Music365. Former Head of Music at Xfm Radio, A&R at Fiction Records, early blogger, ex-roadie, published author. Once appeared in a Cure video dressed as a cowboy, and thinks any situation can be improved by the introduction of cats. Favourite Serbian trumpeter: Dejan Petrović.  

Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters and Free’s Paul Rodgers reviewed Black Sabbath in 1970, and were not at all impressed

Roger Waters, Paul Rodgers, Black Sabbath

(Image credit: Roger Waters – Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns – Paul Rodgers – Mark Sullivan/Getty Images / Black Sabbath – Chris Walter/WireImage )

Once upon a time, in the late ’60s and early ’70s, British music magazine Melody Maker ran a weekly column titled Blind Date, where guest musicians would be invited to share their opinions on a selection of Tracks of the Week, without being told who had recorded the songs in question. This led to some honest and forthright opinions being shared, as the members of Black Sabbath would discover when two of their early singles were included in the feature.

In the January 10, 1970 issue of the paper, Pink Floyd‘s Roger Waters offered his thoughts on songs by, among others, his former bandmate Syd Barrett, Canned Heat, The Rascals, New York Rock & Roll Ensemble and Black Sabbath. The Sabbath song in question was their first single, the Birmingham band’s cover of Crow’s Evil Woman: Waters was far from impressed.

“Well, well, well… I’m speechless – well almost,” Waters said. “It’s got that kind of Dragnet, Peter Gunn, American detective series beginning. You keep thinking it’s going to start. You think that for the first minute but then, if you are really perceptive, you realise it isn’t going to start, and that’s all there is.”

On August 1, 1970, another Sabbath single, Paranoid, was included in the Blind Date column, alongside new releases from Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Yes, The Jackson 5, The Supremes and more, with Free frontman Paul Rodgers being asked to run a critical eye over the songs. Again, Sabbath fared badly.

“This is a heavy sound, but I don’t know who it is,” Rodgers said of Paranoid. “It’s very well recorded but I feel like I have heard so many things like this before. The bass and the drummer don’t seem very together, and neither does the guitarist really. Maybe they are better on stage. I like things to sound heavy but melodic at the same time, as well as tight together.”

In 2017, Sabbath’s Tony Iommi spoke to Planet Rock magazine about some of the criticism that his band faced from the music press in their early days, and singled out Roger Waters’ critique of the band… but there may possibly have been some confusion here, as Iommi remembers Waters being mean about Paranoid.

“I used to read the slaggings we’d get and I’d just think ‘Why?’,” said Iommi. “There was one moment that really hurt and that didn’t actually come from the press. It came from Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters. He reviewed Paranoid when it came out as a single because he was reviewing the singles that week for a music paper. He gave it such a terrible review. I thought ‘Blimey!’  Hearing that from a fellow musician seemed really harsh.”

To be fair, Waters was more caustic in some of his others Blind Date reviews. Pink Floyd’s leader described the New York Rock & Roll Ensemble’s I’m Too Busy as “like something Pete Townshend might have written when he was four.” The New York Rock & Roll Ensemble were fronted by one Michael Kamen, who would go on to work with Metallica, Queen, Kate Bush, Rush…. and Pink Floyd, supplying the orchestral arrangement on Is There Anybody Out There? and Comfortably Numb on Roger Waters’ masterpiece The Wall.

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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. Brannigan lives in North London and supports The Arsenal.

Slipknot’s Corey Taylor says he “couldn’t care less” about being inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame

Corey Taylor

(Image credit: Press)

Over recent years, the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame has sparked ire among both fans and musicians, with many confused over the institution’s lack of acknowledgement towards various hard rock and metal bands bands, as well as its embarrassingly poor record on inducting non-male musicians. 

For example, despite having been eligible for induction for some time – artists become permitted to enter the Hall 25 years after their first release – both Iron Maiden and Motorhead are still yet to inducted. Earlier this year, Courtney Love also slammed the institution for its lack of female representation, noting how just 8.48% of their overall inductees are women.

