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JEFF PILSON “would not be surprised if FOREIGNER farewell tour continued well past 2025”

13-11-2024

In a new interview with The Logan ShowFOREIGNER bassist Jeff Pilson addressed the fact that he and his bandmates are often dismissed as a glorified cover band, particularly since founding guitarist Mick Jones no longer regularly tours with the act.

The only remaining original member of FOREIGNERJones suffered from some health issues beginning in 2011, eventually resulting in heart surgery in 2012. This past February, Jones revealed on social media that he was battling Parkinson’s disease, which explained his absence from FOREIGNER‘s live shows since 2022.

Joining Jones and Pilson in FOREIGNER‘s current lineup are Kelly Hansen on vocals, Michael Bluestein on keyboards, Bruce Watson on guitar, Chris Frazier on drums and Luis Maldonado on guitar.

After singer Lou Gramm left FOREIGNER in 2003, Jones took some time off before regrouping a couple years later with an entirely new lineup, featuring Hansen and Pilson, among others.

Regarding the criticism the current FOREIGNER lineup faces for not featuring any original members, Pilson said: “Well, the ticket sales sort of speak for themselves. Listen, I understand where people are coming from. I understand it. But I also know that with FOREIGNER, the songs are really the legacy. And so my job, as musical director, is to make sure that the songs sound and deliver in a way that they should. And I think I’m doing my job because… Yes, there are haters online — of course — but I think there’s not as many as you might think. I think their voices are louder than the amount of people doing it, because the ticket sales do speak for themselves and the offers from promoters speak for themselves. We are very well established as FOREIGNER right now. So, again, if people don’t wanna come because there’s no original members, that’s okay. I understand that. But if you wanna come and hear FOREIGNER songs done really, really well, come to our show.”

Elaborating on what being FOREIGNER‘s musical director entails, Jeff said: “Well, yes, I decide the setlist. And, listen, it’s an easy job in the respect that everybody’s a great musician, everybody listens. I mean, that’s how you got to be in the band, is ’cause you were gonna fill that position well. So it’s not like I have to ride herd on anybody, but I have to listen and I have to make sure, ‘Hey, don’t get too carried away doing this’ or ‘let’s keep the vocals tight on this thing.’ Yeah, I have to kind of ongoingly do that, but it’s a very easy job because we all have the same vision and that’s the biggest part of it. So, again, I kind of think of it as an easy job, but I take it very seriously. And it’s very important to me that the delivery we give to people is a hundred percent. And I feel like we do that every night. So, I’m very, very confident in what we do.”

Pilson also talked about FOREIGNER‘s recent announcement that it was extending its farewell tour and including a celebration of the band’s Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction. Original bandmembers will join them at select shows starting with FOREIGNER‘s sold-out three-week fall residency at the Venetian, Las Vegas. Both Rick Wills and Al Greenwood, who are frequent guests of FOREIGNER, will sit in with the band they helped create for the entire residency. Discussions are in hand to include Gramm as FOREIGNER moves toward its 50th anniversary in 2026.

Asked how long he thinks the FOREIGNER farewell tour will continue on, Pilson said: “Well, when we first decided — we did at one point think that this was gonna be the end of the road, and then the pressure just got too great. And then with the Rock Hall, it just became obvious that we had to continue… that maybe we’re gonna not do the long nine-and-ten-months-of-the-year road stuff anymore. And that’s kind of what we mean by a farewell tour. We always anticipated that in 2025 we’d be doing other things, like perhaps getting some new music out, and we came to the acceptance that we were gonna be doing shows in 2025 during the course of the year; we came to accept that. Now we’re realizing, okay, it’s gonna be more than we thought. It’s not a nine-and-10-month-of-the-year tour, though. So in that sense, the farewell of that has happened. But how long do I see it going? I see it going a while with the momentum that we’ve established. So, I would not be surprised if we continue well past ’25.”

FOREIGNER was inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame on October 19. GrammGreenwood and Wills were present to accept the award, while Jones and Dennis Elliott sat out the ceremony. (Jones‘s daughter, Annabelle Dexter-Jones, was on hand to help accept the award.) Ian McDonald and Ed Gagliardi died in 2022 and 2014, respectively.

The induction ceremony was held at the Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland, Ohio. It aired live on Disney+. An edited three-hour prime-time special will follow, premiering on New Year’s Day on ABC, and become available for streaming the following day on Hulu and Disney+.

To be eligible for this year’s ballot, each nominee’s first single or album had to have been released in 1999 or earlier.

Eligible since 2002, FOREIGNER has had a huge number of rock hits, including “Cold As Ice”“Double Vision”“Hot Blooded”“I Want To Know What Love Is”“Juke Box Hero” and “Urgent”, and has been nominated for three Grammy Awards, with no wins.

In an interview with Lee Richey, earlier this year, original FOREIGNER singer Lou Gramm confirmed that 2024 will be his last year of performing. He said: “I’ve been doing it — Jeez — for almost 50 years, and I would like to turn my attention to my family and my muscle cars and just enjoy myself knowing that when I lay down at night, it’ll be in my own bed.”

He added: “This is gonna be it. I’ve been putting it off and putting it off. And I still enjoy performing, but when you’ve been doing it for as long as I have — the travel is the worst. It really takes its toll. And that’s a sign that you’re getting old.”

