logo
Paul Simon cancels concerts to undergo emergency surgery ahead of S.F. shows

Paul Simon cancels concerts to undergo emergency surgery ahead of S.F. shows

Paul Simon canceled two concerts over the weekend due to health complications, and is scheduled to undergo surgery ahead of his San Francisco shows.
'Paul has been struggling with chronic and intense back pain,' a statement shared to his Instagram account on Saturday, June 28 reads. 'Today it became unmanageable and demands immediate attention.'
Due to the pain, the 83-year-old scrapped appearances at Philadelphia's Academy of Music on Saturday and Sunday, June 28-29. He had already completed one of the three scheduled shows at the venue on Thursday, June 27.
The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee will now undergo a 'minor surgical procedure' in the coming days before proceeding with his A Quiet Celebration Tour, according to the statement.
Simon's next show is set for Long Beach on July 7. He is also scheduled for a three-night stint at San Francisco's Davies Symphony Hall on July 19 and 21-22.
Though he is unable to reschedule his missed Philadelphia dates immediately, he says he will look into making up the concerts in the future, according to the statement.
Full refunds are being offered to ticket holders.
The singer rose to fame in the 1960s as co-founder of the folk rock duo Simon & Garfunkel, with hits such as 'Mrs. Robinson' and 'The Sounds of Silence,' before launching his solo career in the '70s.
Simon's recent tour came as a surprise to many, after the musician indicated in 2018 that he was retiring from touring due to hearing loss. A year later, however, he performed a headlining set at San Francisco's Outside Lands festival.
To assist with live performances, Simon has worked with his production team and Stanford Initiative to Cure Hearing Loss to adapt his stage setup with moving monitors to ensure optimal acoustics.
'I don't think creativity stops with disability,' Simon said in a November interview on 'CBS Mornings.' 'So far, I haven't experienced that. And I hope not to.'
Simon's A Quiet Celebration tour launched in New Orleans in early April and is scheduled to wrap up in August in Seattle.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

10 top new Milwaukee albums and songs to check out in July 2025, from J.P. and more
10 top new Milwaukee albums and songs to check out in July 2025, from J.P. and more

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

10 top new Milwaukee albums and songs to check out in July 2025, from J.P. and more

