Loren Allred, Lena Hall, Tamika Lawrence, Rosé Set For BROADWAY SINGS ADELE
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The acclaimed Broadway Sings concert series has announced the lineup for its Tenth Anniversary concert event, Broadway Sings Adele. On February 28 at 8pm, a bombshell cast of stars including Loren Allred (“The Greatest Showman”), Tony Award Winner Lena Hall (Hedwig), Tamika Lawrence (Caroline, Or Change), and Rosé (“RuPaul’s Drag Race”) will belt out new arrangements of the hits of the pop superstar Adele, accompanied by a 14-piece orchestra at the beautiful Sony Hall.
Also featured in the lineup are Nick Rashad Burroughs (Tina), Kayla Davion (Tina), Tim Ehrlich (Rent), Sam Gravitte (Wicked), Eric Michael Krop (Godspell), Corey Mach (Kinky Boots), Lindsay Pearce (Wicked), Jelani Remy (Ain’t Too Proud), Kate Rockwell (Mean Girls), Britton Smith (Be More Chill), Raena White (Chicago), and introducing Rebby Han.
The concert will give tribute to the iconic songs from every album Adele has released, including “Hello”, “Rolling in the Deep”, “Easy On Me” and “Someone Like You”. The music will be orchestrated and arranged by Joshua Stephen Kartes.
Broadway Sings Adele is produced and directed by Corey Mach (Waitress, Wicked). Previous singers honored in the series, created in 2012, include Sara Bareilles, Beyoncé, The Beatles, Rihanna, and most recently Lady Gaga’s 2020 album Chromatica. More information about the upcoming Broadway Sings Sondheim, as well as the virtual platform Broadway Sings PARTY!, can be found on their website: www.broadwaysingsconcert.com.
For tickets to the show, visit https://www.sonyhall.com. Sony Hall is located at 235 West 46th Street. Tickets are $40-$110, with a limited amount of tickets available for $30 at the door with a valid student ID. General admission seating and student tickets are first come, first served. All ages are welcome and all performers are subject to change.
Adele ‘upset and embarrassed’ over concert delay
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Adele ‘upset and embarrassed’ over concert delay
Duration: 01:30
A tearful and apologetic Adele on Thursday postponed a series of Las Vegas concerts due to start on Friday because half her crew was sick with COVID-19 and the pandemic had caused delivery delays.
When We Were Young Festival 2022: Tickets, cost, date, schedule, headliners
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For one day this fall, it’s going to feel like the early 2000s all over again in Las Vegas.
On Oct. 22, 2022, the emo/punk revivalist When We Were Young Festival will land at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds bringing headliners My Chemical Romance, Avril Lavigne and Paramore along for the ride.
Other major acts scheduled to perform include Jimmy Eat World, Bright Eyes and AFI among many others.
When We Were Young Festival tickets go on pre-sale to the general public at Ticketmaster on Friday, Jan. 21 at 1 p.m. EST for all shows.
If you don’t want to wait until the tickets go on sale to the general public, you can find seats right now on sites like StubHub, TicketNetwork and MegaSeats.
It’s common for speculative tickets to show up on the secondary market first, but be aware that prices may be more expensive than when they go on sale to the general public.
The cheapest tickets we could find find for the one-day festival at the time of publication were on SeatGeek for $326 before fees. Prices are subject to fluctuation.
When We Were Young’s eye-popping, nostalgia-tinged poster featuring dozens of throwback favorites can be found here.
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Matt Levy covers the live entertainment industry, writing about upcoming concerts, festivals, shows and events. He can be reached at mlevy@njadvancemedia.com.
Fugees cancel reunion tour due to COVID-19
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Ready or not… they’re not coming.
The Fugees have been forced to ax their reunion tour due to the ongoing pandemic.
The formerly estranged hip-hop group apologized to fans Friday for backing out of the concerts, which were intended to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their critically acclaimed sophomore album, “The Score.”
“We anticipate and understand disappointment, but our anniversary tour will not be able to happen. The continued COVID pandemic has made touring conditions difficult, and we want to make sure we keep our fans and ourselves healthy and safe,” they said in a statement.
Band members Lauryn Hill, Wyclef Jean and Pras Michel shared the news with fans on social media.
The Fugees disbanded in 1997, one year after releasing “The Score,” and reunited last fall for the first time in 15 years to help kick off the Global Citizen Live concert.
“We’re grateful for the special night we did get to share with some of you in New York, with that rare live moment,” they said in the statement.
“If opportunity, public safety and scheduling allow, we hope to be able to revisit this again sometime soon. Thank you for all your love and support throughout the years,” they added.
Each member of the band pursued solo projects after they disbanded, but rumors circulated that Jean’s affair with Hill contributed to the split. In Jean’s 2012 autobiography, “Purpose,” he accused the songstress of lying about the paternity of her child with Rohan Marley.
“She led me to believe that the baby was mine, and I couldn’t forgive that,” he wrote.
Meanwhile, they aren’t the only musical act to cancel due to the pandemic. A tearful Adele announced that she was postponing her Las Vegas residency 24 hours before opening night.
“Half my crew, half my team is down with COVID — they still are — and it’s been impossible to finish the show. I can’t give you what I have right now,” she said.
New dates have not been announced.
Meat Loaf once reached out to offer Adele support after she suffered the same vocal-cord injury he’d had
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Meat Loaf, whose death was announced Thursday, told the Daily Mail in 2012 that he reached out to Adele about her vocal-cord injury.
Adele had surgery in 2011 to remove a hemorrhaging polyp on her vocal cord.
Meat Loaf performed a 2011 Australia tour with a hemorrhaging vocal cord, he told Billboard.
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Meat Loaf once sent Adele a message of encouragement after the singer injured her vocal cords and had to undergo surgery in 2012.
The death of the singer and actor, whose real name was Michael Lee Aday, at the age of 74 was announced on Thursday evening. Known for his best-selling album “Bat Out of Hell” and for appearing in films like “Fight Club” and “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” he died with his family around him, according to a statement posted to his Facebook page on Thursday evening.
Meat Loaf told the Daily Mail in 2012 that he had sent a message of encouragement to Adele regarding an injury that both of them had suffered, a vocal-cord hemorrhage. In 2011, the “Rolling in the Deep” singer had surgery to remove a hemorrhaging polyp on her vocal cord, CBS News reported.
“My problems were similar to Adele’s,” Meat Loaf told the Daily Mail. “I actually sent her a message saying that every singer understood what she was going through.”
Adele’s 2011 surgery was successful, but in 2017 the singer had to cancel the final two shows of her tour at Wembley Stadium in London as the result of a vocal-cord injury.
Meat Loaf suffered from a similar injury, telling the Daily Mail that he had rebuffed doctors who had cautioned him about performing during an 2011 Australia tour due to the injury. In 2015, he told Billboard that he had done the tour with a hemorrhaging vocal cord and was “spitting blood every night on stage.”
Still, Meat Loaf finished the tour and completed his 2011 album “Hell in a Handbasket” on the road, which was released first in Australia and New Zealand and later released globally in 2012.
At the time of his death, he had a television show and new music in the works, Insider reported. The singer was working on a relationship reality-competition show named after his single “I’d Do Anything For Love (But I Won’t Do That),” as well as a four-song EP.