Members of Fleetwood Mac appear to be teasing something on social media

Members of Fleetwood Mac appear to be teasing something on social media
Members of Fleetwood Mac appear to be teasing something on social media
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for NARAS

Are the members of Fleetwood Mac trying to tell us something? Based on some cryptic posts on social media, they just might have some news to share.

It all started when Mick Fleetwood shared video of him listening to “Frozen Love,” a track that appeared on Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham’s 1973 album, Buckingham Nicks, which they recorded before joining Fleetwood Mac.

“The marriage of Stevie and Lindsey, the marriage of coming into Fleetwood Mac when they did — it’s all in the song. It’s in the music,” Mick said of the track. “It’s magic then, magic now. What a thrill. Amen.”

While Mick could have just been reflecting on the past, Stevie and Lindsey were soon both sharing the post as an Instagram Story, along with two new posts of their own.

Stevie offered a post with the words “if you go forward,” written in cursive, while Lindsey shared a similarly styled post with the words “I’ll meet you there,” which are lyrics in “Frozen Love.”

The complimentary posts from Stevie and Lindsey are interesting considering the pair’s on-again/off-again relationship.

The two stars dated in the ’70s, but broke up in 1976 while they were in Fleetwood Mac. Their relationship has been tense over the years, and they had a final falling out in 2018, the same year Buckingham was fired from Fleetwood Mac. Nicks told Rolling Stone in October that the last time she spoke to Lindsey was for “about three minutes” at Christine McVie’s celebration of life in January 2023.

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Bruce Springsteen to be honored at the 2025 Academy Museum gala

Bruce Springsteen to be honored at the 2025 Academy Museum gala
Bruce Springsteen to be honored at the 2025 Academy Museum gala
Photo by Danny Clinch

Bruce Springsteen will be honored at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures annual fundraising gala this fall.

Springsteen, who won an Academy Award in 1994 for his song “Streets of Philadelphia,” is set to receive the inaugural Legacy Award, which “honors an artist whose body of work has inspired generations of storytellers and deeply influenced our culture.”

Springsteen will also perform at the event, which raises money to support the museum’s exhibitions, education initiatives and public programming.

Last year’s gala raised more than $11 million for the museum.

The fifth annual Academy Museum Gala, which will also honor actress Penélope Cruz, director Walter Salles and comedian Bowen Yang, will be held Oct. 18.

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Jimmy Page launches smaller Nymph edition of signature Sundragon amp

Jimmy Page launches smaller Nymph edition of signature Sundragon amp
Jimmy Page launches smaller Nymph edition of signature Sundragon amp
Disney/Michael J. Le Brecht II

Jimmy Page has announced a new version of his signature Sundragon amp, the Nymph.

The updated amp is a smaller edition of the original Sundragon, which was inspired by the amp Page used on Led Zeppelin‘s 1969 debut album.

“The idea came to us that we should create a new amp that embodies the sonic qualities I cherish in my favorite amplifiers, but in a smaller package,” Page says. “One that would be suitable for playing at home, at levels that wouldn’t disturb the neighbors, while retaining the tonal characteristics of the larger amps I love.”

Page first tested out a Nymph prototype following his surprise appearance at the 2023 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, during which he performed the famed Link Wray instrumental “Rumble.”

“Despite the excitement and focus that comes with just having played, I was keen to try the amp out with my double-neck Gibson,” Page recalls. “I put it through its paces, searching for familiar tones with the 6-string neck, and smiled. Then came the ultimate test: would this amp be able to stand up to the challenge of reproducing the increased output of the 12-string guitar?”

“To my amazement, not only did it reproduce the 12-string sounds — it did so with flying colors,” he continues. “I just threw my hands up. I’ve got to tell you, that amplifier is absolutely extraordinary!”

For more info, visit SundragonAmps.com.

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Joan Baez’s ‘Farewell, Angela’ getting 60th anniversary vinyl reissue

Joan Baez’s ‘Farewell, Angela’ getting 60th anniversary vinyl reissue
Joan Baez’s ‘Farewell, Angela’ getting 60th anniversary vinyl reissue
Craft Recordings

Joan Baez’s sixth studio album, Farewell, Angela, is getting a new vinyl reissue to mark the 60th anniversary of its release.

