Band Photo Gallery

Fame, fortune and adoring fans haven't changed the values of Jewel, seen during a performance
March 30, 1997 on VH1. "I'm just a person who is honestly living my life and asking, 'How do you
be spiritual and live in the world without going to a monastery?'" Jewel Kilcher says in the May 15,
1997 Rolling Stone. Jewel has performed at an inauguration party for President Clinton and has
opened for big-name acts including a gig at Madison Square Garden. (AP Photo/VH1)
Jewel and B.B. King, nominees in the 39th annual Grammy Awards, pose after they
announced the nominees in New York, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 1997. King is nominated for Best
Rock Instrumental Performance and Jewel as Best New Artist. Winners in 89 categories will
be announced during ceremonies at New York's Madison Square Garden, Wednesday Feb.
26, 1997. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
Jewel arrives at the 40th Annual Grammy Awards Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1998, at Radio City
Music Hall in New York. Jewel is nominated for a Grammy as Best Pop Female Vocalist for
her song, "Foolish Games." (AP Photo/Emile Wamsteker)
Jewel, winner of the Favorite New Artist in Pop/Rock category, holds her award backstage at the
American Music Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, Monday, Jan. 27, 1997. (AP
Photo/Michael Caulfield)
Mark McGrath of the rock band Sugar Ray leaps over the monitors during the band's performance
on the first night of the 9th Annual KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas concert, Friday, Dec. 11,
1998, at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. A variety of the most popular modern rock bands
played the two-night concert, including Hole, Garbage and Billy Corgan of the Smashing
Pumpkins. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, HO)
Limp Bizkit guitarist, Wes Borland, performs during his band's set at the annual KROQ Weenie
Roast summer concert Sunday, June 20, 1999 at Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre in Irvine, Calif.
Limp Bizkit performed along with other popular alternative-rock acts including Sugar Ray,
Blink-182, Metallica and the Red Hot Chili Peppers. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
Singer Mark McGrath of the band Sugar Ray sticks out his tongue at guitarist Rodney Sheppard during the band's set at the annual KROQ
Weenie Roast summer concert, Saturday, June 19, 1999, at Irvine Meadows Amphitheater in Irvine, Calif. Sugar Ray performed with a variety
of the most popular contemporary alternative rock acts including Limp Bizkit, Blink-182, Metallica and Red Hot Chili Peppers. (AP
Photo/Chris Pizzello)
Members of the rock band Los Lobos put their handprints in a plaque that will become part of the RockWalk in the Hollywood district of
Los Angeles Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1997. From left are David Hidalgo, Steve Berlin, Conrad Lozano, Cesar Rosas and Louie Perez. The band,
formed over 20 years ago in East Los Angeles, is popular throughout the U.S. and the Americas with both mainstream and Latin music hits.
(AP Photo/Reed Saxon)
David Hidalgo of the Los Angeles-based rock band "Los Lobos" plays during a concert in Mexico
City, Thursday, Sept. 28, 1995 at the Opera Theater. This was only the second appearance in Mexico
ever for the band which is extremely popular among Hispanics in the U.S.(AP Photo/Joe Cavaretta)
A fan is raised in a "mosh pit" in front of the heavy metal group, Metallica, during a free concert in San Jose, Calif., Tuesday, June 4, 1996.
From left is Metallica's Jason Newsted, James Hetfield and drummer Lars Ulrich. Metallica has official Philadelphia and stadium neighbors
in a dither over plans to throw a free outdoor concert Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1997, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)
Metallica performs during a free concert in the parking lot outside the CoreStates Center in
Philadelphia, Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1997. With an earsplitting riff from an album not yet released,
Metallica opened a free concert Tuesday that drew fans from as far away as Canada and bitter
complaints from neighbors. (AP Photo/Dan Loh)
James Hetfield lead singer of the American rock group Metallica performs during a concert, Friday,
November 15 1996, at the Globen Arena in Stockholm, Sweden. (AP Photo/Soren Andersson)
Guitarist Kirk Hammett of the Heavy Metal band "Metallica" performs on stage as the band launch
their European tour with a concert in Vienna Friday night, September 6 1996. (AP Photo/Slezak)
Kirk Hammett, of Metallica, arrives at New York's Radio City Music Hall, Wednesday, Sept. 4,
1996. The famed New York City landmark will be rocking later in the evening when the 13th
Annual MTV Video Music Awards take center stage. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)
Metallica fans whip into a frenzy as Metallica begins it's set Sunday night, June 30, 1996, at the Winnebago County Fairgrounds in
Pecatonica, Ill. More than 35,000 fans visited the small town, which has a population of 1,800, for Lollapalooza '96. (AP Photo/The
Journal-Standard, Jason Clark)
Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart holds one of his instruments in this April 1996 photo. Hart is set for a 32-city tour with a band
called Mickey Hart's Mystery Box. Joining him on the tour, but with other groups, are former "Dead" musicians, Bob Weir and Vince
Welnick. (AP Photo)
Former Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart, right, howls as he jams and dances with demonstrators, Sunday Sept. 14, 1997, in Stafford,
Calif. Approximately 4,000 environmentalists rallied and marched peacefully to protect the Redwoods against the Pacific Lumber Mills, in the
Northern California Headwaters Forests. (AP Photo/Lacy Atkins)
Grateful Dead band members Mickey Hart, left, and Bob Weir goof around while posing for a picture, Tuesday, April 23, 1996, in San
Rafael, Calif. The two are preparing to go on the Furthur Festival tour hitting 31 amphitheaters across the country this summer. (AP
Photo/Lacy Atkins)
Members of the Grateful Dead Bob Wier, front left, and Mickey Hart, front right, joke with, from left, the NBA's Chris Mullen, Sarunas
Marciulionis, Bill Walton and coach Donny Nelson at a news conference Tuesday, May 21, 1996, in San Francisco to unveil the Grateful
Dead inspired tie-dyed jerseys for the Lithuanian Olympic basketball team. The colorful jerseys made their debut as tee-shirts during the
1992 Olympics. Marciulionis is a member of the Lithuanian team and Nelson is an assistant coach for them. (AP Photo/Sam Morris)
Ottawa native Alanis Morissette performs a song from her Grammy winning album of the year
"Jagged Little Pill" during a concert capping Alanis Morissette Day in Ottawa, Friday night March
8, 1996. (AP Photo/Andrew Wallace)
Singer Alanis Morissette performs in concert at the Warfield Theatre in San Francisco, Monday, Oct.
