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Thread: On This Day In History

  1. #796
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    History For The 27th Of July

    New Zealand memorial in South Korea, 2010
    1953
    Armistice ends fighting in Korean War
    After lengthy negotiations, representatives of North Korea and the United Nations signed an armistice on the ceasefire line between North and South Korea.


    George Bolt, circa 1943
    1963
    Pioneer aviator George Bolt dies
    Bolt was an outstanding figure in the development of commercial aviation in this country. Among his many achievements were taking New Zealand's first aerial photographs in 1912 and delivering its first official airmail in 1919

    July Revolution Begins
    1830 July Revolution breaks out in Paris, opposing the laws of King Charles X
    First Military Airplane
    1909 Orville Wright successfully tests the Wright Military Flyer, the world's first military airplane, with a record flight of 1 hour, 12 minutes, and 40 seconds, flying approximately 64 km (40 mi) [1]


    First Military Airplane
    1909 Orville Wright successfully tests the Wright Military Flyer, the world's first military airplane, with a record flight of 1 hour, 12 minutes, and 40 seconds, flying approximately 64 km (40 mi) [1]





    Music History




    2013-At Gillette Stadium in Boston, Taylor Swift brings out Carly Simon to sing with her on "You're So Vain," which like many of Swift's hits, takes aim at a famous ex. Swift claims that backstage after the show, Simon whispered in her ear the identity of the man she was singing about in "Vain."

    2009-A law enforcement official tells The Associated Press that Michael Jackson's personal doctor administered a powerful anesthetic to help him sleep, and authorities believe the drug is what killed the Pop singer.

    2007-The Simpsons Movie debuts. Early in the film, Green Day sink into Lake Springfield.

    2006-The company behind file-sharing service Kazaa agrees to pay record labels over $115 million in damages for piracy.

    2001-Leon Wilkeson (bass guitarist for Lynyrd Skynyrd) dies in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, from chronic liver and lung disease at age 49.

    2001-Saxophonist Harold Land dies from a stroke at age 72.

    1999-Jazz trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison (of Count Basie's orchestra) dies in Columbus, Ohio, at age 83.

    1996-"Wannabe" hits #1 in the UK, making the Spice Girls the first all-female group to top the chart with their debut single.

    1994-Bob Seger serves jury duty in Michigan and, as the foreman in a criminal trial, finds the defendant guilty.

    1993-Steve Vai's third solo album, Sex & Religion, is issued. The release is credited simply to "Vai," and is his first to feature traditional vocals, which were provided by a then-unknown Devin Townsend.

    1992-Michael Jackson sues the London tabloid Daily Mirror over claims that too many plastic surgeries have left him permanently disfigured.

    1990"Rockin' Robin" singer Bobby Day dies of cancer in Los Angeles, California, at age 60.

    1987-Rick Astley's first single, "Never Gonna Give You Up," is released in America. It climbs to #1 in March 1988, and in 2008 becomes the basis for the Rickrolling trend.

    1986-Nancy Wilson (of Heart) marries screenwriter Cameron Crowe at her sister Ann's home. They remain married until 2010.

    1986-At a Cure concert at The Forum in Inglewood, California, a shirtless man with a cowboy hat goes to the center of the floor section and stabs himself repeatedly with a hunting knife. He survives, and is identified as 38-year-old Jonathan Moreland. He claims he was trying to impress a girl who jilted him.

    1985-At Albert's Hall in Toronto, the blind 19-year-old guitar sensation Jeff Healey joins Stevie Ray Vaughan and Albert Collins on stage for a rousing jam session that gets a lot of press. Healey quickly forms The Jeff Healey Band, which gets signed to Arista Records and has a hit in 1988 with "Angel Eyes." They also appear in the movie Road House, playing the house band where Patrick Swayze's character works as a bouncer.

    1985-Paul Young hits #1 with "Everytime You Go Away," a cover of a Hall & Oates song released in 1980. It's the only Hall & Oates cover ever to make the Top 40.

    1984-Metallica release their second album, Ride The Lightning, via Megaforce Records. It is reissued a short time later when they sign to Elektra Records.

    1984-Prince stars in the film Purple Rain. The movie, in which he plays as an upstart musician who clashes with his band, parallels his life story, but is not strictly autobiographical, and he didn't write or direct it.

    1983-Madonna releases her first album. The self-titled debut doesn't burn up the charts and is derided by Rolling Stone (which calls her voice "irritating as hell"), but gets traction in dance clubs, setting the stage for her breakout second album, Like A Virgin.

    1983-Metallica launch their Kill 'Em All For One tour (with co-headliners Raven) at the Royal Manor in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

    1981-Blondie frontwoman Debbie Harry releases her first solo album, KooKoo. Its highest charting single is "Backfired," which hits #43 in the US, but the album still sells over 500,000 copies.

    1976-Later depicted in the movie What's Love Got to Do with It, Tina Turner files for divorce from her husband Ike. They have been married 16 years.

    1976-John Lennon ends his four-year fight to stay in the US as a special government hearing grants him a green card (Number A-17-597-321).

    1976-Bruce Springsteen sues his manager Mike Appel for fraud and mismanagement. Appel counter-sues, and the legal action keeps Springsteen from recording for about 15 months, a time Springsteen spends touring. The case eventually settles out of court.

    1974-After 23 years, Dinah Shore leaves the NBC network when it cancels her morning program Dinah's Place to make room for game shows.

    1974-John Denver's "Annie's Song" hits #1 for the first of two weeks.

    1973-Thousands of people hit Watkins Glen, New York, for the "Summer Jam" one day before the music festival is scheduled to begin. The crowd is already so large and so raucous that The Band turn their sound-check into a mini-set. The Allman Brothers Band follows in similar character by rocking through "One Way Out" and "Ramblin' Man." The Grateful Dead come next with a two-set explosion. This impromptu jam tires them not at all, and the next day they still scramble psyches with two long sets.

    1973-The self-titled debut by the New York Dolls is released via Mercury Records (and produced by Todd Rundgren). The album spawns such glam/proto-punk classics as "Personality Crisis," "Looking for a Kiss," "Trash," and "Jet Boy."

    There's a Riot Goin' On In Chicago
    1970-A free concert in Chicago becomes a riot when fans pelt the stage with rocks and bottles before Sly & the Family Stone can go on. The band titles their next album There's a Riot Goin' On.More


    1968-The Rascals release "People Got To Be Free."

    1968-Mama Cass Elliot releases "Dream A Little Dream Of Me."

