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“Ozzy’s like, ‘I really f**king need to cut back on the calories’”: Zakk Wylde on the time an air stewardess mistook Ozzy Osbourne for Meat Loaf
![[L-R] Ozzy Osbourne, Zakk Wylde, Meat Loaf](https://guitar.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Ozzy-Wylde-Meat@2000x1500.jpg)
Zakk Wylde has revealed Ozzy Osbourne’s hilarious reaction when he was once mistaken for Meat Loaf by an air stewardess.
In a new interview with Classic Rock – in which he recalls his experiences meeting a number of rock legends throughout his career including Lemmy, Slash and Dimebag Darrell – the Black Label Society frontman remembers joining Ozzy’s band as a young guitar player at around 19 or 20.
Wylde says despite the nerves that came with joining the band of Ozzy Osbourne – “a guy whose records I had grown up listening to,” as he puts it – the Prince of Darkness was, in fact, not a “big rock star ego guy”.
“If we ever got turned away from a restaurant because they were full, he’d never go: ‘Don’t you know who I am?’ He’d go: “[deflated] I guess they don’t like Black Sabbath.”
Wylde remembers Ozzy telling him a story about him flying on a Concorde shortly after his Sabbath departure.
“He’s sitting there, bummed out, and the stewardess is like: ‘Oh, my God, I can’t believe it’s you!’ She’s giving him drinks, getting him food, and he’s just floored by it. He’s going: ‘Maybe things aren’t so bad.’
“As the plane lands, she says: ‘Can I get a picture?’ So she takes the photo, and then she goes: ‘Oh, wow, thank you Meat Loaf!’ Ozzy’s like: ‘I really fucking need to cut back on the calories.’”
Ozzy Osbourne died in July 2025 at the age of 76, just two weeks after performing at Black Sabbath’s mega last-ever show, Back to the Beginning at Villa Park in Birmingham, England.
Following the show and before his death, Ozzy was texting Wylde expressing a desire to record another album, Wylde remembers.
“He was saying, ‘I want to make another record, like when you were going through your Allman Brothers/Lynyrd Skynyrd phase with No More Tears. So it’ll be heavy but melodic.’ And I said, ‘Surely you must be kidding.’ And he goes: ‘No, I’m not kidding – and don’t call me Shirley!’
“I was figuring Ozzy would do his rehab and hopefully get better, and we’d make another record and maybe Mom [Sharon Osbourne, Ozzy’s wife and longtime manager] would do this gig once a year for charity and give him something to strive for.
“Every night when I’m saying my prayers I say hi to him.”
The post “Ozzy’s like, ‘I really f**king need to cut back on the calories’”: Zakk Wylde on the time an air stewardess mistook Ozzy Osbourne for Meat Loaf appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
Courtney Barnett on Kurt Cobain Jaguars, writing for the song, and why she’s learned to push down the feeling she’s “wasting everyone’s time” to nail her guitar solos

