George Thorogood & The Destroyers

  • Friday, February 28 | Doors 7:00PM
    Hard Rock Live

Over the past year alone, George Thorogood & The Destroyers have been honored by The Recording Academy’s GRAMMY Museum and The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s Legends of Rock exhibit, and delivered triumphant performances at New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival as well as on a top-selling U.S. summer 2024 tour with John Fogerty. Meanwhile, Thorogood became the first entertainer in history to receive The University of Delaware’s Medal of Distinction ‘for significant cultural contributions to society’, along with the official renaming of a campus passageway near the site of Thorogood’s December 1st, 1973, debut performance as ‘Thorogood Alley’.

This was, after all, a celebration of George Thorogood & The Destroyers’ 50th Anniversary. And in a five decade career also fueled by 8,000+ live shows, more than 15 million albums sold, and a global reputation as “the band that plays hot enough to melt the polar icecaps” (Rolling Stone), one of the 5 best acts left out of The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame” (WNBF Binghamton), and a snarling embodiment of blues rock’s renegade spirit” (Classic Rock), where can “one of the most iconic bands in rock history” (Rapid City Journal) possibly go from here?

“That’s all pretty good for the first 50 years,” George Thorogood says with a laugh. “But we keep working harder, digging deeper and playing stronger. Now it’s time to go back out there and do some serious rockin’.” For George Thorogood & The Destroyers, serious rockin’ will always be what they do best. And for 2025, The Baddest Show On Earth Tour will bring the guitar-slinging, amp-blasting, roof-shaking rock party like never before.

For Thorogood and longtime Destroyers Jeff Simon (drums), Bill Blough (bass), Jim Suhler (guitar) and Buddy Leach (saxophone), the key has always been the power and honesty that defines great rock & roll. And much like The Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin brough the blues back to America in a new form, Thorogood has always recognized that rock & roll comes from blues, country, R&B and beyond. It’s how he’s reverently reinvented songs like ‘One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer’, ‘Move It On Over’ and ‘Who Do You Love?’ and made them his own. It’s why he’s been inducted into the Mississippi Music Project Hall of Fame, received The B.B. King Award from The Montreal International Jazz Festival, and performed at The Grand Ole Opry. It’s how the hits he’s written – including ‘I Drink Alone’, ‘Gear Jammer’ and the ultimate badass anthem ‘Bad To The Bone’ – became rock radio classics that the band still proudly plays for cheering audiences around the world.