With the film Song Sung Blue due for release on Christmas Day, here’s a quick refresher course on Neil Diamond’s loping, midtempo ballad of the same name which became a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1972.
The song discusses (and demonstrates) the power of music to improve your mood. It walks the same fine line between happy and sad as Elton John’s 1984 hit “Sad Songs (Say So Much).” Diamond co-produced the smash with Tom Catalano, who would produce another Hot 100 No. 1 hit the following year for Helen Reddy, “Delta Dawn.”
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“Song Sung Blue” has an easygoing, amiable approach that echoes such 1940s hits as Bing Crosby’s “Swinging on a Star.” It has little of the dynamics and crackling tension of such earlier Diamond hits as “Cherry, Cherry,” “Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show” and “Cracklin’ Rosie.” You can make a good case that its success marked the moment that Diamond shifted from pop/rock stardom to being seen as one of the kings of adult contemporary.
Song Sung Blue is a narrative feature adaptation of Greg Kohs’ 2008 documentary of the same name. The film stars Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson as Milwaukee couple Mike and Claire Sardina, struggling musicians who become local stars performing as the Neil Diamond tribute band Lightning & Thunder. (He’s Lightning; she’s Thunder.) Because of Hudson’s previous success with rom-coms, you might think this is that kind of film. It isn’t: It’s surprisingly dramatic. Hudson received a Golden Globe nomination last week for her impressive performance.
Here are six things to know about Neil Diamond’s “Song Sung Blue.”
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 14:02:122025-12-15 14:02:126 Things to Know About Neil Diamond’s 1972 Hit ‘Song Sung Blue’ Before the Release of the Film of the Same Name
Dame Shirley Bassey is now officially part of the Harry Potter universe, decades after inspiring a cult favourite character.
The Welsh singer has contributed three original songs to the Harry Potter: The Full-Cast Audio Editions, a new audio version of the famous book series produced by Pottermore and Audible. Check out an exclusive preview clip of “You Stole My Cauldron But You Can’t Have My Heart” here.
Bassey was the original inspiration for the character Celestina Warbeck when J.K. Rowling was writing the novel series and has made appearances in books, video games and more. Writing in 2015, Rowling said that “Celestina is one of my favourite ‘off-stage’ characters in the whole series,” and that she “always imagined her to resemble Shirley Bassey in both looks and style.”
Speaking on the casting, Bassey says: “I’m honoured to have been an inspiration for the original character of Celestina Warbeck in the Harry Potter series. Bringing her music to life in this ambitious project from Pottermore Publishing and Audible was a joy, and I hope these songs throughout the audiobooks offer a truly magical listening experience for fans worldwide.”
Three original songs for the series, blending her iconic voice with a 17-piece big band. She recorded her parts at Miraval Studios in France, with the band recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London. Bassey released her most recent original music in 2020 on the LP I Owe It All To You.
The songs appear in the Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets audio cast which is released on Tuesday (Dec. 16).
Bassey is the latest A-list star to join the new Audible productions, which will continue to be released over the coming months. The cast is led by Hugh Laurie, who voices Albus Dumbledore, with Matthew Macfadyen as Lord Voldemort, Riz Ahmed as Professor Snape and Michelle Gomez as Professor McGonagall.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 14:02:112025-12-15 14:02:11Dame Shirley Bassey Provides Original Songs for Harry Potter Audiobook
After debuting this year on the Billboard charts with her third studio album Latinaje, Cazzu is gearing up for her first U.S. concert run. The Argentine star is set to hit the road next year with the 2026 Latinaje Tour, Billboard can announce exclusively today (Dec. 15).
Promoted by Live Nation, the seven-date trek will kick off on April 30 at the San Jose Civic theater in San Jose, California, making stops in key cities like Los Angeles and New York before wrapping up on May 10 at the 713 Music Hall in Houston, Texas.
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Tickets go on sale Thursday (Dec. 18) at 10:00 a.m. local time on the Live Nation website, with an artist presale on Tuesday (Dec. 16) from 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. (local time) and additional Live Nation and Ticketmaster presales on Wednesday (Dec. 17) during the same timeframe.