    1967-Juliana Hatfield is born in Wiscasset, Maine.

    1962-Soul Asylum bass player Karl Mueller is born in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    1958-Esso Oil (formerly Standard Oil, later Exxon), issues a report warning that listening to rock music in the car could waste gas because "the rhythm can cause a driver to unconsciously jiggle the gas petal."

    1950-Paper Lace rhythm guitarist Michael "Mick" Vaughan is born in Sheffield, Yorkshire, England.

    1949-Singer/actress Maureen McGovern is born in Youngstown, Ohio.

    1944-"Ode To Billie Joe" singer Bobbie Gentry is born Roberta Lee Streeter in Chickasaw County, Mississippi.

    1942-Peggy Lee records "Why Don't You Do Right?"

    1940-Billboard issues its first chart detailing what records are selling the most copies. Titled "National List of Best Selling Retail Records," it's a precursor to the Hot 100 and the first to count record sales (the existing charts are for sheet music sales, jukebox play and radio plugs). It's not an exact science, as Billboard polls record stores to find out what is selling - a practice that stays in effect until the '90s, when call-a-clerk is replaced with Soundscan technology. The first chart is dominated by big band hits, with "I'll Never Smile Again" by Tommy Dorsey (featuring Frank Sinatra on vocals) at #1 and three songs by Glenn Miller in the Top 10.

    1933-Nick Reynolds of the The Kingston Trio is born in San Diego, California.

    1929-Harvey Fuqua of The Moonglows is born in Louisville, Kentucky.

    1927-Bob Morse (of the Jazz/Pop vocal group The Hi-Lo's) is born in Pasadena, California.

    1924-Italian composer/pianist Ferruccio Busoni dies.

    1922-Record producer Bob Thiele is born in New York City. Co-wrote Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World" under the pseudonym George Douglas.

    1920-Henry D. "Homer" Haynes (of the country music parody duo Homer and Jethro) is born near Knoxville, Tennessee

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    History For The 28th Of July

    Detail from suffrage petition, 1893
    1893-Massive women’s suffrage petition presented to Parliament
    The monster suffrage petition contained the signatures of more than 25,000 women. A dozen other, smaller petitions were also submitted around the same time.

    Victory in Battle
    1864 Battle of Ezra Chapel: Union forces under Major General William T. Sherman defeat Confederate Lt. General John Bell Hood near Atlanta in Fulton County, Georgia


    1864 Second day of the Battle of Deep Bottom Run, Virginia

    1866 The metric system becomes a legal measurement system in the US

    Alice In Wonderland
    1951 Walt Disney releases animated musical film "Alice In Wonderland," featuring Kathryn Beaumont, J. Pat O'Malley, Ed Wynn, and Sterling Holloway and songs by Sammy Fain and Bob Hilliard




    Music History



    2020-The British music magazine Q publishes its last issue, ending a 34-year run.

    2018-Neil Diamond stops by the command post near his home in Basalt, Colorado, to play for firefighters and rescue personnel who have been battling wildfires in the area.

    2016-Marianne Ihlen, the subject of Leonard Cohen's song "So Long, Marianne," dies at 81. Before her death, Cohen sent her a letter that read, in part, "Know that I am so close behind you that if you stretch out your hand, I think you can reach mine." Cohen joins her in death on November 7.

    2016-Katy Perry performs her songs "Roar" and "Rise" on the final night of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. Before she sings, she encourages voters to support Hillary Clinton.More

    2012-At a show in Gothenburg, Sweden, Bruce Springsteen plays "Jungleland" for the first time since the death of Clarence Clemons a year earlier. He dedicates the song to Clemons, whose nephew Jake earns rapturous applause after playing the famous saxophone solo.

    2007-"Hey There Delilah" by Plain White T's hits #1 in America two years after it was first released. "Delilah" is the runner Delilah DiCrescenzo, who lead singer Tom Higgenson was trying to impress with a song.

    2004-George Williams (lead vocalist for The Tymes) dies in Maple Shade, New Jersey, at age 68.

    2001-The American Airlines Center in Dallas - new home to the Mavericks (NBA) and Stars (NHL) - opens with a concert by The Eagles, with good seats reselling for about $1,500.

    2000-Guitarist Jerome Smith (of KC And The Sunshine Band) dies in a construction-site accident in Miami, Florida, at age 47.

    1996-Jason Thirsk (bass player for Pennywise) dies from a self-inflicted gunshot wound at age 28.

    1996-Marge Ganser (of The Shangri-Las) dies of breast cancer at age 48 in Valley Stream, New York.

    1995-After decades of legal wrangling, James Al Hendrix, surviving father of Jimi, is once again granted legal use of his son's name and likeness for merchandising.

    1995-Guitarist Eddie Hinton dies from a heart attack in Birmingham, Alabama. He wrote the Dusty Springfield hit "Breakfast in Bed."

    1993-10,000 Maniacs perform with lead singer Natalie Merchant for the last time at the birthday bash for New York radio station Z100 (Bon Jovi, Duran Duran, The Proclaimers and Terence Trent D'Arby are also on the bill). Merchant launches a successful solo career and the band soldiers on without her, bringing new lead singer Mary Ramsey into the fold.

    1992-Mary J. Blige releases her debut album, What's The 411?, executive produced by Sean "Puffy" Combs. It takes the top spot on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums Chart as well as #6 on the Billboard 200. Her unique blend of hip-hop and soul earns her the nickname "Queen of Hip Hop Soul."

    1992-Prince trademarks the male/female symbol he has been using on various album covers and promotional materials. He later re-designs the symbol and uses it as his name.More

    1992-Barenaked Ladies release their debut studio album, Gordon.

    1990-Rapper Soulja Boy is born DeAndre Cortez Way in Chicago, Illinois.

    1989-Anne Murray opens the Anne Murray Centre, a multimedia museum of her career, in her hometown of Springhill, Nova Scotia.

    1987-The Ice-T album Rhyme Pays becomes the first hip-hop album to get a warning label for explicit lyrics.

    1987-The Beatles, along with Yoko Ono, sue Nike for using "Revolution" in TV commercials. Nike authorized the song through the group's US label, Capitol, and Michael Jackson, who owns the publishing. Nike doesn't back down and continues running the ads, which anger many Beatles fans but sell a lot of sneakers. The suit is later settled out of court for an undisclosed amount.

    1987-Ozzy Osbourne performs "Jailhouse Rock" at Wormwood Scrubs prison in London, England. He says it's his "last good memory of the '80s."More

    1986-The WFIL Studio in Philadelphia where American Bandstand was shot is entered into the US National Register of Historic Places.

