The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Aerosmith, Aerosmith (Legendary Deluxe Edition) 5LP, 4LP, 1LP in stores 3/20

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Multi-GRAMMY® Award-winning Rock and Roll Hall of Fame® inductees Aerosmith have announced the release of their forthcoming Aerosmith (Legendary Edition) on March 20, 2026.

For the first time, the Boston rock legends (Steven Tyler, Joe Perry, Tom Hamilton, Brad Whitford, and Joey Kramer) have assembled the definitive version of their multiplatinum self-titled debut, Aerosmith, originally released in 1973. In an effort to finally present their unfiltered vision now, Aerosmith Co-Founders Steven Tyler and Joe Perry have newly mixed the original recordings and tapes alongside GRAMMY® Award-nominated producer and mixer Zakk Cervini (blink-182, Halsey) and GRAMMY® Award-winning producer Steve Berkowitz. As such, this fresh 2024 Album Mix of the record is the crown jewel of the robust Legendary Edition collection.

Aerosmith (Legendary Edition) will be available via Capitol Records / UMe in multiple configurations, outlined in detail below, including a 5LP Box, 4LP Slipcase, 1LP Black / 1LP Color, 3CD, 1CD, and Digital. Exclusive merchandise will also be available. Pre-order/pre-save HERE on the group’s official store. To celebrate its arrival, Aerosmith just shared “Mama Kin (2024 Mix)” as an instant grat track, kicking the energy of the original into high gear and giving fans a taste of what to expect from the newly-mixed version of the record.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Connie Converse, How Sad, How Lovely reissue with bonus 7″ in stores 3/27

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Third Man Records is honored to announce its very special expanded edition of How Sad, How Lovely, the landmark first compilation of previously lost recordings from groundbreaking cult singer-songwriter Connie Converse.

First released in 2009 and previously only existing in extremely limited quantities, the new edition will be available on CD, cassette, and single LP vinyl, the latter joined by a bonus 7” featuring an unreleased track and exclusive remix. Production of this long-awaited reissue was overseen by Dan Dzula, co-producer of the original album and founder of The Musick Group, Connie’s other label home. How Sad, How Lovely arrives via Third Man Records on Friday, March 27. Pre-orders are available now.

Connie Converse was among the first modern singer-songwriters, a truly unique artist whose unconventional, hypnotically intimate songs were far ahead of their time. Born in Laconia, New Hampshire, in 1924 to strict, religious parents, she excelled academically and briefly attended Mount Holyoke College before moving to New York City in the late 1940s. There, she lived a quiet, bohemian life, and, by 1949, began writing a remarkable body of original songs.

Those songs were committed to tape over the next decade, as Converse began recording herself at home on a Crestwood 404 reel-to-reel tape recorder. Starting in 1954, legendary comic artist and animator Gene Deitch also began recording Converse at his Hastings-on-Hudson home, where she was a guest at salons and dinner parties hosted by the Deitch family. Converse’s haunting music blended folk, jazz, and art-song influences, with sophisticated, deeply introspective lyrics that explored themes of longing, independence, and self-knowledge, later becoming hallmarks of the 1960s singer-songwriter movement.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
J. Geils Band,
“Live” Full House

Celebrating Seth Justman on his 75th birthday.Ed.

A few words on the evolution of this review: I originally intended to write about 1977’s Foghat Live because I consider it the best live album this side of Jerry Lee Lewis’ 1964 Live at the Star Club, Hamburg, which I love even more than Roxy Music’s 1976 Viva! Roxy Music, which is guaranteed to make your ears clasp their tiny little hands and say, “Glam bam thank you ma’am!”

But then my friend Hank Dittmar who has forgotten more about music than I’ll ever know recommended this 1972 live album by the J. Geils Band, whom I saw at Shippensburg College in the late seventies but can’t really remember seeing at Shippensburg College in the late seventies because I was totally blotto on a combination of Wild Turkey and Placidyl, the latter of which I can only describe as an industrial strength memory dissolvent.