The announcement follows Cazzu’s recent arena tour across Latin America and marks a milestone as she expands into the U.S. for the first time following the success of Latinaje. Released in April 2025 under Dale Play/Rimas, the 14-track LP — which explores love in all its forms — debuted in May at No. 4 on Billboard’s Top Latin Pop Albums chart and at No. 48 on Top Latin Albums.
“I’m a bit ignorant about managing badges or when one earns medals, it’s a strange feeling,” Cazzu said to Billboard then. “But being on the charts makes me very happy because I think that basically determines that people are liking the album, so it fills me with great satisfaction.”
Meanwhile, the set’s track “Con Otra” spent eight weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Argentina Hot 100 and remains in the top 10 after 37 weeks on the chart. Midway through the year, Latinaje was also highlighted by Billboard editors among The 25 Best Latin Albums of 2025 So Far.
Check out Cazzu’s announced dates for her 2026 Latinaje Tour in the U.S. below:
April 30 – San Jose, CA – San Jose Civic
May 1 – San Diego, CA – Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre
May 2 – Inglewood, CA – YouTube Theater
May 6 – New York, NY – The Theater at Madison Square Garden
May 8 – San Antonio, TX – Boeing Center at Tech Port
May 9 – Irving, TX – The Pavillion at Toyota Music Factory
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 14:02:112025-12-15 14:02:11Cazzu Sets 2026 Latinaje Tour, Her First-Ever in the U.S.: Here Are All the Dates
K-pop superstars ENHYPEN are not wasting any time between albums. The seven-man group announced on Monday morning (Dec. 15) that they will follow-up June’s sixth mini album, DESIRE : UNLEASH on Jan. 16 with their seventh mini-album, THE SIN : VANISH.
According to a release announcing the upcoming EP, it will launch a brand-new series called “The Sin,” which is centered “on the motif of ‘sin’” and marks the beginning of a new narrative arc within the group’s “dark fantasy universe…. Set within the group’s established narrative universe, the album explores an absolute taboo condemned by the vampire society.”
The upcoming release will reportedly follow a pair of loves who’ve been forced into exile to protect their bond, “where desire, sacrifice and forbidden choices collide.” At press time no track list or singles have been announced for the latest project from JUNGWON, HEESEUNG, JAY, JAKE, SUNGHOON, SUNOO and NI-KI.
ENHYPEN united Beliebers and ENGENE last month when the K-pop group dropped their festive cover of Justin Bieber‘s holiday classic “Mistletoe” as part of Apple Music’s 2025 Carols Covered collection. The version of Bieber’s 2011 favorite — which ran up to No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 14 years ago — hews pretty closely to JB’s original with the men taking turns singing lead while the rest of the crew provide killer harmonies.
The news of January’s seventh EP comes after DESIRE : UNLEASH debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200, just months after ENHYPEN made their historic Coachella Festival debut on the Sahara Stage. In addition to new music, the band will stay busy on the road next year with a stop at the inaugural edition of the Hello, Melbourne K-pop festival at Flemington Racecourse in Melbourne, Australia on March 14 alongside TREASURE and Taemin.
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With 47 concerts and nearly 90,000 tickets sold, Rozalén was the highest-grossing female artist on Spain’s national tour charts in 2024, according to the Asociación de Promotores Musicales de España (APM).
“It’s been years of nonstop work, starting in very small venues to now performing in Spain’s biggest arenas,” says Rozalén, an artist known for her intimate songs and a voice that evokes iconic Latin American singer-songwriters, despite being Spanish. “I think we’re living a really sweet moment, and maybe we’re reaching that point of being established.”
That idea of “being established” can also apply to Spain’s music market. Compact but powerful, the country that saw the international success of artists like Raphael, Joaquín Sabina, Joan Manuel Serrat, Mecano and, more recently, Alejandro Sanz, is now experiencing a new era. Rosalía is one of the most talked-about artists globally today, and others like Pablo Alborán, Melendi and Aitana are making waves internationally. At the same time, Spain’s robust circuit of concerts, as well as 900-plus yearly music festivals, ensures a steady flow of local, Latin American and international music within its borders.