12, 1998. It was Morissette's first concert for her new album. (AP Photo/Randi Lynn Beach)
Alanis Morissette performs to a sold-out audience at St. Vincent College in Latrobe, Pa., on Friday,
Feb. 2, 1996. Morissette has been nominated for six Grammy awards. (AP Photo/Steubenville
Herald, Mike Bordo)
Alanis Morissette performs to a sold-out audience at St. Vincent College in Latrobe, Pa., on Friday, Feb. 2, 1996. Morissette has been
nominated for six Grammy awards. (AP Photo/Steubenville Herald, Mike Bordo)
Alanis Morissette performs "Uninvited," for which she won a Grammy as the best female rock vocal
performance, during the 41st Annual Grammy Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles Wednesday,
Feb. 24, 1999. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian)
Canadian rock singer Alanis Morissette performs at the Ariston Theater in Sanremo, Italy, Saturday, Feb. 27, 1999 as guest star of the Italian
song contest "Festival of San Remo." (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
Willie Nelson, shown in this file photo from Oct. 22, 1998, won the "Vote Don't Mess With Texas" contest, a promotion to further the state's
anti-litter campaign. Voters selected Nelson as the state's favorite spokesperson in the 12-year aim to reduce roadside litter. (AP Photo/Texas
Department of Transportation)
Willie Nelson responds to the crowd as he opens the Farm Aid '96 concert Saturday Oct. 12, 1996 at
Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, S.C. On stage at the time with Nelson was the Dennis Alley
Wisdom Indian Dancers. (AP Photo/Lou Krasky)
When he was inducted in 1993, Willie Nelson, shown in an April 20, 1993, file photo, complained
that selecting just one performer a year to the Hall of Fame just wasn't enough. The Country Music
Hall of Fame is taking Nelson's suggestion and stepping up the pace of inducting members. Ed
Benson, executive director of the Hall of Fame, said Wednesday, July 3, 1996, that three performers
would be inducted each year through 1998. (AP Photo/Wyatt Counts)
Willie Nelson gets into the act and plays for the crowd at his 4th of July picnic in Luckenbach, Texas, July 4, 1998. ( AP
Photo/Express-News, Kin Man Hui)
Tom Morello, fourth from right, of the band Rage Against the Machine explains the reasons for having a benefit concert for Mumia
Abu-Jamal during a news conference in East Rutherford, N.J., Thursday, Jan. 28, 1999. Abu-Jamal is a black former radio reporter who is on
Pennsylvania's death row for the 1981 killing of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner. With Morello are some members of the bands
The Beastie Boys, Bad Religion and Rage Against the Machine who will perform at the concert Thursday night. (AP Photo/Mike Derer)
The band Rage Against the Machine performs Friday night, Sept. 12, 1997 at the Gorge Amphitheatre near George, Wash., despite the
protests of Grant County Sheriff Bill Wiester who went to court to try to keep the band from appearing. Wiester was concerned about drug
use and violence at the concert.(AP Photo/The Wenatchee World, Don Seabrook).
Rage Against the Machine accepts the award for Best Metal Performance at the 39th annual Grammy Awards Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1997 in
New York. (AP Photo/Ron Frehm)
Red Hot Chili Peppers bass player Flea goes airborne as singer Anthony Kiedis play their set during the Tibetan Freedom Concert Sunday,
June 16, 1996, in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. The two-day concert was held to raise money and awareness for the plight of Tibet. (AP
Photo/Sam Morris)
Lead vocalist Anthony Kiedis of the recently reunited the Red Hot Chili Peppers sings during the band's Miller Genuine Draft Blind Date
Concert, Saturday, July 25, 1998, at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago. Both the venue as well as the three bands, the Chili Peppers, Garbage
and Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, remained a secret until they hit the stage. (AP Photo/Miller Genuine Draft,Todd Rosenberg/ho)
Supermodel Claudia Schiffer, center, takes the stage with Anthony Kiedis, right, and Flea, members of The Red Hot Chili Peppers, at the
MTV Video Music Awards in New York Wednesday, Sept. 4, 1996. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
Michael Glabicki, guitarist for the band Rusted Root, is flanked by other band members during a
concert in Erie, Pa. Dec. 8, 1995. The Pittsburgh-based band has fans which express the music
through free-form dancing in the aisles, similar to the followers of the Greatful Dead. Glabicki says
they try to create an environment where fans are comfortable expressing themselves. (AP
Photo/Jack Hanrahan)
Singer Gordon Downie, of The Tragically Hip, sings to a crowd of more than 10,000, in Highgate,
Vt., Saturday, July 26,1997. The concert, Another Roadside Attraction, was headlined by The
Tragically Hip. Another Roadside Attraction moves to Buffalo, July 30, 1997. (AP Photo/The Press
Republican, Scott Hite)
Wyclef Jean poses backstage with his award for Best R&B Video for "Gone Till November" during the MTV Video Music Awards,
Thursday night, Sept. 10, 1998 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Michael Caulfield)

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