In a new interview with Jason Bailey of Audacy Check In, Corey Taylor weighed in with his own thoughts on the establishment. During the conversation, the vocalist is asked whether he’d be interested in having one of his three projects — Slipknot, Stone Sour or his solo band — inducted. 

In response, Taylor says: “Oh, Jesus. At this point, who gives a shit, really? To be honest… It’s hard for me to say that they get it wrong because sometimes the people they induct one hundred percent deserve it.

“But there’s still so many groups that should go in before some of the ones that have. And it really upsets me, dude. So at this point it’s, like, I don’t even know if I’ll even be considered for something like that, and I couldn’t care less, to be honest.”

He continues, “To me, that’s a high-five at the end of your career. I would rather have that later on. It’s just something I don’t really concern myself with. Would I be a stingy hog and want to be like the late, great David Crosby and be in there like four times? That would be great — if I could be in there for all three acts, that’d be killer. But I don’t think I’m even gonna get in for one. So it’s fine. I’ve got better things to do.”

This isn’t the first time Taylor has spoken out against the Rock Hall. Back in 2021, the frontman took a more aggrieved stance, and declared: “First of all, I don’t care about that Hall, ’cause I think it’s a pile of garbage. They don’t honour anything except pop music, really, and they only really induct real rock bands when they have to cave to pressure. 

“They disrespected so many bands over the past by putting others in before the ones that actually deserve it, that I would probably go the way of the Sex Pistols. I’d be, like, ‘Your Hall is a sham. I don’t care if I’m a part of it or not. You have no idea what the spirit of rock and roll is actually about. So take this and shove it up your you-know-what.’ So, that’s basically where I’m at. And, obviously, I’m not getting any brownie points, and I probably will never be nominated, but I don’t really care.”

2023’s Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame inductees are Willie Nelson, Missy Elliot,  Kate Bush, Sheryl Crow, George Michael, Rage Against the Machine and The Spinners.

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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.

Sammy Hagar is convinced his dad visited him in a dream to tell him he was dying

Sammy Hagar attends the 24th annual Keep Memory Alive

(Image credit: Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images)

The US rock singer Sammy Hagar has witnessed lots of strange things in this world and he would like you to know about them, so he passed word onto Classic Rock. The first is about aliens, whose existence the former Van Halen frontman was prompted to look into after having a dream about them. It’s always dreams, isn’t it?

“I started looking into it and started reading books about alien encounters,” he told Classic Rock. “I became a big believer and I still am a huge believer. Anyone that thinks we’re the only life in this universe is crazy! Those are the crazy people! Not the guys going round saying, ‘I went up in a rocket ship’”. It could just be that everyone’s crazy, Sammy. Sammy? Sammy? Ach, he’s not listening, he’s still talking about aliens: “It’s easier for me to talk about now. Twenty years ago you were tagged as crazy and you could lose your job and your friends for it.” Not anymore, he explained. People were getting clued up and Sammy was of the opinion that the truth is out there: “I think the possibilities are just vast and it really intrigues me.” 

God, too, was another mysterious entity on Sammy’s mind, but not in the sense of organised religion: that’s a big no-no for Sammy. “Churches have probably caused more wars than anything else on the planet,” he said. ”But I think the fear of going to hell or betraying God is one of the things that keeps us sane.”

It was in another dream that Hagar heard his father banging on his front door, only to be awoken by the news that his dad had died. It made him think about the supernatural. “In the dream, I slammed the door and said ‘Get out of here and don’t ever come back!’”, Hagar said, explaining that dream-him was mad that his dad had woken up his little baby. “Now I just sit there and go, ‘Why didn’t I let him in?’ What would’ve happened?”. We’ll never know the answer to that, but maybe deep down Sammy Hagar does. He’s a man intrigued by the possibilities. 