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Beyond its thriving market, Spain remains an inexhaustible creative force. After hitting its lowest revenue point in 2013 (159.7 million euros [$185.9 million]), its music market has been steadily growing across all sectors. According to Promusicae, by the end of 2024, the market was valued at 568.8 million euros ($662 million) compared with 519 million euros ($604 million) in 2023. Midyear data for 2025 also shows that revenue from music consumption in Spain increased by 10.4% compared with the first half of 2024.
Live music has also been booming. According to the APM, revenue from ticket sales reached 725.6 million euros ($844.5 million) in 2024, marking a 25.3% increase from the previous year and the third consecutive year of growth in the sector.
To celebrate this remarkable musical year, Billboard gathered five Spanish artists representing different genres, styles, generations and backgrounds, united by their impactful music: Singer-songwriter Alborán just wrapped up a Latin American tour in December; Ana Mena is starring in a new movie; Vanesa Martín is preparing for a tour of the United States and Latin America; Omar Montes is working on a reggaetón EP; and Rozalén is taking a well-deserved break after her exhaustive tour. All will be part of Billboard No. 1s España, the first Billboard No. 1s event outside the United States, hosted by Starlite in Madrid on Dec. 15.
Alborán
Pablo Pacheco
Rozalén
Courtesy of GTS/Sony Music Spain
What’s the current vibe in Spain and its music scene?
Pablo Alborán: I feel like Spain is in a phase of huge artistic energy — there’s so much new talent, bold ideas and a curious audience. That pushes you to be brave and keep growing. My new album, KMO, is both wild and classic. It has experimental elements but also a lot of roots. The music scene here is encouraging artists to explore and experiment more.
Ana Mena: We’re in such an exciting and positive moment — not just for music in Spain but for Spanish-language music worldwide. You can see it growing year by year. In Spain, there’s such a promising wave of young artists breaking barriers, something that used to be harder. But in the past five years, we’ve seen careers crossing borders.
Omar Montes: The music scene is growing like crazy right now because we’ve got so many urban artists who are killing it. Thanks to them, we’re reaching audiences all over the world.
Vanesa Martín: Spain’s music scene feels alive, awake, with young artists making a strong impact and an audience more open than ever to diverse sounds. That’s exciting. There’s this beautiful energy, like we’re all looking ahead but staying rooted in our identity.
Rozalén: There are more bands and projects than ever. There’s an overwhelming amount of festivals and music — it’s wild. But luckily, people are responding to all of it. There’s a big need to experience music. It feels like we’re in a sweet spot. Hopefully, it won’t burst.
There’s been a lot of talk about the explosion of live music in Spain. Do you feel the excitement surrounding that?
Montes: People are going to live shows much more now. For example, I spent half a million euros on the set design for my tour. I re-created my neighborhood — three stories high — and I bring my whole neighborhood vibe to my shows, like the village festivals. This level of detail wasn’t as common before.
Mena: There are so many festivals and opportunities to perform live. You see a lot of Latin artists; the lineups in Spain are packed with artists from all over the world.
Martín: Live music in Spain has become a refuge and a celebration. People want to connect, feel, experience, sing and share emotions together. That’s making live music bigger and more important than ever. It’s inspiring for me as an artist to be part of this moment, improving my performances and growing alongside it.
Rozalén: I’ve noticed nights in Madrid where there are five, six, even eight big concerts happening and they’re all sold out. I guess people, after not being able to embrace each other for so long, are eager to live everything fully now.
Mena
Diego Marin
How has Latin music — meaning, music coming from Latin America — influenced your own music and the market in Spain?
Montes: Without Latin music, especially in urban and reggaetón genres, we wouldn’t have those styles in Spain. The pioneers of those rhythms — like Daddy Yankee and Nicky Jam — set the foundation, and we’ve absorbed that and built on it.
Alborán: Latin music has always been a part of my life — I grew up with ballads, boleros and Latin pop. Its impact on the Spanish market has been beautiful because it’s created collaborations, cultural exchanges and blends that enrich everyone. It’s like a growing bridge. In my new album, for example, I experimented with salsa and merengue and worked with Colombian producer Julio Reyes, along with musicians from different cities and countries. That kind of diversity adds so much depth.
