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Monday, September 8, 2025

Forever Young: Rock Legends On Why The Stage Keeps Calling Them

 This past Saturday, David Lee Roth performed at the Fontainebleau Hotel in Las Vegas. There were a handful of posts on Facebook from my friends who attended the show, with many mixed comments from people who attended. Some good, and some not too good. After reading these posts, I decided that it's time to address age and the musicians who entertain well into their golden age of retirement. 



Plenty of musicians, especially in rock and pop, are still performing well into their retirement years, and like David Lee Roth, they all have their reasons for staying on stage. 

Here are some key examples and what they’ve said about why they keep on entertaining.

Mick Jagger & Keith Richards (The Rolling Stones)
Still touring in their 80s, they often say performing keeps them alive and energized. Jagger has said that the adrenaline rush of being in front of thousands of fans is irreplaceable. Richards jokes that he’ll stop “when the music stops” and that rock ’n’ roll is his way of life.

Paul McCartney
At 82, he continues to tour stadiums worldwide. McCartney has explained that he feels a duty to give fans the songs they grew up with, and performing keeps him young. He’s said he still gets the same thrill walking onstage as he did with The Beatles.

Bruce Springsteen
Even after health setbacks, Springsteen calls his concerts a “sacrament” and sees live performance as a bond between him and the audience. He says the road feels like home and gives him purpose.

Aerosmith (Steven Tyler & Joe Perry)
On their farewell tours, they’ve made it clear that performing keeps them grounded and that fans’ energy is addictive. Tyler often says music is “medicine” for him.

Willie Nelson
Still touring into his 90s, Nelson has said plainly: “I just love the music.” He sees performing as both joy and therapy, a way to stay connected with life itself.

Bob Dylan
Dylan is still on the road constantly in his 80s, calling it the Never-Ending Tour. He has said the routine of playing keeps him sharp, and he’s not interested in slowing down as long as people want to hear him.

And as for the X lead singer for Van Halen, David Lee Roth (70) hasn’t given one single reason, but over the years, he’s revealed several motivations for why he continues to entertain, even into his seventies. Roth has often said the stage is where he feels most alive. Performing gives him the kind of rush and purpose that he doesn’t find elsewhere. Being a showman isn’t just a job; it’s who he is. He’s said in interviews that he’s “built for this,” and that the role of frontman, storyteller, and provocateur is part of his DNA. His mind is wired to create and entertain, and live shows give him an outlet that’s both physical and artistic. He’s said that music is not a business you retire from, it’s a lifestyle. For Roth, it isn’t about money so much as staying true to what he was “put here to do.” And finally, even decades after Van Halen’s heyday, he thrives on the energy of the audience. He’s acknowledged that the loyalty of his fans and their ongoing demand to see him makes it hard to walk away.

{My Take}

For David Lee Roth and the countless others who tune their guitars, or step behind the mic well past their so-called retirement age, the stage isn’t just a workplace, it’s oxygen to them. Like their peers, Roth seems to know that the roar of the crowd doesn’t just validate a career; it keeps the pulse alive. Musicians may slow down, change their approach, or take fewer gigs, but few can truly walk away. The music has always been more than sound; it’s their life force.

As for my "Life Force", it's in my writing.

GE - Gary England

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