So I decided to review “Live Full House and let me tell you I’m glad I did. It ain’t Jerry Lee Lewis and it ain’t Roxy Music but man do the J. Geils Band cook. They mainly stick to the rock and R&B basics but they infuse what are of course a couple of formulas as old as the hills with so much passion you’ll find yourself jumping up and down and screaming along with Peter Wolf who can really shout ‘em out for a white boy. And when he’s not busy emoting, Magic Dick who is my second favorite Dick in rock’n’roll behind Handsome Dick Manitoba, is busy honkadonkin’ up a storm on the old harpoon. Just check out his set piece “Whammer Jammer” if you don’t believe me.

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TVD UK

UK Artist of the Week: TEll A ViSiON

Berlin-based artist TEll A ViSiON (she/they) is entering a bold new era. The genre-bending writer, producer, and composer’s new single “IDLU” is out now, and it’s a striking statement that is defiantly empowering.

Built on post-pop sonics, dub-infused bass lines, fuzz-drenched guitars, and piercing, emotive vocals, “IDLU” feels both intimate and incendiary. The title plays on a former German teen expression, “HGDGL” (“I like you very much”), flipping it into a coded but cutting declaration: I Don’t Like U. Rather than a rejection rooted in bitterness, the track reframes refusal as self-knowledge and freedom. “It’s about setting boundaries and feeling yourself again,” TEll A ViSiON explains. “’Cause if you know what you don’t like, you know better what you like.”

That tension between sweetness and sting, playfulness and elegant rage, has long been central to TEll A ViSiON’s artistic world. She crafts time-bending sonics shaped by truth, friction, and raw emotion, creating music that feels physical as much as it does emotional. Sonically and visually, her work sits somewhere between the experimental pop lineage of Björk, Bowie, and Peaches, and a fiercely contemporary, industrial aesthetic. Her visuals aren’t decorative add-ons; they function as extensions of the music itself, forming a unified world where sound, image and performance are inseparable.

With “IDLU,” TEll A ViSiON isn’t just releasing a new single, she’s opening a new chapter. It’s a chapter defined by clarity, confrontation, and unapologetic self-definition, delivered with fuzzed-out guitars, fearless vocals, and a smile that cuts just deep enough.

“IDLU” is in stores now.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve: Woody Shaw, Love
Dance
& Joe Chambers, Double Exposure

October the last was the kickoff for Zev Feldman’s Time Traveler Recordings, which began by putting back into print albums by Roy Brooks, Kenny Barron, and Carlos Garnett on 180-gram analog-mastered vinyl as part of the Muse Master Edition series. On January 30, this program really hits its stride by reissuing Love Dance by trumpeter Woody Shaw and Double Exposure by drummer-pianist Joe Chambers. These two underrated sets are connected in interesting ways, as we detail below.

Woody Shaw should’ve been huge. For many who’ve spent much rewarding time soaking up his discography as a leader and sideman, Shaw is huge, indeed one of the defining trumpeters in post-bop jazz. But as alluded to by Bob Blumenthal in his notes for this edition of Love Dance, Shaw just didn’t get the deserved accolades when he was up and coming.

Eric Dolphy’s Iron Man was Shaw’s recording debut, after which he played in Europe for a spell before returning to the USA to join Horace Silver’s band just in time for Cape Verdean Blues, cut in October 1965 for Blue Note. European touring partner Larry Young’s Unity followed in November, and then Shaw cut material for his own set as a leader in December with Young (on piano) and such august names as Joe Henderson (who played on Cape Verdean Blues), Herbie Hancock, Paul Chambers, Ron Carter, and Joe Chambers.

Those sessions stayed in the can until Muse released them in 1983, titled first In the Beginning and for one 1989 CD edition Cassandranite, the opening cut on the album. Track two is the Young composition “Obsequious,” which gets a reprise as the second selection on Love Dance.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 1/27/26

Alexandria, VA | Alexandria record store closing after devastating flooding, seeking new location: Crooked Beat Records in Alexandria, Virginia, will only be open for a few more days in its current Del Ray location. Devastating flooding damaged the store’s building and hundreds of vinyl records, some of them extremely valuable. The store is reopening Thursday, Friday and Saturday, which will be its last day operating at its current location on Mt. Vernon Avenue. After that, the future of the store is uncertain. “We’ll keep people posted on where we find a new location,” owner Bill Daly said in a message to customers on Instagram. “We really love Del Ray. We want to stay in Del Ray. So, we’re going to keep looking and hope things will get back to normal soon.”

