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Thread: On This Day In History

  1. #1036
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    History For The 16th Of April

    1892
    NZ Rugby Football Union founded
    As rugby grew in popularity in New Zealand, it became necessary to standardise the administration of the game in the colony. Despite some opposition, a New Zealand Rugby Football Union was founded.


    1912
    News of Titanic sinking reaches New Zealand
    Although no New Zealanders were aboard the world’s largest passenger ship when it sank in the chilly North Atlantic with appalling loss of life, the country followed the news closely.

    1973
    Arthur Allan Thomas convicted of Crewe murders – again
    Waikato farmer Arthur Allan Thomas was found guilty – for the second time – of the 1970 murder of his Pukekawa neighbours Harvey and Jeanette Crewe.


    In Music History

    2023 – Broadway milestone: Phantom of the Opera, the longest-running Broadway show, closed at the Majestic Theater after 13,981 performances and seven Tony Awards.

    2018-Kendrick Lamar's album DAMN. wins the Pulitzer Prize for music, making him the first rapper to win the award, which traditionally goes to classical composers or jazz musicians.

    2015-The actress Suzanne Somers inadvertently outs Barry Manilow when she appears on Watch What Happens Live and talks about serving as best man at his wedding the previous year when Barry married his longtime manager, Garry Kief. Manilow comes out publicly two years later.

    2010-Shakira appears on Wizards of Waverly Place in the episode "Dude Looks Like Shakira."

    2010-At the Showbox in Seattle, Washington, Soundgarden play their first show in 13 years.

    2008-Barbra Streisand donates $5 million to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles for a women's heart education and research program.

    2007-Ornette Coleman wins the Pulitzer Prize for music for his 2006 album, Sound Grammar, the first jazz work to receive the honor.

    2003-Luther Vandross suffers a stroke that leaves him confined to a wheelchair. The singer, whose album Dance With My Father is released in June and goes to #1 in America, dies two years later.

    2003-Jerry Lee Lewis files for divorce from his sixth wife, Kerrie McCarver, who was once the president of his fan club.

    1999 – Tom Waits released his album Mule Variations, which became his biggest-selling album and won the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album.

    1999-Skip Spence of Jefferson Airplane and Moby Grape dies of lung cancer two days before his 53rd birthday.

    1996-Judy Collins marries her second husband, designer Louis Nelson.

    1996-Kiss perform at the Grammys in full makeup and glorious costumes. It's just the second time since 1980 (following their 1995 MTV Unplugged taping) that all four original members have been on stage together.

    1995-Bob Seger has his second child: a daughter named Samantha Char.

    1995-Gabrielle gives birth to her son Jordan. Eight months later, Jordan's father murders his stepfather and is sentenced to life in prison.

    1994-Harry Connick, Jr. marries Victoria's Secret model Jill Goodacre in New Orleans.

    1994-Pearl Jam pay tribute to Kurt Cobain, who was found dead a week earlier, on Saturday Night Live with a performance of "Daughter" that ends with lead singer Eddie Vedder opening up his jacket to reveal a "K" on his T-shirt.

    1994 – Prince reached the top of the UK singles chart with “The Most Beautiful Girl In The World”, his first UK number one after changing his name to an unpronounceable symbol.

    1993-Billy Burnette leaves Fleetwood Mac to pursue a country music career.

    1993-Chance the Rapper is born Chancelor Bennett in Chicago. He upsets the industry apple cart by making a huge impact while remaining independent, earning most of his revenue early on through live shows and sponsorships.

    1992-Nirvana appear on the cover of Rolling Stone with Kurt Cobain wearing a T-shirt that reads, "Corporate Magazines Still Suck."

    1992-David Milgaard is released from jail in Canada after serving 23 years for a crime he didn't commit. The Tragically Hip, who have helped in his fight for justice, write the song "Wheat Kings" about the ordeal.

    emple Of The Dog Album Released
    1991-The Temple of the Dog album is released. The one-off project is a tribute to Andrew Wood, the Mother Love Bone lead singer who died in 1990. Temple of the Dog is comprised of Soundgarden members Chris Cornell and Matt Cameron, along with Stone Gossard, Jeff Ament, Mike McCready, and Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam.

    1990-Tribute Concert Celebrates Nelson Mandela's Release.
    The Nelson Mandela: An International Tribute for a Free South Africa concert is held in Wembley Stadium, London, to celebrate the release of Mandela, who had been imprisoned since 1962. Neil Young, Peter Gabriel, Lou Reed, Tracy Chapman, Jackson Browne and Bonnie Raitt all perform.

    1983 – Bonnie Tyler reached No.1 in the UK with her album Faster Than the Speed of Night, featuring “Total Eclipse of the Heart”.

    1980-Academy Award-winning composer Morris Stoloff - who worked with the likes of Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Dinah Shore during his long tenure as music director at Columbia Pictures - dies at age 81.