Gramm also revealed that he is planning to release a new studio album this year. “It’s song ideas and bits and pieces from my recording of my first solo album, second solo album and SHADOW KING project,” he explained. “Now, what I mean is when you put an album out and you have 10 songs, you might record 13 and pick the best 10. So then you’ve got three songs that you don’t know what to do with. And the years go by. Or maybe they’re not complete songs. Maybe you have 10 songs on your album and there’s a couple songs that you started and once the album was released, you just forgot about them. So when I was looking to put out a new album, I had freshly written songs too, but I just started going through the tapes in my tape closet and listening to these things that were 25, 30 years old, and the ideas were awesome. So I started them that long ago and I finished them about two years ago.”

Back in December 2018, Gramm announced that he was retiring from performing as a solo artist. But he later clarified that he wasn’t completely walking away from performing live.

SHADOW KING was a collaboration between Gramm and current DEF LEPPARD guitarist Vivian Campbell. The group released a self-titled album in 1991 and performed live only once, at the Astoria Theatre in London, England on December 13, 1991.

By the time Gramm left FOREIGNER for the first time in 1990, he had already released two successful solo albums: the aforementioned “Ready Or Not” and “Long Hard Look”. He went on to launch LOU GRAMM BAND, which released an all-Christian rock album in 2009. He followed it up with “My Baby” in 2015.

The now-73-year-old Gramm left FOREIGNER for good in 2002 and has battled health issues in recent years, including the removal of a non-cancerous tumor. He told the Democrat & Chronicle in 2018 that he was planning to retire, but still reunited with FOREIGNER for several shows that year to celebrate the band’s 40th anniversary.

Gramm was the voice on FOREIGNER‘s biggest hits, including “Feels Like The First Time” and “Cold as Ice” from the band’s eponymous debut in 1977, and later songs like “Hot Blooded” and “I Want to Know What Love Is”.

FOREIGNER replaced Gramm with Kelly Hansen in 2005. Guitarist Mick Jones, the only remaining original member, suffered from some health issues beginning in 2011, eventually resulting in heart surgery in 2012. More recently, Jones revealed that he has been battling Parkinson’s disease.

FOREIGNER guitarist Mick Jones has revealed earlier this year that he is battling Parkinson’s disease.

The 79-year-old musician, who has not performed with FOREIGNER since 2022, opened up about his diagnosis in a social media post earlier today.

He wrote: “Fans will have become very aware that for some time now, I have not been performing onstage with the band. Several years ago, I was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. I want everyone to know that I am doing alright. However, I’ve always liked to be at my best when performing onstage, and sadly, at present, I find that a bit difficult. I am still very much involved in the background with FOREIGNER and remain a presence.

“Parkinson’s is a daily struggle; the important thing is to persevere and remind myself of the wonderful career I’ve had in music.

“I thank all the fans who have supported FOREIGNER throughout the years and continue to attend our concerts — I want you to know I appreciate your support; it always means so very much to me, but especially so at this point in my life.”

Mick is a Songwriters Hall Of Fame inductee, and Grammy and Golden Globe-nominated rock legend. Jones, also a recipient of the prestigious British Ivor Novello Songwriter Award for “The Flame Still Burns”, the soundtrack for the film “Still Crazy”, is the founding member of the British-American rock band FOREIGNER.

Jones is the creative force behind iconic rock and roll hits such as “I Want To Know What Love Is”“Urgent”“Cold As Ice”“Hot Blooded” and “Waiting For A Girl Like You”. Formed in 1976, FOREIGNER has become one of the world’s best-selling groups, with global sales exceeding 80 million.

Michael Leslie Jones, known professionally as Mick Jones, was born and raised in England. He began playing the guitar as a teenager and formed his own blues/rock band. After opening for THE ROLLING STONES in South London pubs, Jones got his first significant break working for French hitmaker Sylvie Vartan, with whom he opened for THE BEATLES at the Olympia in Paris. He also accompanied Jimi Hendrix on tour in France.

Jones then became the musical director and songwriter for French rock icon Johnny Hallyday, contributing to some of Hallyday‘s biggest hits. Jones continued to work in France until 1971. George Harrison had encouraged him to move to New York, after which he reformed SPOOKY TOOTH with Gary Wright and played with THE LESLIE WEST BAND and George Harrison himself.

In 1976 Jones formed FOREIGNER. The group, comprised of two other Englishmen, Ian McDonald and Dennis Elliott, and three Americans, Lou GrammAl Greenwood and Ed Gagliardi, went on to release some of rock and roll’s most enduring classics, including “Cold As Ice”“Feels Like The First Time”“Long, Long Way From Home”“Juke Box Hero”“Hot Blooded”“Waiting For A Girl Like You”“Head Games”“Say You Will” and the global No. 1 hit “I Want To Know What Love Is”.

With more top 10 hits than JOURNEY and as many as FLEETWOOD MAC, and 10 multi-platinum albums, FOREIGNER continues to chart on radio airplay and the Billboard 200 almost five decades later.

Outside of his work with the band, Jones has maintained a solo career as a producer, working with BAD COMPANY and producing the best-selling albums of Billy Joel (“Storm Front”) and VAN HALEN (“5150”). He co-wrote the Grammy Award-winning song “Bad Love” with Eric Clapton and “Dreamer” with Ozzy Osbourne.

In July 2023, FOREIGNER commenced its two-year farewell tour with a spectacularly successful headline run at Live Nation amphitheaters. The second part of the tour will begin in June 2024 with a 40-show adventure across America.

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