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Lawsuit Over Kiss Guitar Tech's Covid Death Officially Over
Music

Lawsuit Over Kiss Guitar Tech’s Covid Death Officially Over

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

The wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of the Kiss guitar tech who died from Covid-19 while quarantining on the band’s End of the Road World Tour in 2021 ended Wednesday with an official dismissal by the court. The family previously filed a notice of “conditional settlement” involving the band and concert promoter Live Nation, but the court set a hearing for Friday, Nov. 7 to check on the status of the pact. That hearing was cancelled on Wednesday.

No terms of the private settlement were released. Stueber’s widow, Catherine, and lawyers on both sides did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday. Francis Stueber, 53, worked as the guitar tech for Kiss co-founder Paul Stanley for 20 years before his death on Oct. 17, 2021, Stanley previously confirmed in a social media post.

My dear friend, buddy and guitar tech for 20 years, Fran Stueber died yesterday suddenly of Covid. Both on and offstage I depended on him for so much. My family loved him as did I. He was so proud of his wife and 3 boys as they were of him. I’m numb. pic.twitter.com/RvwUGpFt0X

— Paul Stanley (@PaulStanleyLive) October 17, 2021

Catherine and several family members filed the underlying lawsuit against Stanley, his Kiss co-founder Gene Simmons, and Kiss’ longtime manager Doc McGee in October 2023, alleging negligence and wrongful death. Live Nation was also named as a defendant.

Stueber died two days after he was “abandoned” alone in a “random hotel room” as his conditions worsened, the lawsuit alleged. It said the band had “absolutely no recommendation, information, policies, procedures, or safety measures of any kind” in place to deal with staff who contracted Covid-19 on the road.

The lawsuit followed nearly two years after a Rolling Stone investigation detailed claims from several Kiss roadies who claimed lax Covid-19 protocols contributed to Stueber’s death. The roadies said the band didn’t regularly test the crew and that several crew workers fell ill with the virus before Stueber died. 

“I couldn’t believe how unsafe it was, and that we were still going,” one roadie told Rolling Stone at the time. “We’d been frustrated for weeks, and by the time Fran died, I just thought, ‘You have to be fucking kidding me.’”

The band refuted the allegations, saying its safety protocols “met, but most often exceeded, federal, state, and local guidelines.” It said, “ultimately this is still a global pandemic and there is simply no foolproof way to tour without some element of risk.”

In his post mourning Stueber’s death, Stanley called the guitar tech his “dear friend.” He said the death was sudden. “Both on and offstage I depended on him for so much. My family loved him as did I. He was so proud of his wife and 3 boys as they were of him. I’m numb,” he wrote.

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Kiss previously settled a related wrongful termination lawsuit brought by the band’s longtime wig stylist. In that case, plaintiff David Mathews said he was with the band in Illinois in October 2021 when Stueber started showing severe Covid-19 symptoms. Mathews claimed he alerted McGhee to Stueber’s dire condition, but no “timely” action was taken.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Who is Maggie Baugh? 5 things to know about Keith Urban's guitar player amid Nicole Kidman split
Bollywood

Who is Maggie Baugh? 5 things to know about Keith Urban’s guitar player amid Nicole Kidman split

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Published on: Oct 04, 2025 01:39 am IST

Maggie Baugh was absent from Keith Urban’s first show since the news of his split with Nicole Kidman broke. 

Keith Urban’s guitarist Maggie Baugh has found herself in the spotlight amid the musician’s split with Nicole Kidman.

Keith Urban switched a line from a song reportedly inspired by Nicole Kidman, his estranged wife, to one where Maggie Baugh was mentioned. (Instagram/maggie_baugh)

Days before the split, Baugh had posted a video where Urban swapped out a key lyric from his song The Fighter, which is reportedly inspired by Kidman. “When they’re tryna get to you, Maggie, I’ll be your guitar player,” Urban sang on stage, replacing “When they’re tryna get to you, baby, I’ll be the fighter.”

Baugh had captioned it “Did he just say that.” Now, she’s reportedly not been in Urban’s first concert since the news of his split with Kidman came out.

