The British group with Caribbean roots stopped performing in 1974. Its slow-rolling comeback is realized on Friday with a new album, “Renascence.”
"Do a little dance, make a little love," the Super Bowl-bound tight end sang after Sunday's historic win over the Buffalo Bills.
Band of Brothers’ is one of the most acclaimed miniseries of all time. Here’s where the star-studded cast ended up after bringing the true WWII story to the small screen.
Garth Hudson, the last surviving member of The Band known for songs like “The Weight,” has died at 87. Hudson was a founding member of group, which started off as a backing band for Bob Dylan when he went electric.
The thing about film festivals is that there is so much unknown. Will this movie, which is being screened publicly for the first time, actually be good? If it’s good, will it get distribution? And if it manages that,
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,
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."
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 Band’s virtuoso keyboardist and all-around musician who drew from a unique palette of sounds and styles to add a conversational touch to such rock standards as “Up on Cripple Creek,” “The Weight” and “Rag Mama Rag,
Jan. 21 (UPI) -- The Band's last living member, Garth Hudson, has died. He died on Tuesday morning, while sleeping in a New York nursing home, outlets report. Hudson was 87 years old.
Steuart Smith, the guitarist who has played with the Eagles since 2001, says he has to 'bow out' of the band after being diagnosed with Parkinsonism.
Like many, Fran Healy has a complicated relationship with Los Angeles. He vents about it on the band's latest album, L.A. Times. But the response to the recent wildfire emergency challenged those assumptions.