    1985-It's "Kingsmen Day" in Portland, Oregon, in honor of their hometown heroes who made "Louie Louie" a garage rock classic.

    1979-After a show in Cleveland, Joe Perry quits Aerosmith when he gets in screaming match with Steven Tyler. He is replaced by Jim Crespo, but rejoins the band in 1984.

    1979-"I Don't Like Mondays" by The Boomtown Rats, a song about a real-life school shooting in America, goes to #1 in the UK for the first of four weeks.

    1976-Jacoby Shaddix (lead singer of Papa Roach) is born in Mariposa, California.

    1973-Deep Purple release "Smoke On The Water" as a single in America. The song, considered an add-on to fill space on the album, first appeared in March 1972 on Machine Head. By this time, lead singer Ian Gillan has quit the band.

    Summer Jam Draws Biggest Festival Crowd Ever
    1973-The "Summer Jam" concert takes place at Watkins Glen racetrack in New York, outdrawing Woodstock with a crowd of over 600,000. The Grateful Dead, The Allman Brothers Band, and The Band play to the massive crowd that paid $10 a ticket - if they bought one.Mor

    1973-Chicago's Chicago VI LP hits #1 for the first of five weeks in the US.

    1971-George Harrison releases his song "Bangla Desh," which brings attention to the refugee crisis in that country. He performs it three days later at his Concert For Bangladesh, the first major rock fundraiser.

    1970-The Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger makes his acting debut in Ned Kelly, a film about the legendary Australian outlaw, which makes his debut in Kelly's own hometown of Glenrowan.

    1968-The Beatles hold their "Mad Day Out," an all-day group photography session across London, which produces most of their well-known latter-day photographs, including the cover of Life and the inside gatefold of their Beatles 1967-1970 album.

    1966-At the Boys Club in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, The Beach Boys perform "God Only Knows" for the first time. In September, it peaks at an underwhelming #39, but slowly swells in stature and is eventually recognized as one of the greatest pop songs ever made.

    1963-Guitarist Shaunna Hall, best known for her contributions to 4 Non Blondes and George Clinton's Parliament-Funkadelic, is born.

    1962-Singer/actress Rachel Sweet is born in Akron, Ohio. Recorded the hit "Everlasting Love" with Rex Smith.

    1957-Jerry Lee Lewis makes his first national TV appearance, singing "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" on The Steve Allen Show.

    1956-Gene Vincent makes his first national TV appearance, singing "Be-Bop-a-Lula" on NBC's The Perry Como Show.

    1954-The Crew-Cuts' cover of "Sh-Boom" hits #1 for the first of nine weeks in the US.

    1954-Elvis Presley gets his first interview through an article published in his hometown paper, the Memphis Press-Scimitar.

    1954-Guitarist Steve Morse is born in Hamilton, Ohio. After forming The Dixie Dregs, he joins Deep Purple in 1994.

    1951-Rosemary Clooney's "Come-On-A My House" hits #1 in the US for the first of eight weeks.

    1949-Peter Doyle of The New Seekers is born in Melbourne, Australia.

    1949-Drummer Simon Kirke (of Free and Bad Company) is born in Lambeth, London, England.

    1949-Steve Took (of T. Rex) is born in Eltham, London, England.

    1946-Folk singer Jonathan Edwards ("Sunshine") is born in Aitkin, Minnesota.

    1945-Rick Wright (of Pink Floyd) is born in Hatch End, Middlesex, England.

    1943-Guitarist Mike Bloomfield is born in Chicago. He plays on Bob Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited and joins The Paul Butterfield Blues Band.

    1941-Judy Garland marries her first husband, composer David Rose. They divorce in 1944.

    1938-Guitarist/songwriter George Cummings (of Dr. Hook) is born in Meridian, Mississippi.

    1937-Pianist/bandleader Peter Duchin is born in New York Cit

    1933-The first singing telegram is sent - to popular crooner Rudy Vallee, on the occasion of his 32nd birthday.

    1915-Accordionist Frankie Yankovic is born in Davis, West Virginia. No relation to fellow accordionist Weird Al Yankovic, though the parody master says his parents chose the instrument for him because "they figured there should be at least one more accordion-playing Yankovic in the world."

    1901-Pop crooner Rudy Vallee is born in Island Pond, Vermont.

    1750-Johann Sebastian Bach dies at age 65.

  3. #798
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bikkie View Post

    1750-Johann Sebastian Bach dies at age 65.
    at 65 was he a grandfather?

  4. #799
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bikkie View Post
    I have 13 years on him and I'm not old.
    Agreed, yer just a young feller.
    There is a grey blur, and a green blur. I try to stay on the grey one. - Joey Dunlop

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    History For The 29th Of July

    Jewels recovered from the Tasmania by Kelly Tarlton
    1897
    Tasmania sinks off Māhia with suitcase of jewels
    On the afternoon of 28 July, the Huddart-Parker steamer Tasmania left Auckland for Dunedin via Napier, Wellington and Lyttelton. At around 11 p.m. the following night, with a strong south-east gale blowing, the ship struck rocks off Table Cape, Māhia Peninsula.

    Coronation of James VI
    1567 James VI is crowned King of Scots at Stirling

    1862 American Civil War: Confederate spy Belle Boyd is arrested by Union troops and detained at the Old Capitol Prison in Washington, D.C.
    1864 American Civil War: Battle of Macon, Georgia (Stoneman's Raid)
    1864 American Civil War: third and last day of the Battle at Deep Bottom Run, Virginia

    1899 First motorcycle race at Manhattan Beach, New York

    Boy Scouts Formed
    1907 Sir Robert Baden-Powell forms the Boy Scouts in England

    Wagner's Grand Slam HR
    1915 Pirate Honus Wagner, at 41, hits a grand slam home run


    Steamboat Willie
    1928 Test footage is first created for Walt Disney's "Steamboat Willie," featuring Mickey Mouse

    Bonnie and Clyde Police Shootout
    1933 Police shootout with Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow's gang in Iowa leaves one member, Clyde's brother Buck Barrow, dead and one captured; Bonnie and Clyde escape

    1954 Publication of "The Fellowship of the Ring," the first volume of "The Lord of the Rings" by J. R. R. Tolkien, by George Allen & Unwin in London


    Cousteau's Record Anchor
    1956 Jacques Cousteau's Calypso anchors in a record 7,500 meters of water







    Music History



    2022-Beyoncé releases her seventh solo album, Renaissance, with the hit "Break My Soul." Like her previous six albums, it goes to #1 in America.