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Niall Doherty is a writer for The Guardian, Variety and Classic Rock, and co-runs the music Substack letter The New Cue with fellow former editors of Q magazine Ted Kessler and Chris Catchpole. Niall has written for NME, X-Ray Magazine and XFM Online and interviewed some of music’s biggest stars, including Coldplay, Arctic Monkeys, St Vincent, The 1975, Depeche Mode, Radiohead and many more.

Listen to Foo Fighters’ New Song ‘Under You’

Foo Fighters have released another new song from their upcoming But Here We Are album.

You can listen to “Under You” below.

The song joins the album’s first single, “Rescued,” as the first official Foo Fighters releases since their 2021 album, Medicine at Midnight. (A heavy-metal EP released under the name Dream Widow arrived in 2022.) It’s also their first new music since the March 2022 death of drummer Taylor Hawkins.

According to a press release, But Here We Are is “the sound of brothers finding refuge in the music that brought them together in the first place 28 years ago, a process that was as therapeutic as it was about a continuation of life.”

The group noted in a statement released at the end of 2022 how “thankful” they were for the support they’ve received from fans around the world following Hawkins’ death: “Foo Fighters were formed 27 years ago to represent the healing power of music and a continuation of life, and for the past 27 years, our fans have built a worldwide community, a devoted support system that has helped us all get through the darkest of times together,” according to the statement.

They described Foo Fighters as “a place to share our joy and our pain, our hopes and fears, and to join a chorus of life together through music. Without Taylor, we never would have become the band that we were – and without Taylor, we know that we’re going to be a different band going forward.”

The band has also announced a global streaming event called Foo Fighters: Preparing Music for Concerts that will take place on Veeps on May 21. The show will include debut performances of songs from But Here We Are, behind-the-scenes footage and “a few surprises” from the band’s 606 studios. Tickets are free and on-demand repeat viewing will be available through May 24.

Foo Fighters are scheduled to return to the road soon, starting on May 24 in Gilford New Hampshire, followed by various festival appearances throughout the year.

Final Albums: 41 of Rock’s Most Memorable Farewells

From ‘Abbey Road’ and ‘Icky Thump’ to ‘Goodbye’ and ‘Everything Must Go.’

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GUNS N’ ROSES Confirmed As Co-Headliner For Atlanta’s Music Midtown Festival This September

GUNS N' ROSES Confirmed As Co-Headliner For Atlanta's Music Midtown Festival This September

Guns N’ Roses have been confirmed as one of the headliners for the upcoming Music Midtown Festival in Atlanta, GA. It takes place at Piedmont Park from September 15 – 17. GNR perform on Sunday, the 17th.

Pre-sale tickets will be available as of 10:00am EST on Thursday, May 18th 18 at MusicMidtown.com.

Guns N’ Roses recently revealed that The Pretenders and Generation Sex will be the special guests on the European and Middle East legs of their 2023 World Tour. Tickets are on sale now.

The Pretenders, led by vocalist / guitarist Chrissie Hynde, have released 11 studio albums, and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2005. They’re best known for their hit songs “Back On The Chain Gang”, “Middle Of The Road”, and ‘Don’t Get Me Wrong”. 

Generation Sex is an all-star punk ensemble comprised of Billy Idol and Tony James – who both belonged to Generation X, as well as Steve Jones and Paul Cook – both members of The Sex Pistols.

The next Guns N’ Roses concert is scheduled for June 1st at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The band’s complete 2023 tour schedule can be found here.

Prince George loves listening to Led Zeppelin and AC/DC, according to his rocker dad Prince William

Prince George and Led Zeppelin

(Image credit: Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images, Laurance Ratner/WireImage)

Following King Charles III’s coronation last weekend, the royal family have unsurprisingly been dominating headlines, with journalists eagerly documenting everything from their wardrobe choices to the various slices of tedious gossip that bubble up from behind all the pomp and splendour. 

While the royal family aren’t typically a subject of interest for us – after all, we’re pretty sure the monarchy is the least rock’n’roll establishment going –  when our worlds do cross, it certainly raises a few eyebrows, and reminds us all that these untouchable humans may very well be just like the rest of us. Well, sort of.

