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Travis Barker and Alabama Barker had the ultimate father-daughter hangout on Wednesday night (Jan. 3), as the duo got inked up together. The rocker’s 18-year-old daughter took to her Instagram Stories to share a photo of her dad getting his tattoo done. while she sat and waited for her turn. “Tatted together,” Alabama captioned the […]

More than half a century after his first comeback, Elvis Presley is combing back, again. U.K. company Layered Reality announced this week that it is prepping an holographic AI concert special entitled “Elvis Evolution” that is slated to debut in London in November.
In a statement announcing the special event, immersive experience specialists (The Gunpowder Plot) Layered Reality promise that the mind-blowing “concert finale” featuring the King of Rock will feature a “jaw-dropping” performance and a “personal invite to the After Party.”

“The show peaks with a concert experience that will recreate the seismic impact of seeing Elvis live for a whole new generation of fans, blurring the lines between reality and fantasy,” reads a statement announcing the show. “A life sized digital Elvis will share his most iconic songs and moves for the very first time on a UK stage.”

The show promises to use Layered Reality’s patented blend of “technology, augmented reality, theatre, projection and multi-sensory effects” to reproduce the late rock icon for his first-ever shows outside of North America nearly half a century after Presley’s 1977 death.

“Elvis fans can look forward to a memory-making experience like no other. Through AI and groundbreaking tech you’ll be able to witness iconic Elvis performances as if you were really there, and celebrate defining moments in Elvis Presley’s extraordinary life and career,” the statement continues. “After the show, the central London venue will also host an After Party at its ELVIS-themed restaurant and bar with live music, DJs and performances.”

At press time the name of the London venue hosting the event had not yet been revealed. In a video tease, Layered Reality founder and CEO Andrew McGuinness promised that the show will go on a global tour after its London debut — reportedly hitting Las Vegas, Berlin and Tokyo as well — following a deal reached with the owner of the Presley estate, Authentic Brands Group.

“You’re going to go on a journey and really understand what Elvis went through during his life,” McGuinness said. “The end of this experience is a real crescendo, where you’ll see a life-sized Elvis in AI perform some of his biggest hits.” The Elvis AI show will follow on the heels of the hit London show “ABBA Voyage,” which digitally recreated the beloved Swedish pop band via digital avatars.

One of the best-selling artists in music history with over 500 million records sold worldwide, Elvis, who died at 42, has been everywhere over the past two years thanks to Baz Luhrmann’s Oscar-nominated biopic Elvis and Sofia Coppola’s Golden Globe-nominated Priscilla. The rock legend was also back in the Billboard Hot 100 top 20 over the Christmas holiday when his 1957 classic “Blue Christmas” hit No. 18 on the chart dated Jan. 6, 2024, marking the first time one of his songs has has charted since “Way Down” peaked at No. 18 in Oct. 1977.

Watch the preview clip below.

Rage Against The Machine fans will need to find another outlet to release their anger, because the ‘90s rock legends won’t be playing live again.
That’s according to comments posted by drummer Brad Wilk, and shared widely by RATM’s official X (formerly Twitter) page late Wednesday (Jan. 3).

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RATM pushes out a news story published by Blabbermouth and based on comments made by Wilk, who insists the band “will not be touring or playing live again.”

Earlier, Wilk shared his thoughts on Instagram. “I know a lot of people are waiting for us to announce new tour dates for all the canceled RATM shows. I don’t want to string people or myself along any further,” he writes.

“So while there has been some communication that this may be happening in the future… I want to let you know that RATM (Tim, Zack, Tom and I) will not be touring or playing live again.

“I’m sorry for those of you who have been waiting for this to happen. I really wish it was…”

RATM’s post is a curious one which, at the time of writing, wasn’t shared to the rockers’ Facebook or Instagram pages and fails to mention whether recording projects are still in the cards. Bandmates Zack de la Rocha (vocals), bassist and backing vocalist Tim Commerford (bass) and Tom Morello (guitar) have not commented.

The L.A. group was finally tapped for the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2023, after five tries. Internal band issues were obvious then; Morello was the only member to attend the induction ceremony at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

RATM released just four albums during their initial 1991-2000 run before reforming for live dates from 2007-2011 and again in 2019 for a string of shows that were first interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic and then by de la Rocha’s leg injury.

LPs Evil Empire (from 1996) and The Battle Of Los Angeles (1999) both peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.

