
Hard rock artists included on the list:
07. BON JOVI – $19,813,232
12. JOURNEY – $12,313,822
31. FOO FIGHTERS – $6,013,257
32. RUSH – $5,819,304
38. MÖTLEY CRÜE – $5,376,272
You can find the entire list at Billboard.com.

Hard rock artists included on the list:
07. BON JOVI – $19,813,232
12. JOURNEY – $12,313,822
31. FOO FIGHTERS – $6,013,257
32. RUSH – $5,819,304
38. MÖTLEY CRÜE – $5,376,272
You can find the entire list at Billboard.com.
According to Robin Leach of the Las Vegas Sun, MÖTLEY CRÜE singer Vince Neil will open a topless nightclub, Vince Neil’s Girls, Girls, Girls, later this month in Las Vegas. The club will occupy the former Déjà Vu location opposite the Orleans off Tropicana Avenue a mile from the Las Vegas Strip.
“It’s something I always wanted to do,” Neil said. “So it’s like a dream come true. But this will be different and unique. It will be the first rock and roll strip joint. It was a business opportunity to become a partner that was too good to pass up.”
Regarding the kind of entertainment that will be available at Vince Neil’s Girls, Girls, Girls, Neil told the Las Vegas Sun, “First, the girls will be edgier. Tattoos won’t be banned. They will look like they stepped out of a music video. Hot, provocative and edgy. I know it all comes down to G-strings in the end, but they’ll start out with much sexier outfits than you find elsewhere. Second, the music isn’t going to be boring. None of that house, generic strip club music. This will be full-on rock and roll.” Source: Blabbermouth.net
According to RadarOnline.com, MÖTLEY CRÜE drummer Tommy Lee has settled his legal battle with his former assistant, who sued the rock star for defamation and failure to pay overtime, among other claims. Lee will pay Michael Anthony Sullivan more than $400,000 and deliver “a public apology,” a source tells Star magazine.
Sullivan, who claims to have worked as Lee‘s “procurer, Man Friday, chauffeur, guide, bookkeeper, attendant, door-keeper, agent, butler, valet, attendant, cook, shopper, nanny, bodyguard, maid, nurse and nursemaid” from January 2005 to March 2011, filed a lawsuit against Lee and Lee‘s company, Mayhem Touring, in Los Angeles Superior Court in November 2011, claiming that he was worked virtually around the clock, and that Lee made improper deductions from the assistant’s paycheck. The disgruntled assistant also asserts that after he was terminated, he was hired to become the tour manager for BUSH, but lost the job because of “Lee‘s defamatory statements and interference.”
“Lee found Sullivan so useful that he required him to stay at his residence so that he was always available for service,” the suit said. “However, after requiring Sullivan to stay at the home and obtaining the benefits of Sullivan‘s presence in his home, in 2009, Lee began deducting $1,000 from his wages every month for ‘rent.'”
You can check out the entire lawsuit at this location. Source: Blabbermouth.net
Gibson.com: Did MÖTLEY CRÜE ever have a dream of having your own residency in Las Vegas? I mean, you’re the first rock band to really do so.
Mick: Not really. I’m an old-school type of person. When it comes to residencies, I think MÖTLEY CRÜE is kind of breaking the ice in that area, because when I think of residencies, I think of the older names and non-rock acts. So, I feel like it’s what we did with the Roxy in Los Angeles with the rock scene. We were the first unsigned band to play there, which opened up a whole new area for bands that were unsigned to play. So, we could be doing the same thing here. I don’t know — I don’t have a crystal ball. [Laughs]. But, I’m guessing stuff like that will happen.
Gibson.com: I’ve heard that you guys are planning to put together a movie [the long-awaited film adaptation of CRÜE‘s band biography “The Dirt – Confessions of the World’s Most Notorious Rock Band”] and new album by 2013. What can you tell us about the progress on that?
Mick: We’re working on it, and I believe we have the producers lined up. The directors I met with a month or so ago, and they’re all really cool people, and they get it. They understand what rock and roll is about. When I talked to them, I went, “This isn’t all fun and games and fluffy stuff. This is the real deal…” That’s the realism of how rock and roll really is. So far, these directors really get it, and the producers also really like the idea. I’d give it a 99 percent chance of happening, along with a new record.
Read more from Gibson.com.

