Air Supply are celebrating their 50th anniversary as a band this year. The duo, Russell Hitchcock and Graham Russell, who dominated Top-40 radio airwaves in the 80s, seem to always be on the road and have become a legitimate touring powerhouse.
Air Supply performed on March 29, 2025 to a sold-out show at the Chevalier Theater in Medford, Massachusetts (USA).
Opening with "Sweet Dreams", they wasted no time in pulling out their classic 1982 smash,
"Even the Nights Are Better". Smooth takes of "Just as I Am" and "Every Woman in the World" had the rabid crowd (affectionately known as "AirHeads") shouting along to every lyric that came out of Hitchcock and Russell's mouths.
Another hit, "Here I Am (Just When I Thought I Was Over You)" was followed by deeper cuts as "Chances", "Goodbye" and "I Can Wait Forever".
The entire band took a break and left Russell onstage alone as he read a poem and played "Only One Forever" solo.
He also explained how the duo met decades ago (during an audition for the play "Jesus Christ Superstar") and became lifelong friends. Russell also credited their longevity to the fact that they never had an argument. Hitchcock and the band then returned to play "Two Less Lonely People in the World".
Air Supply put on a powerful show, as they employ a killer touring band featuring: Aaron McLain (lead guitar); Mirko Tessandori (piano/keyboards); Doug Gild (bass); and Pavel Valdman (drums). These younger turks add a bombastic energy to the songs that resonate perfectly (much in the same way that Paul McCartney's youthful live band does).
The set ended with a trio of classics, "The One That You Love", "Lost in Love" and the epic "Making Love Out of Nothing at All". Penned by Jim Steinman and originally offered to Meatloaf (who passed on the song), "Making Love Out of Nothing at All" is a showcase of the band's talents and Hitchcock can still recreate his vocals four decades later.
A two-song encore featured a cover of Badfinger's "Without You" and "All Out of Love", where several AirHeads rushed the stage to the delight of the band, who in turn handed out roses to thrilled audience members.
“I received plenty of comments saying it was far too soon to ‘go solo’,” Geese frontman Cameron Winter told NME last year while reflecting on how people initially reacted to his decision to branch out on his own. “Most likely because a lot of folks assume that ‘solo albums’ only happen once a band has passed its peak and that they usually feel like uninspired cash grabs.”
Honestly, everyone is trying to earn a living however they can these days, yet no one expected a Geese side project to generate any real financial payoff in 2024. “Just so you know,” he went on, “my solo album is different: because barely anyone knows my band, I am young and comfortable living with my parents and I have the freedom to follow any ideas that interest me.”
Brooklyn indie followers and former NME cover stars Geese were gaining real momentum when their second album ‘3D Country’ mixed cowboy psychedelia with a jazzy, art-punk energy that had already captured the attention of many UK 6 Music dads back in 2023, but who could have predicted what came next? Geese have become one of the most talked-about bands of 2025 and are expected to dominate multiple end-of-year lists with the ambitious and full-range rock of ‘Getting Killed’. Yet the moment that set the stage for this rise was Winter’s Lou Reed-inspired debut solo record ‘Heavy Metal’.

A handful of late-night US television appearances and a spot on Jools Holland acted as a welcoming doorway for the world to see what this 23-year-old can do far beyond what many twice or three times his age are capable of. Now the sold-out Roundhouse audience made up of indie teens, art school regulars, fans who traveled across Europe and seasoned listeners reacts with a collective breath as a slight opening in the stage curtain reveals the silhouette of Winter seated at a piano. First comes a spark of excitement, then a sudden hush.
There is no flashy social media moment, no chatter overriding the music and almost no sea of raised phones. There is a sincerity to how the night unfolds. The Geese singer barely turns toward the audience. “Turn around!” someone calls out from the balcony at one stage. “Is this not enough for you all?” Winter teases back. For some, maybe it was more than enough. At least four people appear to faint around the warm and crowded Roundhouse while the room stands in absolute focus as Winter moves through the dreamlike storytelling of ‘Try As I May’, the emotional swirl of ‘The Rolling Stones’, the bright lift of ‘Love Takes Miles’ and the sermon-like stomp of ‘Nausicaä (Love Will Be Revealed)’. When he reaches the intense and spiritually charged ‘$0’, even the most skeptical hipster might be convinced that “I’m not kidding, God is actually real”. In that moment, it feels as though we all understand.
The entire performance can be summed up in how ‘Drinking Age’ unfolds. It starts softly with a gentle touch on the keys before erupting into a thunderous attack on the Steinway that could echo into next year, followed by a long, open cry aimed toward the sky. Winter somehow manages to blend something minimal with something enormous, something grounded with something cosmic, a delicate approach that hits with staggering force as he reaches toward ideas of existence, heaven, hell and everything surrounding them.

Winter could recite the phone book and still leave a crowd stunned. He carries the spirit of a post-punk Rufus Wainwright you can play alongside The Strokes and Arctic Monkeys, a Gen Z Tom Waits for listeners exhausted by TikTok overload, a new Nick Cave who arrives at exactly the moment he is needed. His voice feels older than his years yet perfectly suited to express the concerns and emotions of his own generation.
We will continue praising Geese endlessly because they deserve it. They are an extraordinary burst of musical creativity that goes far beyond what their lineup would ever imply, and along with Fontaines D.C., they are poised to become one of the decade’s essential bands. Still, tonight offers something quieter and more intimate. Cameron Winter stands completely on his own power, talent and magnetism, proving himself a rising force who can hold an entire room with only his voice, a piano and an entire future waiting for him.
‘Try as I May’
‘Emperor XIII in Shades’
‘The Rolling Stones’
‘Love Takes Miles’
‘Drinking Age’
‘Serious World’
‘Nausicaä (Love Will Be Revealed)’
‘If You Turn Back Now’
‘Vines’
‘Nina + Field of Cops’
‘$0’
‘Take It With You’
‘Cancer of the Skull’