Boston Needed Lead Singer, Found One Online

By DESIREE ADIB and STEPHANIE DAHLE

Tommy DeCarlo of Charlotte, N.C., dreamed of becoming a rock star, listening to his favorite band’s albums and memorizing their songs.

“A Boston song would come on and I’d get fired up and I’d start singing it,” said DeCarlo, 43, a father of two kids — Talia, 19, and Tommy Jr., 17.

But dreams didn’t pay the bills, so DeCarlo worked as a credit manager at a Home Depot store in Charlotte to support his [family?].

Still, he never gave up singing along to his Boston CDs, and his daughter Talia took notice. She posted a MySpace page of DeCarlo singing karaoke to Boston songs after the band’s lead singer, Brad Delp, committed suicide in March 2007. And, in an instant, DeCarlo’s whole world turned upside down.

“I wanted to share [the karaoke] with … other Boston fans,” he said.

DeCarlo had to sing with the karaoke track because he had sold his keyboard in 2006, using the extra cash to buy Christmas presents for his children.

Meanwhile, up in Boston, members of the real band were struggling to continue playing as they coped with Delp’s suicide.

“My wife was at her computer playing our tunes, and I asked whether it was us playing live,” Boston founder Tom Scholz told USA Today. “She said, ‘It’s some guy in North Carolina singing your songs.’ I said, ‘I know Brad’s voice, and that’s Brad.’”

Still, a skeptical Scholz was intrigued.

“In order to believe it, I had to plug the computer into the big speakers so I could listen to the background music and see if it was the band,” Scholz told ABC News. “And I realized it wasn’t the band, it was a karaoke track. Somebody was singing to it, and it wasn’t Brad.”

So the band decided to give DeCarlo a shot — as their new lead singer.

“I was like, ‘Wow!’” DeCarlo told “Good Morning America.” “I remember calling my wife and kids in the bedroom and I said, ‘Look at this e-mail!’ I couldn’t believe it.”

“I was like, ‘Oh my goodness, I can’t believe this is happening,” said Talia DeCarlo. “It was crazy.”

DeCarlo made his debut onstage at a tribute concert to Brad Delp last August. It was the first time he sang with a band in his entire life.

Source : Source - ABC News, GMA

Led Zeppelin Reunites in London to Play Show

Led ZeppelinLed Zeppelin played a storming show at their first UK in 19 years at the 02 Arena in London last night (December 10).

The long-awaited performance was the headline slot at a tribute show for Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun, who died earlier this year and was instrumental in building the band’s career in the 1970s.

Frontman Robert Plant, guitarist Jimmy Page and bassist John Paul Jones were joined by Jason Bonham on drums - son of John, the band’s original drummer who died in 1980 signalling the end of the original band’s 12-year career.

There had been brief reformations before - including Live Aid in 1985 - but tonight was the first full set the group had played since headlining Knebworth in 1979.

An estimated nine million people applied for the 18,000 tickets, and despite the quiet sound there was mass hysteria as the band performed their classics before a crowd including Paul McCartney, Oasis‘ Noel and Liam Gallagher, Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour, Lulu, Arctic Monkeys, Kate Moss and Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl.

The 16 song set kicked off at 9pm GMT prompt - included classics such as opener ‘Good Times Bad Times’, ‘Kashmir’, ‘Ramble On’, ‘Black Dog’, ‘Dazed And Confused’, ‘Whole Lotta Love’ and rousing closer ‘Rock And Roll’, during the second of two encores.

There were also a few surprises thrown in - the disco funk of ‘Trampled Under Foot’ from 1975’s ‘Physical Graffiti’ made an appearance, as did ‘For Your Life’ from 1976’s ‘Presence’ - the first time the band have ever performed the track live.

Plant spoke little during the show, but when he did it was mostly to pay tribute to Ertegun, who he said after first encore ‘Whole Lotta Love’ “ran the best label in the world” in Atlantic Records.

After playing classic ‘Stairway To Heaven’ the singer exclaimed: “Ahmet, we did it!”

He also said before ‘For Your Life’: “The past few weeks have been full of a thousand emotions for Ahmet, for bringing Jason (Bonham) in.”

He also individually introduced each other member of the band during the course of the two-hour performance.

The four-piece, dressed almost entirely in black except for Page’s white shirt, played in front of a massive video screen which featured straight shots of the band at first, but then exploded into psychedelic colours for ‘Kashmir’, the best received song of the evening.

Before that track, Plant delcared: “There are people from 50 countries here. This is the 51st.”

Led Zeppelin played:

‘Good Times Bad Times’
‘Ramble On’
‘Black Dog’
‘In My Time Of Dying’
‘For Your Life’
‘Trampled Under Foot’
‘Nobody’s Fault But Mine’
‘No Quarter’
‘Since I’ve Been Loving You’
‘Dazed And Confused’
‘Stairway To Heaven’
‘The Song Remains The Same’
‘Misty Mountain Hop’
‘Kashmir’
‘Whole Lotta Love’
‘Rock And Roll’

Other acts who performed on the evening with were Paolo Nutini, former Bad Company and Free frontman Paul Rodgers, and Foreigner frontman Mick Jones, all backed by former Rolling Stone Bill Wyman and his band The Rhythm Kings.