Source: Blabbermouth
Ultimate-Guitar.com recently caught up with producer/engineer TOM WERMAN, known for his work with CHEAP TRICK, MÖTLEY CRÜE and TWISTED SISTER. An excerpt from the interview is available below.
UG: You forged a successful career as a heavy metal producer, what elements were important to you as a producer when it came to producing bands in this genre?
Werman: “Basically I tried to identify and feature the pop elements in their music, so I could get them AM radio play. In the 70’s and 80’s, if you had a hit single you could sell millions of albums. Without a hit single, you could be successful, but not really big – when FM stereo radio came in, then bands could be very successful through album play alone, but having a hit was an effective shortcut to the big time. I tried to do this without compromising the band’s metal street credibility. Fact is, I was never a heavy metal guy – I was a pop guy.”
UG: You were largely responsible for the success of Mötley Crüe in the 1980s, what was it like working with the band in the studio on the albums you produced?
Werman: “This was a different kettle of fish – Tommy and Mick were very quick in the studio, and very accomplished on their instruments. Nikki was not a particularly good bass player when I started with the band, but he did improve considerably by the time we got to Girls Girls Girls. Tommy was a fine drummer with a great hard rock style, and a curiosity about technical sound innovations, like samples and triggers. Vince was very good natured, but also a veteran partier, and this would sometimes render him less than productive when he came in the following day to do his vocals. Still, he worked hard behind the mike. We finally achieved a satisfactory guitar sound when we got to Girls Girls Girls, and this song and ‘Wild Side’ were my two favorite tracks in terms of production ideas and execution.”
UG: Over the years, members of Mötley Crüe, Twisted Sister and Cheap Trick have all questioned your role in their production of their albums, stating they’re not happy with how the albums came out?
Werman: “I find this very curious. It’s the principal guy in each band that has come up with an incredibly inaccurate version of history. First, each of these three individuals absolutely approved every album in question. Second, each one of the seven LP’s involved was either platinum or multi-platinum. Third, with Mötley and Cheap Trick, isn’t it odd that both bands used me 3 times in a row as a producer? Why didn’t they change producers after the first album if they were so unhappy with the outcome? Fourth, these albums were recorded with technology that’s now 30 years old. Consider the stunning progress that’s transpired in the audio-visual world since 1975…naturally the music is going to sound considerably better now.
Frankly, I feel that Dee Snyder was simply unable to share credit for a hugely successful LP after being only marginally successful for the first seven years. Cheap Trick has made lots of bad decisions, and has managed to blame the record label, their manager and their producer for all of them. Nikki Sixx created a work of total fiction in his Heroin Diaries and accused everyone involved with the band of taking advantage of him. He actually alleged that I spent much of my studio time on the phone and that he did most of the work with Vince’s vocals. This could not possibly be less truthful. Isn’t it strange that I was able to produce 20 other gold and platinum records without his valuable assistance?”
Click here for the complete interview.
Source : Bravewords.com
The following are the top-ranked hard rock/metal tours of the year (overall ranking based on total box office gross data as provided to Pollstar by concert promoters and venue managers):
15. JOURNEY
Gross (millions): 37.4
Average Tickets: 12,065
Cities/Shows: 58/58
41. MÖTLEY CRÜE
Gross (millions): 21.1
Average Tickets: 7,397
Cities/Shows: 51/51
47. DEF LEPPARD/HEART
Gross (millions): 19.2
Average Tickets: 8,364
Cities/Shows: 45/45
51. RUSH
Gross (millions): 18.3
Average Tickets: 9,757
Cities/Shows: 25/26
64. LINKIN PARK
Gross (millions): 14.0
Average Tickets: 9,807
Cities/Shows: 24/24
68. PEARL JAM
Gross (millions): 12.3
Average Tickets: 18,578
Cities/Shows: 10/11
73. GUNS N’ ROSES
Gross (millions): 11.2
Average Tickets: 6,446
Cities/Shows: 33/35
75. AVENGED SEVENFOLD
Gross (millions): 10.9
Average Tickets: 5,803
Cities/Shows: 53/53
91. RAMMSTEIN
Gross (millions): 9.0
Average Tickets: 12,175
Cities/Shows: 12/13
94. Rockstar Energy Drink Uproar Festival
Gross (millions): 8.6
Average Tickets: 8,977
Cities/Shows: 30/30
95. OZZY OSBOURNE
Gross (millions): 8.5
Average Tickets: 7,479
Cities/Shows: 22/22
96. Rockstar Energy Drink Mayhem Festival
Gross (millions): 8.5
Average Tickets: 9,578
Cities/Shows: 25/25
97. JUDAS PRIEST
Gross (millions): 8.4
Average Tickets: 4,334
Cities/Shows: 38/38
101. Music As A Weapon
Gross (millions): 7.9
Average Tickets: 4,669
126. SOUNDGARDEN
Gross (millions): 6.1
Average Tickets: 5,167
132. KISS
Gross (millions): 5.8
Average Tickets: 2,704
155. AEROSMITH
Gross (millions): 4.7
Average Tickets: 24,995
166. A PERFECT CIRCLE
Gross (millions): 4.4
Average Tickets: 3,967
175. IRON MAIDEN
Gross (millions): 4.2
Average Tickets: 15,941
180. SYSTEM OF A DOWN
Gross (millions): 4.1
Average Tickets: 7,604
198. DEFTONES
Gross (millions): 3.4
Average Tickets: 2,371
You can see the entire list of the Top 200 top-grossing North American tours of 2011 in PDF format at this location.

Source: Blannermouth.net