RATM has made eight total appearances on Billboard’s Alternative Airplay, with three songs in the top 10 (all in 2000), including “Guerrilla Radio,” which peaked at No. 69 on the Hot 100.

Few songs, however, have the power and fury of RATM’s signature song from 1992, “Killing In The Name,” a record that connected with youths everywhere and sprayed enough energy to enable them run through walls.

When their name was called out for induction into the Rock Hall class of ’23, the band recounted, by way of a statement, how they put their rage into action.

They were, the statement reads, “A band who shut down the NY Stock Exchange for the first time in its history.

“A band who was targeted by police organizations who attempted to ban us from sold out arenas for raising our voices to free Mumia Abu Jamal, Leonard Peltier and other political prisoners

“A band who sued the US State Department for their fascist practice of using our music to torture innocent men in Guantanamo Bay.”

And, “a band who wrote rebel songs in an abandoned, industrial warehouse in the valley that would later dethrone Simon Cowell ’s X Factor pop monopoly to occupy the number 1 spot on the UK charts and have the most downloaded song in U.K. history.”

It’s now an amusing piece of U.K. chart history that, following a public campaign, “Killing In The Name” became 2009’s coveted Christmas U.K. No. 1 – and in doing so killing the established tradition that the winner of X Factor would claim the prize.

Green Day kicked off 2024 in the most Green Day way possible: by taking another snarling lyrical swing at Donald Trump. The band tweaked the politically charged lyrics to the title track from their seventh studio album, 2004’s “American Idiot,” during their Sunday night (Dec. 31) set on ABC’s Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest.
“I’m not part of the MAGA agenda,” singer Billie Joe Armstrong snarled from the stage, replacing the original line in which he stated that he was not part of the “redneck agenda”; click here to watch video of the moment. As the four-times indicted, twice impeached former president ping-pongs between court dates and campaign appearances, the latest lyrical slag from the veteran punk-pop trio was not a huge surprise.

Green Day have long spoken out about their disdain for the former reality star whose recent speeches have featured fascist-like phrases that have raised alarm among political pundits for referring to political opponents as “vermin,” language that echoed that used by Nazi leader Adolph Hitler. Back in 2019, the band didn’t hold back at the iHeartRadio Music Festival in Las Vegas, where they debuted the anti-MAGA line in “American Idiot.” At the 2016 American Music Awards Green Day took aim at the then president-elect while performing “Bang Bang,” where Armstrong chanted “No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA,” in a nod to Trump’s endorsement by the KKK and the rise in racist attacks following his election.

As you might expect, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame band who’ve proudly waved the flag of disdain for authority and authoritarianism for more than three decades drew the ire of some of those MAGA Nation followers, as well as X owner Elon Musk. “Green Day goes from raging against the machine to milquetoastedly raging for it,” the controversy-loving Tesla/SpaceX CEO tweeted.

Some of Trump’s MAGA minions joined Musk in denigrating the group, with one X poster calling them “punk rock sellouts,” while Left Behind: Rise of the Antichrist director and Hercules actor Kevin Sorbo quipped “punk rock is pro big government” and right-wing troll Catturd wrote, “nothing says ‘punk rock’ like Government bootlicking, millionaire sellouts playing on ABC.”

The move should not come as any surprise considering that during their 2017 tour, Armstrong would often shout “F–k you, Donald Trump!” during performances of “American Idiot.” And, after Trump’s mugshot was released following his indictment for attempting to interfere with Georgia’s election process in the 2020 presidential race, GD released an “ultimate Nimrod” shirt with the scowling image of the one-term president on it as a benefit for the victims of last year’s devastating Maui wildfire.

There were, of course, plenty of GD supporters who applauded the band’s prime time takedown, with one noting that the original songs were aimed at another Republican commander-in-chief, George W. Bush during the Iraq War. “To the bi–hes b–ching: Green Day was never on your side. ‘American Idiot’ came out in 2004, who was president then? EXACTLY. That album was a middle finger to Dubya, you were just too stupid to realize it,” they wrote. Another wondered if those complaining about the Trump dump were ever really paying attention. “Why did Green Day have to insert politics into their performance of ‘American Idiot’ is a truly incredible sentence to read,” one X user wrote.

See Musk’s tweet below.

Green Day goes from raging against the machine to milquetoastedly raging for it 🤣🤣— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 1, 2024

DCP is owned by Penske Media Eldridge, a Penske Media Corporation (PMC) subsidiary and joint venture between PMC and Eldrige. PMC is the parent company of Billboard.)