Some long-acclaimed Milwaukee rockers show they've still got the goods with their new releases, while one of Milwaukee's biggest hip-hop breakouts boldly goes in a new direction. Those are among the 10 best new albums and songs to check out in July from local artists, listed in alphabetical order. The alien-like electronic notes at the start of opening track "Letters" suggests Collections of Colonies of Bees might be retreating to their more experimental earlier works. In reality, it's the sound of the band winding up to what quickly becomes its boldest and brightest album to date. Quirky elements including unpredictable drum shifts and the dichotomy of dual vocalists ensure the band's art-rock lineage is intact, but cinematic rock vistas constitute much of "Celebrities," including some dancier rhythms, even some catchy hand claps, on toe-tapping stunners like "A Tricky Sin." Jorge Vallentine hasn't been shy about citing the late Elliott Smith as a reference point for his own songs, and that's clear in the prettiness of his voice, and somberness of his words, on his new EP's three tracks. But he's not strictly following in Smith's wake, evident in his electric guitar touches. There's also another Smith, Robert Smith (specifically the Cure's "Lovesong"), who emerges as a possible influence on some of the melodies floating through EP opener "Swimming in the Sun." It's possible no Milwaukee rocker's voice is as sweeping and soaring as Mark Waldoch's — hear him live, and you frequently have to pick up your jaw from the floor. Pipes like those bring a whole lot of power to songs like heart-bursting slow-builder "Manageable Oblivion," brought over from his newest band The Hallelujah Ward's 2024 EP on their debut album. But what's most striking about "Everybody Swoons" is how subtle Waldoch's intense vocal instrument can be, scaling back the volume to let his words and tenderness have more of the spotlight, and allowing these eight songs to draw their strength from other elements — especially Waldoch's own dreamy guitar and The Promise Ring veteran Dan Didier's punchy drum work. If the Milwaukee bluegrass band is experiencing "growing pains," there's no way of telling — aside from the fact that it's taken seven years for the band to release a new full-length album. Not that they haven't been plenty busy or lost their creative juices — as various releases in the 2020s, including a couple of live albums, and covers of Grateful Dead and Smashing Pumpkins songs, attests. But it's no shock that the immensely talented quintet attracted a bona fide bluegrass legend to "Growing Pains" track "Fiddle and Song": Allison Krauss' dobro player Jerry Douglas. Also not surprising: Each band member's musicianship on the album is as vibrant as the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Famer's. Obscure Birds sure has a funny way of promoting itself, proclaiming on its website: "Despite being together since 2016 and playing couples (sic) of shows each year, Obscure Birds has, through capricious planning, maintained its obscurity." The plan may be foiled by its long-in-the-works debut full-length album "Hatch," which draws on some not-so-obscure reference points — the Beatles, Pink Floyd, Elton John, the Black Crowes and Psychedelic Furs are among the disparate acts that come to mind at times — to create a sprawling, ambitious nine-song collection. "Look alive," Kyle Scheuer screams at the start of "Eyes Meet at the Liquor Store," the shape-shifting epic second track off "Joy Coughs." The only way you won't experience a quickening pulse listening to this often unhinged and always unpredictable album was if you don't have one. J.P. became the poster child for Milwaukee's playful, party-ready lowend sound when last year's "Bad Bitty" became the most popular track from a Milwaukee-based rapper since Coo Coo Cal's "My Projects" in 2021, amassing 29.6 million streams (and counting) on Spotify alone. But the album that song appeared on, "Coming Out Party," showed that J.P. was too talented to be contained in one box. And new single "My Peace" proves it, with J.P. trading raps for beautiful, buttery R&B vocals, and replacing the good-time goofiness of "Bad Bitty" for some deeply moving introspection. It is a huge risk to do something so different from the breakout hit, but it also confirms that J.P. has the potential to be a really fascinating and accomplished artist. With broad pop strokes that make it instantly infectious, and elements of pop-punk that may recall the good old days of Warped Tour, Brett J.B. on his latest singles addresses a crisis of faith with vivid details and poignancy, and in the process makes one of the catchiest songs about nihilism you might ever hear. Motel Breakfast is changing the menu a bit on its new standalone single, letting bass groves and synth swells take the spotlight, and embracing elements of The Cure, for what slowly builds to become one of its most satisfying and catchiest songs yet. Hopefully, they won't keep people waiting for a new album for too long. Milwaukee-born, now Madison-based Hunt has long proved his mastery of smart, heartfelt power pop, be it leading Midnight Reruns or with his solo material. His latest, "Timeless World Forever," suggests his talents continue, but it also has Hunt pushing beyond his previous parameters — most pointedly on the fuzzed-out "Cave Art," which recalls Beck's everything but the kitchen-sink experimentation with just a sprinkle of Nine Inch Nails '90s-era synths. And also, there's cowbell. "Must-Hear Milwaukee Music" runs on or around the first of every month in the Journal Sentinel and at If you have a new album, EP or song coming out, contact Piet Levy at plevy@ for review consideration. Follow him on Facebook at This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: 10 top new Milwaukee albums and songs to check out in July 2025

Why Flavor Flav Says the US Must Ban Firearms Now
Why Flavor Flav Says the US Must Ban Firearms Now

Newsweek

time7 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Why Flavor Flav Says the US Must Ban Firearms Now

