Queen's Roger Taylor announces 7th solo album and September 2026 UK tour

He plays six headline shows

Roger Taylor
Author: Scott ColothanPublished 9 hours ago

Queen drummer Roger Taylor has announced his seventh solo album ‘Violence Insane in a Beautiful World’ and his first UK tour in five years.

Released on Friday 18th September 2026 on Columbia, ‘Violence Insane in a Beautiful World’ has nine original tracks penned by Roger Taylor plus a cover of John Lennon’s ‘Jealous Guy’.

Very different to February’s plaintive, politically charged protest song ‘Chumps’, Roger’s positively euphoric new single ‘Come on Summer (It’s Party Time)’ features The Ndlovu Youth Choir from Limpopo, South Africa, who also sing on two other album tracks.

“I was really happy when I became aware of this amazing South African choir, who sing in Zulu. They're just wonderful,” enthuses Roger.

“They did the most incredible cover version of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, and it's fabulous. I couldn't believe it when I saw it. So, we suddenly had the bright idea of asking them to sing on some of the tracks, which they did, and I think it's transformed those songs. It gives them a whole new dimension. I'm really thrilled with their work on that.”

Commenting on the overarching themes of ‘Violence Insane in a Beautiful World’, Roger says: “There is a theme, you know, it's in the title really, what a beautiful world we live in, don't f--- it up. There seems to be all this insanity at the moment. The violence in the world seems to be as bad as it ever was, at any point, and certainly in my lifetime. It's just horrific, a lot of insane violence. And we do seem to be f---ing up the world, plastics in the sea, you know, and all these awful wars everywhere and hatred born of different religions.”

However, the tone of the album is hopeful, as Roger adds: “It's a beautiful world, you know. And kindness is very important, I think, it seems to be forgotten quite a lot. So, that is basically the sort of underlying theme.”

Following the release of ‘Violence Insane in a Beautiful World’, Roger will embark on a six-date UK tour visiting Newcastle, Edinburgh, Birmingham, Manchester, London and Swansea.

Fans who pre-order any format of ‘Violence Insane In A Beautiful World’ via the official store between Wednesday 10 June at 11am BST and Saturday 13 June at 11:59pm will receive exclusive access to an early ticket pre-sale for Roger’s tour dates.

Roger Taylor's 'Violence Insane in a Beautiful World' album cover

General sale tickets are available from 9am on Wednesday 17th June.

Roger’s band will feature keyboardist Spike Edney, supporting drummer Tyler Warren, multi-instrumentalist Tina Keys, Neil Fairclough on bass, and Christian Mendoza on guitar.

Roger Taylor’s UK tour dates:

SEPTEMBER 2026

Newcastle O2 City Hall – 21st

Edinburgh Usher Hall – 22nd

Birmingham The Alexandra – 24th

Manchester Opera House – 25th

London Roundhouse – 28th

Swansea Building Society Arena – 29th

Roger Taylor UK tour

Roger Taylor's 'Violence Insane in a Beautiful World' track-listing:

A Beautiful World – Feat. The Ndlovu Youth Choir

Violence Insane

What Really Matters

Don’t Photograph Food

I See You Now

Chump

Spit In His Eye

Jealous Guy

Come On Summer (It’s Party Time) - Feat. The Ndlovu Youth Choir

A Great Big Beautiful World (reprise) – Feat. The Ndlovu Youth Choir

The 20 greatest rock songs of all time, including Queen:

20) AC/DC - Highway to Hell (1979)

At Number 20 on Planet Rock's countdown of the 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time is AC/DC's Bon Scott-era classic 'Highway to Hell'. Incredibly, the 1979 hard rock anthem is AC/DC's 18th song to feature on the Top 500.

19) Deep Purple - Child in Time (1970)

Deep Purple's sprawling 1970 masterpiece 'Child in Time' is Number 19 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. The multi-layered 10-minute opus is the perfect showcase for Ian Gillan's astonishing pipes, with guitar titan Ritchie Blackmore and late-great organist Jon Lord also sharing centre stage.

