logo
#

Latest news with #BadMoonRising

John Fogerty to Release New Recordings of Creedence Clearwater Revival Songs — Basically ‘John's Versions'
John Fogerty to Release New Recordings of Creedence Clearwater Revival Songs — Basically ‘John's Versions'

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

John Fogerty to Release New Recordings of Creedence Clearwater Revival Songs — Basically ‘John's Versions'

Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and former Creedence Clearwater Revival frontman John Fogerty has announced the release of a collection of re-recordings of his classic songs from the Creedence era, titled 'Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival Years,' and arriving August 22, 2025 via Concord. The 20-track collection features newly recorded versions of Fogerty compositions from the late 1960s and early 1970s, including 'Proud Mary,' 'Bad Moon Rising,' 'Fortunate Son' and 'Have You Ever Seen the Rain.' The new versions are described in the announcement as 'both a celebration of an iconic catalog and a personal reclamation of artistic ownership,' and 'fresh takes on the music that continues to define American rock, recorded with renewed energy and a deep sense of purpose as he celebrates his 80th birthday.' More from Variety Amazon Prime Video Taps Eric Church, John Fogerty for NASCAR Theme Based on Retooled CCR Smash NAMM Convention Adds Brandi Carlile for Session Exploring Her Views on Record Production John Fogerty Recounts His Epic Journey to Finally Control His Classic Creedence Songs: 'Good Things Come to Those Who Wait' - for 55 Years Fogerty announced the album from the stage during his sold-out 80th birthday concert Wednesday night at New York's Beacon. 'For most of my life I did not own the songs I had written,' says Fogerty. 'Getting them back changes everything. Legacy is my way of celebrating that — of playing these songs on my terms, with the people I love.' The album was produced by Fogerty and his son Shane Fogerty, with executive production by his wife and manager Julie Fogerty. While Fogerty did not mention it, the move is similar to Taylor Swift's re-recordings of her first six albums on Big Machine Records, the rights to which were sold without her consent; she has painstakingly re-recorded four of the albums as 'Taylor's Version's in a move to gain control of the material. Many artists have re-recorded songs from their catalog in an effort to sidestep record deals they felt were unfair, but the move is doubly significant for Fogerty, as he bitterly battled with former Fantasy Records owner Saul Zaentz for decades over control of his catalog. Zaentz signed Fogerty and Creedence in the mid-1960s to an onerous contract that he defended aggressively and litigiously for decades. Fogerty's deep frustration over the situation led him to essentially retire from releasing and performing music for many years, re-emerging in 1985 with his 'Centerfield' album, which included the thinly veiled song and music video, 'Vanz Kant Danz' (which unsurprisingly led to a $144 million, ultimately unsuccessful lawsuit from Zaentz, who claimed the song copied Fogerty's own hit 'Run Through the Jungle'). The battle consumed Fogerty for decades of his life and the artist's life and sidelined his music career for many years, although Concord quickly improved the terms of the deal when it acquired the Fantasy catalog in 2004. Finally, in 2023, nearly 10 years after Zaentz's death and more than a half-century after the songs were released, Concord sold Fogerty a majority interest in the global publishing rights to his song catalog with the group for an undisclosed sum. Although ownership of the original recordings remains with Concord, apparently no bad feelings, as the company will also release the new Fogerty-owned versions. Julie Fogerty said, 'I knew first hand how much it meant for John to get his publishing back. It has been so joyful and beautiful since this happened for him. This is a celebration of his life's work. It is the biggest party for the good guy/artist winning.' Both Shane and his brother Tyler Fogerty perform throughout the album, accompanied by musicians Matt Chamberlain, Bob Malone, Bob Glaub and Rob Stone. Today, new recordings of 'Up Around The Bend' 'Have You Ever Seen the Rain,' and 'Porterville' are available on streaming services now. Best of Variety 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz

John Fogerty Reclaims Creedence Songs With New ‘John's Version' Recordings
John Fogerty Reclaims Creedence Songs With New ‘John's Version' Recordings