Hong Kong, CN | Vinyl record bar 8055 reopens to bring new beats Lan Kwai Fong’s nightlife scene: Listen, we love a good beat drop or screaming chart-toppers like any other nighttime reveller in the city, but in this era of EDM and throwback pop-heavy party scene, it would be nice to enjoy something authentic that sounds different for once. Well, it looks like we got our wish, because a vinyl record-based bar has just announced they’ll be opening in Lan Kwai Fong. The brainchild of longtime friends Brian and Ah Hei, the 8055 vinyl bar has had previous iterations based in Causeway Bay and Wan Chai, which grew in popularity to welcome even local celebrities and creatives like Eason Chan and Tyson Yoshi as patrons. The pandemic saw the shuttering of the bar—but not for good.

Los Angeles, CA | VinylCon! returns to Los Angeles this spring: VinylCon! is set to return to Los Angeles this spring, bringing its growing vinyl-focused convention back for a two-day event at the California Market Center in downtown Los Angeles. The event will take place March 21-22, marking the second Los Angeles edition of the multi-city vinyl fair. The announcement follows VinylCon!’s debut Los Angeles outing last summer, which drew more than 2,500 attendees and featured over 80 record dealers from across the United States and abroad, including sellers from Japan and the Netherlands. Organizers said the first L.A. edition was one of the largest record fairs the city had seen in years, attracting collectors, DJs and music industry figures searching for rare pressings and sample material. Tickets are on sale now, with more details to be released in the coming weeks.

Queen rereleasing ‘Live Killers’ and ‘The Platinum Collection’ on vinyl: Queen is revisiting their 1979 album, Live Killers. The band is set to reissue the live album on two-LP black vinyl on Jan. 30, marking the first time it’s been available on vinyl in years. The double live album was originally released in June 1979 and featured songs recorded during the European leg of their Jazz Tour, which ran from January 1979 to March 1979. The album includes performances of “We Will Rock You,” “We Are the Champions,” “Bohemian Rhapsody,” “Killer Queen,” “Don’t Stop Me Now” and “You’re My Best Friend.” Live Killers is available for preorder now. But Live Killers isn’t the only Queen album getting a vinyl rerelease. The band also recently announced they will be releasing their box set The Platinum Collection on black vinyl for the first time. The six-LP set features all three of the band’s Greatest Hits albums in one collection.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD Live Shots: Metal Allegiance at the House of Blues, 1/22

The House of Blues was buzzing with energy on Thursday night as Metal Allegiance stormed the stage with a lineup that felt like a who’s who of heavy metal and thrash. From the moment the lights dimmed and DJ Will appeared on the HOB stage, fans of all ages knew they were in—it was 100% insanity. What followed was simply brilliant—a 2+ hour masterclass in musicianship, highlighting the raw power of live music on us all. It was an incredible performance and the perfect way to kick off NAMM week here in Orange County.

For the uninitiated, Metal Allegiance is not just a band, it’s a movement. Formed in 2014 by bassist and songwriter Mark Menghi, he quickly reached out to metal heavyweights David Ellefson, Alex Skolnick, and Mike Portnoy, and a supergroup was formed. Today, MA is still alive and kicking, with its core, along with a rotating collective of musicians who come together a few times a year to celebrate the music they love with fans.

With a lineup that often includes members of bands like Testament, Megadeth, Anthrax, and more, Metal Allegiance is a living, breathing tribute to the power of collaboration and the unifying spirit of heavy metal. Their performances are as much about the music as they are about the community, creating an experience that feels both intimate and intense.

The evening kicked off with Lost Legacy, whose blend of melodic and thrash metal set the tone for the night. Their intricate guitar work and commanding stage presence had the early crowd nodding along, a testament to their ability to captivate even the most discerning metalheads. Next up was Red Reign, bringing a classic hard rock vibe with a modern edge. Their anthemic choruses and tight rhythm section had the audience singing along, proving that their sound is as timeless as it is electrifying.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Pretty in Pink OST 40th anniversary pink vinyl edition in stores 3/13

VIA PRESS RELEASE | UMe celebrates the 40th anniversary of Pretty in Pink, the beloved 1986 film from Writer/Executive Producer John Hughes, with a limited-edition reissue of its iconic soundtrack, available March 13.