18) Black Sabbath - War Pigs (1970)

Black Sabbath's anti-war anthem 'War Pigs' is at Number 18 on our countdown of the 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time. A towering heavy metal tour-de-force that's powered by Geezer Butler's hard-hitting and powerful lyrics, 'War Pigs' is undoubtedly one of Sabbath's finest moments in their fabled career.

See the full Top 500, as voted by Planet Rock listeners, below 👇

17) Metallica - Master of Puppets (1986)

Metallica's enduring thrash classic 'Master of Puppets' is at Number 17 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. The title track of Metallica's third album – and last to feature the late-great Cliff Burton – has enjoyed a fresh wave of popularity in recent years thanks to its inclusion in Stranger Things.

16) AC/DC - Back in Black (1980)

AC/DC's hard rock juggernaut 'Back in Black' is at Number 16 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. The title track of AC/DC's all-conquering seventh studio record – and the second best-selling album of all time – the omnipotent 'Back in Black' is instantly recognisable from those opening crunching riffs.

15) Iron Maiden - Hallowed Be Thy Name (1982)

Iron Maiden's 'Hallowed Be Thy Name' is at Number 15 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. Penned by bassist and sole constant member Steve Harris, 'Hallowed Be Thy Name' brings Iron Maiden's landmark 1982 album 'The Number of the Beast' to an emphatic close. It's widely - and rightfully - regarded as one of the greatest metal songs ever.

14) Metallica - Enter Sandman (1991)

Metallica's 'Enter Sandman' is at Number 14 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. The opening track of Metallica's self-titled fifth record - aka The Black Album, 'Enter Sandman' fuses nightmarish lyrics with monumental metal music to devastating effect.

13) Deep Purple - Smoke on the Water (1972)

Deep Purple's 'Smoke on the Water' is at Number 13 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. The 'Machine Head' track was written by Ritchie Blackmore, Ian Gillan, Roger Glover, Jon Lord and Ian Paice about the fire that ravaged the Montreux Casino on Saturday 4th December 1971, and it's powered by Blackmore's famous riff.

12) Black Sabbath – Paranoid (1970)

Black Sabbath's 'Paranoid' is at Number 12 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. One of the most famous metal songs in history, 1970 classic 'Paranoid' was fittingly the last track Black Sabbath ever performed live at their final Back to the Beginning concert at Villa Park in July 2025.

11) Meat Loaf - Bat Out of Hell (1977)

The late-great Meat Loaf is at Number 11 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. The title track of Meat Loaf's blockbuster Jim Steinman-penned debut album, 'Bat Out of Hell' helped propel a 30-year-old Michael Lee Aday into global superstardom.

10) AC/DC – Whole Lotta Rosie (1977)

AC/DC are at Number 10 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown with the truly tremendous 'Whole Lotta Rosie'. Lifted from 1977's 'Let There Be Rock' album, 'Whole Lotta Rosie' details an amorous relationship late-great frontman Bon Scott had with a voluptuous woman in Tasmania.

9) Guns N’ Roses - Sweet Child o' Mine (1987)

Guns N' Roses' tenth song on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown is the band's ubiquitous anthem 'Sweet Child o' Mine' at Number 9. One of the many zeniths on Guns N' Roses' barnstorming debut album 'Appetite for Destruction', 'Sweet Child o' Mine' is enduringly popular and it's no surprise our listeners voted it into the Top 10.

8) Alter Bridge – Blackbird (2007)

Arguably the crowning glory of Alter Bridge's illustrious career so far, eight-minute masterpiece 'Blackbird' is at Number 8 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. 'Blackbird' combines poignant lyrics about Myles Kennedy's friend Mark Morse, who died as the song was being written, with impeccable musicianship and transcendental guitar solos from Kennedy and Mark Tremonti.