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

John Fogerty Reclaims Creedence Songs With New ‘John's Version' Recordings

John Fogerty has announced a new album titled Legacy: The Creedence Clearwater Revival Years, due out Aug. 22 via Concord. To celebrate, Fogerty has released three newly recorded versions of CCR classics: 'Up Around the Bend,' 'Have You Ever Seen the Rain,' and 'Porterville,' the latter originally released in 1967 under the band's earlier name, The Golliwogs. More from Billboard Zak Starkey Rubbishes Reports He Retired from The Who, Insists He Was 'Fired' Lorde Makes Surprise Appearance at Aotearoa Music Awards Bone Thugs-N-Harmony Perform 1996 Hit 'Tha Crossroads' on 'Everybody's Live' The new recordings are labeled 'John's Version,' a nod to Taylor Swift's 'Taylor's Version' project, though Fogerty now owns his masters. He won control over his publishing rights in early 2023, ending a legal battle that spanned five decades. 'For most of my life I did not own the songs I had written,' Fogerty said in a statement. 'Getting them back changes everything. Legacy is my way of celebrating that — of playing these songs on my terms, with the people I love.' The sessions feature Fogerty's sons Shane and Tyler on guitars, with Matt Chamberlain on drums, Bob Malone on keys, Bob Glaub on bass, and Rob Stone on saxophone. Shane Fogerty also co-produced the album with his father, while Julie Fogerty, John's wife, served as executive producer. 'I knew firsthand how much it meant for John to get his publishing back,' said Julie. 'It has been so joyful and beautiful since this happened for him. This is a celebration of his life's work. It is the biggest party for the good guy/artist winning.' Legacy features 20 tracks, including CCR staples like 'Proud Mary,' 'Bad Moon Rising,' 'Fortunate Son,' and 'Down on the Corner.' The project arrives as Fogerty celebrates his 80th birthday with a pair of shows at New York's Beacon Theatre, ahead of a European summer tour and a performance at Glastonbury Festival. Fogerty co-founded Creedence Clearwater Revival in the late 1960s and went on to write and perform some of the most enduring hits of the era. The band scored nine Top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 between 1969 and 1971, including 'Proud Mary,' 'Bad Moon Rising,' 'Green River,' and 'Lookin' Out My Back Door.' Legacy: The Creedence Clearwater Revival Years is available for pre-order now. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

La Liga belongs to Barcelona again. Here's how they did the double
La Liga belongs to Barcelona again. Here's how they did the double