Rozalén: You can feel the Latin influence in my music from the very first album. Even though my music is eclectic, there’s always a Latin touch. Traveling has played a big role in that — I’ve absorbed so much during my trips. I’m really drawn to folklore and the roots of each place, especially the African roots that everything stems from. My music features norteño, ranchera, rock, cumbia, champeta, Cuban son — it’s all there.
Conversely, do you feel like Latin America and the U.S. Latin market are more open to Spanish artists now?
Alborán: Definitely. There’s a mutual curiosity that’s leading to amazing collaborations. I feel like Latin America and the U.S. Latin market see Spanish artists with more warmth and connection now. When doors open both ways, music becomes freer. Thanks to the Spanish language, music is music. It doesn’t matter where the artist is from unless their roots play a big role in the arrangement of the songs.
Mena: Things are definitely improving. Every time I go there, they treat me so well. I’m incredibly grateful. Of course, it takes a lot of hard work, just like in my own country. I started working when I was 8 or 9 years old, and everything I’ve achieved has been through sacrifice and consistency.
Rozalén: I think the connection is growing stronger. Spaniards now proudly say we feel like part of the Latin world, and I think Latin America sees us as siblings. The bond has always been there, but now it feels more equal, which I love.
Montes: There’s still room for growth. We welcome Latin artists more than they welcome us. Maybe they struggle to connect with our “flamenquito” vibe. I think mixing flamenco with urban genres like reggaetón, trap or Afrobeat can help make it more accessible.
What makes Spanish music or the current movement in Spain special right now?
Martín: It’s bold. It’s mixed. And it has a poetic touch that’s uniquely ours, blending tradition with modernity without losing its identity. There’s honesty and personality in what artists are creating, and that’s connecting with people.
Rozalén: It’s hard not to mention Rosalía. We’ve never had a Spanish artist who’s been so massive and international before. She’s huge and everyone is talking about her. And she doesn’t forget her roots or the flamenco essence, which is such a big part of Spain’s identity.
Alborán: Spain has a very unique kind of honesty right now. Our flamenco roots play a big role globally. I love seeing voices that weren’t mainstream before now becoming references. Early in my career, some radio stations wouldn’t play my music because my voice sounded “too flamenco,” but now it’s the opposite — they want more of that personality in my songs.
Martín
Salva Musté
Montes
Salva Musté
Ana, do you feel like there’s a pop comeback?
Mena: I love pop! I think there’s always room for everything. Urban and pop sometimes follow the same path. But it’s great to hear more organic classics, rock hits and older songs in the top charts. Maybe young people are discovering classics on TikTok or younger audiences have fewer prejudices.
What excites you about 2026?
Montes: I’m releasing a new EP with old-school reggaetón vibes, like the style of Héctor el Father. I want to go back to the roots and bring that sound back.
Alborán: I’m excited to keep creating without rushing, but with passion. I’ve got new songs taking shape, exciting collaborations, and I’m dreaming of an incredible tour. After a tough year with my family — one of my relatives underwent chemo and a bone marrow transplant but recovered — I’m entering the new year with hunger for experiences and opportunities.
Mena: I’m thrilled to finish my album and go on tour with it, visiting Mexico, Argentina and the U.S. again to promote my music. Plus, I’m getting back into acting. On Jan. 23, a MotoGP movie called Idols will premiere, where I play a tattoo artist. Fun fact: I didn’t have any tattoos when we filmed, but now I do!
Martín: I’m starting to spend more time in Mexico and I’m loving it. It’s such a multicultural, magnetic place. I’ve got a tour in Latin America and the U.S. coming in May, new songs and some exciting collaborations lined up.
Rozalén: For me, I’m looking forward to taking a step back after such a busy year and seeing what’s next.
