Organizers of the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival have announced the festival's 2023 edition will take place June 15-18, 2023 on The Farm, located about 60 miles south of Nashville in Manchester, Tennessee.
Black Sabbath bandmates Ozzy Osbourne and Tony Iommi reunited to perform "Paranoid" onstage in their hometown of Birmingham, England, during the closing ceremony of the Commonwealth Games.
Garth Brooks has signed with National Geographic to narrate their upcoming docuseries "America's National Parks."
Better Than Ezra have announced a U.S. tour this Fall, called "Better Than Ezra: Legends of the Fall 2022 Tour."
BMI will honor songwriter, rapper, producer and actor Busta Rhymes with the BMI Icon Award at its 2022 R&B/Hip-Hop Awards on September 7.
In response to a lawsuit that claims Taylor Swift stole the lyrics to "Shake It Off," the pop superstar has declared that the lyrics for the song "were written entirely by me" and that she has "never heard" the song she has been accused of copying.
American rock band Weezer have canceled their Broadway Residency due "low ticket sales" and "high expenses."
Beyoncé and Madonna have teamed up for a new remix, "Break My Soul (The Queens Remix)."
An upcoming video for The 1975's fifth studio album Being Funny in a Foreign Language track "I'm in Love with You" will feature a cameo from Phoebe Bridgers, according to Pitchfork.
Country music superstar Carrie Underwood surprised everyone present at a Tennessee bar after she joined a band called The Heartshakers for an impromptu cover of a Stevie Nicks and Tom Petty classic.
R&B star Summer Walker has teamed with Amazon Music to release her Summer Series (Amazon Music Live) EP.
The Chemical Brothers are set to headline Ibiza club Amnesia's Closing Festival on October 15.
Chris Young and Kane Brown's "Famous Friends," the title track from Young's eighth studio album, has been certified double platinum by the RIAA.
Beyoncé's "Break My Soul" has jumped to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart.
In a recent interview with CNN, Roger Waters explained why he labelled President Joe Biden a "war criminal" in a video he projected to the audience before a show during his current "This Is Not a Drill Tour."