
The Hollywood Palladium transformed into a cathedral of extreme blasphemy as Behemoth, Deicide, Rotting Christ, and Immolation delivered the heaviest touring lineup to hit the iconic venue this year. This convergence of legends ended their five-week The Godless IV tour on Thursday night, May 21, in Hollywood after kicking off this evil trek back on April 13 in San Diego.
With each band carrying their own altar of destruction on stage, Immolation kicked off the night at 6:25 PM to a surprisingly already packed venue. Supporting their brutal new album Descent, released on April 10, the band opened the show with new songs “These Vengeful Winds” and “The Ephemeral Curse” and played a total of five songs from Descent, proving these new songs are true Immolation classics already.

Vocalist Ross Dolan remains one of the OG extreme vocalists, having paved the way for New York death metal back in 1986, and his delivery is as strong as ever (Dolan also has the longest hair in death metal as well). Immolation ended their 30-minute set the same as they started—with a new song, “Bend Towards the Dark.” It was killer seeing these warriors who typically play small clubs on the big stage in Hollywood.
Rotting Christ shifted the atmosphere from brute-force death metal into something darker and more hypnotic. With many controversies surrounding the name of the band, these Greek metal warriors took the Palladium through a dark ride of evil and occultism as vocalist, guitarist Sakis Tolis delivered a high-energy performance that had the venue barking the lyrics in unison with Tolis in ceremonial fashion. The thundering drums of Sakis’ brother, Themis, shook the Palladium floor as guitarist Kostis Foukarakis and bass player Kostas “Spades” Heliotis played their parts with laser-guided precision.




Lane—who succumbed in 1997 to multiple sclerosis at the tragically young age of 51—was the heart (he had a huge one) and soul (he oozed the stuff) of the Faces. Rod Stewart got the attention—too much of it towards the end—but Ronnie embodied the band’s rambunctious approach to rock and roll and wrote (or co-wrote) some of the band’s most endearing and poignant songs, including “Ooh La La,” “Glad and Sorry,” and “Debris.”


Carrollton, GA | The Vinyl Frontier Keeps Vinyl Spinning After 10 Years in Carrollton: After a decade in business, The Vinyl Frontier in Carrollton is still spinning strong and continuing to grow in new ways. The business was started in 2016 by co-owners Trey Carter and Nick West, opening during Mayfest after months of preparing inventory and getting the store ready. What began as a passion project has since grown into one of Carrollton’s most recognizable independent businesses, now holding an estimated 40,000 records packed throughout the shop. West recently reflected on the store’s 10-year journey, calling the milestone hard to believe. One of the biggest changes over the past year has been expanding into online sales, something the store had avoided for years outside of occasional eBay listings. Since launching online ordering,
Portland, OR | Music Millennium Opens a Call-In ‘Thought Line.’ Owner Terry Currier hopes people share memories and messages about the longtime record store. Music Millennium wants to know what you think of it. And the venerable record store has teamed up with advertising agency Wieden+Kennedy to find out. Music Millennium’s “Thought Line” is a toll-free phone number that anyone can call to leave a memory, a message or anything at all about the Portland record store that originally opened in 1969 on East Burnside Street. Owner Terry Currier announced in February that he plans to retire and is seeking a buyer for the record store. When a small group of Wieden+Kennedy employees—and Music Millennium fans—heard this news, they reached out to Currier to see what they could do to ensure that the culture of the record store carried on. 

Curated by Ahmet Zappa and Zappa Vaultmeister Joe Travers, ZAPPAtite collects 18 tracks ranging from Zappa’s early psychedelic rock beginnings to his avant-garde experimentation, jazz-rock explorations, symphonic suites, and satirical send-ups. The collection serves as an inviting entry point into the more rock-oriented side of his expansive repertoire.


The duo has toured vigorously since their inception and have recorded over fifty releases, which include 12 full-length studio albums and numerous collaborations, EPs, and live records. The latest, Leave This World Behind, came out in March on their own label, Heads On Fire Industries. Five tracks built around a Sonic Rituals live series they’re performing through 2026. We talked about how Dave and Ego met, the birth of the band, and the deeply grounded and spiritual point of view that this light filled and heavy music is born of.
It’s occasionally difficult to shake the notion of music history being shaped by particular inevitabilities. That is, certain great musicians, and specifically those who innovated across extensive discographies, were just creatively unstoppable. Their brilliance simply had to happen. And in the realms of jazz, perhaps no single musician can foster this atmosphere of the inescapable more than Miles Davis.
Dance/Electronic Vinyl Variety: From Belfast to Vegas Fergie Runs Down His Favourite Record Stores: DJ Fergie shares his favourite record stores from Belfast to Las Vegas in this globe-spanning edition of Vinyl Variety. Fergie shares six record stores and platforms that have shaped his experience as a collector, DJ, and lifelong music fan. Spanning Germany, Portsmouth, London, Belfast, Las Vegas, and the online marketplace Discogs, each selection reflects a different side of modern vinyl culture, from specialist techno outlets and community-driven independent stores to high-end listening spaces and global online digging. …Whether it’s sourcing exclusive techno releases from Decks Records in Germany, revisiting formative tracks at Underground Records in Belfast, or crate-digging alongside world-class sound systems at Echo Taste & Sound in Las Vegas, Fergie’s selections
Las Vegas, NV | Vinyl Room to open at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas this summer: Vinyl Room, inspired by intimate 1970s Japanese listening bars, will open on the top floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas in August. The music-forward venue, 












