Billboard No. 1s, in its first edition outside the United States, celebrates artists who’ve had hits on Billboard charts in Spain and beyond. This inaugural event will take place Dec. 15 at IFEMA Madrid as part of Starlite Madrid. Other performers include Rosana, Chucho Valdés, India Martínez, Nil Moliner, Ari Malikian, Arthur Hanlon and Yami Safdie.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 13:06:492025-12-15 13:06:49The New Spanish Scene: Pablo Alborán, Ana Mena, Rozalén, Vanesa Martín and Omar Montes Talk What Makes Spanish Music Pop Today
Discogs has unveiled its 2025 year in review, revealing what vinyl collectors prized most over the past 12 months — and Billboard has the first look at the data.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Taylor Swift dominated Discogs’ global stats again this year thanks to her blockbuster The Life of a Showgirl album, which was named the platform’s most collected album of the year; while her Record Store Day exclusive Fortnight 7-inch was named its most collected 7-inch of the year. However, the 21st-century icon was beaten out by The Beatles for the title of most collected artist of the year globally (though she finished at No. 1 on the North America-specific chart). Elsewhere, most collected reissue honors went to Frank Ocean‘s Channel Orange, both globally and in North America, and Columbia finished 2025 as the year’s most collected label.
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The data is broken out into nine different regions, offering a snapshot of vinyl collectors’ tastes around the world. In Eastern Europe and Russia, Pink Floyd was the most collected artist of 2025, followed by Depeche Mode and then The Beatles (Swift doesn’t even appear in the top 10 there). In Ireland and the U.K., Oasis‘ (What’s the Story) Morning Glory was the most collected reissue. In Latin America, the most collected album was Pink Floyd at Pompeii, followed by Dois’ Legião Urbana. And in the Nordic countries, the most collected albums of the year were Overdriver by The Hellacopters (No. 1) and Skeletá by Ghost (No. 2) on the most collected albums tally.
As stated by Discogs, the year-end lists are powered by collection statistics, discography data and marketplace insights. “It captures the full scope of what collectors sought, shared, and preserved throughout the year, highlighting both global patterns and the distinct musical identities of local collecting communities across multiple regions,” a press release states.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 13:06:482025-12-15 13:06:48What Were Discogs’ Most Collected Albums of 2025?
Taylor Swift is practicing for her future cool aunt era. A day after celebrating her 36th birthday on Saturday (Dec. 13), Swift was in her usual spot on Sunday (Dec. 14) in the family skybox watching fiancé Travis Kelce and the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Los Angeles Chargers in what was a do-or-die game for the three-time Super Bowl winner and his on-the-bubble team.
And while the Chiefs struggled in the tough 16-13 loss at home in which quarterback Patrick Mahomes tore his ACL and the team was eliminated from the playoffs for the first time in 10 years, Swift was busy making nice with her future nieces. TikTok videos from the singer’s latest visit to Arrowhead Stadium showed Taylor hoisting one of Kylie and Jason Kelce’s daughters onto her hip as Kylie held one of the couple’s other four children; Kylie and former NFL star Jason share four daughters: Wyatt Elizabeth, 6, ElliotteRay, 4, Bennett Llewellyn, 2 and Finnley Anne, 8 months.
Though the result was not great for the home team, Swift had plenty to celebrate at the game, which took place just two days after the first two episodes of her six-part The End of an Era docuseries debuted on Disney+, pulling back the curtain on the career-spanning global tour. In the first episodes, we learn that the combination of the pandemic lockdown and her (ultimately successful) fight to regain control of her masters inspired Swift to dream up the sprawling tour at a time when live music was shut down due to COVID-19 restrictions.
It was the second week in a row that Swift has played supportive fianceé, coming seven days after she and longtime BFF Selena Gomez and writer/actress Lena Dunham watched the Dec. 7 Chiefs game, which the team lost 20-10 to the Texans.
New episodes of The End of an Era will roll out on Fridays, with episodes three and four due to drop on Friday (Dec. 19), followed by the final two on Dec. 26. Swift and Kelce got engaged this summer and at press time had not yet announced plans for their wedding.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 13:06:472025-12-15 13:06:47Taylor Swift Prepped For Cool Aunt Era at Chiefs Game By Bonding With Kylie and Jason Kelce’s Daughter
Rob Reiner, the acclaimed director, actor and producer whose work helped define modern American film and television comedy, has died alongside his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, it was confirmed late Sunday (Dec. 14).