    2021-After postponing the previous year's festival due to the coronavirus outbreak, Lollapalooza returns in full force for a four-day music event in Chicago's Grant Park. But there's a catch: Festivalgoers must provide proof of vaccinations or negative COVID tests to gain entry. Those who have tested negative but are unvaccinated also have to wear a mask.More

    Katy Perry Found Guilty Of Infringement For "Dark Horse"
    2019-In a unanimous verdict, a jury rules that Katy Perry's "Dark Horse" copied the electronic melody from the 2008 song "Joyful Noise" by the Christian hip-hop artist Flame. Three days later, the jury awards $2.78 million in damages, but in March 2020, a federal judge overturns the verdict on appeal.More

    2016-Nearly six months after all four members of the British group Viola Beach were killed in a car accident, their self-titled debut album is released. It debuts at #1 in the UK.

    2015-The Eagles play their last concert with Glenn Frey. The show takes place in Bossier City, Louisiana, the final date of their History of the Eagles tour. The set features 27 songs and two encores, closing with "Desperado." Founding member Frey dies six months later. The band continues on with his son, Deacon, in his stead.

    2014-Jazz drummer Idris Muhammad, born Leo Morris, dies at age 74.

    2014-After 36 years of marriage, Neil Young files for divorce from his second wife, Pegi.

    2011-Gene McDaniels, known for singing the 1961 hit "A Hundred Pounds Of Clay" and writing Roberta Flack's 1974 hit "Feel Like Makin' Love," dies at age 76 at his home in Maine.


    2011-Chuck Berry throws out the first pitch at the St. Louis Cardinals baseball game on the same day his statue is unveiled on Delmar Boulevard in the city.

    2011-At a Dallas concert, Kings Of Leon frontman Caleb Followill leaves the stage after complaining about the heat. He never returns, and the band cancels the rest of their tour. The incident is officially blamed on "dehydration," but Caleb's brother (and bass player) Jared later Tweets: "There are problems in our band bigger than not drinking enough Gatorade."

    2005-An anonymous bidder pays one million dollars for the original handwritten lyrics to The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" at the Hippodrome nightclub in London.

    2004-Cincinnati-born singer, songwriter, and musician Huby Heard dies of a heart attack at age 53. As a keyboardist, he played with Billy Preston's group The God Squad, Leon Russell's Gap Band, and toured with The Rolling Stones.

    1999-Anita Carter (of The Carter Family) dies at age 66 after years of drug treatment for rheumatoid arthritis irreparably damages her liver, kidneys, and pancreas.

    1995-Les Elgart, swing jazz bandleader and trumpeter who performed the American Bandstand theme "Bandstand Boogie," dies of heart failure shortly before his 78th birthday.

    1993-Eddie Guzman (drummer for Rare Earth) dies from complications of diabetes at age 49.

    1990-Elton John can't find a facility in Los Angeles that will treat both his bulimia and drug and alcohol addictions, so he checks into the Parkside Lutheran Hospital in Chicago for rehab. He stays for six weeks, then takes a year off from touring and recording

    1988-Pete Drake, Nashville record producer and session guitarist who played with the likes of Bob Dylan, Don Gibson, and Marty Robbins, dies of emphysema at age 55. Known for the 1964 hit "Forever" with his groundbreaking use of a talk box for the pedal steel guitar.

    1987-Michigan governor James Blanchard declares today "Four Tops Day" in honor of the Motown legends.

    1986-Paul Davis, known for hits like "I Go Crazy" and "Cool Night," is shot in the stomach during an attempted robbery at a Nashville hotel. He eventually recovers.

    1984-Prince becomes the first person to have a #1 song and star in a #1 movie at the same time as Purple Rain tops the box office while "When Doves Cry" stays perched atop the Hot 100 for its fourth consecutive week.

    1983-Country singer Ashley McBryde is born in Waldron, Arkansas. She drops out of college and starts playing bars in 2002 but doesn't break through until 2017 when she lands a record deal and releases her first single, "A Little Dive Bar In Dahlonega."

    1979-Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers conclude their "Lawsuit Tour" with a show at the Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles. Petty embarked on the tour to raise money for his legal battles with MCA Re

    1978-The Grease soundtrack hits #1 in the US, thanks to the hits "You're the One That I Want" and "Summer Nights."

    1978-Publicist Peter Meaden (former manager of The Who) dies from a barbiturate overdose at age 36 in Edmonton, London, England.

    1978-Glenn Goins (guitarist, vocalist for Parliament-Funkadelic) dies of Hodgkin's lymphoma at age 24.

    1978-At the Bottom Line in New York City, Television play their last show until their 1991 reunion. Only the band members know they are calling it quits.

    1978-Kenny Loggins and Stevie Nicks release "Whenever I Call You 'Friend'."

    1974-Cass Elliot of The Mamas & The Papas dies at 32 of a heart attack while on tour as a solo artist in London. Her manager, believing her death to be drug-related and trying to protect her legacy, plants a story that she choked on a ham sandwich, a narrative that persists for decades.

    1973-Led Zeppelin has about $180,000 stolen from their safe at the Drake Hotel after a show at Madison Square Garden, an event chronicled in their concert documentary The Song Remains The Same.

    1973-Wanya Morris (of Boyz II Men) is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    1972-Gilbert O'Sullivan's "Alone Again (Naturally)" hits #1 for the first of six non-consecutive weeks in the US.

    1970-The Rolling Stones' contract with Decca expires, and the group takes the opportunity to split with notorious manager Allen Klein. Delivering one more song to the label to fulfill its obligation, the famously unreleasable "C--ksucer Blues" (aka Schoolboy Blues), they also begin the process of forming their own label, Rolling Stones Records (which features their new "tongue and lips" logo).

    1968-Refusing to play in front of the country's segregated audiences, Gram Parsons leaves The Byrds on the eve of a South African tour.

    1967-The Doors' "Light My Fire" hits #1 for the first of three weeks in the US. It is knocked off by the Beatles song "All You Need Is Love."

    1967-Chris Gorman (drummer for Belly) is born in Buffalo, New York.

    1967-The Temptations release "You're My Everything."

    1966-Country singer Martina McBride is born in Sharon, Kansas.

    1966-Cream make their stage debut, playing at Manchester, England's Twisted Wheel club.