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

La Liga belongs to Barcelona again. Here's how they did the double

Way after midnight and visiting hours had long since finished but they had only just got started and they weren't going to leave the patient with appendicitis lying there alone, not at a time like this. So Pedri González, Dani Olmo, Iñigo Martínez and Eric García rented four city bikes and cycled up Avinguda Diagonal in the dark. They had been out to Cornella and come back with the league, double done. They had gone to the training ground at Sant Joan Despí, belting through Bad Moon Rising from the balcony with the fans below. Now they were heading to the hospital to share the moment with Ferran Torres, recently out of emergency surgery and watching from the ward as he became a champion like them. At the end of the game that finally won the title, a campaign concluded with victories over Real Madrid first and Espanyol four days later, just about as good as it gets, the first thing Hansi Flick was asked was what he was most proud of. 'Pfff,' the coach replied. 'I don't think we have time for this …' There was so much, which is why there was a long pause before he finally said: 'The most important thing is you feel like a family. The atmosphere in the dressing room is so great; I've never seen this before. They really take care of each other.' And which was why when he was asked whose league this was – Lamine Yamal's? His – he replied: 'Barcelona's. This is not about one guy.' Related: Barcelona crowned La Liga champions after victory over 10-man Espanyol Lamine Yamal had scored the extraordinary goal that set it all up, another strike so very his. Nobody had played the way Pedri had. And Raphinha had been involved in 59 goals across all competitions, a captain recovered for the cause. But cause is the word: this was about all of them. Think about this season and every playerwas better than before; together they had been better than anyone else, and a lot more fun. When Fermín López scored the second on Thursday, La Liga won with two games left, it was Barcelona's 97th league goal, their 169th overall, no one near them. Eight were against Real Madrid, and that's just the league; there were eight more across the Super Cup and the Copa del Rey. By then, Barcelona winning the league had come to feel natural, inevitable, right, but it wasn't always so. This season didn't have to end with Wojciech Szczesny smoking a fat cigar, at least not in the Cornellà dressing room; it had started without him being a footballer at all. It didn't need to end with Marc Casadó on the shoulders of supporters at Canaletes, traditional gathering point for cule celebrations, and had he gone 10 months ago no one would have noticed. It didn't have to end with Alex Balde bare-chested and hanging out of the sunroof, singing. Or with Joan Laporta in Luz de Gas, or perhaps it did. But the rest wasn't supposed to happen. Madrid had added Kylian Mbappé to a team that had just won the league and European Cup. Atlético Madrid had spent more than anyone. Barcelona, well behind last season, had signed Olmo, it is true, but couldn't register him yet. And the player that they had most pursued had escaped them, so they had to settle for the best instead. They had seen their coach Xavi Hernández renew his contract in September, resign in January, be convinced to continue in April and get sacked in May. But now they had Hansi Flick, who had a plan plus the personality to put it into place. There was a change of culture and atmosphere, a seriousness worn lightly. Jules Koundé sat out games against Espanyol and Alavés, punished for being a few minutes late, and didn't do it again. Iñaki Peña lost his place entirely for the same reason, or at least that was the initial excuse. There was a change in the physical preparation. There was a change on the touchline and the press room too, a calmness about a coach not drawn into all the noise, not once complaining, even when Olmo was unavailable. Above all there was a change in idea and the conviction to see it through. Barcelona were going on the attack with everything they had. Especially their guts: never mind sticking your head in where the boots fly, this is bravery. Fun too, if you get it right. If there is a stat that defines the season, perhaps it is that Barcelona have caught opponents offside 289 times; no one in Europe is even within a hundred of them. Their opponents have had 38 goals ruled out for offside. The margins may have been fine, it may feel like a risk and some players' subconscious may be screaming 'Don't do it!', but it is not luck; it is a plan, precision executed, and life has been good lived on the edge. 'There were doubts because it was different but we can see the results now,' Flick said. 