When Cournet Barnett was 18, she was hopping around at open mics, performing original songs to anyone who would listen. Soon enough, however, she found herself playing guitar in her first-ever band: the gritty, Melbourne-based grunge collective, Rapid Transit.
The music was riotous, punchy garage rock that only lasted a year, with the outfit releasing a one-off self-titled cassette in December 2010. Barnett is no stranger to seamlessly slipping into new projects – from Immigrant Union to The Olivettes. But, now, as she mulls over her past on a call from LA, it’s clear that phase in her life was one she recalls fondly.
“It’s so cool that you found that,” she enthuses. “I loved that band. I love that music that we made. My friend Chris, that was his band. I joined other bands and did whatever felt fun at the time. Chris and I worked in this bar together, and he asked me to play guitar in his band, and it was so different to what I was doing with my songs, and I loved it.
“Actually, I’ve never really written like that. I didn’t even know what key the songs were in or what chords we were playing! I just remembered all my parts, but I didn’t understand absolutely any of the theory or anything that was going on.”
Image: Lindsey Byrnes
Learning Curve
There are few better ways to cement your place in the music industry firmament than getting a nomination in one of the super prestigious “Big Four” categories at the Grammy Awards, but that’s exactly what happened to Barnett a decade ago when she was nominated for Best New Artist at the 58th Grammys.
Ten years and one month later, she released her poignant, brilliant new album, Creature of Habit. Reflecting on her coming-of-age guitar moments, the Australian musician picks out a quietly confident trick.
“It’s wild to think back to that time now. I would still be scared to go into an open-mic. There’s something really nerve-wracking about it. But I was looking at all those moments as a place to learn, and that’s something I’m always trying to do,” she says. “Every step of the way, with every different-sized show, it’s always good to remember that I’m just trying to serve the song and the storytelling. It doesn’t matter what size the venue or whatever it is, I always want to do a good show.”
It’s early morning and Barnett’s dog, Rosa, is pacing around the flat, eager to get outside. In some way, there’s a similar glimmering enthusiasm of routine in Barnett’s latest full-length album. Creature of Habit emerged in the quiet of Joshua Tree, where she could experiment and chip away at her album, sticking to what felt like the right path. Wisdom, then, is something Barnett is coaxing out of all situations. She explores openly, sinking into the feelings of creative limbo, looking, searching for a moment that strikes, something that feels authentic and right.
“There’s a beauty in an in-between moment of figuring something out and capturing that sound in the studio. It’s usually a guitar solo or something like that that I would typically leave to the last minute and do it based on feeling,” she says. “I’m figuring it out in the moment, and I feel like I’m wasting everyone’s time, but then, at the same time, I think it captures something really raw; it’s right on the edge of falling apart, or you can hear me searching for the notes and I like that. It feels really, really honest.”
Image: Lindsey Byrnes
Breaking The Habit
Finding those moments and little breakthroughs is, as anyone who has tried to write a song can surely attest, is where the real magic is found. But even after more than a decade of making her own music across myriad projects, Barnett still cherishes the lessons she’s learned on the back of Creature Of Habit.
“I think my biggest lesson for this album was about finishing things, especially lyrics,” she reveals. “I left a lot of the lyrics to the last minute and, often, didn’t finish a song. I kind of thought that I’ll figure the rest out later and I’ll get around to it or in the moment, I’ll figure it out, but that just psyched me out and stressed me out.
“It’s normally a bit more structured and things would be more finished. I was experimenting, but I knew if I didn’t have a deadline, I wouldn’t get anything done. I would sit around looking at the sky and waiting for some grand idea to happen.”
One of the album’s standout tracks is Mantis, and this was another song that taught Barnett some valuable lessons in the studio – and was so impactful that the insect the song was inspired by ended up being the album’s cover.
“When I finished writing that song, I felt the album come together like that,” she reveals. “The song felt like the glue. I don’t 100 per cent know why, but it just made all of the songs make sense as a collection, instead of them just being random songs placed together.
“I couldn’t come up with the chorus. I had some random lines that didn’t really make sense. Then, one day, I was at home, and I looked up at my windowsill and saw this praying mantis. I was in a moment where I was feeling really lost and really sad, and I was really having a hard time, and this tiny little mantis felt like this weird sign from the universe. This supportive little creature was kind of telling me I was, I was going in the right direction, and so it became this symbol for me.
“Around that time, I was getting up every morning, I was making a coffee, and then I was sitting down to write, and one of the phrases I wrote one morning was something about being a creature of habit. Then, a year or so later, I was coming up with the album title at the last minute, which I always do, and I thought that line represented all the songs really nicely, both in a kind of abstract way, but also quite an obvious way.”
Tried And True
The album’s title is the sort of thing that obviously promotes discussion about Barnett’s tried and true ways of doing things, and when it comes to her captivatingly jagged and raw approach to guitar, she has a relatable process for how it all comes together – finding the familiar and then pushing beyond it.
“It’s funny how there are always little things that I fall back on,” she explains. “I always pick up a guitar and I’ll go to the same chords I learned as a kid with my guitar teacher, and the pentatonic scale. When I’m soloing or finding notes, I find myself following similar patterns, and then I have to force myself to kind of break out of that. I’ll definitely jump on the tremolo arm often, if I feel kind of lost I’ll make noise with it. But if I pick up a guitar, I go to a G-A-G, and play some kind of country-style strumming pattern – that’s my go-to.”
Fruitful collaboration has been a regular feature of Barnett’s career, and so it’s fitting that the album’s lead single, Site Unseen, sees her working with another indie-rock big-hitter in the shape of Kathryn Crutchfield, aka Waxahatchee.
“I wrote that song at the last minute before we went into the studio the first time,” Barnettt recalls. “This album was recorded in a couple of different sessions, and I wrote it at the last minute. I was sitting with my girlfriend in the studio, and we were talking, but I had the guitar in my hand and the melody in my head.
“I was so distracted, because I was like, ‘Oh my god, what if I forget this song that I’ve kind of written as we’ve been talking…’ My girlfriend was saying something and I was like, ‘I’m so sorry, but I need to record this song and can we just stop talking for one second?’ I did a voice memo of this song idea and then a couple of days later, I showed the band, and we tried to track the song, but I hadn’t really fleshed it out properly.
“Then, six months later, I did a different version of it that wasn’t right and then another one. Finally, it sounded right and I had this idea to get Katie. I asked her if she would be interested in singing this harmony idea that I had floating around in my head, and I thought her voice would be so perfect for it. I really love her songwriting and I think she’s such an amazing artist. I just knew that her voice would be perfect. So I texted her and asked her and she was into it. She did a vocal and it all sounded right to me, but it was a real journey. It took over a year to get it right.”
Image: Press
Going Big
For many fans, the squall of Barnett’s guitar is a magical component of her music, though it was something that took a little bit of a back seat in the sparser arrangements of 2021’s Things Take Time, Take Time. When she started talking about Creature Of Habit, she declared that the guitars would be more overt this time around – a notable thing that begs the question why she felt the need to make such a promise…
“Lots of people seemed to comment that my last album wasn’t guitar-heavy,” she says. “It seemed to be a bit of a comparison, not so much for me, but a few observations from other people. But this does feel bigger, wider and louder. I wrote Things Take Time… in a small apartment during Covid lockdowns on acoustic guitars. It was quite small, quiet and intimate. With this album, I started writing it in the desert with big landscapes and no kind of noise restrictions. I was just playing more guitars, playing electric guitar instead of acoustic on that album. I think, sonically, they’re so different.”
Speaking of playing electric guitars, it would be remiss not to chat about Barnett’s most synonymous guitar – her lefty Fender Kurt Cobain Jaguar that has been a constant companion throughout her musical life, and was a key player on Creature Of Habit too.
“I’ve just been using it for so long, and I don’t have that many guitars,” she demures of the guitar’s significance. “I don’t like rotating between a lot of guitars and always come back to it like that. It feels like such a workhorse and it does everything I want it to do; I can play all my songs on it. They all sound good to my ear on that guitar. At the moment, I have that guitar and this white Strat, and they’re the two guitars that I use. I don’t really have any other ones here. I find that Jag can do everything I want it to do.”
A little over a decade on from the debut album that propelled her to global indie-rock stardom, Barnett has understandably learned and experienced a huge amount, but it’s also a career that seems to have gone by in a flash.
“It’s funny that 10 years feels so long ago, but also so like it was kind of just yesterday as well,” she agrees. “It’s such a weird way to look at a time. It feels like another lifetime. I was thinking about this album the other day and there’s always this feeling of nerves and vulnerability as you’re just about to release something. I’m so proud of it and I’m just excited to release it and to perform the songs. I have been working on this for three years, so it feels like such a journey.
“But when other people listen to the music, it kind of becomes something else. People interpret it in different ways, and often I learn more about the music once it‘s released. It’s really interesting to see how songs evolve over time and how they kind of change. Sometimes they might even change meaning or just gain a new meaning. I sat with these ideas for so long. I struggled with a lot of the lyrics. I went through a lot of emotional turmoil and I learned a lot. Now, I can let it go and I can move on with all these lessons learned and perspectives gained. It feels like I can take a breath. It’s a nice bit of closure.”
Courtney Barnett’s Creator of Habit is out now via Milk! Records
The post Courtney Barnett on Kurt Cobain Jaguars, writing for the song, and why she’s learned to push down the feeling she’s “wasting everyone’s time” to nail her guitar solos appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
“Supremely stupid idea – we’re going to be so emotional”: Alex Lifeson and Geddy Lee look on to the opening show of Rush’s reunion tour

Rush’s Fifty Something reunion tour has to be one of the most anticipated rock tours in recent memory, as guitarist Alex Lifeson and bassist Geddy Lee – with drummer Anika Nilles in tow – head out on the road for the first time in 11 years, and since the tragic death of Neil Peart in 2020.
Speculation has swirled in recent years as to whether Rush would ever head back out on the road, and comments made by Lifeson earlier in 2025 didn’t help, when he said: “I’d rather be remembered for that legacy than return as the top Rush tribute band. Some days I wake up wanting to go out and tour again and some days I don’t.”
But the prog legends sent shockwaves round the rock world in October when they announced plans to head back out on the road once again in 2026. Demand for the shows was so high, in fact, that the band shortly after added 17 more dates.
Rush fans haven’t got long to wait now, either, with the first shows of the trek – not one, not two, but four – at LA’s Kia Forum on 7, 9, 11 and 13 June. As it happens, the venue was where Lee and Lifeson played their last-ever show with Neil Peart in 2015.
And in a new interview with Classic Rock, the pair acknowledge the emotions that will come with performing their first reunited shows at the same venue.
Likening it to “returning to the scene of the crime”, Lifeson says: “Staring at that same clock where it ended, yeah.”
“Supremely stupid idea,” Lee replies. “It’s a massively stupid idea, because we’re going to be so emotional already, that first show without Neil, and then to be in that building. What the fuck was I thinking?” Lifeson concurs: “Yeah, what were we fucking thinking?”
Later in the interview, Lee continues: “Without Neil… I’ll be frank. There are some songs you play where it kind of hits you, it’s bad, and it feels weird. And it’s appropriate that that happens. You know what I mean?
“If we just picked up and went on without feeling any tug of anything, that would be absurd, that would be a whole other thing. And there’ll be moments in both sets where we’ll pay tribute to him. We’re working hard on that, making sure that it’s appropriate.”
Noting the “emotional and logistical aspect” of deciding to reunite as Rush, Lee adds: “There was nothing about this decision that came easily, except when Al looks at me, and I look at him in the studio and we go why the fuck shouldn’t we do this?”
View a full list of dates for the Fifty Something tour at Rush’s official website.
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Hole bassist on the “public witch trial” that followed her leaving the band – and why she was “pissed” at Courtney Love “turning away”

