• Guns N’ Roses Share New Teaser

    Guns N’ Roses have shared a new teaser regarding their 2026 plans. You can check out that clip below. The teaser is expected to be related to an upcoming tour announcement. Notably, several dates have already been confirmed:

    03/28 Monterrey, MEX – Parque Fundidora
    04/04 São Paulo, BRA – Allianz Parque
    05/07 Daytona Beach, FL – Welcome To Rockville
    06/12 Donnington, UK – Download Festival

  • The Devil Wears Prada’s Mike Hranica Hospitalized Amid European Tour

    The Devil Wears Prada frontman Mike Hranica has been hospitalized amid the band’s current European tour. The group issued the following statement:

    “Our deepest apologies to our friends in Vienna as we are unable to make the show tonight. Mike was hospitalized before we could finish our show in Paris, and we’re taking an additional day of rest to prepare for the rest of the tour supporting Ice Nine Kills. Mike is recuperating. We promise we’ll be back in Paris and Vienna next year, we appreciate your understanding and look forward to next time around.”

  • Sol Invicto Stream “There Never Was” (Breakbeat Mix)

    Sol Invicto (Deftones, Cypress Hill, etc.) are streaming a “Breakbeat Mix” of “There Never Was” as part of their “Vault Of Shadows” series. You can check that out below. Richie Londres said the following about the single:

    “A lo-fi gritty breaks track ft Stephen Carpenter of Deftones and Eric Bobo (Cypress Hill) adding the Latin flavour to the track. This is a alt version of a track we have coming up next year with a Latin artist. Production Notes: Loose old school classic break, chopped a little but still keeping it loose, pushed with some kicks and snares running hot through distortion and delays. A dirty guitar recording sampled and chopped with some clean live percussion (one take) running behind holding the track together. Mastered with a low end push, gritty on purpose.”

  • Watch Tool Perform “Prison Sex” For The First Time In 23 Years

    During their November 23 show at Spark Arena in Auckland, NZ, Tool performed “Prison Sex” live for the first time since 2002. You can see fan-filmed footage of that below. Notably, the set also included the live debut of “Mockingbeat” and the first performance of Intension“ since 2014. However, footage of those tracks has yet to surface. This news comes after the group played several other songs for the first time in years during their November 22 show at the same venue.

  • Angra Part Ways With Singer Fabio Lione

    Angra have parted ways with singer Fabio Lione. This news comes shortly after the band revealed that their “Rebirth” lineup would be reuniting for a performance at the 2026 Bangers Open Air in São Paulo, Brazil.

    Angra commented (translated from Portuguese):

    “It is with deep gratitude and admiration that Angra officially announces the departure of vocalist Fabio Lione.

    Fabio is an extraordinary singer and an unusual human being, who marked our history with his delivery, his artistic sensitivity and a voice capable of moving and impressing audiences around the world.

    Over 13 years, Fabio devoted a huge part of his life to Angra, often away from his home in Italy, his family and his routine. This constant effort, always carried out with professionalism, passion and generosity, is something for which we will have eternal admiration. There were countless trips, exhausting tours, hours and hours in the studios and moments that will remain forever in the memory of the band and fans.

    Over time Fabio ended up becoming a bit Brazilian too. Embedded our culture, our language, our humor and our way of seeing life. He became part of our musical family and gained a special place in the hearts of the fans who always welcomed him with immense affection. He is very dear to us all and his presence made a profound mark on all who had the chance to work with or interact with him. [His] legacy within Angra will be remembered forever through the music we made together and our time sharing the road and life.

    We wish him all the success and happiness in the next chapters of his journey. We are sincerely grateful for each year of dedication and the memories we made together. Our admiration remains intact and the doors will always be open to him.

    Fabio will bid farewell to Angra at the Bangers Open Air show [in April 2026].

    Thank you, Fabio!”

    [via Blabbermouth]

  • Alissa White-Gluz (Ex-Arch Enemy) Premieres “The Room Where She Died” Music Video

    Alissa White-Gluz (ex-Arch Enemy) has premiered a new video for her new song “The Room Where She Died.” You can check that out below. The singer commented:

    “I hope you love this first offering from my upcoming solo album. ‘The Room Where She Died’ is a song that feels truly satisfying to me; like I get to express myself in so many ways that have been dormant for years. This upcoming album is diverse; and I love the idea of opening up this new chapter with this song and video, which I wrote the script for. Can’t wait to share more with you!”

  • Arch Enemy Part Ways With Vocalist Alissa White-Gluz

    Arch Enemy have parted ways with vocalist Alissa White-Gluz. A replacement has yet to be revealed.

    The band commented:

    “Arch Enemy have parted ways with singer Alissa White-Gluz. We’re thankful for the time and music we’ve shared and wish her all the best. Wherever there is an ending, there is also a beginning. See you in 2026.”

    White-Gluz added:

    “After 12 years in Arch Enemy, we have parted ways. I am forever thankful to the thousands of amazing fans I have met along the way. Thank you, Beastlings! I can’t wait to share what I have been working on with you all (with some big surprises in store). Stay tuned for big news in 2026 and see you very soon.”

  • Stitched Up Heart Recruit Lauren Babic And Eyes Set To Kill For New Song “SICK SICK SICK”

    Stitched Up Heart have recruited Lauren Babic (Red Handed Denial) and Eyes Set To Kill for a new song titled “SICK SICK SICK.” You can check out that track below. This news comes as the three acts are preparing to tour together next month.