'Dropping back doesn't help us. The key point is to get pressure on the ball. We train this. The first player starts the dynamic to press and then the next one goes. We want that the opponent cannot pass clearly. Maybe not the first, not the second; maybe the third player gets the ball. That is what we train and everyone is included.' There's something of the fearless of youth in that, embraced by the coach and expressed of course by Lamine Yamal – and something very special is happening with the 17-year-old, the player Simone Inzaghi said that 'is born every 50 years'. 'When you see the babies they always want to learn, want to learn: it is in our DNA and this is what I want from the players,' Flick said. 'They have this hunger and that for me is crucial.' On the opening day of the season, Barcelona had three 17-year-olds in their starting XI. On the day they won the title, nine academy products played. They had the youngest average age in La Liga. But it is is not just them and at the other end of the spectrum was Robert Lewandowski. Xavi had not been keen on keeping him – a significant factor in the decision to change coach – but Flick put him back in the area, and if some doubts remain, Torres an able sometimes even superior replacement, the Pole set off towards a 40-goal season. When he was asked in those opening months what he had done, Flick said this was just the Robert he had always known. When Marc-André ter Stegen injured his knee, Lewandowski called Szczesny and convinced him to come out of retirement; now he is a double winner. Another veterans have been vital, Martínez especially alongside Pau Cubarsí. Koundé too. By the final months Frenkie de Jong became what Frenkie de Jong had always been supposed to be. Raphinha felt important and responded with the season of his life. Pedri's centrality to everything spoke of talent but also the shift in the physical preparation, Flick publicly thanking sporting director Deco for bringing in new medical and fitness staff. Pedri moved to a deeper place on the pitch, controlling everything; just as important was that he was on the pitch at all. Still only 22, the man who missed 75 games over the previous three years started his 33rd league game at Espanyol. No one has covered more kilometres or recovered more balls. The change has been good for all of them. 'We needed that fresh air,' Lamine Yamal said. Yet even the optimistic, and Laporta is always optimistic (and, it should be added, often right), couldn't have imagined things would change quite this much. Flick told his players that the start was vital: they had to get points on the board while Real Madrid adapted to Mbappé. They won every match until the first clásico, and that night they beat Madrid 4-0; they also caught them offside 12 times, which was a statement of intent, the season set up. Thursday Osasuna 2-0 Atlético Madrid, Rayo Vallecano 2-2 Real Betis, Espanyol 0-2 Barcelona, Getafe 0-2 Athletic Bilbao Wednesday Alaves 1-0 Valencia, Villarreal 3-0 Leganés, Real Madrid 2-1 Real Mallorca Tuesday Real Valladolid 0-1 Girona, Real Sociedad 0-1 Celta Vigo, Sevilla 1-0 Las Palmas Barcelona though lost their captain and goalkeeper. Then came what the coach called 'shit November', which was about right, except that it took in December too, just six points earned from 24 and the advantage lost. They would find themselves seven points behind Madrid and trailing Atlético too. In the last game of 2024, they dominated Diego Simeone's side but lost 2-1 at Montjuïc, shot down by the hitman. It was their third consecutive defeat at home, after Leganés and Las Palmas, two of the bottom three. It didn't happen again anywhere in Spain, not even when they came back from that defeat in Milan and went two down to Madrid, title race back on. So much for being found out, so much for fear. They might have crumbled, a normal team probably would have done; instead, they produced their 10th comeback and scored four in less than half an hour, taking Madrid apart so completely you could be forgiven for thinking that had let the first two in just for the fun of it. For 24 minutes, Madrid didn't get out of their half. Yes, literally. Then on Thursday night, Szczesny and Lamine Yamal took them to another victory. They had done it. In an eight-week period in the middle of the season, Barcelona had won just one but either side of that, their record reads: 29 wins, one draw, one loss, one super cup, one Copa del Rey and one league title. 'When I see the people and they are happy and they are smiling, for me it is the greatest thing. It's time to celebrate,' Flick said on Thursday night and that meant all of them, four bikes heading up the diagonal in the small hours with champions on board. Pos Team P GD Pts 1 Barcelona 36 61 85 2 Real Madrid 36 36 78 3 Atletico Madrid 36 31 70 4 Athletic Bilbao 36 27 67 5 Villarreal 36 17 64 6 Real Betis 36 10 59 7 Celta Vigo 36 2 52 8 Rayo Vallecano 36 -5 48 9 Osasuna 36 -6 48 10 Mallorca 36 -8 47 11 Valencia 36 -9 45 12 Real Sociedad 36 -10 43 13 Girona 36 -11 41 14 Sevilla 36 -9 41 15 Getafe 36 -5 39 16 Espanyol 36 -11 39 17 Alaves 36 -11 38 18 Leganes 36 -21 34 19 Las Palmas 36 -18 32 20 Valladolid 36 -60 16

