Aerosmith Announce New Live DVD
Yesterday, Aerosmith's Steven Tyler took to Facebook to post the trailer for his group's upcoming concert movie 'Rock For The Rising Sun'.
Yesterday, Aerosmith's Steven Tyler took to Facebook to post the trailer for his group's upcoming concert movie 'Rock For The Rising Sun'.
The Rolling Stones kicked off the second leg of their '50 and Counting' tour last night with a 23-song, two-and-a-half hour show at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. The setlist and more video can be found below.
The concert began in style, with the UCLA Marching Band filling the tongue-shaped runway and pe
We wish somebody would follow us around and animate our drunken brilliance. Although, to be fair, arguing over the lyrics to a Go-Go's song is not nearly as entertaining as this joke, told by Adam Patch's wife after she drank an entire bottle of wine.
Russian dash cams are always a good source of mayhem, but that's not all there is to that country. There are also lots of cats, and old ladies who need help crossing the street, and cars stuck in the snow.
Wheatmore High School in Trinity, North Carolina has found itself in one mother of a controversy.
"It started with the crystal age. It moved to the golden age. And now, welcome to the solid platinum age" states the tagline in the trailer for the 1978 movie 'FM.' Before MTV and MP3s, radio was music's unifying force. During the classic-rock era, it was also the gas that fueled the record industry.
The four painted faces of Poison's Bret Michaels, Bobby Dall, C.C. DeVille and Rikki Rockett made their debut in 1986 on ‘Look What the Cat Dragged In,’ but it was the band's 1988 follow-up LP that sealed their fate. Twenty-five years ago today, ‘Open Up and Say … Ahh!’ was released, crowning Poison the kings of rock's glam revival.
Joanna Chesimard has made history, but not in a good way.
With its thunderous opening riff, followed by a crushing onslaught of drums and bass behind Corey Glover's volcanic vocals, Living Colour's 'Cult of Personality' kicked in the airwaves during the summer of 1988 with a fresh, aggressive sound. Even if the band was brand new to listeners, their success arrived after years of hard, patient work.
'Revolver' magazine's fifth-annual Golden Gods Awards, held last night, featured Metallica as the night's headliners. They were joined onstage by special guest Rob Halford, who led the metal giants through a surprise performance of Judas Priest's 'Rapid Fire'.