    1966-A US magazine targeted to teenagers called Datebook causes an uproar when they reprint some of John Lennon's interview from four months earlier in the London Evening Standard where Lennon said, "We're more popular than Jesus now." The American media jump on the quote and turns it into a major story

    1966-Bob Dylan gets in a motorcycle accident and pretty much disappears for nine months, leaving a void filled with rumors speculating on his condition. He clears things up in his 2004 autobiography, where he writes: "I had been in a motorcycle accident and I'd been hurt, but I recovered. Truth was that I wanted to get out of the rat race."

    1965-The Supremes begin a three-week run at the famous Copacabana night club in New York City, a prominent showcase for Motown's hottest act, which has tallied five #1 hits. During the run, they play 16 shows each week, with three on Saturdays and Sundays.

    1965-The Beatles' second movie, Help!, premieres in London at the Pavilion Theatre, with none other than the Queen attending. Later, manager Brian Epstein and the group attend a post-premiere reception at the Dorchester Hotel.

    1963-Capitol Records sends disc jockeys around the US a list of hot rod terms to assist DJs when talking about the latest music trend.

    1961-Dick Clark presents his very first Caravan of Stars revue at the Steel Pier in Atlantic City, New Jersey, featuring The Jive Five, The Shirelles, and Clarence "Frogman" Henry.

    1959-John Sykes (guitarist for Whitesnake, Thin Lizzy) is born in Reading, Berkshire, England.

    1953-Patti Scialfa (Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band) is born in Deal, New Jersey.

    1953-Rush frontman Geddy Lee is born Geddy Lee Weinrib in Willowdale, Ontario, Canada.

    1947-Carlo Paul Santanna (lead singer of Paper Lace) is born in the UK to an Italian mother and Polish father.

    1946-Jazz great Charlie Parker falls asleep while smoking and sets his hotel bed on fire. He is arrested after wandering through the hotel lobby wearing nothing but socks. The incident leads to a stay at the Camarillo State Hospital (a mental institution), which inspires his song "Relaxin' at Camarillo."

    1946-Neal Doughty (keyboardist for REO Speedwagon) is born in Evansville, Indiana.

    1933-Randy Sparks (of The New Christy Minstrels) is born in Leavenworth, Kansas.

    1887-Austro-Hungarian composer Sigmund Romberg is born Siegmund Rosenberg in Nagykanizsa, Hungary.

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    History For The 30th Of July

    Cook Returns to England
    1775 Captain James Cook with HMS Resolution safely returns to England at the end of his second voyage

    "Eye-for-Eye" Order
    1863 President Abraham Lincoln issues "eye-for-an-eye" order to shoot a rebel prisoner for every Black prisoner shot

    Siege of Petersburg
    1864 US Civil War, Siege of Petersburg: Union General Ambrose Burnside fails in an attack on Petersburg, Virginia, in the Battle of the Crater

    1869 World’s first oil tanker, "The Charles," departs the United States for Europe carrying 7,000 barrels of oil

    1870 Staten Island Ferry "Westfield" burns, killing 100

    1874 Boston and Philadelphia are the first baseball teams to play outside the US in the British Isles

    Dempsey vs. Fulljames
    1884 Nonpareil Jack Dempsey fights George Fulljames in what is possibly the first middleweight fight with boxing gloves



    Music History


    2014-Guitarist Dick Wagner dies of respiratory failure at age 71. Wagner is known for his associations with Lou Reed, KISS, David Bowie, and especially Alice Cooper.

    2012-Pitbull makes an appearance in Kodiak, Alaska, winner of an online contest skewed by the #exilepitbull campaign. The Miami rapper takes it in stride, enthusiastically greeting fans in the remote city before flying back to the mainland to resume his tour.

    2011-U2 wrap up their 360 tour at Moncton, Canada. The final gross for the tour is $735 million, breaking the record set by The Rolling Stones on their A Bigger Bang tour, which ran from 2005-2007. Ed Sheeran sets a new mark in 2019 with $775 million on his ÷ (Divide) tour, but it takes him 255 shows to do it - U2s tour ran for 110 dates.

    2010-Rapper T.I. marries Tameka "Tiny" Cottle of the R&B group Xscape in Miami Beach, Florida.

    2009-"No Scrubs" songwriter Kandi Burruss, formerly of Xscape, joins the cast of Bravo's The Real Housewives of Atlanta and produces "Tardy For The Party" for co-star Kim Zolciak.

    2004-While walking around London, The Isley Brothers' Ronald Isley suffers a minor stroke and is admitted to a local hospital. He recovers in a matter of just a few weeks.

    2003-Sam Phillips, the record producer who launched Elvis Presley's career at Sun Records, dies of respiratory failure at age 80.

    2003-When the disease SARS spreads to Toronto, it scares a lot of people away. To get visitors back, the city puts on a huge open-air concert featuring The Rolling Stones, The Guess Who, Rush, The Isley Brothers, The Flaming Lips and Justin Timberlake (who is jeered and has muffins thrown at him). About 450,000 people attend.

    2002-Bruce Springsteen releases The Rising.


    The Strokes Spur Rock Renaissance With Debut Album
    2001-The Strokes revive garage rock with the release of their debut album, Is This It. It drops in Australia first before making its way to England and America.More

    2001-Performing at OzzFest in Clarkston, Michigan, a thong-clad Marilyn Manson wraps his legs around the head of a 26-year-old security guard and grinds into him. The guard sues, claiming his head was "completely engulfed" in Manson's groin.More


    Sublime Release Self-Titled Album
    1996-Sublime's self-titled album is released. It's their major-label debut, and also their last, as lead singer Brad Nowell died of a heroin overdose two months earlier. The album goes on to sell over 5 million copies.More

    1995-Biggie Tembo (guitarist/lead vocalist for Bhundu Boys) commits suicide at age 37 in Harare, Zimbabwe.

    1993-Don Myrick (saxophonist for Earth, Wind & Fire), age 53, is fatally shot by Santa Monica policemen during a narcotics investigation when the lighter he is holding is mistaken for a weapon.

    1991-"Enter Sandman" is released as a single, serving as a preview of what's to come from Metallica's Black Album. With a cover of the early Queen classic "Stone Cold Crazy" on the B-side, it reaches #16 on the Hot 100, their best showing to this point.

    1986-RCA releases John Denver from his contract, possibly over his new single, "What Are We Making Weapons For?," which he recorded with the Russian singer Alexandre Gradsky. RCA had recently been acquired by General Electric, which was a top military contractor.