A spokesperson for the Reiner family confirmed the deaths Sunday evening. “It is with profound sorrow that we announce the tragic passing of Michele and Rob Reiner. We are heartbroken by this sudden loss, and we ask for privacy during this unbelievably difficult time.”
Emergency responders from the Los Angeles Fire Department arrived around 3:30-3:40 p.m. PT to the Chadbourne Avenue property following a medical aid call, discovering a 78-year-old man and a 68-year-old woman deceased with stab wounds.
The LAPD’s Robbery-Homicide Division is investigating, with no suspect identified or detained as of Sunday evening; no signs of forced entry were reported
“We are not looking for anyone as a suspect or in any other manner right now,” Hamilton said, adding that police will not release further details until the Los Angeles County coroner completes formal identification and investigators gather additional evidence.
Reiner, who turned 78 in March, was one of Hollywood’s most influential creative figures. He first rose to prominence in the 1970s as Mike “Meathead” Stivic on All in the Family, earning two Emmy Awards, before becoming a defining filmmaker of the 1980s and ’90s.
His directing credits include This Is Spinal Tap, Stand by Me, The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally…, Misery and A Few Good Men.
In September, Reiner spoke with Billboard about the enduring legacy of This Is Spinal Tap ahead of the release of its long-awaited sequel, Spinal Tap II, reflecting on how closely the original film mirrored real rock culture.
“Life imitating art imitating life,” Reiner said during the September interview, appearing on Zoom wearing a Spinal Tap baseball cap and T-shirt. “In Oasis’ case, they’re real brothers, but with Spinal Tap, the two guys were best friends since they were little and break apart and come back together.”
Discussing the emotional core of the sequel, Reiner said the film leaned beyond satire. “The emotional ballast of the movie is the relationship between the two guys,” he said. “Now, many years later, they’re older. The same issues are happening, but it’s deeper because they’ve known each other longer.”
Originally released in 1984, This Is Spinal Tap was not a box office success but became a cult classic through home video and word of mouth, particularly among musicians. Reiner previously noted that some rock stars initially bristled at how closely the film mirrored reality.
“We took [moments] from the real world of rock and roll,” he said, citing backstage mishaps and infamous tour lore that later became part of music mythology.
The son of comedy legend Carl Reiner, who died in 2020, Rob Reiner married photographer Michele Singer Reiner in 1989 after meeting while he was directing When Harry Met Sally…. The couple shared three children. Reiner was previously married to actor and filmmaker Penny Marshall, who died in 2018.
Tributes continued to emerge Sunday night, including from former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who described Reiner as “an iconic figure in film who made us laugh, cry and think.”
Police said the investigation remains active and that additional updates will be provided as appropriate.
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(Editor’s Note: Billboard interviewed Rob Reiner in September about making Spinal Tap II: The End Continues. Reiner and his wife, Michele, were found dead Sunday, Dec. 14, at their Brentwood home in Los Angeles).
Oasis’s Noel and Liam Gallagher aren’t this year’s only long-anticipated musical reconciliation.
As Spinal Tap II: The End Continues opens, it’s revealed that Spinal Tap bandmates Nigel Tufnel (Christopher Guest) and David St. Hubbins (Michael McKean) have been estranged for 15 years. While not actual blood brothers like the Gallaghers, the two musicians grew up together in England and had been pals since they were five.
The fortuitous timing is, of course, completely coincidental, Spinal Tap II director Rob Reiner notes, but he still gets a kick out of “life imitating art imitating life,” he says over a Zoom interview, sporting a Spinal Tap baseball cap and t-shirt. “In Oasis’ case, they’re real brothers, but with Spinal Tap, the two guys were best friends since they were little and break apart and come back together.” The movie opens in theaters nationwide Friday (Sept. 12).
In the sequel to 1984’s This isSpinal Tap — the revered mockumentary about a British heavy metal band touring America as their fortunes are fading — Tufnel and St. Hubbins, along with bassist Derek Smalls (Harry Shearer), are forced to reunite because, as it is revealed after the death of original manager Ian Faith, the band is contractually obligated to play one more show.