As essential as the film itself, the music captures the story’s emotional truth—freezing moments in time with the vivid clarity of memories that linger for decades. Film soundtracks hold a rare power to shape identity, influencing who we are, where we belong, and the social experiences that define youth. Few filmmakers understood the coming-of-age experience quite like John Hughes, and Pretty in Pink stands as one of his most enduring cultural touchstones.Anchored by era-defining songs including The Psychedelic Furs’ Top 5 title track “Pretty in Pink,” OMD’s iconic “If You Leave,” The Smiths’ “Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want,” and Echo & The Bunnymen’s sweeping anthem “Bring on the Dancing Horses,” and INXS fan-favorite deep-cut, “Do Wot You Do,” the Pretty in Pink soundtrack became a defining voice of its time—shaping mood, identity, and belonging in ways few films ever achieve. More than four decades after its theatrical release, Pretty in Pink continues to resonate across generations, its music and themes echoing with each new audience as they navigate the universal challenges of growing up.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve: Mountain,
Climbing!

Celebrating Corky Laing on his 78th birthday. Ed.

Leslie West is a heavy guy. He weighs like 1,000 lbs and plays heavy music and called his band Mountain because mountains are very heavy, and his song “Mississippi Queen” is so heavy it has to be carried from gig to gig in a specially made truck of the sort the U.S. Army uses to transport intercontinental ballistic missiles. And forget about vinyl. Mountain was so heavy they released their 1970 debut on concrete. It weighed 42 pounds and crushed a whole lot of record players.

Lots of folks dismissed Mountain (West on guitar and vocals, Felix Pappalardi on bass and vocals, Corky Laing on drums, and Steve Knight on keyboards) as Long Island’s answer to Cream, and on songs like “Theme for an Imaginary Western,” “For Yasgur’s Farm,” “The Laird,” and “Boys in the Band” the resemblance is striking. But on Climbing! Mountain escapes their Cream fetish to produce songs as humongous as the whale you keep expecting to show up in “Nantucket Sleighride,” except he never does.

Given Mountain’s reputation as the heaviest beast to ever slouch out of Long Island, Climbing! is far more diverse than you’d expect. Sure, you get some nifty Godzilla stomp along the lines of “Mississippi Queen.” But the band also flirts with acid-prog of the sort that won’t wreak havoc on your tweeters, and tosses in a couple of genre-benders that defy all known ethnomusicological definition. In short, Mountain was no one-trick mastodon.

The band’s division of vocal duties further lent diversity to Mountain’s sound. West’s rhino snort contrasts nicely with Pappalardi’s Jack Bruce, and the duo delegates lead vocal chores accordingly–West sings the speaker-busters, Pappalardi the more Cream-influenced tracks.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Supertramp, Even The Quietest Moments…, Breakfast In America & …Famous Last Words… half-speed remasters in stores 3/20

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Following the reissues of Crime Of The Century and Crisis? What Crisis?, Supertramp continues the 50th anniversary celebrations in their half-speed remaster reissue series with Even In The Quietest Moments…, Breakfast In America, and …Famous Last Words….

As per the first two releases in the series, all three records have been remastered at half-speed by Miles Showell at Abbey Road Studios. They are available to pre-order now from HERE and will be released on March 20, 2026. Crime Of The Century and Crisis? What Crisis? are available now from HERE.

Even in the Quietest Moments… was originally released in April 1977 and is the band’s fifth album. It was an instant hit, charting at number 16 in the Billboard Album Charts, and the album’s opening track, “Give A Little Bit,” also broke into the Billboard Hot 100. To this day, the track has been streamed over almost 800 million times. Just a year after its original release, the album was ranked 63rd in The World Critic Lists, which recognized the 200 greatest albums of all time as voted for by notable rock critics and DJs.