For instance, not so long ago, Prince William declared that he was a big fan of AC/DC, and stated that the Aussie band’s 1990 single Thunderstruck would frequently serve as the motivating soundtrack to his mornings. 

“There’s nothing better than, on a Monday morning, when you’re a bit bleary-eyed after the weekend and trying to get yourself back into the grind of the week, listening to AC/DCThunderstruck,” said the Prince.

“I have to say the first time I put it on, and I’ve heard it a million times now, I was kind of, like, ‘Well, this is quite heavy for a Monday morning,'” he continued. “But now, when I listen to it, it’s the best tonic for a Monday morning. It absolutely wakes you up, puts your week in the best mood possible, and you feel like you can take on anything and anyone. I’d imagine you’re going to walk quite fast listening to it, maybe with a skip in your step, with the headbanging. It’s a difficult song not to dance to or to nod along to.”

And now, it looks like the royal has passed down his heavier listening tastes to his son, Prince George, who apparently, is also a big fan of the Aussie rockers, and Led Zeppelin.

This fact about the 9-year-old was revealed ahead of the coronation concert on May 7 at Windsor Castle, which saw the likes of Katy Perry, Tiwa Savage, Calum Scott, and Lionel Richie perform in tribute.

According to the Mirror, as Prince William and Princess Kate greeted Big Lunch attendees and Coronation concert-goers around the area, William stopped to chat with Rock Choir member Caroline Mulvihill, which is when he spoke of his son’s interest in rock music.

“We were talking about the kind of music we do in Rock Choir and Will was telling us in their household they have a very diverse music taste and George is very much into AC/DC and Led Zeppelin. It was quite interesting to hear that,” Mulvihill tells PA. 

Clearly, the future king has good taste. For those about to rule, we salute you.

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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.

“Metallica loved it”: why Hesher is the greatest Hollywood movie ever to be inspired by Cliff Burton

Joseph Gordon Levitt as the main character in the movie Hesher

(Image credit: Everett Collection Inc/ lamy Stock Photo )

For those in the metal community, being hailed as a “hesher” ranks among the highest of honours, even if – nay, especially when – the speaker intends it as an insult. Today the term refers to the most passionate and committed of metalheads, although it originated centuries ago with the Hessians – a bloodthirsty pack of German mercenaries hired by the British Empire to track down and slaughter colonists during the American Revolution. Savage and unrelenting, Hessians were the stuff of nightmares.

The most famous Hessian of all time is the fabled Headless Horseman – the ultra-spooky antagonist in Washington Irving’s The Legend Of Sleepy Hollow. Said horseman was a Hessian fighter, deprived of his head by a cannonball, who, in true Hessian fashion, just kept going. Over time, the term morphed into “hesher,” where it ultimately found a home as an adjective for raucous, long-haired, horn-throwing metalheads – the kind who shout “Slayer!” at weddings and who acquire a glazed, faraway look when people around them start talking about the Top 40.

In 2010, writer/director Spencer Susser released Hesher, a piercing drama starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the titular character. Bleaker than a clown’s funeral, Hesher centres on 13 year-old TJ, a luckless kid in a squalid Southern California town, who has just lost his mother in a fatal car accident. His father, evocatively played by Rainn Wilson (The Office), is hopelessly mired in depression and pills, leaving only TJ’s grandmother to take care of the two of them.

Picked on by bullies and utterly alone in his cheerless world, TJ hurls a rock through the window of an abandoned building, dramatically upending his life on the spot. Unbeknownst to TJ, said building houses a long-haired squatter known only as Hesher – a violent and nihilistic caricature of a metalhead, with tattoos of a gigantic middle finger on his back and a stick figure shooting itself on his chest. Grim as fuck.

As a security patrol descends on the scene, Hesher realises that the proverbial jig is well up and, now homeless, he turns up at TJ’s house and begins squatting there. It’s a thoroughly absurd plot twist, rendered all the less-believable by TJ’s father just letting it happen, while his grandmother begins caring for and feeding Hesher.