7) AC/DC – Thunderstruck (1990)

Testament to AC/DC's musical magnificence, 'Thunderstruck' is the band's 21st entry in Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown at the lofty position of Number 7. Powered by scintillating riffs from Angus and Malcolm Young, rabble-rousing chants, screeching vocals from Brian Johnson and muscular rhythms from Chris Slade and Cliff Williams, 'Thunderstruck' is the sound of AC/DC at their most electrifying and one of the standout moments of the post-Bon Scott era.

6) Led Zeppelin – Kashmir (1975)

A song that's so immense it has you thumbing the thesaurus for suitable superlatives, Led Zeppelin's 'Kashmir' is at Number 6 in Planet Rock's countdown of the 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time. Timeless, formidable, startling and brimming with majesty, more than 50 years after it was released 'Kashmir' sounds as vital as ever. In fact, it's no surprise that the surviving members of Led Zeppelin regard 'Kashmir' as a career zenith.

5) Lynyrd Skynyrd – Free Bird (1974)

Lynyrd Skynyrd are at Number 5 on our 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown with 'Free Bird'. Penned by the much-missed Ronnie Van Zant and Allen Collins, 'Free Bird' is the band's signature song and truly one of the finest tracks in rock history. Delivered in Van Zant's trademark southern rock drawl, the track opens with him singing "If I leave here tomorrow, would you still remember me?", hinting at a man unable to settle down. Just past the midway point, 'Free Bird' morphs into a crescendo of glorious guitar solos and frenetic instrumentation – a life-affirming aural onslaught that still sounds as fresh now as it did over half a century ago.

4) Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb (1979)

David Gilmour's transcendental playing on Pink Floyd's 'Comfortably Numb' was voted the greatest guitar solo ever by Planet Rock listeners six years ago, and the song is rightfully in the upper echelons of our 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown at Number 4. Penned by Roger Waters and David Gilmour, 'Comfortably Numb' is one of the defining moments of their songwriting partnership, yet such was the friction between the two during the recording process (and beyond) that Gilmour later noted it represents "the last embers of mine and Roger's ability to work collaboratively together."

3) Rainbow – Stargazer (1976)

Rainbow's 'Stargazer' takes the coveted Number 3 slot on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown. The standout song from Rainbow's legendary 'Rising' album, 'Stargazer' sees the inimitable, late-great Ronnie James Dio narrate the ominous story of a wizard whose attempt to fly by constructing a tower to the stars leads to the enslavement of countless people. A musically complex, powerful and majestic heavy metal tour-de-force, 'Stargazer' flaunts the imperious talents of the respective Rainbow band members, from Dio's astonishing pipes to Cozy Powell's titanic drums to Ritchie Blackmore's mercurial guitar playing. Nothing short of a masterpiece.

2) Led Zeppelin – Stairway to Heaven (1971)

Narrowly missing out on the top spot by just a handful of votes, Led Zeppelin are at Number 2 on Planet Rock's 500 Greatest Rock Songs of All Time countdown with 'Stairway to Heaven'. Not only considered one of Led Zeppelin's finest songs in their short career but also one of the greatest songs of all time, 'Stairway to Heaven' is so entrenched in rock n' roll folklore it's certain to retain its enduring appeal for many, many decades to come. Every second of the song is iconic; from the opening, Renaissance-tinged finger-picked guitars and recorders to Jimmy Page's legendary solo, and right through to Robert Plant's ultimate, plaintive "and she's buying the stairway to heaven" refrain.

1) Queen - Bohemian Rhapsody (1975)

Queen's 1975 rock epic 'Bohemian Rhapsody' has officially been crowned the Greatest Rock Song all Time ahead of Led Zeppelin's 'Stairway to Heaven'. Multi-layered and ambitious in musical scope, the Freddie Mercury penned six-minute suite that is 'Bohemian Rhapsody' has topped the charts twice in the UK, and it's been introduced to new generations of fans via 1992's Wayne's World and the 2018 Queen biopic of the same name, Bohemian Rhapsody. It's also only one of a handful of songs to surpass 2 billion views on YouTube.

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