Nearly three decades on, former Hole bassist Melissa Auf der Maur has opened up about her tumultuous relationship with Courtney Love, and the “public witch trial” that followed her exit.
Appearing in the new issue of Uncut, Auf der Maur looks back on her five-year stint in Hole, a period that saw the band rise to mainstream success with 1998’s Celebrity Skin. The 54-year-old joined the alt-rock group in 1994, stepping in after the tragic loss of bassist Kristen Pfaff, and remained through some of the band’s most high-profile years. After leaving Hole in 1999, she toured briefly with The Smashing Pumpkins, fronted by Courtney Love’s ex, Billy Corgan.
Reflecting on the emotional fallout of leaving Hole, Auf der Maur says, “We broke our own hearts along the way. I had dutifully stayed, trying to do what we set out to do, which is put women in a male-dominated landscape. We had a Top 40 hit, we were as big as ever, and Courtney turned away and explored Hollywood and I was pissed. But that’s her journey. She was surviving insurmountable pain – not just Kurt [Cobain] and being left alone as a mother and her own struggle with addiction, but a lifetime of not being loved.”
In the aftermath, Auf der Maur adds, the band’s reputation took a hit and the narrative quickly spiralled.
“And then it became a public witch trial. The legacy of Hole was in the gutters. No one took care of it because no one took care of her.”
The drama didn’t stop when she left Hole. When asked about Love’s reaction to her move to the Pumpkins, Auf der Maur admits it was complicated.
“She was respectful, but angry that I was leaving for her ex-boyfriend,” the bassist explains. “It was a lot of drama, but I’ve long said that Hole was my Bachelors in humanity and the Pumpkins was my Masters in music. I learned in Hole about how society treats women, and then I got to basically go on vacation and be the best bass player I’ve ever been by playing with the best musicians I’ll ever play with in my life.”
Playing with Corgan, she adds, pushed her creative and technical limits like nothing she had experienced before.
“The intensity of Billy Corgan and his work ethic, and the radical dexterity I needed to have as a bass player, was insane,” says Auf der Maur. “We were playing up to three hours a night, different setlists every night. It was Olympian-style musicianship.”
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“One of the most unique guitars I’ve ever played”: This multi-scale 7-string S-type is a prog-ready monstrosity
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Think you know the Stratocaster? Well think again. Prog guitarist Joshua De La Victoria and Iconic Guitars have reworked the classic S-type into a seven-string, multi-scale machine that looks somewhat familiar – but plays like nothing you’ve seen before.
Gone are the days of sticking to the classic three-single-coil formula. De La Victoria’s latest guitar blends an HSS pickup configuration, a custom offset humbucker, and an EverTune bridge with a multi-scale neck that stretches your fingers – and your imagination. Every inch of the build is designed to push the Strat into modern territory without losing the iconic charm that’s made it a legend.
Revealing the new build on Instagram, De La Victoria explains how Iconic used their Solana 7 model as a starting point, then reworked the “whole center of the body” and neck to accommodate the multi-scale layout. The team also created a custom bridge humbucker to complement the 7-string single coil configuration.
“Bet you haven’t seen this before,” De La Victoria writes. “I had a chat with Kevin [Proctor, Iconic President] a few months back about a crazy new build idea, and it’s here. For the past year, I’ve been thinking about how an S-type guitar could work with multi-scale, and I gotta say it looks and plays incredible.”
“The mix of vintage and modern has always been something that I really connect with and look for. This is probably the most extreme version of that.”
Even Periphery’s Misha Mansoor couldn’t resist commenting: “Wow. Lemme get dat.”
“Really proud of this dude and this guitar,” Proctor adds on Instagram. “Thanks to my dear friend Josh for the idea for this guitar and for trusting our team to bring this incredible Solana 7 multi-scale to life.”
In a dedicated YouTube video, De La Victoria explains the concept behind the guitar: The idea was to create “something that no one makes but that I wish they would,” he says. Growing up on S-style guitars, De La Victoria wanted something that felt “super familiar”, but with the capabilities needed for his current work.
“I’m writing a lot of music and I’m playing a lot of music. I’m out on tour playing music that uses extended range instruments. So, seven and eight string guitars,” says the musician. “I wanted something that could bridge the gap between the two… Something that’s vintage looking – so S-style – and then has the extended range and some of the modern features of extended range guitars.”
Watch the full build video below.
The post “One of the most unique guitars I’ve ever played”: This multi-scale 7-string S-type is a prog-ready monstrosity appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
“Metallica were the best of all of us but not anymore”: Gary Holt says Exodus now “crushes” their thrash rivals

Master of Puppets may be “the best metal album ever made” in the eyes of Gary Holt, but the band behind it is no longer “the best” today, according to the Exodus guitarist.
Speaking to Metal Hammer Spain, Holt reflects on the long-running dynamic between Exodus and Metallica, tracing it back to the early days of the Bay Area, and the very different paths the two bands took as thrash exploded into the mainstream.
- READ MORE: Gary Holt: “All I listen to is Adele”
“I think the thrash bands that came after [us] – ‘cause, obviously, the first two in the [San Francisco] Bay Area were us and Metallica – were really chasing what Metallica did,” he says [via Blabbermouth]. “That’s why most of ‘em started doing ballads and they started following the blueprint a little, whereas Exodus kind of did our own thing.”
“For better or for worse, we made our own decisions,” Holt adds. “We tried our hardest not to be like Metallica.”
While Holt is quick to give James Hetfield and co. their due, he argues that the Bay Area pecking order has long shifted, with Exodus now firmly ‘crushing’ their old peers.
“Everybody makes their own musical decisions,” he says. “Metallica were the best of all of us. I mean, I don’t think so anymore – I think Exodus crushes them, but that’s my own humble opinion.”
Still, when it comes to the records themselves, Holt isn’t shy about showering praise on what he considers “the best” the genre has delivered.
“But [Metallica third LP, 1986’s] Master Of Puppets, to me, is the best metal album ever made,” says the guitarist. “I fucking love it. I’m jealous, that album is so good. It makes me jealous. Some people like [Metallica’s second album, 1984’s] Ride The Lightning better. I think Master Of Puppets is a masterpiece.”
“That album and Stained Class [by] Judas Priest are, to me, the two best metal albums of all time. [Exodus guitarist] Lee Altus likes Ride The Lightning better [than Master Of Puppets]. To me, it’s no choice. It’s, like, no – it’s fucking Master Of Puppets.”
In related news, Gary Holt recently joked he’s still waiting on royalties for Metallica’s megahit Creeping Death, claiming his lyrics from an early Exodus demo helped shape the track that later appeared on Ride The Lightning.
“It’s Kirk’s riff, it’s my lyrics,” he told Heavy Stories [via Louder]. “I’ve never been credited, so yeah, that’ll tell you how I feel. I should get paid for that shit.”
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Luthier on Luthier: Otto D’Ambrosio
For episode 112 of the podcast, I’m talking with Otto D’Ambrosio.
Otto wears two hats—as a solo luthier and Chief Designer at Eastman Guitars—and he walks us through his journey from working with legends like Flip Scipio, John Monteleone, and Carl Thompson to his role today, bridging the gap between hands-on building and production design.
We talk about how the pandemic pushed him into 3D CAD, changing the way he collaborates with Eastman’s workshops, and dive into some of his design work—including the Fullertone neck system, his boutique archtop builds, and an upcoming project comparing domestic and European tonewoods.
Links:
https://dambrosioguitars.com/
Luthier on Luthier is hosted by Michael Bashkin of Bashkin Guitars and brought to you by the Fretboard Journal. This episode is sponsored by the Looth Group, Dream Guitars and StewMac.
Michael Bashkin’s Hub of Acoustics 2026 US Academy: https://hubofacoustics.com/en/#Colorado_Academy
Want to support Luthier on Luthier? Join our Patreon to get access to exclusive photos and content from Michael and his builds.
The post Luthier on Luthier: Otto D’Ambrosio first appeared on Fretboard Journal.
“His dependents became incredibly greedy”: Brian May reveals Queen are being sued by the family of the photographer who shot their most iconic album cover