If we refer to the mythical Book Of Trite Old Movie Formulas, we’d expect Hesher to slowly reveal his dormant tender side, taking TJ under his wing and injecting life and happiness into his home. Instead, Hesher parades around the house in next-to-nothing, watches porn on the television, swears as if he’s getting paid to do so and generally avoids any and all opportunities to be of service to his hosts. He even watches a bully kick the ever-loving-shit out of TJ without jumping in. Without spoiling too much, events unfold with Dickensian cruelty until at last the characters find both purpose and connection.

Hesher is larger than life; he doesn’t walk, he swaggers exaggeratedly and throughout the film, he appears on screen along with a shotgun-sized riff from Metallica’s The Shortest Straw. It’s one of the funnier gags in a film that’s by turns heartbreaking, shocking, violent and occasionally uplifting. The Metallica reference, it turns out, is very intentional. In fact, both Susser and Gordon-Levitt have revealed that the Hesher character was inspired by none other than Cliff Burton, Metallica’s legendary bassist, killed in a bus accident in 1986.

Over the years, Susser has discussed writing the character with Burton in mind. In a 2011 interview with IndieWire, Susser explained, “I’d send [Gordon-Levitt] clips of Cliff Burton… one thing that I read about him was he used to wear bell bottoms in the ’80s and it was just out of style. Everyone gave him a hard time about it and he said this is what I wear, I don’t care what you think. He wasn’t interested in being a rock star, he wanted to make music, that’s all he cared about… he wasn’t about stadium shows, he was about music. So I think that’s what Hesher really liked about him.”

Without revealing their inspiration for Hesher, they sent the movie to Metallica, who loved it on the spot. In an interview with REEL JUNKIES, Gordon-Levitt explained,  “Cliff Burton… was a big inspiration for Hesher. Which was why it was all the cooler when we showed the movie to Metallica – they actually dug it and they decided to let us use their music. And they don’t let anybody use their music, but they dug this movie.”

Of Hesher’s inspiration, Gordon-Levitt shared that the band needed zero clues. “[Metallica] actually even brought up Cliff,” said Gordon-Levitt, “which meant a lot to me because we didn’t mention that to them. They said, ‘Oh yeah, He reminds us a lot of Cliff. We like this.’” They even allowed the film to use the iconic Metallica font for the film’s poster.

For Susser, getting the rights to Metallica’s music was as critical as casting the right actors and he had no Plan B. Fortunately, he didn’t need one. Speaking to Movieweb in 2011, Susser explained, “I didn’t have a backup plan. I don’t know if it was a struggle so much, but everybody told me that it was never going to happen. The Metallica songs are in the script, and everyone said, ‘Yeah, you’ve got to take that out. They’re not going to give us the music, and even if they did, we couldn’t afford it.’ I said, ‘No, that’s what it’s supposed to be. That’s what it is.’ They said, ‘Well, OK, we’ll just change it later.’ So I shot the film and cut the film and I put in those songs that I thought were the right ones and everyone said, ‘You’ve got to take those out. We’re not going to get those.’ I said, ‘How do you know?’ I just kept pushing that it was right and, eventually, we sent the film to Metallica and I wrote them a letter and told them how I ended up there and why I thought it was important and they loved the film and basically gave us the music. They were awesome the whole time.”

The Hesher soundtrack includes Metallica’s The Shortest Straw, Fight Fire With Fire, Anesthesia (Pulling Teeth), Battery and Motorbreath and the official trailer is soundtracked by Battery. Check out the REEL JUNKIES interview with Gordon-Levitt and Wilson here (skip to 1:40 if you want to get straight to the Metallica chatter)

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Hailing from San Diego, California, Joe Daly is an award-winning music journalist with over thirty years experience. Since 2010, Joe has been a regular contributor for Metal Hammer, penning cover features, news stories, album reviews and other content. Joe also writes for Classic Rock, Bass Player, Men’s Health and Outburn magazines. He has served as Music Editor for several online outlets and he has been a contributor for SPIN, the BBC and a frequent guest on several podcasts. When he’s not serenading his neighbours with black metal, Joe enjoys playing hockey, beating on his bass and fawning over his dogs.