Members of the band Moe. said they were in a state of “profound shock and sadness” on Monday (Jan. 1) after a deadly car crash outside their New Year’s Eve show at the Kodak Center in Rochester, NY that killed several.

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According to WABC, police are investigating the incident as a possible act of terrorism. The incident took place around 12:50 a.m. as around 1,000 people were leaving the band’s Dec. 31 show. Rochester Police Department officers were helping fans navigate the crosswalk outside the venue in the early morning hours when a Ford Explorer ran into a Mitsubishi Outlander that was pulling out of a nearby parking lot.

The force of the crash reportedly caused the two vehicles to plow through a group of pedestrians as well as two other vehicles, with a large fire breaking out as a result that took nearly an hour to extinguish, according to the report. Once the fire was extinguished, first responders reportedly found at least a dozen gas canisters in and around the Expedition, prompting a response from the Rochester Police Department’s Bomb Squad and Joint Arson Task Force, as well as the FBI.

Two people in the Outlander were killed and the unnamed driver was taken to Rochester General Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, while a number of other pedestrians and a Rochester police officer were also struck by vehicles; one of the three pedestrians was hospitalized with life-threatening injuries while the other two are reportedly in non-life-threatening condition.

On Tuesday morning (Jan. 2), Syracuse.com reported that the total death toll had risen to three, including the alleged driver of the Expedition, whom the New York Post identified as Michael Avery, who reportedly died at 8 p.m. on Monday night.

The band released a statement in response to the crash, writing, “Last night’s events outside the Kodak Center have left us all in profound shock and sadness. On a night that was meant for celebration and togetherness, we are faced instead with a tragedy that defies understanding. Our hearts go out to the family and friends of those who lost their lives, and our thoughts are with those who were injured.”

Moe. thanked the first responders and venue staff for their “swift and courageous” actions securing the safety of fans, as well as their fans, the Famoe.ly, for their support and resilience. “In these moments of confusion and grief, we stand together in solidarity,” the note continued. “We believe in the power of music to heal and unite, and it is in this spirit that we will continue to move forward.”

According to WABC, at press time authorities were still not sure that the crash was a deliberate act of terrorism, but are investigating it as such until they can determine a cause of the accident. Law enforcement sources told the station that reported Expedition driver Avery was from Syracuse and that he drove his own vehicle to the Syracuse airport, where he rented an extra-large SUV. The Post additionally reported that Avery allegedly rented a hotel room in Rochester, where investigators are said to have found a suicide note.

At press time Billboard was unable to reach a spokesperson for the Rochester Police Department for additional information on the incident.

Investigators are reportedly combing through the Expedition driver’s social media, as well as interviewing friends and family in search of additional information that might provide clues about why there were so many gas canisters in the vehicle.

See the band’s full statement below.

Noah Kahan earns his second No. 1 on Billboard’s Adult Alternative Airplay chart in 2023, and Hozier his third, as the pair’s “Northern Attitude” rises to the top of the tally dated Jan. 6, 2024.

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The song was originally recorded by Kahan solo, while Hozier joined as a featured artist on the collaborative version released Nov. 10.

The new No. 1 marks two in a row for Kahan, after “Dial Drunk” reigned for two weeks in September, becoming his first leader.

Hozier now boasts five total Adult Alternative Airplay No. 1s, dating to 2014’s “Take Me to Church.” Previously in 2023, he led with “Eat Your Young” in May and “Francesca” in September. He also reached the summit with “Nina Cried Power,” featuring Mavis Staples, in 2018.

Concurrently, “Northern Attitude” jumps 27-22 on the all-rock-format, audience-based Rock & Alternative Airplay chart with 1.4 million audience impressions, according to Luminate. Both acts have earned top 10s on the chart in 2023: Kahan with “Dial Drunk” (No. 3, September) and Hozier with “Eat Your Young” (No. 7, June).

“Northern Attitude” is the latest single from Stick Season, Kahan’s third studio album, which was released in October 2022, followed by a deluxe version this June. The title-track lead single peaked at No. 2 on Adult Alternative Airplay in November 2022, followed by “Homesick” (No. 7, May) and the aforementioned “Dial Drunk.”