    1982-The Ron Howard comedy Night Shift, starring Henry Winkler and Michael Keaton, debuts in theaters. The soundtrack features the song "That's What Friends Are For," performed by Rod Stewart. Written by Burt Bacharach and Carole Bayer Sager, it becomes a huge hit four years later when Dionne Warwick, Elton John, Gladys Knight, and Stevie Wonder (aka Dionne & Friends) cover it for AIDS awareness, winning Grammys for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals and Song of the Year.

    1977-Andy Gibb's "I Just Want To Be Your Everything," written by his brother, Barry Gibb, hits #1 in America. His next two singles, "(Love Is) Thicker Than Water" and "Shadow Dancing," also hit the top spot, making him the first male solo artist with three straight #1 hits on the Hot 100.

    1971-Brad Hargreaves (drummer for Third Eye Blind) is born in Marin County, California.

    1969-The Beatles, producer George Martin, and the Abbey Road engineers assemble the first rough cut of the proposed Abbey Road medley. Paul McCartney, feeling that the song "Her Majesty" distracts from the flow of the medley, has it removed and orders it erased. Second engineer John Kurlander, not wanting to destroy a Beatles song, instead appends it to the end of the medley tape, adding 15 seconds of leader to make sure it's kept separate. When he finds out, Paul likes the effect so much that he leaves the ending of the album just that way.


    1968-The Beatles' Apple Boutique, a psychedelic clothing store located at 94 Baker Street in London, closes after seven months of bad business practices and rampant theft. With the group and its intimates having had the pick of the remaining inventory the night before, Apple Boutique employees are instructed to simply let people in off the street to take whatever merchandise they like. The store was closed that evening for good.

    1966-The Troggs' "Wild Thing" hits #1.

    1966-The Beatles' Yesterday ...And Today album hits #1 in America.

    1965-The Rolling Stones release their fourth US album, Out Of Our Heads.

    Kate Bush Is Born
    1958-Kate Bush is born in Bexleyheath, Kent, England. At 19, she releases her debut single, "Wuthering Heights," which goes to #1 in the UK.Mo

    1956-11-year-old Brenda Lee records her first single, "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)," at Owen Bradley Studio in Nashville.

    1949-Hugh Nicholson (guitarist for Marmalade from 1970-1973) is born in Rutherglen, Scotland.

    1949-R&B singer Joyce Jones (of First Choice) is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    1946-Jeffrey Hammond (bass guitarist for Jethro Tull) is born in Blackpool, Lancashire, England.

    1945-Saxophonist David Sanborn, who would play as a session musician on David Bowie's Young Americans, is born in Tampa, Florida.

    1942-Frank Sinatra ends his association with the Tommy Dorsey orchestra, recording the last two of over 90 songs before moving on to great acclaim as a solo star at Columbia.

    1941-Paul Anka is born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

    1936-Buddy Guy, a blues musician who starts his career in the '60s as the house guitarist for Chess Records, is born in Lettsworth, Louisiana. He's most successful in the '90s, when he issues a string of Grammy-winning albums with guest appearances by many of his admirers, including Eric Clapton and Bonnie Raitt.

    1929-Christine McGuire of The McGuire Sisters is born in Middletown, Ohio.

    1892-John Philip Sousa, director of the President's Own Marine Band, conducts a farewell concert at the White House the day before his discharge from the Marine Corps. Sousa became famous for his "Washington Post" march a few years earlier and wanted to explore a civilian music career.

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    History For The 31st Of July

    1843
    Foundation stone laid for New Zealand's first purpose-built theatre
    Laying the foundation stone for the Royal Victoria Theatre on Manners St, Wellington, Alderman William Lyon welcomed the new amenity – ‘a theatre [was] a necessary concomitant of an advanced state of civilization.’

    Read the full story about this Event

    Columbus Discovers Trinidad
    1498 Christopher Columbus is the first European to discover the island of Trinidad on his third voyage



    Kilmarnock Edition
    1786 "Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish dialect" by Robert Burns, also known as the Kilmarnock Edition, is published by John Wilson in Kilmarnock, Scotland

    1856 Christchurch, New Zealand, is chartered as a city

    First Surgery Under Kerosene Lamp
    1853 First nighttime surgery performed at Lychakiv Hospital in Lemberg (now Lviv, Ukraine) using new kerosene oil lamps invented by Ignacy Łukasiewicz [1]

    1843-Foundation stone laid for New Zealand's first purpose-built theatre
    Laying the foundation stone for the Royal Victoria Theatre on Manners St, Wellington, Alderman William Lyon welcomed the new amenity – ‘a theatre [was] a necessary concomitant of an advanced state of civilization.’



    Music History


    2020-The Psychedelic Furs release Made Of Rain, their first album since 1991, the year they disbanded. The group re-formed in 2000 but didn't get around to releasing new music until 20 years later.

    2019-Woodstock 50, which at one point had Miley Cyrus, Jay-Z, Santana and John Fogerty on board, is officially cancelled because of legal and logistical problems. Santana and Fogerty celebrate the anniversary with shows at the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, where the original Woodstock took place.

    2016-Justin Timberlake accepts the Decade Award at the Teen Choice Awards, the first time the award is given out. He says, "As a former teen, who's made a few choices along the way, I'm here to tell you that you and your choices matter."

    2015-Drake releases "Hotline Bling," the first single from his album Views. He doesn't rap in the song, but it still wins Grammy Awards in two rap categories, which Drake doesn't show up to accept because he feels it's really a pop song.

    2010-Switchfoot perform at the 2010 Boy Scouts of America National Jamboree final arena show in Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia.

    2010-Alicia Keys marries the producer Swizz Beatz (Kasseem Dean) at a ceremony on the island of Corsica. Keys is pregnant with their first child, Egypt.

    2009-With Adam Yauch (MCA) diagnosed with cancer, Beastie Boys cancel their appearance at the All Points West festival at Liberty State Park in New Jersey. In tribute, Jay-Z opens his set with a cover of "No Sleep Till Brooklyn."

    2004-It's "Mac Davis Day" in Lubbock, Texas, home of the songwriter who composed such classics as "In The Ghetto" and "A Little Less Conversation."

    1995-Jamaica issues a commemorative series of postage stamps honoring local native and reggae legend Bob Marley.

    1992-While performing his song "Don Henley Must Die" at the Austin nightclub Hole In The Wall, the psychobilly singer Mojo Nixon is surprised when Henley, who happened to be in the neighborhood, climbs up on stage and joins him on the song. In doing so, Henley shows he's not as earnestly arrogant as he's depicted in the song (sample lyric: "Poet of despair! Pumped up with hot air!").