Måneskin’s Victoria De Angelis on Italy’s “conservative” attitude towards homosexuality: “Many people still believe that it’s a sin”

Victoria De Angelis of Maneskin

(Image credit: Matthew Baker/Getty Images)

Måneskin‘s Victoria De Angelis has discussed her experience of dating in Italy as a queer musician, revealing that she believes her home country still holds a very “conservative” stance towards LGBTQIA+ relationships.

In a new interview with The Big Issue (via Music-News (opens in new tab)), the bass player  – who was born in Vatican City, Rome – explains how she was made to feel “uncomfortable” when dating women in the area.

“I remember when I first started dating girls, I felt people really staring”, she says. “These things can really make you uncomfortable, even if it’s not such a big deal compared to what other people deal with. But I still just wish it could be completely normal.

Angelis then notes that, despite her negative experiences, she is “hopeful” of the country becoming more “tolerant” of the LGBTQIA+ community, with younger generations now teaching their elders on what is acceptable. 

She continues, “It’s very conservative still, in Italy. It’s a very Catholic country and many, many people still believe, because of that, that it’s a sin to be homosexual. So that’s why many people still can’t get over this. 

“But hopefully the younger generations are opening their minds more, and even if they are religious, they can learn to be more respectful and tolerant towards people that just have their own sexuality. I think that’s a step that is starting now in Italy but it’s still gonna need time.”

The bassist then goes on to explain how her band work to create a safe space for their fans, where they can freely embrace their sexual and gender identities.

“We’re about freedom”, she says. “So we would really just like to live in a more respectful world, where everyone can be safe and allowed to be who they are, without having to deal with any racism, homophobia, misogyny, or violence of any kind. 

“We want to spread the message of believing in yourself and finding the courage to be who you are. But also… like, the fucking idiots should stop being such dicks, you know?”.

Måneskin are currently in the midst of their Loud Kids tour across Europe and the UK. Their next show will see them play in Budapest Arena, Hungary, on May 16. Later this year, they’ll then embark on a world tour in support of their third album Rush!, with the run kicking off on September 3, in Hanover, Germany.

Måneskin: Loud Kids tour 2023

May 16: Budapest Arena, Hungary
May 18: Riga Arena Riga, Latvia
May 19: Tallin Saku Suurhall, Estonia
Jul 16: Trieste Stadio Nereo Rocco, Italy
Jul 20: Rome Stadio Olimpico, Italy
Jul 21: Rome Stadio Olimpico, Italy
Jul 24: Milan Stadio San Siro, Italy
Jul 25: Milan Stadio San Siro, Italy

Måneskin: Rush! tour 2023

Sep 03: Hanover EXPO Plaza, Germany
Sep 06: Nancy Open Air, France
Sep 21: New York Madison Square Garden, NY
Sep 23: Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion, MD
Sep 25: Boston TD Garden, MA
Sep 27: Toronto Scotiabank Arena , ON
Sep 29: Chicago Allstate Arena, IL
Oct 01: Detroit Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre at Freedom Hill, MI
Oct 03: Nashville Nashville Municipal Auditorium, TN
Oct 06: Irving The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory, TX
Oct 10: Los Angeles Kia Forum, CA
Oct 13: Oakland Oakland Arena, CA
Oct 15: Vancouver Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre, BC
Oct 20: Mexico City Palacio De Los Deportes, Mexico
Oct 24: Bogotá Movistar Arena, Colombia
Oct 27: Santiago Estadio Bicentenario La Florida, Chile
Oct 29: Buenos Aires Movistar Arena, Argentina
Nov 01:Rio de Janeiro Qualistage,  Brazil
Nov 03: San Paulo Espaço Unimed, Brazil
Nov 20: Brisbane BCEC, QLD
Nov 22: Sydney Hordern Pavilion, NSW
Nov 23: Melbourne Margaret Court Arena, VIC
Nov 25: Adelaide AEC Theatre, SA
Nov 27: Singapore
Dec 02:  Tokyo, Japan
Dec 03:  Tokyo, Japan
Dec 07: Kobe, Japan
Dec 14: Dublin 3 Arena, Ireland
Dec 19: Manchester AO Arena, UK

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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.