On the most recently published, Dec. 30-dated Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart, which incorporates streaming, radio airplay and sales data, “Northern Attitude” ranked at No. 12 (after reaching No. 7 in November following the new version’s release). In addition to its radio airplay, the song earned 4.7 million official U.S. streams and sold 1,000 downloads Dec. 15-21.

Stick Season has led the Top Rock & Alternative Albums chart for two weeks to date and earned 1.3 million equivalent album units through Dec. 21.

All Billboard charts dated Jan. 6, 2024, will update on Billboard.com on Tuesday, Jan. 2.

Kiss fans will have to wait a little longer to see the band’s first avatar performance.
On Friday (Dec. 22), the legendary rockers — who played their final concert at New York’s Madison Square Garden earlier in the month — shared a teaser clip through social media revealing the date of their digitized characters.

“50 years is a long time, and what the future holds is in the making,” Kiss captioned the clip on X (formerly Twitter).

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The 25-second teaser includes previously seen footage of Kiss’ digital avatars and concludes with the message, “2027 A Show Is Coming.”

During their the last concert of their End of the Road farewell tour on Dec. 2, Kiss made a surprise announcement that they will continue on as digitized versions of themselves going forward.

After the concert, the quartet — comprising co-founders founders Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons as well as guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer — shared a two-minute video on YouTube teasing their next chapter.

“The future is so exciting,” Simmons says amid behind-the-scenes snippets of the band wearing motion capture suits to develop their high-tech avatars. Stanley adds, “We can live on eternally.”

Kiss’ avatars were created by George Lucas’ Industrial Light & Magic, in partnership with Sweden’s Pophouse Entertainment Group, according to the Associated Press. The companies recently collaborated on the ABBA Voyage show in London, a virtual concert performed by the Swedish pop group.

“Kiss could have a concert in three cities in the same night across three different continents. That’s what you could do with this,” Pophouse CEO told the AP.

In a roundtable interview, Stanley noted that Kiss “deserves to live on because the band is bigger than we are,” adding, “It’s exciting for us to go the next step and see Kiss immortalized.”

Simmons pointed out that the forthcoming digital band will be able accomplish things the original members couldn’t dream of doing.

“We can be forever young and forever iconic by taking us to places we’ve never dreamed of before,” the bassist said. “The technology is going to make Paul jump higher than he’s ever done before.”

See Kiss’ announcement on X below.

The Rolling Stones threw it back to the ’80s and ’90s when they filmed their music video for Hackney Diamonds single “Angry.” Sydney Sweeney served as the video’s star, but after it premiered, some expressed concerns of her being sexualized for the shoot — claims that she addressed in her Thursday (Dec. 21) cover story […]

Five of the world’s most prominent rock ‘n’ rollers walk side by side through Times Square, just before performing three straight concerts at the Iridium nightclub. And almost nobody recognizes them. “I don’t remember anybody going, ‘Look at those guys,’” says Waddy Wachtel, guitarist for the Immediate Family, session musicians who have played with Linda Ronstadt, James Taylor, Jackson Browne, Phil Collins, Carole King and hundreds of others since the ’70s. “It was just another semi-busy afternoon. People just doing what they do.”
Although giant-bearded bassist Leland Sklar clarifies that he did get recognized before those 2019 concerts, and snapped photos with three or four fans, the Immediate Family, stars of a new documentary, remains both unprecedentedly important and pointedly non-famous. 

“If somebody stops me on the street and says, ‘Oh, I love your playing,’ yes, of course, I love that. How could you not?” says Danny Kortchmar, one of the group’s three guitarists. “But I don’t miss it. I certainly wouldn’t want the thing that Carole and James had. It didn’t do them any good, let me tell you.”

Denny Tedesco directed and produced Immediate Family to follow up his first film, The Wrecking Crew!, about an earlier generation of studio musicians who backed ’60s pop giants from Frank Sinatra to The Beach Boys. Tedesco’s late father, Tommy, was a guitarist for that band, and Denny made the film to “rediscover what he did,” he recalls via Zoom. Immediate Family was a natural next step, “like someone handed a baton over,” according to Tedesco. And while Tedesco and his wife, co-executive producer Suzie Greene Tedesco, went into debt licensing the classic songs for The Wrecking Crew!, its success allowed the filmmaker to secure financial backing for Immediate Family, including a rights-acquisition deal with indie giant Magnolia Pictures.

