GEORGE THOROGOOD AND THE DESTROYERS announce their summer / fall “Good To Be Bad: 45 Years of Rock” 31-city tour, starting June 22 in Hinckley, Minnesota through October 19 in Battle Creek, Michigan, with additional dates forthcoming.

The group is in their fifth consecutive year of supporting the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) by donating $1 from each ticket sold on their “Good To Be Bad: 45 Years of Rock” tour to LLS. They will also continue donating 100% of the net proceeds from the sale of their LLS-branded Destroyers shirt to the organization.

Additionally, Epiphone recently announced the release of the Ltd. Ed. George Thorogood “White Fang” ES-125TDC Outfit guitar, featuring a vintage-inspired ES-125 hollowbody archtop in a bone white finish with removable “Cobra” sticker, new ProBuckerTM P-90 single-coil pickups, a hand-signed Certificate of Authenticity, Custom Hard Case with “snake-skin” handle, and WilkinsonTM Deluxe Tuners.

The ES-125 thin-line hollowbody was first introduced in 1956 as a student guitar, but in George Thorogood’s hands, his rare, late 50s two-pickup ES-125 was transformed into one of the most iconic instruments in American music.

George Thorogood

In 2018, GEORGE THOROGOOD AND THE DESTROYERS released a top-selling limited edition 7″ single for Record Store Day, saw the 180-gram vinyl re-issues of their Bad To The Bone, Born To Be Bad and Greatest Hits: 30 Years Of Rock albums, and performed over 70 dates throughout North America on their “Rock Party” tour. Thorogood was presented the 2018 B.B. King Award from The Montreal International Jazz Festival, and his Party Of One album continued to be his fastest-selling disc in over 20 years.

It’s on tour that George & band flip the switch nightly, delivering what The Toledo Blade calls a “gut-bustin’, guitar-wailin’, face-meltin’, take-no-prisoners, good old-fashioned lunch bucket rock-and-roll show”. The Sacramento Bee says, “The Destroyers remain as they have been for years – Jeff Simon on percussion, Bill Blough on bass, Jim Suhler on guitar, and Buddy Leach on saxophone. They are without doubt one of the best touring bands in blues-rock history.” Or as Rolling Stone once raved, “George Thorogood & The Destroyers play rock & roll hot enough to melt the polar icecaps and flood the world’s major population centers.”

George Thorogood & The Destroyers drumset

“GOOD TO BE BAD: 45 YEARS OF ROCK” SUMMER/SPRING TOUR DATES INCLUDE:

6/22/19   Grand Casino – Hinckley, MN
6/23/19   Ravinia  – Highland Park, IL
7/19/19   Casino Rama  – Rama, ON
7/20/19   Kemptville Live Music Festival –  Kemptville, ON
7/21/19   Indian Ranch – Webster, MA
7/23/19   The Cabot – Beverly, MA
7/24/19   Live at MLK!  – Rochester, NY
7/26/19   Tioga Downs Casino Resort – Nichols, NY
7/27/19   Parx Casino XCite Center – Bensalem, PA
7/28/19   Outlaw Jam-Anne Arundel County Fairgrounds –
Annapolis, MD
7/30/19   River City Casino & Hotel – St. Louis, MO
7/31/19   Surf Ballroom  – Clear Lake, IA
8/2/19     Magic City Blues Festival – Billings, MT
8/3/19     Sturgis Buffalo Chip – Sturgis, SD
8/4/19     Arvada Center – Arvada, CO
8/7/19     Jackson Rancheria Casino Resort – Jackson, CA
8/8/19     Ventura County Fair – Ventura, CA
8/9/19     Pacific Amphitheatre – Costa Mesa, CA
8/10/19   Star of the Desert Arena @ Buffalo Bill’s – Primm, NV
9/17/19   Ector County Coliseum – Odessa, TX
9/25/19   The Town Hall – New York, NY
9/27/19   Count Basie Theatre – Red Bank, NJ
9/29/19   Penn’s Peak – Jim Thorpe, PA
10/1/19   The Grand Opera House – Wilmington, DE
10/3/19   CNU’s Ferguson Center for the Arts – Newport News, VA
10/5/19   The Frederick J. Brown Amphitheater – Peachtree City,
GA
10/10/19  Palace Theatre – Greensburg, PA
10/11/19  MGM Northfield Park – Center Stage – Northfield, OH
10/12/19  JACK Cincinnati Casino Event Center – Cincinnati, OH
10/13/19   Brown County Music Center – Nashville, IN
10/18/19   Crystal Grand Music Theatre – Wisconsin Dells, WI
10/19/19   Firekeepers Casino Hotel – Battle Creek, MI

All dates on sale TBA. Check venue websites for more information.

For more information please visit: http://www.georgethorogood.com/

About George Thorogood & The Destroyers

George Thorogood & The Destroyers onstage

Since 1975, they’ve sold over 15 million albums, built a classic catalog of hits, and played more than 8,000 ferocious live shows. They broke records with their 50 Dates/50 States tour, delivered landmark performances at Live Aid and on SNL, and became mainstays of radio, MTV and stages worldwide for more than two generations. Through it all, they’ve remained one of the most consistent – and consistently passionate – progenitors of blues-based rock in pop culture history.