David Coverdale Says John Sykes Reunion ‘Would Never Work’

Whitesnake fans hoping for a reconciliation between David Coverdale and John Sykes shouldn’t hold their breath, as the singer said he has no desire to rekindle a working relationship with his former guitarist.

Sykes joined Whitesnake for 1984’s Slide It In and collaborated on the band’s astronomically successful 1987 self-titled album, which spawned the hits “Here I Go Again,” “Still of the Night” and “Is This Love.” Before Whitesnake hit shelves, though, Coverdale fired Sykes, claiming he and producer Mike Stone tried to replace the singer while he was recovering from a severe sinus infection and surgery.

Coverdale reflected on the falling-out in a recent Metal Edge interview, where he praised Sykes’ skill but said he wouldn’t work with him again. “As you know, things went squirrely between us, which was unfortunate. But John was and is an incredible talent,” he said. “Our musical chemistry was great, but it didn’t work personally. The truth of the matter is no matter how incredible of an album that we made together, we were unable to connect as people.”

He continued: “You can hear that there was creative magic in that relationship, but it stopped the moment we put the mics and instruments down. John was critical to that record and a superb live player. But there were many important aspects of things that were not there. It wasn’t meant to be. With John, things just exploded. I think rock bottom would have been when he tried to fire me from my own band. As you can imagine, that didn’t go over very well.”

Sykes has disputed this version of events over the years, telling Rock Candy magazine (via BraveWords) in 2017 that Coverdale “said nothing to any of us about having decided to kick us out of the band” and claiming he found out through Geffen Records A&R man John Kalodner. “So I went down to the studio where David was still recording his vocals, prepared to confront him,” Sykes added. “Honest to God, he ran away, got in his car and hid from me!”

Watch Whitesnake’s ‘Still of the Night’ Video

Coverdale replaced Sykes with Vivian Campbell and Adrian Vandenberg for the Whitesnake supporting tour, and Steve Vai later replaced Campbell for 1989’s Slip of the Tongue. Sykes, meanwhile, formed the band Blue Murder with bassist Tony Franklin and drummer Carmine Appice and released their self-titled debut in 1989. He and Coverdale remained on bad terms for years, though they finally reconnected while Coverdale was working on his 2000 solo album Into the Light.

“So, after something like 15 years of animosity, we spoke and got on well,” Coverdale recalled. “Thoughts of working with him again crossed my mind, but the more we spoke, the more I realized that I had changed significantly, and John had been his own boss for so long, so it would never work. I thought, ‘The chemistry is not going to work; it’s going to be as it was all over again; I can’t have that.'”

Coverdale added that despite Sykes’ prodigious talent, he doesn’t believe a reunion would benefit either of them at this point. “Truthfully, I simply don’t want to do anything at this time in my life that will open the door to regret,” he explained. “I know that’s perhaps disappointing to fans, and I wish John every success, as I know he’s a much-loved and admired player. And I hope everything’s okay with him as I haven’t heard from him for a while. But I guess what guides me now is something I learned from Jimmy Page, Jon Lord, and the great Ritchie Blackmore, and that’s: what’s the point of working with someone if I don’t think I can teach them anything or get something in return?”

The frontman also exalted Vai, who joined Whitesnake onstage last summer at France’s Hellfest before they canceled their remaining farewell tour dates. “Both my band and I had to pick our jaws up off the floor while trying to mouth, ‘We’re not worthy,’ because the man is just a deity,” Coverdale said. “But Steve and I are still very good friends; we text each other naughty stuff regularly.”

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