Think of Queen, and we’re willing to bet the Queen II artwork is the first image that pops into your head. Shot in 1974 by photographer Mick Rock, the artwork for the band’s sophomore record has since become one of the most recognisable shots in musical history. However, following Rock’s death in 2021, his family are now pursuing legal action, arguing that Rock wasn’t properly compensated for his work.
Speaking to The Sun, guitarist Brian May reveals that the Rock family are claiming that the late photographer was allegedly not paid enough for his work. “His family is suing us at the moment for vast amounts of money,” May says. “Mick was a lovely guy, very ambitious, quite money oriented.”
Queen ensured that they “paid [Rock] very, very well for what he did”. Despite that, Rock’s family are insisting that the payout wasn’t sufficient.
Alongside its recreation in the 1975 video for Bohemian Rhapsody, the iconic snap of Freddie Mercury, guitarist Brian May, bassist John Deacon and drummer Roger Taylor has since become a cultural touchstone, with countless bands imitating it in photoshoots and music videos. Yet that legacy has been soured, in light of the brewing legal battle.
Perhaps alluding to the later recreation of the shot for memorabilia and in the Bohemian Rhapsody video, May alleges that the Rock family are suing on the grounds that Rock should be compensated for every way in which Queen have benefitted from the shot.
“His dependents became incredibly greedy and decided that everything was his idea,” May explains. “[They believe] we owe him millions and millions, not just in the UK, but all around the world. So they’re suing us all around… it’s a little hard for me to be objective about the thing.”
May goes on to say that, if Rock were still alive, the matter could have been settled easily out of court. “I’m sorry he’s not around because I know if he was around, we’d go, ‘Oh, come on, we’ll settle this,’” the guitarist says. “We’d shake hands and it would be done tomorrow.”
News of the legal battle comes shortly after the re-release of Queen II, with an expanded edition of the record dropping just last Friday.
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FUKKAUDIO is a browser-based text-to-tone guitar tone generator

With the increasing power of AI-driven LLMs, it was only a matter of time before digital guitar tones created from a single text prompt were made possible.
Positive Grid really spearheaded the movement last year when it launched BIAS X, with a handy text-to-tone AI assistant that turns the tonal ideas in your head into reality. Now, the concept is available in a browser-based format courtesy of FUKKAUDIO.
Text prompt guitar tone creation, in theory, circumvents the often-tedious process of crafting the perfect signal chain yourself, essentially offering a faster route from the sound in your head to a sound you can actually use.
Unlike Positive Grid’s BIAS X – which can be used as a standalone application or as a plugin within a DAW – FUKKAUDIO is an entirely browser-based guitar tone generator, with no installation required.
So how does it actually work? Simply plug your guitar into your computer via an audio interface – input and output device dropdown lists are front and centre in the user interface – then enter your prompt, like “tight modern rhythm” or “sparkly clean that makes chords feel expensive”, and FUKKAUDIO will do the rest.
FUKKAUDIO doesn’t have quite the same post-prompt customisability as BIAS X, which formulates a full signal chain based on your prompt, after which you can swap out amps and effects to your heart’s content. Understandable, of course, considering FUKKAUDIO is a free browser application.
FUKKAUDIO does, however, grant controls for FX Intensity, Drive and output level, which can be tweaked to further refine your prompted sound.
“The focus is on getting to a usable tone quickly, especially for home players working with a laptop or simple setup,” the Finnish brand tells Guitar.com.
“That shift – from presets to plain-language tone – is the core angle. It turns guitar tone into something you can reach immediately instead of something you have to construct.”
Try FUKKAUDIO for yourself now.
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Wolfgang Van Halen says his father was “right” to start him out playing drums instead of guitar: “I play guitar like a drummer”

With Van Halen blood running through his veins, it’s no surprise that Wolfgang Van Halen knows his way around a guitar. However, Wolfgang’s father Eddie Van Halen was in no rush to teach his son guitar – in fact, he didn’t buy him his first acoustic until he had first become proficient on the drums.
In a new interview with Rick Beato, Wolfgang reflects on how this drum-first approach has helped him as a musician. “I think my dad was right to start me on drums,” he explains. “It’s a really good place to start rhythmically. You just understand music from that dynamic first, and you kind of grow from there.”
As Wolfgang notes, his foundational understanding of percussion is something he utilises across his now-multi-instrumental arsenal. “I play guitar like a drummer, I play bass like a drummer,” he says.
“Everything I start with is the rhythm of it,” he adds. “The rhythm section is tight because it’s my instincts.”
Wolfgang Van Halen is a proficient multi-instrumentalist, but explains how it’s “always drums first”. And that approach stems from how he was taught by his father.
In a 2023 interview with MusicRadar, he revealed drums were the only instrument Eddie properly taught him, and he was largely left to his own devices while learning guitar. “Other than [drums]… there was never a moment where Dad sat down like, ‘I’m gonna teach you how to do this,’” he revealed.
“I wouldn’t have had it any other way. I like how I was able to teach myself from looking at guitar tabs on the internet and just trying to replicate every one of my favourite songs.”
Back in 2023, Wolfgang also told the Talk Is Jericho podcast that his dad only got him a guitar after he has mastered the drums. “He had magazines on the table and was like, ‘do this and do this’… the second he saw I could do that he bought me a V drum kit and for my birthday the next year got me an acoustic kit,” he said.
In the same podcast, Wolfgang also praised Tool’s drumming for “expanding” his musical knowledge. “Tool was a big band for me… I noticed I became a better drummer when I learned how to play Tool songs,” he explained.
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Mike McCready says using a digital amp modeller has pushed him to play better than ever: “I just felt more confident”