Shortly after Tedesco’s crew started filming in 2019, Wachtel, Sklar, Kortchmar and drummer Russ Kunkel, who’d been known for nearly 50 years as The Section, rebranded themselves as a new band called the Immediate Family. They began playing gigs on their own and added a longtime collaborator, guitarist Steve Postell, for a self-titled 2021 album. 

“We enjoyed it a lot. It wasn’t a drag,” Kortchmar, 77, says of the new film. “We didn’t have to sit around for hours and hours, the way a lot of movies are made.”

Carole King, James Taylor, Danny Kortchmar in IMMEDIATE FAMILY, a Magnolia Pictures release.

Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

Immediate Family begins with Kortchmar, known as “Kootch,” whose mother bought him a Stella guitar as a kid, although he didn’t take to it until he saw Elvis Presley on television. Vacationing with his family in Martha’s Vineyard, he befriended a 13-year-old Taylor; as Taylor evolved into a megastar, Kortchmar gigged in bands, first in New York, then Los Angeles, until producer Peter Asher hired him to play on Taylor’s second album, 1970’s Sweet Baby James, along with pianist King and drummer Kunkel. (Craig Doerge eventually replaced King on keys in Taylor’s band, and he was a founding member of The Section.)

After learning drums from his older brother, Kunkel played in his fifth-grade orchestra, which ejected him for playing too loud. He later joined bands in Southern California, evolving his sound into what Browne, in the film, calls “solid, but quiet, with these big toms.” Kunkel’s band, Things to Come, succeeded The Doors as the house band at L.A.’s Whisky a Go Go, and, supporting a wife and baby, he used his music-scene connections to secure studio gigs — including for Sweet Baby James. “From there, the dominoes started to fall,” he says in the film.

Sklar, a fast-fingered bassist influenced by Liberace’s piano-playing, met Taylor through a friend, and joined the singer-songwriter, as well as Kortchmar and Kunkel, at a Troubadour club gig in LA. “Next thing I know, it turned into 50-plus years,” Sklar says in the documentary. King then made her smash 1971 album Tapestry with nearly the same backup band. And unlike The Wrecking Crew or Motown’s Funk Brothers, The Section benefited from Asher’s decision to credit them on each record — drawing the attention of music fans everywhere, from future stars like Collins to Wachtel himself, who noticed Kortchmar’s name and wondered, as he recalls in the documentary, “Why is he on all these records? How does he get all these gigs?”

Wachtel, a long-haired, skinny, bespectacled guitar hero, began a lifelong collaboration with Kortchmar, a fellow New Yorker, when they played together on a Tim Curry session. Influenced by Les Paul as a five-year-old watching TV, Wachtel soaked up early rock ‘n’ roll, played in a band, moved to L.A. and sought out the studio musician scene. He was driving to a studio gig in his ’57 Chevy when he encountered another ’57 Chevy on the way out. That driver? Kunkel.

Wachtel’s car “carried me around for a while, and it literally died one day on the freeway and I just pulled over and left it there and walked away,” the 76-year-old guitarist says, in a phone interview from Ventura County, Calif. By contrast, Kunkel still has his Chevy, and, in a separate phone interview, he lovingly describes every detail, from its vertical chrome strips on the back to the original buying price of $400 to his sharing it with his adult son, Nathaniel.

“Waddy and Danny are two of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll parts-players of all time,” says Postell, 67, in a call from Marina del Rey, Calif. “Danny came up from the great R&B tradition of rhythm parts. Waddy has an incredible ability to find the right lines and the inner parts that drive a song along.”

Asher’s decision to credit the studio musicians on the album covers in the early ’70s was a “quantum change” from The Wrecking Crew days, says Sklar, 76, by phone from Pasadena, Calif. The Section, collectively and individually, went on to perform on Browne’s “Running On Empty,” Stevie Nicks‘ “Edge of Seventeen,” Hall & Oates‘ “Rich Girl,” Warren Zevon‘s “Werewolves of London,” Don Henley‘s “All She Wants to Do Is Dance” and thousands of other classic tracks. “Unlike the Wrecking Crew, we got credit for it as it was happening, not necessarily later,” Kunkel adds. “It changed all of our careers. It made us who we are today.”

The Immediate Family film documents the band’s evolution, complete with funny stories like Zevon insisting on 61 straight studio takes of “Werewolves,” before settling on the second take for his album. Conspicuously absent are the usual recollections of drug and alcohol excess that accompany many documentaries about rock touring in the ’70s and ’80s. “We did talk about drugs here and there, and there are things that are very painful for those guys,” Tedesco says. “They took in a lot of things and they survived — some did, some didn’t.”