La Liga belongs to Barcelona again. Here's how they did the double
La Liga belongs to Barcelona again. Here's how they did the double

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

La Liga belongs to Barcelona again. Here's how they did the double

Way after midnight and visiting hours had long since finished but they had only just got started and they weren't going to leave the patient with appendicitis lying there alone, not at a time like this. So Pedri González, Dani Olmo, Iñigo Martínez and Eric García rented four city bikes and cycled up Avinguda Diagonal in the dark. They had been out to Cornella and come back with the league, double done. They had gone to the training ground at Sant Joan Despí, belting through Bad Moon Rising from the balcony with the fans below. Now they were heading to the hospital to share the moment with Ferran Torres, recently out of emergency surgery and watching from the ward as he became a champion like them. At the end of the game that finally won the title, a campaign concluded with victories over Real Madrid first and Espanyol four days later, just about as good as it gets, the first thing Hansi Flick was asked was what he was most proud of. 'Pfff,' the coach replied. 'I don't think we have time for this …' There was so much, which is why there was a long pause before he finally said: 'The most important thing is you feel like a family. The atmosphere in the dressing room is so great; I've never seen this before. They really take care of each other.' And which was why when he was asked whose league this was – Lamine Yamal's? His – he replied: 'Barcelona's. This is not about one guy.' Advertisement Related: Barcelona crowned La Liga champions after victory over 10-man Espanyol Lamine Yamal had scored the extraordinary goal that set it all up, another strike so very his. Nobody had played the way Pedri had. And Raphinha had been involved in 59 goals across all competitions, a captain recovered for the cause. But cause is the word: this was about all of them. Think about this season and every playerwas better than before; together they had been better than anyone else, and a lot more fun. When Fermín López scored the second on Thursday, La Liga won with two games left, it was Barcelona's 97th league goal, their 169th overall, no one near them. Eight were against Real Madrid, and that's just the league; there were eight more across the Super Cup and the Copa del Rey. By then, Barcelona winning the league had come to feel natural, inevitable, right, but it wasn't always so. This season didn't have to end with Wojciech Szczesny smoking a fat cigar, at least not in the Cornellà dressing room; it had started without him being a footballer at all. It didn't need to end with Marc Casadó on the shoulders of supporters at Canaletes, traditional gathering point for cule celebrations, and had he gone 10 months ago no one would have noticed. It didn't have to end with Alex Balde bare-chested and hanging out of the sunroof, singing. Or with Joan Laporta in Luz de Gas, or perhaps it did. But the rest wasn't supposed to happen. Madrid had added Kylian Mbappé to a team that had just won the league and European Cup. Atlético Madrid had spent more than anyone. Barcelona, well behind last season, had signed Olmo, it is true, but couldn't register him yet. And the player that they had most pursued had escaped them, so they had to settle for the best instead. They had seen their coach Xavi Hernández renew his contract in September, resign in January, be convinced to continue in April and get sacked in May. But now they had Hansi Flick, who had a plan plus the personality to put it into place. Advertisement There was a change of culture and atmosphere, a seriousness worn lightly. Jules Koundé sat out games against Espanyol and Alavés, punished for being a few minutes late, and didn't do it again. Iñaki Peña lost his place entirely for the same reason, or at least that was the initial excuse. There was a change in the physical preparation. There was a change on the touchline and the press room too, a calmness about a coach not drawn into all the noise, not once complaining, even when Olmo was unavailable. Above all there was a change in idea and the conviction to see it through. Barcelona were going on the attack with everything they had. Especially their guts: never mind sticking your head in where the boots fly, this is bravery. Fun too, if you get it right. If there is a stat that defines the season, perhaps it is that Barcelona have caught opponents offside 289 times; no one in Europe is even within a hundred of them. Their opponents have had 38 goals ruled out for offside. The margins may have been fine, it may feel like a risk and some players' subconscious may be screaming 'Don't do it!', but it is not luck; it is a plan, precision executed, and life has been good lived on the edge. 'There were doubts because it was different but we can see the results now,' Flick said. 'Dropping back doesn't help us. The key point is to get pressure on the ball. We train this. The first player starts the dynamic to press and then the next one goes. We want that the opponent cannot pass clearly. Maybe not the first, not the second; maybe the third player gets the ball. That is what we train and everyone is included.' There's something of the fearless of youth in that, embraced by the coach and expressed of course by Lamine Yamal – and something very special is happening with the 17-year-old, the player Simone Inzaghi said that 'is born every 50 years'. 'When you see the babies they always want to learn, want to learn: it is in our DNA and this is what I want from the players,' Flick said. 'They have this hunger and that for me is crucial.' On the opening day of the season, Barcelona had three 17-year-olds in their starting XI. On the day they won the title, nine academy products played. They had the youngest average age in La Liga. Advertisement But it is is not just them and at the other end of the spectrum was Robert Lewandowski. Xavi had not been keen on keeping him – a significant factor in the decision to change coach – but Flick put him back in the area, and if some doubts remain, Torres an able sometimes even superior replacement, the Pole set off towards a 40-goal season. When he was asked in those opening months what he had done, Flick said this was just the Robert he had always known. When Marc-André ter Stegen injured his knee, Lewandowski called Szczesny and convinced him to come out of retirement; now he is a double winner. Another veterans have been vital, Martínez especially alongside Pau Cubarsí. Koundé too. By the final months Frenkie de Jong became what Frenkie de Jong had always been supposed to be. Raphinha felt important and responded with the season of his life. Pedri's centrality to everything spoke of talent but also the shift in the physical preparation, Flick publicly thanking sporting director Deco for bringing in new medical and fitness staff. Pedri moved to a deeper place on the pitch, controlling everything; just as important was that he was on the pitch at all. Still only 22, the man who missed 75 games over the previous three years started his 33rd league game at Espanyol. No one has covered more kilometres or recovered more balls. The change has been good for all of them. 'We needed that fresh air,' Lamine Yamal said. Yet even the optimistic, and Laporta is always optimistic (and, it should be added, often right), couldn't have imagined things would change quite this much. Flick told his players that the start was vital: they had to get points on the board while Real Madrid adapted to Mbappé. They won every match until the first clásico, and that night they beat Madrid 4-0; they also caught them offside 12 times, which was a statement of intent, the season set up. Thursday Osasuna 2-0 Atlético Madrid, Rayo Vallecano 2-2 Real Betis, Espanyol 0-2 Barcelona, Getafe 0-2 Athletic Bilbao Advertisement Wednesday Alaves 1-0 Valencia, Villarreal 3-0 Leganés, Real Madrid 2-1 Real Mallorca Tuesday Real Valladolid 0-1 Girona, Real Sociedad 0-1 Celta Vigo, Sevilla 1-0 Las Palmas Barcelona though lost their captain and goalkeeper. Then came what the coach called 'shit November', which was about right, except that it took in December too, just six points earned from 24 and the advantage lost. They would find themselves seven points behind Madrid and trailing Atlético too. In the last game of 2024, they dominated Diego Simeone's side but lost 2-1 at Montjuïc, shot down by the hitman. It was their third consecutive defeat at home, after Leganés and Las Palmas, two of the bottom three. It didn't happen again anywhere in Spain, not even when they came back from that defeat in Milan and went two down to Madrid, title race back on. So much for being found out, so much for fear. They might have crumbled, a normal team probably would have done; instead, they produced their 10th comeback and scored four in less than half an hour, taking Madrid apart so completely you could be forgiven for thinking that had let the first two in just for the fun of it. For 24 minutes, Madrid didn't get out of their half. Yes, literally. Then on Thursday night, Szczesny and Lamine Yamal took them to another victory. They had done it. Advertisement In an eight-week period in the middle of the season, Barcelona had won just one but either side of that, their record reads: 29 wins, one draw, one loss, one super cup, one Copa del Rey and one league title. 'When I see the people and they are happy and they are smiling, for me it is the greatest thing. It's time to celebrate,' Flick said on Thursday night and that meant all of them, four bikes heading up the diagonal in the small hours with champions on board.

