Most people these days probably know "REO Speedwagon," if at all, as the name of the moderately successful rock band behind the 1980s hits "Keep On Loving You" and "Can't Fight This Feeling." But the ...
A couple of years ago, REO Speedwagon’s Kevin Cronin traveled a few miles from his Southern California home to catch the Foo Fighters at a club with a capacity of 600. “It was so inspiring,” Cronin ...
Kevin Cronin said REO Speedwagon reached the point where they had to choose between partying and working around 1982, soon after they made the big time. “We would check into the hotel, he’d check into ...
REO Speedwagon played their final show on Saturday at Las Vegas' Venetian Theatre, putting to bed a career that spanned nearly six decades. You can see the set list and videos from the performance ...
Back in the Roaring Twenties, nearly all household goods were delivered to your home. Fruits and vegetables, eggs and butter, milk, and coal all arrived at your door via delivery truck. Anyone who ...
Last year, REO Speedwagon’s Kevin Cronin traveled a few miles from his Southern California home to catch the Foo Fighters at a club with a capacity of 600. “It was so inspiring,” Cronin said, making ...
Because we suspect few of you are middle-aged Midwestern women, you might not be aware that REO Speedwagon is still touring. Well, they are: The 42-year-old band from Champaign, Illinois, did more ...
The post REO Speedwagon Play Final Show (But Same Band Will Continue Touring): Video + Setlist appeared first on Consequence. REO Speedwagon played their final show on Saturday (December 21st) at Las ...
REO Speedwagon's Kevin Cronin recalled how the band decided to name their breakthrough album You Can Tune a Piano, But You Can't Tuna Fish, and said their record label had no problem with letting it ...
In 2021, REO Speedwagon’s Kevin Cronin traveled just a few miles from his Southern California home to catch rock band Foo Fighters play an intimate, 600-capacity show the Canyon Club in Agoura Hills ...
REO Speedwagon began revving up its engines in 1967, when some University of Illinois students put together a musical group that took its name from the REO Speed Wagon, a 1915 truck designed by Ransom ...