The record, Baez’s bestselling album, will be released Oct. 3 on 180-gram vinyl, marking the album’s first wide vinyl reissue in almost 40 years. It will also be released on standard and hi-res digital platforms.

Farewell, Angela, which peaked at #10 on the Billboard Pop Albums chart, features Baez’s first use of electric guitar. It has the artist mixing traditional folk standards with contemporary covers, including four Bob Dylan songs — “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue,” the title track, “Daddy, You’ve Been on My Mind” and “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” — plus songs written by Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger.

Farewell, Angela is available for preorder now.

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Annie Lennox to take part in London events surrounding release of ‘visual memoir’

Annie Lennox to take part in London events surrounding release of ‘visual memoir’
Annie Lennox to take part in London events surrounding release of ‘visual memoir’
Rizzoli International Publications

Annie Lennox is set to release the “visual memoir” Annie Lennox: Retrospective in September, and now she’s announced two special appearances in London to promote the book.

The Eurythmics singer will sit down for a conversation at the Emmanuel Centre on Sept. 24. She will then take part in a book signing at the Waterstones in Piccadilly on Sept. 27.

Ticket information for both events can be found at AnnieLennox.com.

Annie Lennox: Retrospective, dropping Sept. 16, features over 200 photographs that take fans chronologically through the legendary singer’s career. The book includes shots from her personal archives, as well as album covers and music video stills, covering Lennox’s time with Dave Stewart in Eurythmics to her solo career and more.

The book is available for preorder now.

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Cyndi Lauper kicks off final leg of Farewell Tour: ‘We want people to leave happy’

Cyndi Lauper kicks off final leg of Farewell Tour: ‘We want people to leave happy’
Cyndi Lauper kicks off final leg of Farewell Tour: ‘We want people to leave happy’
Live Nation

Cyndi Lauper‘s Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Farewell Tour began in October 2024 and has already traveled to the U.S., Canada, Paris and Japan. The final leg starts Thursday in Mansfield, Massachusetts. Cyndi tells ABC Audio what her initial concept was for what she says will be her final major tour.

“I said, ‘Well, if I’m gonna say goodbye, let me say goodbye the right way,'” she explains. “So that was the main thrust of it: that I was gonna bring people together, celebrate who I am now, and all the music that people listen to — share my story, let them know how important it is, how their stories are important [and] everybody’s story is important.”

“We’re a community of light, so why not bring people together and make them happy?” she notes. “And we want people to come to the show and leave happy.”

Cyndi says the reason she’s decided to stop touring has nothing to do with performing, and everything to do with what it takes for her to actually get to the stage so she can perform.

“The packing and unpacking is such a drag. And if you saw the luggage cart with my luggage,” she says. “So I won’t miss that. I’ll miss the people.”

But what’s good news for her fans is that Cyndi isn’t giving up the stage entirely.

“If I want to give a show, I’ll find a place I could stay in the same place and do a show … maybe two in a row, whatever it is. I’ll do that,” she says. “But on a tour, it’s really rough.” 

The tour is set to wrap Aug. 30 at the Hollywood Bowl.

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On This Day, July 17, 2011: Bruce Springsteen honored Clarence Clemons at New Jersey show

On This Day, July 17, 2011: Bruce Springsteen honored Clarence Clemons at New Jersey show
On This Day, July 17, 2011: Bruce Springsteen honored Clarence Clemons at New Jersey show

On This Day, July 17, 2011 …

At Wonder Bar in Asbury Park, New Jersey, Bruce Springsteen made a surprise appearance for a tribute to his late friend and E Street Band saxophonist Clarence Clemons, who had passed away in June of that year.

The 45-minute set for 400 fans included soul classics, as well as “Savin’ Up,” which Bruce wrote for Clemons’ 1983 album with the Red Bank Rockers.