    1982-Kim Wilde visits injured soldier Michael Barnett at Woolwich Army Hospital in England on his 21st birthday. Barnett, who has Wilde's name tattooed on his arm, lost a hand in the Falklands War.

    1980-The Mamas & The Papas founder and vocalist "Papa" John Phillips is arrested for possession of cocaine and running a phony prescription scam with a local pharmacy and eventually sentenced to eight years in prison (though this sentence would later be reduced to 30 days in jail and community service).

    1980-The Eagles split up after Glenn Frey and Don Felder go at it on stage.

    1979-Donny Osmond's wife, Debra Glenn, gives birth to their first child, Donny Jr. The couple end up having five children, all boys.

    1978-Will Champion (drummer for Coldplay) is born in Southampton, Hampshire, England.

    1977-The Starland Vocal Band Show, a variety series hosted by the group famous for the hit "Afternoon Delight," debuts on CBS. It lasts just six episodes.

    1976-The jazzy George Benson interrupts the reign of Frampton Comes Alive! to claim the top spot on the US albums chart with Breezin', which includes his hit "This Masquerade."

    1976-Orleans release "Still The One."

    1971-After being denied entrance to a Who concert in New York City's Forest Hills Stadium, an ex-convict stabs and kills the security guard.

    1971-The singer-songwriter era reaches its apex as James Taylor's "You've Got A Friend" hits #1 in the US.

    1971-Guitarist John William Lowery is born in Grosse Point, Michigan. Better known by his stage name "John 5," he goes on to contribute to acts such as Marilyn Manson, Rob Zombie, and Lynyrd Skynyrd.

    1969-Elvis Presley comes to Vegas! Making his first live concert appearance since March 25, 1961, he plays the International Hotel in Las Vegas, the first of 57 shows that help revive his career and earn him $1.5 million.

    1964-Country singer Jim Reeves dies at age 40 when he crashes his private plane while flying over Brentwood, Tennessee, in the midst of a violent thunderstorm. He will continue to chart after his death, with "Distant Drums" fighting the Beatles' double-sided "Yellow Submarine" and "Eleanor Rigby" for the #1 spot in the UK.

    1963-Fatboy Slim is born Quentin Leo Cook in Bromley, Kent, England. An electronic music innovator, he uses samples and loops to create hits in the '90s that include "The Rockafeller Skank" and "Praise You."

    1959-Cliff Richard charts his first UK #1 hit with "Living Doll," which becomes the top-selling single of 1959 in Britain.

    1958-Bill Berry (drummer for R.E.M.) is born in Duluth, Minnesota.

    1957-Daniel Ash (guitarist for Bauhaus, Love and Rockets) is born in Northampton, England.

    1953-Cellist Hugh McDowell (of Electric Light Orchestra) is born in Hampstead, London, England.

    1951-Ray Charles gets married for the first time. His bride is Eileen Williams, a beautician from Chicago. Their union lasts just one year.

    1947-Karl Green (bassist for Herman's Hermits) is born in Manchester, England.

    1945-Gary Lewis, future leader of Gary Lewis and the Playboys, is born Cary Levitch. His name is changed two years later when his dad changes his name from Joseph Levitch to Jerry Lewis.

    1943-Seventies singer-songwriter Lobo is born Roland Kent LaVoie in Tallahassee, Florida.

    1942-Harry James records "I've Heard That Song Before."

    1942-Daniel Boone, a British pop singer known for the 1972 hit "Beautiful Sunday," is born Peter Charles Green in Birmingham, England.

    1931-Jazz guitarist Kenny Burrell is born in Detroit, Michigan.

    1923-Ahmet Ertegun, co-founder and president of Atlantic Records, is born in Istanbul, Turkey. Also a songwriter, he writes songs such as "Chains of Love" and "Sweet Sixteen" under the pseudonym A. Nugetre.

    1918-Jazz pianist Hank Jones is born in Vicksburg, Mississippi. In addition to releasing over 60 albums, he also accompanies Marilyn Monroe as she famously sings "Happy Birthday, Mr. President," to John F. Kennedy on May 19, 1962.

    1911-George Liberace, violinist and elder brother to the mononymous entertainer Liberace, is born in Menasha, Wisconsin.

    1846-France's army gives legitimacy to Belgian Adolphe Sax's latest invention, the saxophone, by including it in their marching band.

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    History For The 1st Of August

    1774 – British chemist Joseph Priestley identifies a gas he calls “dephlogisticated air” - later known as oxygen.

    1834 – Slavery is abolished throughout the British Empire. An estimated 770,280 slaves become free.

    1914 – Germany declares war on Russia at the start of World War I.

    1932 – The first Mars bar, made in Slough, England, goes on sale.

    1981 – Rock music video channel MTV makes its first broadcast. Video Killed The Radio Star, by The Buggles, is the first song played.




    Music History



    2015-Rush play their last concert, closing out their R40 Live tour with a show at The Forum near Los Angeles. It's not announced as their farewell, but the band has hinted it might be. At the end of the show, drummer Neil Peart uncharacteristically comes to the front of the stage to take a bow with his bandmates.

    2014-The movie Guardians of the Galaxy opens in America, reviving '70s favorites like "Hooked On A Feeling" and "Come And Get Your Love."More

    2014-The BBC screens Elvis: That's Alright Mama 60 Years On to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the recording of the song: July 5, 1954.

    2012-Tony Sly (frontman for No Use For a Name) dies in his sleep at age 41. No cause of death is revealed.

    2006-30-year-old Andy Richardson dies after he is beaten in the mosh pit during the Deftones' set at the Family Values tour in Atlanta.

    1996-Bill Buchanan, known for a songwriting partnership with Dickie Goodman that produced the 1956 hit "The Flying Saucer," dies of cancer at age 81.

    1994-The Rolling Stones politely refuse an invitation to play at the Bill Clinton White House, though they play his 60th birthday party in 2006.

    1994-The Rolling Stones begin their Voodoo Lounge tour with a show in Washington, D.C. Their first tour without bass player Bill Wyman, it goes for 134 shows and finishes as the top-grossing tour of all time.
    "Jeremy" Video Debuts On MTV


    1994-Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley announce that they are married, having wed at a secret ceremony in the Dominican Republic 11 weeks earlier.

    1992-Pearl Jam's "Jeremy" video, depicting the teen suicide described in the song, makes its debut on MTV. It goes on to win Video of the Year at the VMAs.More

    1990-After writing "Blaze of Glory" for the film, Jon Bon Jovi makes his acting debut in Young Guns II, playing an inmate who gets shot.