5 things to know about Maggie Baugh

  • Maggie’s father reportedly said he was not privy to any relationship between Baugh and Urban. “I don’t know anything about it, other than she’s a guitar player for him,” he said to the Daily Mail, adding “It’s more of a musician thing than a dating thing.
  • Baugh reportedly began her songwriting career at 13. She told the Hamilton County Reporter “I started going to Nashville when I was 13 and started songwriting around the same age. I put out my very first record when I was 13 years old..”, she said. “When I was 18 years old, I moved to Nashville and started touring a bunch. Last year, I was on tour with Keith Urban and it’s been a crazy wild journey, man,” Baugh added.
  • Maggie shared that she does not come from a family with a background in music. “Nobody in my family plays music. I’m literally the only one. Isn’t that crazy? I’m the oddball. My dad is a microbiologist, and my mom is a stay-at-home mom who runs a dog training business on the side.,” she added.
  • She recently teased a new single about fighting temptation amidst negativity. “There is so many negative vibes in the world right now. I wanted to write this song to give some encouragement,” Baugh wrote on Instagram.
  • One time she also compared her music to music to her ‘boyfriend’. “I feel like music has always just been my boyfriend. So, whenever I have a boyfriend, it’s always like, ‘Oh, you’re just temporary,” Baugh told People, adding, “But when I do go through a breakup, I don’t go to the bar. I put my guitar in my hands.”

News / Entertainment / Music / Who is Maggie Baugh? 5 things to know about Keith Urban’s guitar player amid Nicole Kidman split

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Aryan Khan Surprises Diljit Dosanjh, Fans With Singing, Guitar Skills For The Bads Of Bollywood
Bollywood

Aryan Khan Surprises Diljit Dosanjh, Fans With Singing, Guitar Skills For The Bads Of Bollywood

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Aryan Khan, son of Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, is set to make a powerful debut — not in front of the camera like his sister Suhana Khan, but behind it. He marks his directorial entry with the upcoming Netflix web series The Bads of Bollywood, and the buzz around it has only grown stronger with each teaser and song release.

One of the highlights leading up to the release has been the track Tenu Ki Pata, a collaboration between Aryan and Punjabi sensation Diljit Dosanjh. A behind-the-scenes video, shared by Shah Rukh himself, shows Aryan working closely with Diljit on the song. In the clip, SRK can be heard joking with Aryan, saying he’ll get famous now thanks to working with Diljit.

The surprise element? Aryan not only directed but also showcased his musical talent. He plays the guitar and even sings — something that caught Diljit off guard. In response to SRK’s tweet, Diljit praised Aryan, calling him “pyara” and revealing that Aryan’s musical abilities were shockingly impressive. “He knows every single note of the song,” said Diljit, adding, “God bless him. Respect.”

This unexpected musical side of Aryan has left fans in awe and heightened the anticipation for The Bads of Bollywood. The internet is buzzing with excitement, especially after learning that Aryan can sing so well.

The series features Kill star Lakshya, Sahher Bambba, and Bobby Deol in lead roles, with special appearances by Shah Rukh Khan, Aamir Khan, Ranveer Singh, Disha Patani, and more.

Set to premiere on September 18, The Bads of Bollywood is shaping up to be one of the most awaited releases on Netflix this year.

September 13, 2025 0 comments
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'Man of Steel' Steel Guitar Player Was 63
Music

‘Man of Steel’ Steel Guitar Player Was 63

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Accomplished steel guitar player and producer Robby Turner, who has played with artists including Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, The Highwaymen and Chris Stapleton, died Thursday, Sept. 4, at age 63.

Turner’s son Bobby Turner confirmed the passing of his father on social media, writing, “We’re sad, but we know he’s walking without any help, and he’s no longer in pain.”

Known as the “Man of Steel,” Turner played on projects including the 1976 album Wanted! The Outlaws, from Jennings, Nelson, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser, which spawned the Jennings/Nelson hit “Good Hearted Woman” and became the first country album to become certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.

Turner also recorded and toured with country supergroup The Highwaymen (Jennings, Nelson, Kris Kristofferson and Johnny Cash) and contributed to the group’s 1990 project The Highwayman 2 and their 1995 album The Road Goes On Forever. He contributed to several of Jennings’ albums and became the Country Music Hall of Famer’s primary steel guitar player until Jennings’ death in 2002.

In 2019, Turner was honored as part of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Nashville Cats series. During his interview for the series, he said of working with Jennings, “Waylon never really told us what to do…we just played until he smiled.”

Turner contributed to albums by Tanya Tucker, Randy Travis, John Prine, Marty Stuart, Jim Lauderdale, Loretta Lynn, Travis Tritt, The Oak Ridge Boys, and more recently, projects from Chris Stapleton, Sturgill Simpson and Colter Wall, playing on Stapleton’s CMA Awards album of the year-winning projects Traveller and From A Room: Volume 1, Simpson’s High Top Mountain, and Wall’s self-titled album. He also performed with artists including Johnny Paycheck and The Chicks.

Turner was surrounded by music from an early age; his parents Doyle and Bernice Turner were part of Hank Williams Sr.’s Drifting Cowboys from 1946-1948.