Tedesco proceeds to tell a story about the band touring with Ronstadt in Detroit when a driver mistakenly takes them across the bridge to Canada. On the way back, worried about U.S. Customs, members of the band start throwing their drugs out the window. “One of the guys goes, ‘Probably thousands of dollars in drugs laying on the side of the road somewhere,’” Tedesco says. Sklar, a teetotaler and “real Type A kind of control-freak personality” who has never smoked or tried a single drug, wasn’t a fan of this side of his avocation. “I was never judgmental or anything,” says Sklar, also a prolific presence on YouTube. “The only time it would really get to bug me would be like we finished a gig and one of the guys would get really drunk on the bus and I knew we had eight hours in the bus and they immediately started saying, ‘I love you, man. I really love you.’”

Also absent from Immediate Family are references to the Mellow Mafia, a longtime Section nickname due to their work with Taylor, King, Ronstadt, Browne and others. A Rolling Stone 2013 profile of the group included the headline “The Knights of Soft Rock.” Wachtel, who has played in Keith Richards‘ raucous solo band, The X-Pensive Winos, for decades, is especially sensitive to this language. “These are just phrases you don’t really want to be associated with,” he says. “I’m a rock ‘n’ roll guitar player and I play all kinds of music.” Kortchmar is even more pointed. “My answer to that is ‘F— you!’” he says by phone. “Don’t ever call me ‘soft rock,’ man. I really hated that terminology and I still do. There’s nothing soft about me and about the music we play.”

When headliners Eric Wilson, Bud Gaugh and Jakob Nowell took the stage shortly before midnight at the Teragram Ballroom on Dec. 11 in Los Angeles for a benefit concert for Bad Brains frontman H.R., they didn’t officially have a band name. It wasn’t until the second song during the rousing set that Nowell announced he was now leading the band his late father, Bradley Nowell, first launched with Wilson and Gaugh in 1998 — the beloved Long Beach alternative, rock and reggae group Sublime.
One week later, on Monday (Dec. 18), Rome Ramirez, lead singer of the group Sublime with Rome — the Sublime spinoff that has performed classic Sublime songs and Ramirez’s original material since 2009 — announced he was ending his run performing with the group. The announcement followed news that the Nowell family, along with Wilson and Gaugh, had effectively laid the groundwork for the younger Nowell to take over his father’s role and lead the band into a new era.

Briefly, in 2009, Wilson and Ramirez toured under the name Sublime but were sued by the Nowell family and eventually reached a legal settlement and license agreement with Nowell’s wife, Troy Dendekker, to tour under the moniker Sublime with Rome.

While Wilson and Ramirez were touring and performing, Jakob was developing his own musical talents, forming the Long Beach band LAW in 2013. Earlier this year, Jakob and his mother agreed with Wilson and Gaugh to relaunch Sublime with Jakob at the helm under the management of Kevin Zinger and Joe Escalante.

What this development means for Rome Ramirez is not totally clear. In a statement, the singer announced that “after almost two remarkable decades, I am announcing my departure from Sublime with Rome at the close of 2024. The upcoming performances over the next year will allow us to reflect on countless incredible memories together!”

Sublime with Rome currently has four dates on its website scheduled for 2024: Feb. 16 at Cali Vibes Festival in Long Beach, April 12 at Cattle Country Festival in Gonzalez, Tex., April 20 at Hard Rock Live in Atlantic City, N.J., and an April 27 headliner show at Red Rocks.

“Over the last 2 years I’ve been spending countless hours pouring my soul into my solo music, and the excitement to share these songs with you is building up! I’ve got some really big news that I can’t drop yet. Just wait,” Ramirez’s statement continued. “Singing and playing guitar for this iconic band has been a lifetime opportunity and just flat out, absolutely epic. Carrying on the Sublime legacy has been a trust I’ll forever cherish. This is only the beginning…”

Sublime with Rome has put out a total of three albums, including its 2011 debut record, Yours Truly, which peaked at No. 9 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. They followed that up in 2015 with Sirens, which peaked at No. 34 on the tally, followed by Blessings in 2019. The band has consistently headlined festivals and in 2023 collaborated with Slightly Stoopid on the track “Cool & Collected,” along with a joint 27-date summer tour.