“The emotional ballast of the movie is the relationship between the two guys. Now, many years later, they’re older. The same issues are happening, but it’s deeper because they’ve known each other longer,” says Reiner, who recreates his role as documentarian Marty DiBergi. “[The sequel] couldn’t be just a straight satire; it had to have some kind of emotional underpinnings. And it’s not easy because satire and emotion, they don’t like to be with each other.”
The original film wasn’t a box office success, grossing only $5.98 million — but over the decades, thanks to home video and word of mouth, it has become a cherished cult classic among musicians, comedians and music fans. At first, it did have a few detractors among rockers who felt it cut a little too close to home, Reiner says.
“Initially, you had people like Steven Tyler, Axl Rose and, God rest his soul, Ozzy Osbourne, they were not so happy with it because they thought we were making fun of their music and all that,” Reiner says, noting that many of the incidents in the film “we took from the real world of rock and roll: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers getting lost backstage; Van Halen demanding backstage there be no [brown] M&Ms.”
Despite — or perhaps because of– the film’s iconic status, the quartet never truly considered making a follow-up. “I mean, people approached us all the time to do a sequel, and we always felt like we did it, you know,” Reiner says. “We don’t want to do it again. It wasn’t like, ‘Oh god, we’ve got to do a sequel.’ Nobody ever talked about it that way.”
Then in 2016, Shearer filed a lawsuit against Vivendi and its StudioCanal division, which the other three later joined, alleging they had made less than $200 each on the mockumentary due to “Hollywood accounting.” The quartet asked for damages — but more importantly, to reclaim the rights to Spinal Tap. The case settled in a California federal court in 2020, allowing the filmmakers to move forward should they wish.
Once the lawsuit was resolved, Reiner, Guest, McKean and Shearer gathered at Shearer’s house in Santa Monica, once again broaching the idea of a sequel. “The first meeting we had we talked about, ‘Do we really want to do this, [given] the high bar that we were dealing with?’” Reiner says.
The film’s mythical status had only grown in the intervening decades: it’s now in the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry — and Tufnel’s now-classic “These go to 11” quote, as he shows DiBergi his amplifier, is even in the Oxford English Dictionary to reference anything that goes to an extreme. At the real Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England (not the 18” replica in the first movie), a display wall with quotes from philosophers, scientists and poets about the ancient, prehistoric site includes Tufnel’s lyric, “No one knows who they were or what they were doing,” from the band’s masterpiece, “Stonehenge.” “This fictional thing that we created — we have definitely invaded the real world,” Reiner says.
Around their third meeting, the quartet landed on the basic theme of a forced reunion and decided to incorporate a plot point spurred on by another real-life event: Kate Bush’s 1985 song, “Running Up That Hill,” soaring to the top of the Spotify charts, and Bush earning her first No. 1 album on a Billboard chart after being used on Netflix’s Stranger Things: “We said, ‘Wait! What if some big musician is screwing around at sound check and sings one of [Spinal Tap’s] songs. Someone captures it on an iPhone, throws it on TikTok and it goes viral?’”
Enter Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood, who appear as the superstars singing Spinal Tap’s classic “Big Bottom” at a soundcheck. Reiner had met the pair at Jeff Bezos’ annual Campfire retreat and had mentioned the possibility of a sequel. He then called them when it became a reality, and they were immediately in.
Like with the first film, after basic ideas for the scenes were agreed upon, the dialog for second film was entirely improvised. Similarly, the quartet brought back the “Grimsby Method” to work out primary plot points: While creating the first movie, Shearer was dating a woman who worked at ABC News, and he brought home a small stack of promotional cards with then WABC news reporter Roger Grimsby’s face on them that had a blank back. “We had a big bulletin board where we put ideas for scenes and if we came up with something, we thought, ‘Does this warrant a Grimsby? Should we sacrifice a Grimsby to put the idea down since we have a limited amount?” Reiner recalls. Though Grimsby died in 1995, McKean found his picture on the internet, and came up with similar cards while they workshopped the ideas for the sequel.
Other than a significant callback to Stonehenge, “The charge was to create a film that worked on its own,” Reiner says. “If you’ve seen the first one, there are little references that you might pick up, but if you haven’t, it works on its own.”
