
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Van Halen began a new chapter 40 years ago with the release of 5150, the first album featuring the lineup of Sammy Hagar, Eddie Van Halen, Alex Van Halen, and Michael Anthony. 5150 marked the band’s first #1 album with hits like “Why Can’t This Be Love,” “Dreams,” and “Best Of Both Worlds” and continued their streak of multi-Platinum releases.
Rhino will release 5150 (Expanded Edition) on March 27, just days after the album’s 40th anniversary. The LP/3CD/Blu-ray collection includes the 1986 album remastered directly from the original master tapes, overseen by the band’s longtime engineer Donn Landee. Additionally, an Amazon-exclusive green vinyl version will be available the same day.
The set also introduces more than 90 minutes of previously unreleased live recordings from the band’s August 27, 1986, concert at New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum in New Haven, Connecticut. These are joined by a selection of rare 7” single edits and extended 12” versions.
The Blu-ray includes a new high-definition upgrade of Live Without a Net, Van Halen’s double-Platinum 1986 concert video that was also recorded that same August night in New Haven, along with promotional videos for “Dreams” and “Why Can’t This Be Love.” Pre-order HERE.
Standalone versions of 5150 featuring the remastered album and rarities will also be available the same day as a 2CD set or a 2LP on black vinyl. Ahead of the release, the live version of “Summer Nights” from the New Haven show is available today digitally, along with the HD remastered video.


The Capitol Session ‘73 should rectify that. A live session, for the cameras from October 24th, 1973, just a week after the release of their latest album, Burnin’, produced by Denny Cordell, received a video and audio release from Mercury Studios, co-executive-produced by Cordell’s son Barney.
Outside the Cadillacs, Sergio led the long-running punk-rock group Cienfuegos. He’s also collaborated extensively with Mimi Maura—including co-founding her band in 1999. Along the way he’s recorded and produced with artists such as Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth, Debbie Harry, Mick Jones (The Clash), Big Youth, Los Auténticos Decadentes, Todos Tus Muertos, and Los Cafres. He has also released several solo albums and singles in recent years as Rotman, many of which have been produced by Pablo Martin.

Iowa City, IA | UI alum opens new record store in North Liberty: Zig Zog’s Records is set to open Feb. 7 and boasts a diverse collection of vinyl and CDs. Tucked away in the back of an unmarked commercial unit off Ranshaw Way in North Liberty, Isaac Smith sat among boxes of records and CDs, combing through his collection and pricing each item. With less than a week left, he had a laundry list of tasks to prepare for the grand opening of his record store, Zig Zog’s Records, on Feb 7. …After a decade of selling his records without a permanent location and using the funds to pay for college, it seemed like the next logical step to
UK | Holly Humberstone announces Brighton date at Chalk: Holly Humberstone has announced a run of intimate record store dates. The BRIT Award winner will perform at Chalk in Brighton on March 25, in partnership with Resident Music, as part of 



And small wonder, because the Sensational Alex Harvey Band were simply too esoteric gonzo in the grand tradition of unapologetic English eccentrics for mass consumption. Pub rock heroes with progressive rock tendencies who weren’t afraid to shamelessly camp it up for the Glitter kids, SAHB liked to keep the punters guessing, as 1973’s Next demonstrates.


UK | Record Store Day 2026: Check out the full list of releases. Fans can expect collectible and limited-edition records from the likes of Charli xcx (a “Party 4U” 7″); Ethel Cain, releasing the Inbred EP onto 12″ vinyl (bootlegs aside) for the first time; a double vinyl reissue of Paramore’s debut album All We Know Is Falling, and there’s a 7″ with a ‘new song’ from Lucy Dacus. Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Disco Darling” – an unreleased song from her 2017 Dedicated album – is being pressed onto 7″ while Pavement’s 1991 Perfect Sound Forever EP is getting a 10″ reissue; there’s vinyl debuts for Dijon’s How Do You Feel About Getting EP and Madonna’s Confessions Tour Live; rare rough mixes from Slint’s final untitled EP by the late producer Steve Albini, and
Portland, OR | Terry Currier Announces Plans to Sell Music Millennium: The owner of the storied East Burnside retailer says he’ll work with the new owner during a transitional period. Terry Currier, who has owned and operated Music Millennium for 42 years, is looking for a successor. In a message shared on Music Millennium’s social media accounts Tuesday, Currier wrote that he is looking to sell the store and possibly the building—or to sell the business separately and execute a long-term lease with the new owner. “Rest assured, I’m good with working with the future owner during a transitional period, educating them on just how we make Music Millennium tick,” Currier wrote. He also noted that developers have approached him about buying the building, which sits on East Burnside Street at the edge of the Laurelhurst neighborhood, and 




Eric Burdon seems like the kind of cat who’d rather keel over dead than quit singing. Nearly fifty years after his first album came out he’s still out there doing it on stages, and like the R&B legends that provided him with his formative inspiration, his continued activity comes without a whole lot of pomp and circumstance. Because he played an enjoyably quirky role in the landslide of ‘60s psychedelic rock by fronting a later incarnation of The Animals and proceeded from that to get his fingers nice and funky on a pair of albums in collaboration with the California groove merchants War, Burdon’s profile has easily transcended the outfit that began in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1962, when he joined up with a group then called The Alan Price Rhythm and Blues Combo.








