Their sixth album, Breakfast In America, is their biggest commercial success. Released in March 1979, it has sold over 22 million worldwide, generated 2 billion global streams, and spent 88 consecutive weeks in the Billboard 200. It spawned hit singles “The Logical Song,” “Goodbye Stranger,” and “Take The Long Way Home,” all of which broke into the Billboard Hot 100, with “The Logical Song” becoming their most prolific streamed track (over 900 million to date), spending 17 weeks on the chart.

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Graded on a Curve:
New Order,
“1981-Factus 8-1982”

Before we get around to talking about the stupid band New Order’s dumb 1982 EP “1981-Factus 8-1982,” please allow me to say that one of the things I force myself to do as a responsible music critic is what I call Prejudice Testing. This entails my listening to the music of a contemptible band or musical artist I’ve loathed for decades without going to the unnecessary effort of actually listening to them.

The completely lame English band New Order is such a band. My reasons for not listening to New Order were two-fold. One, they were, as we all know, just Joy Division without Ian Curtis, and seeing as how Ian Curtis is the only reason I liked Joy Division, why bother listening to the riff-raff behind him?

They were bound to suck, and in my mind, the best thing they could have done after Curtis’ death was give up music and take desk jobs at a travel agency. Two, it was my understanding that New Order specialized in a smarty-pants species of synthesizer-heavy dance music, which has never been my idea of a good time. And they didn’t sound like much fun, which is the only reason I listen to synthesizer-heavy dance music in the first place. Be brainless or go home, that’s always been my philosophy.

In most cases, my Prejudice Testing confirms my long-held and completely ignorant distaste. Nick Cave really is the pompous windbag and Lazarus-voiced poet manque of modern rock; the music of Oingo Boingo is as dumb as its name; and The The are indeed boring boring. And I could go on.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 1/26/26

US | Puscifer Announce ‘Normal Isn’t: Puscifer Live at the Pacific Stock Exchange’ Record Store Screenings. Puscifer will be screening their new live concert film ‘Normal Isn’t: Puscifer Live at the Pacific Stock Exchange‘ at select independent record stores from February 06th to 08th. Those screenings will coincide with the upcoming February 06th release date of the band’s fifth studio album, “Normal Isn’t“. Puscifer vocalist Maynard James Keenan, himself a record store owner, commented: “Brick and mortar vinyl shops are the lifeblood of independent bands. There is a symbiotic relationship that was almost obliterated by the age of digital downloads and streaming. Thankfully we survived by working together.”

Liverpool, UK | Legendary Liverpool record shop discovers links to Brian Epstein and ‘the secret Beatle.’ Legendary Liverpool record shop The Musical Box has discovered a connection to two pivotal figures in The Beatles career. The shop on West Derby Road already has confirmed history linking it to John Lennon and original drummer Pete Best who regularly went in there in the early 60s to look for new releases. Now, thanks to a customer, they’ve been able to add another two names to their famous customer list: manager Brian Epstein and Joe Flannery, who was the band’s booking manager in the early days. The Musical Box, which was recognised last year as the oldest independent record store in England, has been in the same family for four generations.

UK | Behind the Counter Returns to UK Record Shops for a Seventh Season 23 Jan 2026: Premiere of new 12-part video series celebrating the people behind the UK’s thriving vinyl culture. Behind the Counter returns for a seventh season with a brand-new 12-part video series, presented by Record Store Day and Classic Album Sundays in collaboration with Bowers & Wilkins, spotlighting inspirational independent record shops and the communities that sustain them across the UK. Following a previous season that reached over 5.6 million viewers, Behind the Counter enters its latest series as one of the largest-reaching and longest-running projects dedicated to UK record shop culture. Each episode offers an intimate look inside an independent store, exploring how shop owners, staff, and customers continue to shape local music scenes and keep physical formats thriving.

