Hollywood Vampires — the rock & roll supergroup featuring Alice Cooper, Joe Perry and Johnny Depp — are in the middle of a brief run of West Coast shows ahead of their forthcoming second album, Rise. On Saturday, May 11th, the all-star band swung through Los Angeles' Greek Theatre and welcomed two special guests to the stage — Marilyn Manson, who stepped up for a cover of Cooper's "I'm Eighteen," a song he's sung many times with the shock-rock godfather, and Steven Tyler, who wailed and shimmied to Tiny Bradshaw's "Train Kept A-Rollin," a live staple of his band with Perry, Aerosmith. Check out fan-shot footage above and below. Hollywood Vampires, which also features Cooper's guitarist Tommy Henriksen, are set to drop Rise on June 21st via earMUSIC. As for Manson, he appears on a couple of the collector's covers of the new Revolver issue, including one alongside his Twins of Evil tour mate Rob Zombie; the next installment of the Twins of Evil tour is set to kick off this summer.
See Marilyn Manson Join Hollywood Vampires to Sing Alice Cooper's "I'm Eighteen"
Manson, Cooper, Johnny Depp, Joe Perry team for all-star rendition of Coop classic
Cane Hill's Elijah Witt: 5 Albums That Made Me
From Pantera to Letlive, the singer looks back on the records that changed his life
Polyphia's Clay Gober: 5 Surprising Albums I Love
Avant-garde soul, "good acid trip" music and more
Hail to the Kings: M. Shadows Interviews Hetfield and Ulrich
Avenged Sevenfold singer gains audience with Metallica's founding duo in classic story
How Lamb of God Came Back After Randy Blythe's Arrest and Imprisonment
From Prague's Pankrác Prison to LOG's 'VII: Sturm und Drang'
Cane Hill's Elijah Witt: 5 Albums That Made Me
From Pantera to Letlive, the singer looks back on the records that changed his life
Polyphia's Clay Gober: 5 Surprising Albums I Love
Avant-garde soul, "good acid trip" music and more
Hail to the Kings: M. Shadows Interviews Hetfield and Ulrich
Avenged Sevenfold singer gains audience with Metallica's founding duo in classic story
How Lamb of God Came Back After Randy Blythe's Arrest and Imprisonment
From Prague's Pankrác Prison to LOG's 'VII: Sturm und Drang'