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The Offspring: Why SoCal's punk legends remain rock's ultimate gateway band — Kerrang! kerrang.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kerrang.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Offspring announce first album in almost a decade, Let The Bad Times Roll BANG Showbiz 2/25/2021 Bang Showbiz The Offspring have announced their first studio album in almost a decade. The Pretty Fly For A White Guy hitmakers - comprising Dexter Holland, Noodles, Pete Parada, and new bassist Todd Morse - will release Let The Bad Times Roll on April 16, and have given fans a taste of what s to come with the release of the album title track. The follow-up to 2012 s Days Go By was recorded over a number of years at various locations, including their Huntington Beach, California studio. ....
Dom Moraes—Chiseling the stone to bring out undying beauty siasat.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from siasat.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Oscar LaDell & Hoot bring their summer tour to Yonder. Oscar LaDell was born in the US and raised in Purakaunui, Dunedin. The second-generation bluesman and his band started out playing blues standards in nightclubs around Dunedin, featuring songs by Muddy Waters, BB King, and Guitar Slim. Over the years, funk, rock, soul, R&B, and more have found their way into Oscar’s music. Oscar is supported by his band ‘Hoot’ - Ruairi Griffin (Guitar), Rani Cohen (Drums), and Oliver Robson (Bass). Oscar LaDell & Hoot are touring Oscar’s latest album ‘Love & Revolution’ (release Jan 14th) following his debut ‘Gone Away’ (www.bit.ly/oscarladell). The singers sophomore effort relies more heavily on R&B and psychedelia, building upon LaDell’s blues background. ....
The writer is an author. AFTER spotting a reference to the poet Dom Moraes in my article on Ved Mehta, a thoughtful reader wrote to tell me that he owned a copy of Dom’s first book The Grass is Greener (1951). It was published when he was only 13 years old. Its subject was not poetry, for which he later became world famous, but cricket. Its frayed dust jacket describes him as possessing “an amazing precocity”. Curiously, Dom never mentions it in any of his autobiographies, except in a casual aside in Never At Home (1996). At the age of 12, Dom received his first prize as the best commentator in a cricket match between the Commonwealth XI and India XI in 1950-51. At the age of 18, while still at Oxford, he won the more coveted Hawthornden Prize for his slim anthology of poems A Beginning (1961). ....