For every guitarist who isn’t yet a digital amp modelling convert, there’s another who’s made the switch. Recently, the Black Crowes’ Rich Robinson spoke of his hesitancy around amp modellers, admitting that “they’re getting close” to the real thing, but noting the “symbiotic relationship” a guitarist has with their analogue amplifier.
But on the flip side, Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready has readily adopted a digital guitar rig, even admitting that doing so has made him a “better guitar player”.
Speaking to Guitar World in a new interview, McCready shares that he used a Fender Tone Master Pro – which we gave a strong 8/10 in our 2023 review – while touring Pearl Jam’s 2024 album Dark Matter, and it also makes up part of his home rig.
He does, however, admit that he’s still very partial to analogue gear – it’s just about striking the right balance.
“It’s a mixture of modelling and real amps, so I keep both the analogue and digital worlds,” McCready says. “I love the Tone Master… I play on it every day. I can pick up any kind of pedal on that thing and it sounds pretty great.”
On Pearl Jam’s Dark Matter tour, McCready ran the Tone Master Pro through Fender Tone Master FRFR (full range, flat response) cabs. He says his current rig – newer digital technology combined with classic analogue gear – has made him a sharper guitar player.
“I know there’s purists that probably aren’t into that, but I felt like my amp modelling system along with the old analogue stuff has made me a better guitar player,” he continues.
“It was the consistency of the amps over the Dark Matter tour that pushed me to play better than I have ever done. I just felt more confident.”
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Plug in and play 500 miles away: how to set up Lutefish for guitarists

Ad Feature with Lutefish
The Lutefish Stream is a very capable solution for jamming remotely, in real time, with musicians up to 500 miles away, one that aims to get past the normal roadblocks that lead to session-ruining latency and frustration in online jam sessions. For bandmates who aren’t all in the same city, or just don’t want to have to deal with the traffic and the gear-lugging and the time commitment that can come with piling into a practice studio, it’s a gamechanger!
Making connections

So, how do you set the Lutefish Stream up if you’re a guitarist? At first blush, the Lutefish Stream resembles an audio interface – but it’s not quite the same. Most importantly, there’s no computer connected to the Stream – instead, the Stream sends audio directly through an ethernet cable connected to your router to reduce latency. The Stream cannot connect to your network via Wi-Fi, you must use an Ethernet cable. This is a big part of what makes the connection fast enough for playing music in real time.
The audio connectors on the device include two mono combo XLR/¼” inputs with individual gain controls and two headphone outputs for your preferred connector size (⅛” or ¼”). There’s also a talkback mic that transmits your voice – or acoustic instrument – over the same stream as the rest of the audio.
The very first step is powering the unit up – the Lutefish is powered by a USB-C cable, and needs to be connected with the included USB-C power brick. Once it’s powered up and connected to your router via the included ethernet cable, it’s time to get it online. First, log into Lutefish.com, and go to the account settings page. Choose ‘device setup’ to ‘add new device’, and enter the serial number on the bottom of your Stream. If your Stream is powered on and connected to the internet – it’ll be showing a solid blue light. If so, you’ll get a message that reads “device connected”, and you’re ready to jam.
Using a mic

There are a few ways you can set up the stream as a guitarist. For more control over your sound, plug a microphone directly into the Lutefish stream. This is great for acoustic guitarists and singer/songwriters, as the two inputs let you use one mic for your guitar and another for your vocals – meaning a clearer mix for your bandmates, and clearer monitoring for yourself.
For electric players, you can mic up an amplifier as you would if you were recording with an interface – this will give you and your bandmates a great sound, of course, but it might not be ideal if you have neighbours or flatmates, and you want to turn your amp up to its sweet spot.
Going direct

If you want to avoid any noise complaints, going direct is the way! Thanks to the combo nature of the Lutefish’s input jacks, you can take whatever your favourite direct solution is – such as the IR-loaded line output on the back of your amplifier or a multi-effects unit – and go straight into the unit. If you play acoustic and have a pickup system in your guitar, you can go straight in with an instrument cable – or go through your favourite effects.
If your approach is a little more in-the-box, you could also take a ¼” line-out from your audio interface of choice and route that into the Lutefish. This will let you apply software effects and amp modelling to your guitar, while still going straight into the Lutefish – but keep an eye on your buffer size, as you’ll want to make sure you’re playing with the lowest latency possible.
Talkback only

In a pinch, you could simply engage the talkback microphone. This will also transmit your voice, so you won’t need to worry about leaning over to engage the talkback microphone.
There are a couple of downsides to this simpler setup, however – if you’re singing, you can’t balance your voice against your guitar, and depending on the space you’re in, this might lead to a bit of a boomy sound. It definitely won’t sound as good as using dedicated mics for your guitar and voice, or a built-in pickup.
Scheduling a jam session
First, make sure that you’ve connected with your bandmates on the Lutefish network by searching for their usernames and sending them a connect invite. You can schedule a Jam right from the main bar at the top of lutefish.com. Once you join a session on your device, you’ll be able to see your bandmates as if it’s a standard video call – but the audio will be going through the Lutefish Stream’s low-latency connection! This separate approach leaves as much bandwidth and processing power available for the most important part of any jam – the audio – to reach your bandmates’ ears unimpeded.
If you’ve picked a good setup for your instrument and your playing situation, you should have no trouble playing with your bandmates remotely. The Lutefish Stream can provide latency under 30ms, depending on connection speed and distance – which is great for a natural-feeling session. Once you’ve got a jam going, you can adjust your mix with the dedicated mixer panel, accessible via the controls in the top-right corner – or simply use the hardware gain controls to get the right balance. You can also add basic reverb effects, which is brilliant for elevating your guitar playing or singing and making a session feel even more real!
Find out more at lutefish.com.
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IK Multimedia ToneX Heiga Studios Amp Series review – a collection of all-star amps taken from a world-class studio gives Tonex a serious quality boost