"Right, left, left, right, left." We are marching ourselves into madness, both in the crazy and angry senses of the word. We are caught in an epidemic of gun violence with no sign we can stop or change course. That's why Chuck D and I created a new Public Enemy song, "March Madness," a term usually reserved for basketball. To us, March Madness is not about the left or the right or politics—it's about the need to unify, as human beings, to say what is right and what is wrong. Stop putting a price tag on the heads of our children. Chuck D and Flava Flav pose for a portrait at the 2024 Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony streaming on Disney+ at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on October 19, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. Chuck D and Flava Flav pose for a portrait at the 2024 Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony streaming on Disney+ at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on October 19, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. Sara Jaye/Getty for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame This track starts off with a 911 call report about a teacher calling in a school shooting and begging for help. I fear for my kids when I drop them off at school. Our schools aren't safe and our kids aren't safe. This is because gun protection laws are weak. Guns are falling into the hands of the wrong people. I would know. I went to jail because of guns. I ended up on Rikers Island. So I am speaking from first-hand experience. Back in the day, guns and drugs were brought into Black communities. It was a time when we were taught that guns and drugs equaled power. We all had guns. There was peer pressure; a gun felt like a necessity to protect yourself from gang wars. This helped create a system of criminals who were forced into legalized slavery. If one part of society has guns, then more people feel the need for guns to protect themselves. And then more people. But no civilian needs to possess semi-automatic weapons. Fear and power are two of the biggest emotions that drive us. America is being built on fear. You have people who are scared. And these people are fighting for gun rights to protect themselves. They wouldn't have to protect themselves if all guns were banned. Fear is a powerful, short-term motivator. We need to flip it so it can break through to be a positive and valuable resource. Let our fear of losing our children be more powerful than our fear of our next-door neighbor. Right now, it's too easy for kids to grab their parents' guns. They are motivated by fear of being disliked, fear of not being accepted, fear of being made fun of. It makes them feel powerless. Some choose to take their power back and show up those peers. This happens so often, we have started to become numb to it as a society. It's barely in the news if it's less than a handful of people who were killed, and then the news cycle moves onto something else... The hits just keep on coming... School shootings are normalized. The lack of gun laws has created a violence epidemic here in the United States that is nowhere else in the world. This is domestic errorism. I've grown up. I had to take responsibility for myself, my actions and my career. I got sober. And I see the world with more clarity. I got a whole new team. No more guns for Flav. The only thing I'm carrying now is the conversation. My new manager, on day one, set up a meeting with Sam Hollander, a producer and songwriter with numerous chart-topping hits. They had me do something I've never done before. If we want Public Enemy and Flavor Flav to appeal to a broader audience, we need to invite them into the conversation. We need to understand their perspective. Now, my manager used to represent former Detroit Lions running back Barry Sanders and he has this extremely talented and musical son, Nigel Sanjai Sanders, who was a student at Howard University. We asked him to make us some music and he delivered. My manager graduated from Harvard University and, using her resources, she, Sam, Nigel and I went to Harvard and met with their students and Dee-1, a brilliant rapper who served as a Nasir Jones Hip-Hop Fellow at Harvard's Hiphop Archive & Research Institute. Then we all went to the neighboring Berklee College of Music to write and record with some of their students. Public Enemy: March Madness Cover Artwork. Public Enemy: March Madness Cover Artwork. Courtesy of Alto Global Media I was in that room, with all these students, just sitting back and being quiet. If y'all know Flav, that's not like me. But to listen to them, their ideas, opinions and reasons behind them, you had to sit back and stay quiet. Now, take the students' intelligence and point of view, plus the experience of growing up on the streets and Public Enemy, and that equals something powerful. Our friend, the artist Shepard Fairey, inspired an entire population with just one word: hope. That is what I saw in these students. I hope this song, "March Madness," reignites the conversation. I hope this song sparks change. I hope this anthem gives a voice to those who feel powerless against a system of power and greed. I hope we can come together to create a wall of unity with peace and togetherness that is so strong, no one can divide and tear us down. As my partner, Chuck D, says: "I would rather live in peace than rest in peace." I hope the same for my children and all children. Flavor Flav is a rapper who cofounded hip-hop group Public Enemy with Chuck D over 40 years ago. Their new single, "March Madness," is out now.

Reclusive Rocker, 84, Nearly Unrecognizable at Annual Wimbledon Outing
Reclusive Rocker, 84, Nearly Unrecognizable at Annual Wimbledon Outing

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Reclusive Rocker, 84, Nearly Unrecognizable at Annual Wimbledon Outing

Reclusive Rocker, 84, Nearly Unrecognizable at Annual Wimbledon Outing originally appeared on Parade. A British rocker from the 1960s and '70s was spotted out and about enjoying himself at the 2025 Wimbledon Championships tennis tournament. Sir Cliff Richard, 84, is a British singer and actor who nowadays is not seen much in the public eye, but he always makes time for the annual Wimbledon Grand Slam tournament at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London, England. Just about the only times he has been photographed at a major public event in the last few years are when he attends the annual British tennis tournament. Richard burst onto the music scene in the late 1950s. He was seen as a rock 'n roll singer in the style of Elvis Presley, and is still one of the top-selling artists on the UK Singles is best known for such hits as "Move It," "Living Doll," "Fall in Love With You," "Please Don't Tease," "It's All In the Game" and his biggest hits in the U.S. "Devil Woman," which was certified gold and peaked at No. 6, and "We Don't Talk Anymore," which was also certified gold and peaked at No. 7. He also recorded some famous duets, including "Suddenly" with Olivia Newton-John in 1980, "Slow Rivers" with Sir Elton John in 1986, "All I Ask of You" with Sarah Brightman in 1986, and "This Love" with Tammy Wynette in 1994. Richard has not been seen in the U.K. much in the past 20 years. In 2006, according to the Telegraph, he sold his Surrey estate and moved to Barbados. He told the Telegraph that he likes to come back to his home country but never spends more than "a week here, a week there" in Britain. He did keep one apartment in Berkshire, England, plus his apartment in New York and a farmhouse in Portugal, dividing more of his time between Barbados and Portugal. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 Reclusive Rocker, 84, Nearly Unrecognizable at Annual Wimbledon Outing first appeared on Parade on Jun 30, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 30, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store