Adelaide, AU | Hi-fi record store, natural wine bar & specialty cafe, Jewels of Thought spins into Adelaide’s East End: A new kind of record store is preparing to open on Ebenezer Place, and it’s designed to be about far more than flipping through crates (although we love that too). Jewels of Thought Recordings is the latest venture from husband-and-wife team Anthony Wendt and Linh Tieu, bringing together high fidelity audio, pour over coffee and unique teas, natural wine, and Adelaide’s vibrant music scene. After all, Adelaide is Australia’s only UNESCO City of Music. Jewels of Thought Recordings is set to open its doors at 15 Ebenezer Place, likely in early February, just in time for Fringe. There’s another layer to this record store though, and depending on the time of day, you can expect an atmosphere as varied as the vinyl stocked inside.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream / It is not dying / It is not dying / Lay down all thoughts, surrender to the void / It is shining / It is shining / That you may see the meaning of within / It is being / It is being

That love is all and love is everyone / It is knowing / It is knowing / That ignorance and hate may mourn the dead / It is believing / It is believing / But listen to the color of your dreams / It is not living / It is not living

How do we transcend 2026? Dr. Google says John Lennon recommends meditation. So do I. I often take 15 to 20 minutes to sit in our canyon, lay down all thoughts and surrender to “the void.” If I’m having a cool day, I can “relax and float downstream.”

At the front of my desk are two excellent speakers. One has a post-it on it that reads, “It’s not gonna turn out like that.” The other has a fortune from cookie I got last week at Panda Express that reads, “MODIFY YOUR THINKING TO ADAPT TO NEW SITUATIONS.”

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Savages, Adore Life 10th anniversary reissue
in stores now

VIA PRESS RELEASE | On January 22, 2016, Savages released its riveting sophomore album Adore Life, the band’s final release to date. Today, the London quartet celebrate the album’s first decade by sharing two unreleased songs from the era—a piano-lead cover of Black Sabbath’s iconic “Paranoid” and the haunting original “Prayer.” Stream both tracks now.

From Savages: Celebrating 10 years of Adore Life, we’re sharing with you two unreleased songs that never made it onto the albums. We left them exactly as they were—no retakes, no remixing. What you’ll hear is precisely how they were first recorded. To us, they feel like snapshots of a moment in time, and while we’ve never been ones to dwell too much on nostalgia we felt these songs offered a fresh perspective on the band, or at the very least—a gentle reminder of its magic. Enjoy the music and video. It is our gift to you. Happy Birthday to Adore Life. What a record. What a time.
—Ayse, Fay, Gemma & Jehnny

“When Savages delivered the Adore Life artwork, they really captured the feeling of the music contained within,” recalls Matador founder Chris Lombardi. “A giant fist of a record. It’s visceral and taut much like their incendiary live shows. This record reminds that Savages were the REAL DEAL.”

The band’s performance of “Paranoid” was captured on film by Grammy-nominated director Giorgio Testi and premieres today as well. “Paranoid” was recorded by Johnny Hostile and Matt Farrar, produced and mixed by Johnny Hostile. “Prayer” was recorded at RAK studios in London by Richard Woodcraft, produced and mixed by Johnny Hostile.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Billy Idol Should Be Dead in theaters early 2026

VIA PRESS RELEASE | The global theatrical rights to the forthcoming feature-length documentary film Billy Idol Should Be Dead, directed by three-time Grammy-winner Jonas Åkerlund and produced by Live Nation Studios, have been acquired by Evan Saxon Productions (ESP).

The film traces the life and career of punk pioneer turned rock ‘n’ roll icon Billy Idol. Through never-before-seen archival and personal interviews with Idol, his family, peers and collaborators, the documentary digs deep into his emergence as a prototypical punk rocker, his meteoric rise as a global superstar in the MTV era, and the myriad of challenges Idol had to overcome to not just survive, but to remain one of the most beloved figures in rock ‘n’ roll, almost fifty years into his career.

The film made its festival debut at the Tribeca Film Festival last summer, followed by an award qualifying run. The film will have its wide theatrical release in early 2026. Additional info will be shared shortly.

“Billy Idol is a larger-than-life artist who changed the face of pop culture and music history during his 50-year career,” notes Evan Saxon. “From Generation X to now, he’s still selling out arenas around the globe. We are honored to work with Another Planet’s Laurence Freedman and Live Nation to bring the powerful and heartfelt documentary Billy Idol Should Be Dead to his fans on the biggest cinema screens worldwide.”

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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