$69.99 (individual amps from $9.99), tone.net
People who work in pro recording studios spend all day every day doing creative stuff, surrounded by piles of top-quality gear – and they get paid for it. Is it any wonder they always seem to be so infuriatingly nice?
- READ MORE: Universal Audio Paradise Guitar Studio review – all the classic tones you need for home recording?
More importantly for the purposes of this review, studio professionals are the real experts when it comes to capturing the sounds of great guitar amplifiers. So in theory at least, when the people who run Heiga Studios in Miami decide to contribute a library of amp models to the ToneX digital platform, it should be seriously good.
Heiga Studios Amp Series. Image: Press
Heiga Studios Amp Series For ToneX – what is it?
Just to be clear, this is not an app: ToneX is IK Multimedia’s modelling ecosystem, and the Heiga Studios Amp Series is simply a collection of extra sounds for it. So if you’re not using ToneX software or one of the ToneX pedals, you’re welcome to read the rest of this review but you might feel a bit like a pigeon fancier at a dog show.
As long as you are already on board the good ship ToneX, what you’re getting here – for a very reasonable price – is a total of 142 models captured from 10 of the amps in Heiga’s collection. Those amps are a Fender Twin Reverb, a Fender Hot Rod DeVille, a Vox AC30, a Roland JC-120, a Marshall JCM900, a Peavey 51050 II, a Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Solo, a Fuchs Mantis, a Bogner Uberschall Rev Blue and – for the bass thwompers – an Aguilar Tone Hammer 700.
Notice anything? If you include the JCM900, five of the nine guitar amps are of the high-gain variety. That’s the kind of ratio that should have metalheads piqued.
Amps in ToneX desktop app. Image: Press
Heiga Studios Amp Series For ToneX – sounds
I tested these sounds two ways: firstly by loading up the amps in the main ToneX desktop app and auditioning them through studio monitors; and secondly by using ToneX Editor to load two at a time into a ToneX One pedal then recording them. Initial setup via the IK Product Manager app was a faff, but that’s not Heiga’s fault… and the sounds themselves are glorious.
As a Vox obsessive, I had to start with the AC30 captures – and while only a tiny logo distinguishes the Heiga ones from IK’s own in ToneX Editor, telling them apart by ear is a lot easier. The factory sounds are pretty good, but the new ones are sublime: rich and lifelike at all levels of crunchiness, perhaps even better than the ones in UA Paradise Guitar Studio.
The clean stuff also has plenty of depth – this might be the first time I’ve actually enjoyed playing through a JC-120 – but the high-gain amps are where things get really impressive. There’s lots of tonal variety between the different models, and none of the oversaturated washiness that often characterises this kind of modelling: no matter how much bite you want or don’t want in the midrange, the top end always remains crisp yet smooth. I don’t think Heiga Studios is particularly associated with metal bands, but on this evidence maybe it should be.
Amp model info. Image: Press
Heiga Studios Amp Series For ToneX – should I buy it?
Just as my theory about studio professionals predicted, these amps sound top-class – so if you are a ToneX user and you fancy a realism upgrade, this library will absolutely provide it. The only pity is that it’s limited to one software system – a system that, incidentally, I wasn’t able to get working within my DAW of choice, Logic Pro. I’d love to see a standalone Heiga plugin, making these excellent models – especially the metally ones – easily available to everyone.
ToneX Editor. Image: Press
Heiga Studios Amp Series For ToneX alternatives
Last time I checked, there were 639 ‘tone partner’ collections for ToneX available through tone.net – so you might want to have a browse through that lot for a start. Otherwise, you have strong options for home recording in Positive Grid Bias X ($149) and Universal Audio Paradise Guitar Studio ($149).
The post IK Multimedia ToneX Heiga Studios Amp Series review – a collection of all-star amps taken from a world-class studio gives Tonex a serious quality boost appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.
Ross “The Boss” Friedman, pioneering Dictators and Manowar guitarist, dies aged 72

Ross “The Boss” Friedman, guitarist and co-founder of The Dictators and Manowar has died at the age of 72.
Friedman passed away on 26 March, weeks after publicly disclosing that he had been diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). News of his death was confirmed via a statement posted to his official Instagram account.
“It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of the Bronx’ own Ross ‘The Boss’, Friedman who died last night after battling ALS,” the statement reads. “A legendary guitarist and beloved father, his music and spirit impacted fans around the world as much as you impacted him. We are grateful for the outpouring of love and support you all have shown throughout his career and especially these last few months.”
“His music meant everything to him & his guitar was his life’s breath,” it continues. “This insidious disease took that away from him. His legacy with The Dictators, Manowar, Ross the Boss Band and other collabs will live on forever in our hearts and ears.”
Born in the Bronx, New York, Friedman emerged in the early 1970s as a co-founder of The Dictators alongside bassist and songwriter Andy Shernoff and rhythm guitarist Scott Kempner. Formed in 1972, the band became an early fixture of the city’s developing punk scene, releasing three albums during its initial run: The Dictators Go Girl Crazy! (1975), Manifest Destiny (1977) and Bloodbrothers (1978). Of those, Manifest Destiny reached the Billboard 200, marking the group’s only chart appearance.
Following his tenure with The Dictators, Friedman briefly performed with Shakin’ Street, who toured as a support act for Black Sabbath, before linking up with bassist Joey DeMaio to form Manowar in 1980. During his decade with the band, Friedman recorded on six studio albums, including 1988’s Kings of Metal, one of their most commercially successful releases.
In 1984, Manowar set the Guinness World Record for the loudest band in the world, a record they have since broken on multiple occasions.
Friedman left Manowar in 1989 but continued working steadily as both a recording and touring musician. He later fronted the Ross the Boss Band, revisiting material from across his catalogue, and played with a range of acts including Manitoba’s Wild Kingdom, The Hellacopters, The Nomads and The Brain Surgeons. He also reunited with The Dictators on several occasions, with the band releasing their sixth studio album in 2024.
Friedman was inducted into the Hall of Heavy Metal History in 2017. A tribute from the organisation describes Ross as a “pioneering force in both punk and heavy metal”: “His powerful playing, unmistakable tone, and uncompromising spirit helped shape generations of musicians and fans around the world… From the raw energy of early punk to the epic scale of heavy metal, his work left a lasting mark on the genre and on everyone who experienced it.”
“Beyond his achievements on stage and in the studio, Ross was deeply respected by his peers and beloved by fans across continents. His legacy will live on through his music, his influence, and the countless lives he touched.”
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Rush have performed for the first time since reforming – and you can watch it right now

Rush made their long-awaited return to stage at the 2026 Juno Awards, performing live for the first time in over 11 years. The appearance also marks the band’s first performance together since the death of drummer and lyricist Neil Peart in 2020.
For the evening, frontman Geddy Lee and guitarist Alex Lifeson were joined by new touring drummer Anika Nilles and keyboardist Loren Gold, who will also be part of Rush’s upcoming Fifty Something tour. Together, the band kicked off the ceremony with a surprise performance of Finding My Way, the opening track from Rush’s 1974 debut album.
Asked why they chose that particular song, Lee tells reporters [via Blabbermouth], “You really can’t ask us what song to play. If we have to choose one song, it’s almost impossible. We have so many. So we just asked management, and they said first song, first album.”
“Also, it’s the only song we know how to play,” Lifeson adds.
Rush will take this lineup on the road for the Fifty Something tour starting this June, with dates across Canada, the US, and Mexico. The initial 22 dates sold out immediately, prompting the addition of more shows. The tour now totals 58 shows across 24 cities, with over half a million tickets sold for 2026.
Sharing his excitement about the upcoming run, Lee says: “We can’t wait to get back to all these cities we haven’t played in so long, as well as hitting some new places we’ve yet to play. Both Alex and I are loving the hours of rehearsal time we’re spending with Anika and now Loren, learning around 40 songs which will enable us to keep the shows evolving, playing some different songs on different nights.”
“We are thrilled that many of our longstanding crew have come back to help us design the kind of Rush show that fans have grown accustomed to expect from us. We dearly hope you will come along and help us celebrate 50 years of Rush music, while giving Neil the long overdue tribute he so richly deserves.”
Watch Rush’s full Juno Awards performance below.
Check out the full list of dates for Rush’s Fifty Something reunion tour on the band’s official website.
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Totally Guitars Weekly Update March 27, 2026
March 27, 2026 Continuing my John Prine kick from last week – this week we added a lesson on a bunch of intros to his songs, which was then added to our John Prine Package, along with a Fly On The Wall lesson. I played some bits of a couple of his songs, which led […]
The post Totally Guitars Weekly Update March 27, 2026 appeared first on On The Beat with Totally Guitars.
“I don’t think I’ve ever played such long solos in my life!”: Paul Gilbert’s unplanned 1991 tribute to Jimi Hendrix is being released digitally for the first time

