Rare Bird Books has set a July 15, 2025 release date for “Ghost Notes”, the new memoir from POISON drummer Rikki Rockett, written with writer duo Leif Eriksson and Martin Svensson.During an October 31 appearance on SiriusXM’s “Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk”, the 63-year-old Rikki, whose real name is Richard Allan Ream, said about “Ghost Notes” (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET): “I was working on it all year last year. I was gonna launch it at the same time as the [POISON 2025] tour, but the tour is not gonna happen [next year]. So we’re gonna launch [the book] anyway.”Regarding why he decided to name his book “Ghost Notes”, Rikki said: “The first chunk of our career, like [early POISON albums] ‘Look What The Cat Dragged In’ [1986], ‘Open Up And Say… Ahh!’ [1988], all those records, even most of ‘Flesh & Blood’ [1990], the way they were producing records at that time, they did not want drummers playing ghost notes, if you know what ghost notes are… It’s kind of like a lighter tap on the snare drum, for example, the kind of the notes in between the notes that are not fully pronounced, I guess would be the best way to explain it in layman’s terms. And so a lot of times it gives it that little bit of swing groove to it. And producers did not want that in the early 80s — they just wanted straight drums, almost machine-like and heavy and loud and detuned snare drums and all that kind of stuff. And it wasn’t really until ‘Flesh & Blood’, but even more ‘Native Tongue’ [1993] where I was able to really play the way I wanted to play. I think a lot of other drummers dealt with that. I know I talked to various drummers about their frustration back then. So I decided to name it. I finally was able to play however I wanted. And all those little notes between the notes are my kind of what I’m talking about in my life. Instead of just the highlights that you always hear about, you know, ‘POISON did this’ or ‘Rikki Rockett did this’ or ‘Rikki got arrested for this’ or whatever, these are like all the stuff in between. So those are the ghost notes between all the big things that you’ve heard about. So I kind of made a little connection there, and that’s why I named it that.”Asked if “Ghost Notes” is “kind of like a semi-autobiography, but more focused on things that people wouldn’t know” about him, Rikki said: “Yes. Or more in depth. A lot of the things are more in depth. You’ve heard some of these stories about POISON, but you never really dig that much deeper or maybe they just haven’t been reported much more than what you’ve heard on the surface, for example. And so I talk about a lot of those kinds of things.”He continued: “Everything [that you hear about the 1980s glam rock scene is] always focused on the Sunset Strip. And that was only a couple years of our life, honestly. What’s more interesting is our years in the tri-state area and Pennsylvania and all the crap we went through trying to play gigs and trying to find our space, and that stuff, to me, is more cinematic, if you will, than, ‘Oh, yeah, they played the Troubadour and the Strip and they hung up flyers. I mean, we’ve all heard those stories. But it’s the other stuff, like trying to hold jobs down and renting VFW halls and renting vans and trying to scrape enough money to get to the next gig and all that stuff. That was really the meat of our struggle, I think. Not that being on the Strip wasn’t interesting, but I feel like when you talk about the Strip, you’re just lumping every band together that was our contemporaries. But, really, we kind of came, fought, got our deal and got out even sort of before that. I mean, the Strip continued to explode after we were off the Strip.”Rikki is the co-founder and drummer for the band POISON, which exploded into the highly competitive Los Angeles music scene in the 1980s, making a name for themselves in the clubs on the Sunset Strip.POISON has sold over 50 million records worldwide, releasing eight studio albums, four live albums, and four compilations. The band has charted 10 singles on the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100, including six Top 10 singles and one Hot 100 number-one smash hit, “Every Rose Has Its Thorn”.Relentless from the ground up and forged in the hellfires of the Pennsylvania and Los Angeles club scenes, POISON smashed its way up as an independent band who bet on itself. Selling over three million copies of an independent album which included the big hits “Talk Dirty To Me”, “I Won’t Forget You”, “Cry Tough”, “I Want Action” and the underground smash “Look What The Cat Dragged In”, they were soon picked up by Capitol Records and beat the sophomore jinx by releasing the aforementioned No. 1 smash “Every Rose Has Its Thorn”. Written out of emotion by singer/songwriter and frontman Bret Michaels, the song blasted into the charts remaining a top the pop, rock and country genres for threee months consecutively. The album “Open Up And Say…Ahh!” sold eight million copies out of the gate and spawned other hit singles “Fallen Angel”, “Nothin’ But A Good Time” and “Your Mama Don’t Dance”. Followed up by the multi-platinum album “Flesh & Blood”, POISON again lit up the charts with several more smash hit singles, including “Unskinny Bop” and “Something To Believe In”.POISON’s reunited original lineup — Rockett, Michaels, bassist Bobby Dall and guitarist C.C. DeVille — completed “The Stadium Tour” with MÖTLEY CRÜE, DEF LEPPARD and JOAN JETT & THE BLACKHEARTS in 2022. The trek was originally scheduled to take place in the summer of 2020 but ended up being pushed back to 2021, and then to 2022, due to the coronavirus pandemic.Rockett was declared cancer free more in 2016 after undergoing an experimental treatment. He was diagnosed with oral cancer back in 2015.In April 2022, Rockett married his longtime girlfriend TC Smith at the Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara, California.Rikki was previously married to singer/songwriter Melanie Martel. They share joint custody of their two kids — son Jude Aaron Rockett and daughter Lucy Sky Rockett.Last month, Rikki announced the launch of a new band called THE ROCKETT MAFIA. Joining him in the group are Brandon Gibbs (DEVIL CITY ANGELS) on vocals and guitar, Mick Sweda (BULLETBOYS) on guitar and backing vocals, and Bryan Kimes on bass and backing vocals.Rockett and Gibbs played their first show as THE ROCKETT MAFIA in May at the end of The Distinguished Gentleman’s Ride motorcycle charity event in Santa Monica, California. They were joined at the gig by guitarist Brent Woods (SEBASTIAN BACH, CHEVY METAL) and bassist Wiley Hodgden.Rockett and Gibbs previously played together in a band called DEVIL CITY ANGELS, also featuring guitarist Tracii Guns (L.A. GUNS) and bassist Eric Brittingham (CINDERELLA). The band released its self-titled debut album in September 2015. Following the recording of “Devil City Angels”, Brittingham decided not to continue with the project and his spot was taken by Rudy Sarzo (QUIET RIOT, OZZY OSBOURNE, WHITESNAKE). Around a year later, Rockett, Gibbs and Brittingham joined forces with guitarist Joel Kosche (ex-COLLECTIVE SOUL) to form the LORDS OF DEVIL CITY. Within a few months, Rockett, Gibbs and Brittingham relaunched DEVIL CITY ANGELS, only for Eric to exit the project in the summer of 2017 and be replaced by Topher Nelson. In July 2020, DEVIL CITY ANGELS released a new single, “Testify”.In 2015, Rockett and Gibbs joined forces with Rikki’s POISON bandmates Bobby Dall (bass) and C.C. DeVille (guitar) to play several shows as THE SPECIAL GUESTS in what was widely perceived as a not-so-subtle message to POISON singer Bret Michaels that they weren’t willing to remain completely inactive while he pursued a solo career.