  • Angra To Reunite With Kiko Loureiro, Eduardo Falaschi, And Aquiles Priester At 2026 Bangers Open Air Festival

    Angra have revealed that they will be reuniting with guitarist Kiko Loureiro, singer Eduardo “Edu” Falaschi, and drummer Aquiles Priester during the April 26 date of the 2026 Bangers Open Air festival. That event will take place at Memorial da América Latina in São Paulo, Brazil.

    The band commented:

    “Being the headliner of a major festival in Brazil, as a Brazilian band, carries enormous meaning for us, especially in the year Angra celebrates 35 years of existence. It proves that the metal made here has strength, history, and relevance.”

    Festival organizers added:

    “Having Angra, and specifically the legendary ‘Rebirth’ lineup , as the headliner for Bangers Open Air is a historic milestone for Brazilian metal. In the year that a national metal festival reaches its fourth edition, an unprecedented feat in the country, this encounter consecrates the strength, trajectory, and relevance of the music produced here.”

  • Stray From The Path Open Up About Their Decision To Call It Quits

    During a recent interview with Kerrang!, Stray From The Path opened up about calling it quits. The group choose to “go out on a high with a victory lap and a new record.”

    Vocalist Andrew “Drew York” Dijorio said the following:

    “We’ve been doing this for 20 years. Through this band, we’ve given the world everything we can give. I’d rather go out on a high with a victory lap and a new record than [slowly lose momentum]. Looking out the window on the bus some days, I’ll think to myself, ‘Damn, this is the last time we get to do this.’ Then you turn up to certain venues to find there’s no heating, the shower is freezing, there’s a hole in the ground to take a shit in and be like, ‘God, I can’t wait to not do this anymore.’

    I’ll go to the merch table and meet fans who seem to want there to be some bitterness. I have to steer the conversation, like, ‘Nah, it’s alright. We’re not here to be sad, we’re here to celebrate!’ We just don’t want to be in this band anymore. But we do want to enjoy these last shows, to see them a positive way where the close of one chapter is the beginning of another.”

    Drummer Craig Reynolds continued:

    “With a band this size you need to be putting your full momentum into it. It’s six months out of the year touring if you really want to make a go of it. We’re getting old. None of us really have that in us anymore. And you begin to think, ‘Is this a sustainable route for me to be able to retire?’ Like, people ask why we aren’t playing more shows in America. Selfishly, we play our best shows in Europe, and we wanted to go out on the best tour we’ve ever had!

    But also, we sell half as many tickets in the U.S. as we do in Europe. And if we did a full tour, you’d have to tell Tom that he’s going to miss his kid’s birthday. Drew will miss recording an album. Neck’s gonna miss making a video. And I’ll miss a podcast guest. After all that, you’d come home from the three weeks of being gone with less money than you would’ve made if you’d stayed at home!”

    Guitarist Tom Williams added:

    “Also, there are just too many bands now. I like the idea of getting out of the way and passing the torch. Touring Australia, we brought out Orthodox and Diamond Construct. On this run, we’ve got Calva Louise, Graphic Nature and Alpha Wolf. It’s getting harder and harder nowadays, so let’s make room for bands like those. I like the thought of making way for the next generation!”

    Reynolds also commented on disbanding during a time when people need political and protest music:

    “As much as I understand that the world needs music like this right now, it takes a lot to actually make it. It’s draining to write about [and endlessly revisit] all the things you hate. I thought people had a chance for a real revolution. We had Jeremy Corbyn and Bernie Sanders.

    Then the pandemic seemed to be the once-in-our-lifetime [event] where things could genuinely change for good. But now we’ve got Trump again and you get the feeling [they’re] keep winning and there’s nothing we can do. That is how fucked the world is at this point: even the artists who speak up against all this stuff are cooked.”

    Dijorio chimed in as well:

    “No one band is ever going to change the world. I’m just happy to have spoken out on the things that are important to us: injustice, [corrupt] politicians, or singers signing bombs that are going to be dropped on people in ‘a war’. I don’t want to say that I’m checked out of it, but I’ve done enough. We’ve done enough.”

    Bassist/vocalist Anthony “Dragon Neck” Altamura also shared his thoughts:

    “Things happen sometimes and people will ask, ‘Where are Stray talking about this?!’ They forget that we’re busting our asses to write songs about these things – songs that might help people to think differently than they would reading a comment on some online argument. I think the songs we’ve written will live on – a lot longer than some Instagram story!”

    Williams went on to discuss how Rage Against The Machine ended during a politically divisive time:

    “‘The Battle Of Los Angeles‘ is as relevant in 2025 as it was in 2000. [Refused‘s] ‘The Shape Of Punk To Come‘ is as applicable now as it was in 1997. Rage Against The Machine have been one of the most influential bands of my life. They made three albums. We did nine. In 1996, on ‘Bulls On Parade‘, Zack de la Rocha sang, ‘Weapons not food, not homes, not shoes / Not need, just feed the war cannibal animal.’ That’s still relevant today.”

    Dijorio concurred:

    “Our music isn’t going anywhere. You’ll always have us. Maybe it’s greedy to hope that in 10 years people will still be listening to music we made. But we wrote our hearts out, we worked our asses off, we sacrificed a lot, and we believe that lyrics like ‘Desperate people never stay desperate forever’ from ‘Guillotine’ will be relevant. In another decade, people will still be saying ‘Fuck the cops!’ like we did on III.”