Clemons was a member of Bruce’s E Street Band from 1974 until his passing in 2011 at the age of 69. He was posthumously inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the E Street Band in 2014.

In 2012, Springsteen chose Clarence’s nephew Jake Clemons to be the new E Street Band saxophonist. He has performed with them ever since.

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Bruce Springsteen lands his highest-grossing tour of his career

Bruce Springsteen lands his highest-grossing tour of his career
Bruce Springsteen lands his highest-grossing tour of his career
Sergione Infuso/Corbis via Getty Images

Bruce Springsteen continues to bring in the big bucks on tour.

Billboard reports that The Boss’ recent trek with the E Street Band, which kicked off in 2023 and wrapped on July 3 in Italy, was the biggest moneymaker of his career.

The tour, which consisted of 129 shows, brought in $729.7 million, with 4.9 million tickets sold. Those numbers handily surpass Springsteen’s previous highest-grossing tour, the 2012-13 Wrecking Ball World Tour, which brought in $347 million. It also sold more tickets than any previous Springsteen tour, also surpassing the Wrecking Ball World Tour, which sold 3.6 million tickets.

One reason for the increase in numbers is likely do to higher ticket prices. Billboard notes that for this tour, prices were 29% higher than they were for his The River Tour in 2016 and 2017. That tour brought in $200 million, as did The Rising Tour in 2002 and 2003, and The Magic Tour in 2007 and 2008. 

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Steve Miller Band cancels tour dates due to extreme weather

Steve Miller Band cancels tour dates due to extreme weather
Steve Miller Band cancels tour dates due to extreme weather
Brad Barket/Getty Images for Mount Sinai Health System

Steve Miller Band has canceled their upcoming tour due to the extreme weather conditions hitting the U.S.

“You make music with your instincts You live your life by your instincts Always trust your instincts…,” began a post on Miller’s social media accounts. “The Steve Miller Band has cancelled all of our upcoming tour dates.”

“The combination of extreme heat, unpredictable flooding, tornadoes, hurricanes and massive forest fires make these risks for you our audience, the band and the crew unacceptable,” the post continued. “So… You can blame it on the weather…The tour is cancelled.”

As for the future, the post, signed by Steve, the Band and the crew, notes, “Don’t know where, don’t know when… We hope to see you all again,” adding, “Wishing you all Peace, Love and Happiness, Please take care of each other.”

Steve Miller Band was due to kick off their tour on Aug. 15 in Bethel, New York, with dates confirmed through Nov. 8 in Anaheim, California.

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Connie Francis, ‘Pretty Little Baby’ singer, dies at 87

Connie Francis, ‘Pretty Little Baby’ singer, dies at 87
Connie Francis, ‘Pretty Little Baby’ singer, dies at 87
Erick Quituizaca

Singer Connie Francis, best known for her 1962 hit “Pretty Little Baby” and the 1961 song “Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool,” has died at the age of 87, her manager confirmed.

“It is with a heavy heart and extreme sadness that i inform you of the passing of my dear friend Connie Francis last night,” said her copyrights and royalties manager, Ron Roberts, in a post on social media. “I know that Connie would approve that her fans are among the first to learn of this sad news.”

“Pretty Little Baby” most recently became a viral song on TikTok, which Francis joined shortly after, and the 1962 song has been used in more than 17 million videos totaling more than 27 billion views globally on the app.

“I’m flabbergasted and excited about the huge buzz my 1962 recording of ‘Pretty Little Baby’ is making all over the world,” Francis said. “To think that a song I recorded 63 years ago is captivating new generations of audiences is truly overwhelming for me.”

“Pretty Little Baby” was released on Francis’ 1962 album, Connie Francis Sings “Second Hand Love” & Other Hits, which peaked at No. 111 on what was then known as the Billboard Top LPs chart.

In May of this year, “Pretty Little Baby” broke into Spotify’s Global and U.S. charts for the first time.

Francis was born Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero in Newark, New Jersey, on Dec. 12, 1937, and is estimated to have sold more than 200 million records worldwide in her lifetime.

ABC News’ Angeline Jane Bernabe contributed to this report.

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