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"Do a little dance, make a little love," the Super Bowl-bound tight end sang after Sunday's historic win over the Buffalo Bills.
Garth Hudson, the last surviving member of The Band, has died. He was 87. Hudson died early Tuesday in a nursing home near Woodstock, New York, his former manager, Jim Della Croce, confirmed to USA TODAY. Della Croce remembered the late musician as a "brilliant man" and the "glue that made The Band, The Band."
The British group with Caribbean roots stopped performing in 1974. Its slow-rolling comeback is realized on Friday with a new album, “Renascence.”
Garth Hudson, who played organ, accordion, saxophone, and more as a member of the Band—perhaps still the group that best embodies the glorious, lawless amalgamation of styles at the very heart of rock and roll—died at the age of eighty-seven,
The Band were the ultimate rock & roll fantasy of brotherhood, and Garth Hudson was the glue guy who made the fantasy real. Rob Sheffield pays tribute
Only five of the Hottest 100 winners have been bands in the past 15 years, compared to 13 in the 15 years prior.
A multifaceted musician, he was the last surviving original member of an influential group that mixed rock, r&b and an Americana sound.
Garth Hudson, the keyboardist, sax player and archivist for Rock and Roll Hall of Famers The Band, died January 21 in his sleep in Woodstock, NY. He was 87.
Bowling For Soup formed in 1994 and began putting out albums throughout the ‘90s, but the band’s real breakthrough actually came in the early 2000s, per Billboard. Perhaps their biggest hit, “1985,” came off of 2004′s “A Hangover You Don’t Deserve” album. The band released “Pop Drunk Snot Bread,” in 2022.
After joining the band in 2001, Eagles guitarist Steuart Smith has quit the group after being diagnosed with a form of Parkinson's disease.
One of the biggest rock bands in the history of music, Aerosmith rose to fame in the mid to late 70s and have become synonymous with the debauchery and the blood-pumping, raw live shows associated with the era.