For the past 45 years, it’s been very good to be George Thorogood & The Destroyers. And in 2019, their Good To Be Bad Tour: 45 Years Of Rock will prove why like never before.

“If you’re content, you may as well be dead.” George laughs with his familiar rasp. “I think everyone has thoughts about retiring, but the phone keeps ringing. You want me and The Destroyers to come to your town, set up our gear, wear some badass clothes and play ‘Who Do You Love?’ End of conversation. Let’s rock!”

For Thorogood and his longtime band – Jeff Simon (drums, percussion), Bill Blough (bass guitar), Jim Suhler (rhythm guitar) and Buddy Leach (saxophone) – the power to rock audiences has been both battle cry and creed from the beginning. “Since I was 17,” George says, “all I wanted to do was see how far I could go with my guitar, putting my own spin on music I loved.” After a few hard years as a solo acoustic performer – a period he would revisit with his acclaimed 2017 album Party Of One – George added a drummer and bass player in 1974 to form the electric trio he called The Destroyers. Built around Thorogood’s fiery guitar skills, explosive performance style and a blistering take on blues rarities, the band began to gain a devout following at college parties around their native Wilmington, Delaware. It was at one of their earliest shows that Thorogood had his live performance epiphany. “It wasn’t about the amount of people we drew, but rather the impression we made,” he remembers. “I asked myself, ‘Are we reaching them? Do they want more?’ And we knew from the very first set that we had something special.”

“George had that drive and charisma when we were 11 years old,” laughs childhood pal and 45-year Destroyer drummer Jeff Simon. “At first, we just enjoyed playing music. Then we had the thought of maybe making a living at it. We always believed that if we played great songs and stayed true to ourselves, people would keep coming back.” The band soon became a sensation throughout the Delaware Valley and New England club circuit, and in 1976 signed with Cambridge-based label Rounder Records. Over the course of 16 studio albums – including two Platinum and six Gold discs on Rounder, EMI and Capitol – Thorogood and The Destroyers toured the globe, as Rolling Stone once raved, “playing rock & roll hot enough to melt the polar icecaps and flood the world’s major population centers.” “We’re on a very short list of bands that are still having fun doing this,” Jeff says. “And we’re still looking over our shoulders thinking that somebody will catch us at it.”

George Thorogood

Thorogood & The Destroyers indeed remain unstoppable. In 2018 alone, the band released a top-selling limited edition 7” single for Record Store Day, saw the 180-gram color vinyl re-issues of their legendary Bad To The Bone, Born To Be Bad and Greatest Hits: 30 Years Of Rock albums, and performed over 70 dates throughout North America on their sold-out Rock Party Tour. Thorogood himself received the 2018 B.B. King Award from The Montreal International Jazz Festival, and his Party Of One album – which critics called “brilliant” (Spin), “electrifying” (Guitar Player) and “chock full of classics” (Music Connection) –continued to be George’s fastest-selling disc in over 20 years. “I was meaning to make that record ever since I first picked up an acoustic guitar,” he says. “It was special and I’m really proud of it, but there won’t be a Party of One/Part Two. Once it was done, I grabbed my electric guitar and said to the band, ‘C’mon boys, let’s get back on the road.’”

It’s on tour that George & The Destroyers flip the switch nightly, delivering what The Toledo Blade calls a “gut-bustin’, guitar-wailin’, face-meltin’, fiery-tempoed, take-no-prisoners, good old-fashioned lunch-bucket rock & roll show” that includes their signature hits “Get A Haircut”, “I Drink Alone”, “One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer”, “Move It On Over”, “Who Do You Love” and the definitive badass anthem “Bad To The Bone”, along with several surprises. “George has been honing the set list since our bar band days,” explains 43-year Destroyers’ bassist Bill Blough. “It’s been a constant evolution to make it all killer, no filler. We hear our walk-on song, the lights go down, and something still inherently clicks the second we step on stage. We feel the audience’s energy and the show just explodes.”

And as in past years, a portion of proceeds from every date on the Good To Be Bad Tour will benefit the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. “Now we’re talking about something that’s really important,” George says. “When I was a kid I remember Robert F. Kennedy saying, ‘Some people see things as they are and ask why. I dream things that never were and ask why not?’ That still gives me the chills today. Don’t tell me to slow down or turn down, but if The Destroyers and I can help make a difference in any way, shape or form, we’re there.”

But after 45 years of rock – and no signs of stopping – can Thorogood point to what continues to make it all matter? “My highlight is every night when I walk on that stage and play our hits for those happy people,” he says. “At the end of the show, the audience is smiling, I don’t see any police and everyone got their money’s worth.”

George Thorogood

More importantly, is it still good to be bad? George Thorogood instantly flashes that huge grin. “You bet it is,” he says. ”We’ll always be the baddest band in the land. Expect our best on this tour, because that’s what you’re gonna get.”