Sunday, June 21, 2026

Taylor Swift’s all-nighter at Electric Lady Studios fires up new album speculation

Taylor Swift has sparked speculation that she’s working on a new album after reportedly pulling an all‑nighter at Electric Lady Studios in...

Latest Posts

Drake pays tribute to Tay Keith

Drake has paid a heartfelt tribute to Tay Keith following the producer's death. The God's Plan hitmaker took to...

Danny Bretherton taking break from December 10

Danny Bretherton is "taking some time out" from December 10. The singer is taking a break from the boy...

The Strokes explain new album delay

Albert Hammond Jr has explained why The Strokes’ new album release was delayed. Back in April, the New York...

Taylor Swift’s 90 minute Toy Story rehearsal

Randy Newman had only 90 minutes to rehearse his duet with Taylor Swift. Toy Story composer Newman and pop...

Desert Trip sells out in three hours

Desert Trip has sold-out in just three hours..
The mega festival has a phenomenal line-up comprised of The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Sir Paul McCartney, Neil Young, Roger Waters and The Who and all tickets for both weekends have been snapped up by music lovers.
Promoters Goldenvoice and AEG have sold an impressive 70,000 three-day tickets for each of the festival’s two weekends in October – totalling 140,000 tickets.
The festival will take place after sunset at Indio, California’s Empire Polo Club from October 7 until October 9 and the following weekend from October 16 until October 18. It has been put together by the organisers behind Coachella at the same site where that festival is held.
The Rolling Stones – fronted by Sir Mick Jagger – and Dylan and His Band will share one night, McCartney and Young another, while former Pink Floyd star Roger Waters and The Who split the third.
Billboard estimates the gross revenues from ticket sales at $150 million meaning revenues would dwarf the $84.26 million made by Coachella over two weekends, making Desert Trip the highest-grossing event in music history.
Speaking previously about the once-in-a-lifetime festival, The Who singer Roger Daltrey felt it was an event that signalled the end of an era.
The ‘My Generation’ rocker said: "We have to face it, we are (at) the end of an era. We’re the last of our generation. You can see from reading the obituaries lately that we [rock stars] don’t make old bones very well, do we?
"I just hope a lot of normal fans can get tickets before they get snatched up."

Latest Posts

Drake pays tribute to Tay Keith

Drake has paid a heartfelt tribute to Tay Keith following the producer's death. The God's Plan hitmaker took to...

Danny Bretherton taking break from December 10

Danny Bretherton is "taking some time out" from December 10. The singer is taking a break from the boy...

The Strokes explain new album delay

Albert Hammond Jr has explained why The Strokes’ new album release was delayed. Back in April, the New York...

Taylor Swift’s 90 minute Toy Story rehearsal

Randy Newman had only 90 minutes to rehearse his duet with Taylor Swift. Toy Story composer Newman and pop...

Don't Miss

Alice Cooper gifts signed album to man who handed in his lost credit card

Alice Cooper sent a signed copy of his new album to a fan after he handed in the credit card the singer...

Bob Dylan recalls ‘best and worst parts’ about turning 80

Bob Dylan says the "worst part" about turning 80 was understanding something too late to alter "everything in the past".

Bruce Springsteen’s Bono regret

Bruce Springsteen is sorry he didn’t let Bono use his song for a charity ad. The 76-year-old star issued...

Olivia Rodrigo breaks streaming records with new album

Olivia Rodrigo’s You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love has broken streaming records. The 23-year-old pop...

Chaka Khan reaches catalogue agreement with investment firm

Chaka Khan has partnered with HarbourView for a stage in her music catalogue. The 73-year-old singer is set to...

Stay in touch

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.