When your entire set falls through at the very last minute, what do you do? Go out and perform some crowd-pleasing Jimi Hendrix covers, of course. That’s exactly what Paul Gilbert did when a health emergency rendered blues guitarist Albert Collins unable to join him onstage at the Frankfurt Jazz Festival back in 1991.
Despite the panic that coloured the few hours Gilbert had to practice the impromptu set, the unplanned tribute to Hendrix was a huge success. In fact, it was so good that it’s now being released digitally, to mark the 25 year anniversary of the marvellous set that happened by pure chance.
Originally, Gilbert and Collins were set to headline the festival with a joint set. When Collins was forced to pull out, the promoters begged Gilbert to go out and perform regardless. “The promoter was panicking and asked me to be the headlining act instead,” Gilbert explains [via Guitar World]. “I didn’t have a band with me. And I didn’t have any solo material prepared.”
However, Gilbert improvised. He recruited a bassist and drummer from the band Ten Years After, and then the trio started brainstorming. They quickly discovered a common ground in Hendrix. “The only thing I could think to do was to quickly rehearse some Jimi Hendrix songs,” Gilbert admits.
The crux of the issue, however, was still the time restraints. So Gilbert came up with an ingenious plan: “I had to make the solos long enough to fill up a whole set… I told the promoter, ‘We only have time to learn 5 songs, so I’m going to have to play REALLY LONG SOLOS.’”
That’s how Gilbert and two parts of Ten Years After ended up onstage having only prepared five Hendrix songs. However, the limited setlist of Red House, Hey Joe, Highway Chile, Midnight and Purple Haze was scattered with plenty of long, self-indulgent solos – and it went down a storm. “It turned out great,” Gilbert recalls. “I don’t think I’ve ever played such long solos in my life!”
“In the end, the pressure of pulling everything together quickly in front of an audience,” he adds. “And being worry-free about endless guitar jamming may actually have brought me closer to Hendrix’s spirit than if I had planned everything while sitting in a chair.”
Gilbert goes on to praise Hendrix’s music for lending itself so well to a good ol’ jam. “Jimi’s songs are such great vehicles for jamming,” he notes. “His writing invites musicians to play with each other and listen to each other. The songs are flexible enough to allow musicians to keep their own style and still make the song work.”
Gilbert’s Tribute To Jimi Hendrix album is set to drop on 12 June. The first track, Purple Haze, is available now.
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“We were ludicrously compliant”: Brian May looks back on why Queen were “terrified” recording their first album

Today, Queen are globally recognised as one of the best-selling rock acts of all time. However, things were very different back in the early 1970s. When the now-rock legends were recording their 1973 debut, there was no guarantee it would be a hit – so the entire period of recording at Soho’s Trident Studios was a “terrifying”, high-stakes process.
Without the ability to see into the future, the young band had no clue of the success that lie ahead. As a result, it meant that every second of their self-titled debut mattered – it had to be all killer, no filler. “We were ludicrously compliant on the first album because we were terrified that it was going to be out only chance to record,” guitarist Brian May tells Uncut.
With the pressure well and truly on, Queen would put everything into their two year stint recording in Trident Studios between 1971 and 1972. And it was a respectable studio for a young band to be using – David Bowie, Lou Reed and Paul McCartney were also all using the studio across the same period. However, they had a far less glamorous experience, having to settle on cheaper, late-night slots.
“We’d start our sessions near midnight,” drummer Roger Taylor recalls. “By six in the morning we’d have to reset everything in the studio ready for whoever had booked in the next day.”
As a result, it meant that 1973’s Queen left the band slightly unsatisfied. Inspired by the Beatles’ knack for “using the studio as an instrument”, Queen also wanted to have full reign over the studio layout – but having to reset things every evening meant they were unable to do so. “We wanted drums that throbbed and reverberated and soaked into the rest of the studio, which meant reorganising the entire space around the drum kit,” Taylor explains.
“That’s the big difference between Queen and Queen II,” he continues. “The second album is the sound of us starting to get the sound we wanted.”
It’s a sentiment shared by May. “Queen II was the first time we could behave as if the studio belonged to us,” he says. “We’d been rehearsing ourselves to death, and by this point we are very ready. All this stuff is already prepared, we just have to fulfil the promise that was in our heads.”
Despite coming just one year after their debut, 1974’s Queen II was far more grandiose and ambitious. The cover art alone has stood the test of time, with the artwork serving as the most iconic snap of the band to this day. “We weren’t turning up and plugging in and playing, as we did on the first album,” May notes.
This involved whacky moves like bassist John Deacon crafting a DIY amp from a radio speaker from a recycled circuit board, a device that captured a sound not unlike a synth. “We were finally able to orchestrate these huge arrangements that were in my head. We were able to build orchestras in the sky.”
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Joe Bonamassa Announces “The Spirit Of Rory Live From Cork,” Celebrating Rory Gallagher’s Legacy
Press Release
Source: Noble PR
Joe Bonamassa has announced the upcoming release of The Spirit Of Rory Live From Cork, a powerful live album and film capturing his deeply personal tribute to Irish blues guitar legend Rory Gallagher, recorded during a series of sold-out performances in Gallagher’s hometown of Cork, Ireland last summer. The album will be released FridayJune 19th via Bonamassa’s own J&R Adventures, with pre-orders starting today.
Listen to the first three live singles: “Walk On Hot Coals (Live)”, “Bullfrog Blues (Live)”, and “Who’s That Coming? (Live)”.
Watch the live performance for “Walk On Hot Coals”.
Pre-Order the album from UK & Europe. Pre-Order the album from North America.
For Bonamassa, the project was never approached as a casual homage. Gallagher’s music has been part of his life since childhood, and the weight of performing it in Cork, with the blessing of Rory’s family and in front of audiences who carry his legacy so personally, was something he felt immediately. “I never had the honour to meet him, but his music and musicianship loom large in my life,” Bonamassa writes in a personal foreword accompanying the release. “From my first time hearing Irish Tour ’74 I was captivated by the sheer intensity of the man and the ferocity of his approach to the electric blues.”
That impact began early. “I remember that voice and a singular guitar tone slicing through the walls of my bedroom at a very young age,” Bonamassa recalls. “My father, who exposed me to so many of the great guitarists of his era, was quick to encourage me to listen to Rory and glean what I could.”
What began as an invitation from the Gallagher family quickly became something much larger. “All these many years later I was asked by Rory’s family to consider performing some of his material and paying tribute to him at a venue in Cork,” he writes. “The very thought frightened me. Yes, I was scared to even attempt it but at the same time so honoured that his family felt that I might be up to the task.” Rather than try to reinvent the material, Bonamassa focused on meeting it with the right spirit. “I felt the very best I could hope for was to approach his catalog with humility and reverence.”
That humility shaped the project from the start. In 2024, Bonamassa traveled to Cork to announce the tribute with a small introductory performance for Rory’s family, local friends, and members of the press. The response was immediate and emotional, and what began as a single concert soon expanded into a three-night stand. “After the announcement, one show turned into three sold out shows,” Bonamassa writes. “I felt that my reputation was on the line with the Irish, but what a response!”