Bruce Springsteen Jams With John Fogerty, Tom Morello, Smokey Robinson at American Music Honors
Bruce Springsteen Jams With John Fogerty, Tom Morello, Smokey Robinson at American Music Honors

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Bruce Springsteen Jams With John Fogerty, Tom Morello, Smokey Robinson at American Music Honors

The American Music Honors, an annual event organized by the Bruce Springsteen Archives & Center, took place Saturday at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey, this year honoring Smokey Robinson, John Fogerty, Emmylou Harris, Tom Morello, and Joe Ely. Every honoree with the exception of Joe Ely was on site to receive the award, as well as perform their classic songs with help from Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul, Bruce Springsteen, and surprise guests Jackson Browne, Nils Lofgren, Nora Guthrie, and Darlene Love. In other words, an all-star event on par with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony was staged in front a mere 714 people on a college campus, and there's no plans to air it on television. Fortunately, phones were allowed, and there's lots of fan footage. (Let's give a special shoutout to Dr. Marty Jablow for his great camera work.) More from Rolling Stone Bruce Springsteen Shares Unreleased 'Blind Spot' From 'Tracks II: The Lost Albums' How Craig Finn Made the Seventies L.A. Record of His Dreams Brad Paisley on That Time Charley Pride Surprised Him at the White House Former NBC News anchor Brian Williams was the host for the evening, and Springsteen personally delivered the induction speeches for Ely and Fogerty. In a revival of some of the best moments from the 2004 Vote For Change tour, Springsteen performed the Creedence classics 'Bad Moon Rising,' 'Proud Mary,' and 'Fortunate Son' with Fogerty. Springsteen also covered Joe Ely's 1995 song 'All Just to Get to You,' and teamed up with Smokey Robinson for 'Going to a Go-Go,' Jackson Browne for 'Take It Easy,' and Tom Morello for 'The Ghost of Tom Joad' and 'Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out.' At the end of the night, everyone from the show came back onstage along with Darlene Love and Nora Guthrie for 'This Land Is Your Land.' The Woody Guthrie classic was a regular part of Springsteen's live show in the Eighties, but it's become a rarity these days. He last performed it in 2013. Next month, Springsteen and the E Street Band head over to Europe for a run of 16 stadium shows. And on June 27, Tracks II: The Lost Albums – a collection of seven complete records Springsteen recorded between 1983 and 2018 – is finally coming out after years of feverish anticipation. The Springsteen biopic Deliver Me From Nowhere, staring Jeremy Allen White, is also due out before the end of the year. It focuses on the creation of 1982's Nebraska, and also stars Jeremy Strong, Paul Walter Hauser, Gaby Hoffmann, Marc Maron, and Stephen Graham. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store