The sequel also continues Spinal Tap’s horrible track record with drummers, all of whom have either spontaneously combusted or died in unfortunate incidents, such as a “bizarre gardening accident,” with the most recent drummer succumbing to a lethal sneeze.
To find a new drummer, Spinal Tap held real tryouts — there are fake auditions for comedic effect shown in the movie — ultimately choosing Valerie Franco, a professional drummer who has played with Hayley Kiyoko, Halsey and Kylie Minogue, among others.
“We had a place at SIR [rehearsal studio] in Los Angeles and Valerie kicked ass,” Reiner says. “We thought, ‘Wow, this is incredible.’ And then we thought, ‘Well, why not? Let’s have a female drummer.’ She had never acted before, and she just took to it right away. “
The film features a number of cameos from rock royalty, including Paul McCartney and Elton John.
McCartney’s scene is based on a real visit that happened years ago when the members of Spinal Tap and the Beatle were both rehearsing for tours in the same facility in Burbank. McCartney dropped by and suggested they play a song together (Reiner thinks it was an acoustic version of “Start Me Up”). That scene takes a different turn in the film, “but came out of a real place that Paul McCartney stopped by to say hello.”
After improvising scenes with McCartney, Reiner declares, “He’s really funny. He’s glib. He was great. When [Dibergi] interviewed him, he didn’t know what I was going to ask him. We just started talking to see what comes out of it. Same with Elton.”
Similarly, John adlibbed his lines as he comes into the studio, and joins the band on “Flower People” and later on “Stonehenge.”
Both songs with John appear on Interscope’s The End Continues — a new album from Spinal Tap, also out Sept. 12 — which includes nine new songs, including “Rockin’ in the Urn” and “The Devil’s Not Just Getting Old,” as well as four remakes with John, McCartney and Brooks and Yearwood.
Given the title Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, could there be another sequel, especially since the film ends on a cliffhanger? “Who knows? We never know,” Reiner says, admitting he has a “love/hate relationship” with the characters.
But he does know that he wants fans to see Spinal Tap II: The End Continues in movie theaters for “the shared experience, to laugh with others. If you’ve seen the first one, I want them to feel nostalgic and to feel for the emotional part of it, which is the relationship with the guys,” he says. “We’re living in a rough time right now and [I’m for] anything that can make people have a good time and get some good laughs in.”
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 05:37:402025-12-15 05:37:40Rob Reiner on Making ‘Spinal Tap II: The End Continues,’ Drawing From Kate Bush & Working With ‘Really Funny’ Paul McCartney
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Homicide detectives were investigating Sunday after two people were found dead at director-actor Rob Reiner’s Los Angeles home, authorities said.
The Los Angeles Fire Department said it responded to a medical aid request shortly after 3:30 p.m. and found a 78-year-old man and 68-year-old woman dead inside.
Detectives with the Robbery Homicide Division were investigating an “apparent homicide” at Reiner’s home, said Capt. Mike Bland with the Los Angeles Police Department.
Authorities have not confirmed the identities of the people found dead at the residence in the upscale Brentwood neighborhood on the city’s west side that’s home to many celebrities.
Reiner is long one of the most prolific directors in Hollywood, and his work includes some of the most memorable movies of the 1980s and ’90s, including “This is Spinal Tap,” “A Few Good Men,” “When Harry Met Sally” and “The Princess Bride.”
His role as Meathead in the 1970s TV classic “All in the Family” alongside Carol O’Connor’s Archie Bunker catapulted him to fame. Reiner turned 78 in March.
Messages to his representatives were not immediately returned Sunday night.
The son of comedy legend Carl Reiner, Rob Reiner has been married to photographer Michele Singer Reiner since 1989. The two met while he was directing “When Harry Met Sally” and have three children together.
Reiner was previously married to actor-director Penny Marshall from 1971 to 1981. He adopted her daughter, Tracy Reiner. Carl Reiner died in 2020 at age 98 and Marshall died in 2018.
Reporting by Christopher Weber and Mike Balsamo via the Associated Press.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-12-15 04:36:392025-12-15 04:36:39Two People Found Dead at Rob Reiner’s L.A. Home as Homicide Detectives Investigate