    1989-The Rolling Stones release their album Steel Wheels, which contains the hit "Mixed Emotions."

    1988-Mudhoney's first-ever single is released: "Touch Me I'm Sick" b/w "Sweet Young Thing Ain't Sweet No More," via Sub Pop Records.

    1988-Cincinnati AM radio station WCVG changes its format, becoming the first US all-Elvis radio station. The burning love for the format dies out after a year, and on August 16, 1989, it switches to talk.

    1988-Soundgarden release their second EP, Fopp, on Sub Pop Records. Its title comes from the name of an Ohio Players song, which they cover on the set.

    1987-MTV Europe makes its debut. The first video shown is Dire Straits' "Money for Nothing," a song where Sting proclaims, "I want my MTV."

    1987-Guns N' Roses head to Park Plaza and 450 South La Brea in Hollywood and shoot their first video, for "Welcome To The Jungle."

    1985-Tom Waits releases Rain Dogs, widely considered one of his most important and innovative works. Synthesizers and samples - very common in the 1980s - are deliberately absent as Waits develops the unique approach he began on Swordfishtrombones.

    1984-Jermaine Jackson appears on an episode of CBS's long-running soap opera As The World Turns.

    1983-Neil Young puts together a one-time backing band called the Shocking Pinks for a rockabilly album titled Everybody's Rocking'. It's his 13th studio album.

    1981--"Jessie's Girl" by Rick Springfield goes to #1 in America the same day MTV goes on the air. Springfield, a former soap opera star, is a great fit for the music video medium and gets a big boost from the network.

    1981-MTV goes on the air, bringing music videos to the masses - at least the ones with cable.

    1981-Ashley Angel (of O-Town) is born in Redding, California.

    1980-Def Leppard perform their first US live gig, opening for AC/DC in New York City.

    1980-George Harrison forms a movie production company called Handmade Films, which produces the films Monty Python's Life of Brian, The Long Good Friday, Time Bandits, and Shanghai Surprise.

    1978-Dhani Harrison is born to George Harrison and his soon-to-be-wife Olivia. Dhani, who like his dad becomes a musician, is the couple's only child.

    1976-Gladys Knight gives birth to her third child, Shanga-Ali.

    1972-Elvis Presley releases "Burning Love."

    1972-The Eagles release "Witchy Woman."

    1971-The Sonny And Cher Comedy Hour, starring the popular duo, premieres on CBS.

    George Harrison Hosts First Major Charity Concert
    1971-George Harrison hosts the Concert For Bangladesh, the first major charity concert and the precursor to Live Aid. Guests include Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, Billy Preston and Ringo Starr.More

    1970-Music video director Harold "Hype" Williams is born in Queens, New York. He breaks into directing rap videos in the early '90s with clips from Puff Daddy, The Notorious B.I.G., and Nas before adding work with Kanye West and Jay-Z to his resume in the ensuing decades.More

    1970-After two years of sitting on the shelf (namely due to shocking sex and violence scenes), the gangster movie Performance premieres in London. It features what would have been the acting debut of the Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger (Ned Kelly was released first).

    1969-Carl Wilson of The Beach Boys is indicted in Los Angeles for failing to perform his required community service hours, which were imposed upon him after he refused to be drafted as a conscientious objector; rather than the janitorial duty he was sentenced to at LA County Hospital, Wilson taught music classes there instead.

    1966-The Chambers Brothers record "Time Has Come Today" at Columbia Records' Los Angeles studios. Overdubbed with harpsichord, the single is released with a 2:37 running time and flops. A year later, an 11-minute version appears on their album The Time Has Come which becomes an FM radio favorite. In 1968, the song is once again released as a single, this time at 4:45. This version climbs to #11 in the US.

    1965-Marianne Faithfull collapses during a performance in Lancashire, England, and is taken to a hospital, canceling the remainder of her tour.

    1964-It's the heyday of the harmonica, as the industry publication Billboard points out that The Beatles, Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones and Stevie Wonder have all had hits with the instrument.

    1964-Adam Duritz (frontman for Counting Crows) is born in Berkeley, California.

    1964-With The Beatles' album A Hard Day's Night already at #1 in America, the title track also hits the top spot, where it stays for two weeks. The film of that name - the first Beatles movie - is released in America 10 days later.

    1963-Beatles Monthly magazine debuts. It publishes for six years.

    1963-Coolio is born Artis Leon Ivey Jr. in Compton, California. He gets his stage name when a friend sees him playing guitar and says, "Who do you think you are, Coolio Iglesias?"

    1960-Suzi Gardner (guitarist and vocalist for L7) is born in Sacramento, California.

    1960-Public Enemy leader Chuck D is born Carlton Douglas Ridenhour in Queens, New York.

    1960-Chubby Checker releases "The Twist," starting a dance craze that soon grips the nation.

    1960-Aretha Franklin begins her first non-gospel recording session, an abortive attempt at jazz-pop with the Columbia label.

    1959-Joe Elliot (lead vocalist for Def Leppard) is born is Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England.

    1958-His contract up at Sun Records, Johnny Cash leaves Memphis, moves to Los Angeles, and signs with Columbia Records.

    1958-Songwriter/composer Michael Penn, brother of actor Sean Penn, is born in Greenwich Village, New York.

    1953-Blues guitarist/singer Robert Cray is born in Columbus, Georgia.

    1951-Tim Bachman (of Bachman-Turner Overdrive) is born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

    1951-Guitarist Tommy Bolin (of Deep Purple and the James Gang) is born in Sioux City, Iowa.

    1947-Bassist Rick Anderson (of The Tubes) is born in St. Paul, Minnesota.

    1946-Boz Burrell (bass player for Bad Company) is born in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, England.

    1946-Rick Coonce (drummer for The Grass Roots) is born Erik Michael Coonce in Los Angeles, California.

    1943-Producer Denny Cordell is born Dennis Cordell-Lavarack in Buenos Aires. His productions include "A Whiter Shade Of Pale" and "American Girl."

    1942-Fighting against phonograph records, which they fear will replace live music, the American Federation of Musicians goes on strike, forbidding their members from playing on recorded music. The strike lasts over two years, by which time it becomes clear that people will both listen to records and go to concerts.

    1942-Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead is born in San Francisco, California

    1942-Jimmy Dorsey records "Charleston Alley."

    1934-Leadbelly is released from prison after a four-year stint for attempted homicide.

    1930-Composer Lionel Bart is born in Stepney, London, England.

    1779-Francis Scott Key is born in Carroll County, Maryland.

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