Joe Bonamassa – Photo Credit: Marcus Bird
By the time the band returned in 2025, the atmosphere around the performances had only intensified. “This was Rory’s town, and Rory’s people. We weren’t going to let them down,” Bonamassa says. “The crowds on those three nights were rowdy, raucous and Cork did their favourite son proud.” The result is a live document that feels charged by that setting – deeply felt, high-wire, and rooted in the connection between artist, audience, and place.Across 14 hand-picked songs, The Spirit Of Rory Live From Cork moves through the many sides of Gallagher’s catalogue – from the blistering attack of “Walk On Hot Coals”and “Bullfrog Blues” to the emotional sweep of “A Million Miles Away,” which will serve as the album’s focus track upon release. Other highlights include “Tattoo’d Lady,” “Bad Penny,” “I Fall Apart,” “Calling Card,” and “Cradle Rock,” each delivered with fire and conviction while honouring the shape and soul of the originals.
The release also captures several moments that carried special meaning across the Cork run, including Bonamassa’s performance of “As The Crow Flies” on Gallagher’s own 1930 National Triolian resonator guitar, loaned by the Cork Public Museum. It was a tangible connection to the artist whose presence still looms so large over the city and over generations of guitar players who followed him.
Additional footage, included on DVD and Blu-ray editions, expands the story with bonus material including The Inspiration of Rory, featuring conversations with Brian May and Slash, along with Rory’s Acoustic Guitar and Ballycotton – A Million Miles Away. Together, the audio and visual components offer a fuller picture of what these performances meant to Bonamassa, to Gallagher’s family, and to the fans who packed the room night after night.
In the end, Bonamassa sees the album as an offering – his band’s best attempt to honour a musician whose work helped shape his own. “What you hear on these recordings is our best effort to pay tribute to Rory Gallagher, a man I never met, but admire so deeply,” he writes. “His music is part of me and I’m grateful that we were able to contribute in some small way to his ongoing legacy.”
2. Walk On Hot Coals (Live)
3. Tattoo’d Lady (Live)
4. I Wonder Who (Live)
5. Calling Card (Live)
6. Who’s That Coming? (Live)
7. Messin’ With The Kid (Live)
8. Bullfrog Blues (Live)
9. Treat Her Right (Live)
10. Bad Penny (Live)
11. I Fall Apart (Live)
12. A Million Miles Away (Live)
13. As The Crow Flies (Live)
14. Back On My Stompin’ Ground (Live)
2. Cradle Rock
3. Walk On Hot Coals
4. Tattoo’d Lady
5. I Wonder Who
6. Calling Card
7. Who’s That Coming?
8. Messin’ With The Kid
9. Band Introductions
10. Bullfrog Blues
11. Treat Her Right
12. Bad Penny
13. I Fall Apart
14. A Million Miles Away
15. As The Crow Flies
16. Back On My Stompin’ Ground
17. Ballycotton (End Credits)
● Rory’s Acoustic Guitar
● The Inspiration of Rory (A Conversation with Brian May & Slash)
1. Cradle Rock (Live)
2. Walk On Hot Coals (Live)
3. Tattoo’d Lady (Live)
4. I Wonder Who (Live)
Side B
5. Calling Card (Live)
6. Who’s That Coming? (Live)
7. Messin’ With The Kid (Live)
8. Bullfrog Blues (Live)
9. Treat Her Right (Live)
10. Bad Penny (Live)
11. I Fall Apart (Live)
12. A Million Miles Away (Live)
13. As The Crow Flies (Live)
14. Back On My Stompin’ Ground (Live)
+Sold Out
April 24 – Rotterdam, NL – Rotterdam Rtm Stage
April 25 – Paris, FR – La Seine Musicale
April 27 – Esch-sur-Alzette, LU – Luxembourg Rockhal
April 29 – Mannheim, DE – SAP Arena
May 1 – Chemnitz, DE – Stadthalle Chemnitz
May 2 – Nürnberg, DE – Psd Bank Nürnberg Arena
May 3 – Zürich, CH – Hallenstadion
May 6 – London, UK – Royal Albert Hall
May 7 – London, UK – Royal Albert Hall
June 27 – Atlantic City, NJ – Ocean Casino Resort
June 28 – Newark, NJ – New Jersey Performing Arts Center
July 29 – Vienna, VA – Wolf Trap w/ Gov’t Mule
July 31 – Bangor, ME – Maine Savings Amphitheater w/ Gov’t Mule
August 1 – Gilford, NH – BankNH Pavilion w/ Gov’t Mule
August 3 – Hyannis, MA – Cape Cod Melody Tent
August 5 – Bridgeport, CT – Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater w/ JJ Grey & Mofro
August 7 – Selbyville, DE – Freeman Arts Pavilion
August 8 – Baltimore, MD – Pier Six Pavilion w/ Gov’t Mule
August 9 – Youngstown, OH – The Youngstown Foundation Amphitheatre w/ Gov’t Mule
August 12 – Highland Park, IL – Ravinia Festival
August 14 – Interlochen, MI – Kresge Auditorium
August 15 – Welch, MN – Treasure Island Resort & Casino w/ Gov’t Mule
August 16 – Lincoln, NE – Pinewood Bowl Theater w/ Gov’t Mule
August 19 – Cheyenne, WY – Cheyenne Civic Center
August 21 – Salt Lake City, UT – Eccles Theater
August 23 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre
EU FALL TOUR 2026October 21 – Helsinki, FL – Veikkaus Arena
October 23 – Stockholm, SE – Stockholm Avicii Arena
October 24 – Oslo, NO – Oslo Spektrum
October 25 – Gothenburg, SE – Göteborg Partille Arena
October 27 – Copenhagen, DK – K.B. Hallen København
October 29 – Rostock, DE – Stadthalle Rostock
October 30 – Berlin, DE – Uber Arena
October 31 – Dortmund, DE – Westfalenhalle
November 3 – Basel, CH – Baloise Session
November 4 – Milan, IT – Unipol Forum
Blues-rock superstar Joe Bonamassa is one of the most celebrated performing musicians of his generation. A five-time GRAMMY-nominated artist and 15-time Blues Music Award nominee – with four wins, he recently notched his 30th No. 1 album on the Billboard Blues Chart with B.B. King’s Blues Summit 100, extending his record for the most No. 1 albums in the chart’s history. With more than 50 releases spanning studio and live recordings, he has built a far-reaching, multi-genre catalogue.Beyond performing, Bonamassa plays a significant role in today’s blues landscape as a producer and curator. Working closely with Josh Smith, he has produced albums for artists including Joanne Shaw Taylor, Marc Broussard, Larry McCray, and Jimmy Hall through his Journeyman and KTBA labels. He also curates and headlines sold-out destination events like Keeping the Blues Alive at Sea and Sound Wave Beach Weekend, while his Keeping the Blues Alive Foundation has funded hundreds of music education projects across the country.
A dedicated student of the instrument, Bonamassa is also known as one of the world’s leading guitar collectors and historians, with a deep connection to the lineage of blues and rock. For more information, visit www.jbonamassa.com.