During the Nashville Cats series, Turner also spoke of why he loved both recording steel guitar in the studio and also playing onstage. “It was part of my learning process,” he said. “I had to. I wasn’t going to just fall right into the studio. [Steel guitar player, known for his work with George Jones, Tammy Wynette and others] Pete Drake, my mother would take me by there and drop me off at Pete’s place…when I was younger, [steel guitarist, known for work with artists including Dolly Parton and Charley Pride] Lloyd Green and Pete Drake owned the radio…Pete asked me when I was 12, ‘What do you want to be? A session player or a road guy, play with artists live?’…I thought about it and the next couple of months when I was down there…I said, ‘I want to be able to do both. I want to play on records and I want to produce records…I’ve had recording equipment since I was nine years old…I want to do both, but I really want to concentrate on studio stuff.”

Of performing with The Highwaymen, Turner said, “That was the greatest band that you could ever ask to play with…the American rhythm section and those four guys. Sometimes I would literally pinch myself, it was like a dream…it was one of the highlights of my life.”

Along the way, Turner also released his own projects, including 1996’s Man of Steel and 1998’s Steel Country.

Jennings’ son, musician/producer Shooter Jennings, wrote in tribute to Turner on X, “So sad to hear about Robby Turner. A once in a lifetime talent and the funniest guy I ever met. What a player. Was lucky to have toured and recorded with him many times. Rest in Peace, Robby.”

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Mac DeMarco: Guitar Album Review
Music

Mac DeMarco: Guitar Album Review

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The most affecting moment on Guitar comes 45 seconds into the fourth tune, “Nightmare.” The song begins mid-meter, DeMarco’s voice arriving so ahead of the beat that it’s like he has been searching for someone he can tell his troubles to. Maybe there’s been an argument, and his partner is still sleeping it off in the next room. It is a miracle, he confesses, that she sticks around at all. “Roll up those sleeves, boy,” he sings in a diminutive falsetto, cuddly as a teddy bear. “Smoke the whole pack/There’s no turning back from this one.” In a few perfect lines, this is the war of always trying to get your shit together, of trying to be good enough for the life into which you have wandered. By all interview accounts, DeMarco’s partner, Kiera McNally, possesses a saintly forbearance, sticking with him from those rough-and-tumble salad days to these idyllic times of pruning olive trees on an island; here he is, waking up bummed, then rolling up his sleeves to try and deserve her.

In two minutes, “Nightmare” bottles both sides of Guitar—DeMarco’s bummer survey of what he has been and his grim commitment to what he may still be. The past comes back to haunt him on “Knockin’,” a simple country-funk number where regrets he thought he’d overcome arrive like uninvited guests for a housewarming party at the spot where he hopes to spend the rest of his life. Evoking George Harrison on a morphine drip, “Home” finds him contemplating the places and people he’s already left, how seeing them again would feel like finding a ghost whose sole purpose is to remind him of his failures. Each beat is another towering speedbump that DeMarco is willing himself over and beyond, forcing himself into the future.

And DeMarco’s songs about that future are what make Guitar so endearing, what makes it land like a long hug from an old friend you assumed you’d never see again. “Sweeter” seems like a catatonic bummer, a from-the-brink testimonial of someone who has supremely fucked up, repeatedly breaking a lover’s heart until she vanished. But DeMarco’s promise—“This time, I will be sweeter/I can be much sweeter/Some things never change”—is so plainspoken and earnest that I find myself pulling for him like he’s some hapless sports team, one play away from saving the franchise. He searches for his core on “Punishment,” a sort of secular prayer about trying to find the thing that animates you, the thing that can serve as a safeguard against your worst instincts. Plodding in a way that suggests a daily ritual, “Holy” is more direct still, a plea to be cut free from the “curse from down below.” DeMarco can see the tether to his old ways starting to fray; just maybe it will finally snap.

DeMarco’s first album arrived the month I got engaged, his second a month or so before I turned 30 and got married. When his songs were daily reckonings with nights of excess, I was trying to get over inherited bacchanalian patterns of my own, to ease into some version of adulthood. His music made me feel like I was staring into some cracked rearview mirror. I get the sense from Guitar that DeMarco now knows what that’s like, as one tries to leave the pernicious habits that extend from a lineage of addicts. But these songs—soft lullabies and blues for himself about the hard places he’s been—make me think he’s getting somewhere new by being honest and at least a little optimistic. “All those days of trying to run/What a waste of breath,” he sings at one point, like he’s letting out a sigh he’s suppressed for 35 years. Maybe no matter the struggle, you could still be a little like this version of Mac DeMarco, too.

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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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