    1977 – ABBA returned to number one on the UK Albums Chart with Arrival, continuing their global pop dominance.

    1977 – David Soul topped the US Billboard Hot 100 with “Don’t Give Up On Us”, which also reached number one in Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and Canada.

    1977-Stevie Wonder becomes a father for the second time when his son Kieta is born.

    1976-Boz Scaggs goes to visit friend Bobby "Blue" Bland backstage at the famed Antone's in Austin, Texas, and is beaten unconscious by two bouncers.

    1974-Queen make their US live debut at Regis College in Denver, Colorado, supporting Mott the Hoople. Their trek ends early when Brian May develops hepatitis a month later.

    1973-Paul McCartney's first television special, James Paul McCartney, airs on ABC, featuring a few Beatles songs, new Wings tracks, sketches, and a final performance of a song called "Gotta Sing, Gotta Dance," originally written for Twiggy.

    1972 – Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) performed their live debut at The Fox and Greyhound pub in London, showcasing their classical-influenced rock style before becoming one of the biggest acts of the 1970s.

    1971-Ringo Starr releases his second solo single in the US, "It Don't Come Easy," which will peak at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    1971-Tejano singer Selena is born Selena Quintanilla in Lake Jackson, Texas.

    1971-The Rolling Stones issue "Brown Sugar," the first release on their own label, Rolling Stones Records.

    Electra Kicks Out The MC5
    1969-Elektra Records drop the MC5 from their roster after the group takes out an ad in an underground newspaper castigating the department store chain Hudson's for not stocking their debut album, Kick Out The Jams. Hudson's didn't want it on their shelves because of a line in the title track: "Kick out the jams, motherf--ker!"More

    1969 – Desmond Dekker and The Aces became the first Jamaican act to top the UK Singles Chart with “The Israelites”, marking a milestone for reggae music internationally and also charting in the US.

    1965-The Hollies make their US stage debut at New York's Paramount Theatre.

    1964-The Rolling Stones release their self-titled debut album in the UK.

    1964-David Pirner (frontman of Soul Asylum) is born in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

    1964-Needing one more song for his album, Dean Martin records "Everybody Loves Somebody," which his friend Frank Sinatra recorded in 1948 and several other singers tried in the '50s. Martin's version is the first to hit, and it hits big, knocking The Beatles off the top spot in August.

    1963-Jimmy Osmond (of The Osmonds) is born in Canoga Park, California.

    1962-Punk rocker Ian MacKaye (of Minor Threat, Fugazi) is born in Washington, DC.

    1956 – Buddy Holly released his debut single “Love Me” with the B-side “Blue Days – Black Nights”.

    1955-Kool Herc is born in Kingston, Jamaica. Born Clive Campbell, his stage name is based on "Hercules," a nickname he earns for his strength. When he is 12, his family moves to the Bronx, where Herc becomes a DJ, throwing dance parties where MCs talk over extended breakbeats he creates with two turntables, one of the most important developments in hip-hop.

    1954 – Doris Day reached No.1 on the UK Singles Chart with “Secret Love”.

    1953-Peter Garrett, frontman of the Aussie rock band Midnight Oil, is born in Wahroonga, Sydney. He pursues a law career before joining the band.

    1947-Rock drummer Lee Kerslake (of Uriah Heep, Blizzard of Ozz) is born in Winton, Bournemouth, Hampshire, England.

    1947-Rock singer-songwriter Gerry Rafferty (of Stealers Wheel) is born in Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland.

    Woody Guthrie Begins The Asch Recordings
    1944-On shore leave from the Merchant Marines, Woody Guthrie arrives at Folkway Records' studios in New York City, where he starts recording with the label's founder, Moses Asch, in what becomes known as the "Asch recordings." Among the songs recorded during these sessions is "This Land Is Your Land," which becomes an iconic populist protest anthem, covered by countless artists including Pete Seeger and Bruce Springsteen.

    1943-Blues rocker Dave Peverett (of Foghat, Savoy Brown) is born in Dulwich, London, England.

    1939-Dusty Springfield is born Mary Isobel Catherine Bernadette O'Brien in West Hampstead, North London, England.

    1936-Country entertainer Judy Lynn is born Judy Lynn Voiten in Boise, Idaho.

    1935-Bobby Vinton is born Stanley Robert Vintula in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania.

    1930-Jazz flautist Herbie Mann is born Herbert Jay Solomon in Brooklyn, New York.

    1929-Singer-songwriter Ed Townsend, who co-wrote Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get It On," is born in Fayetteville, Tennessee.

    1929-R&B singer Roy Hamilton ("Unchained Melody," "You'll Never Walk Alone") is born in Leesburg, Georgia.

    1924-Rudy Pompilli (tenor saxophonist for Bill Haley & His Comets) is born in Chester, Pennsylvania.

    1924-Film composer Henry Mancini ("Moon River") is born Enrico Nicola Mancini in Cleveland, Ohio.




    Notable Deaths on April 16

    Mike Mitchell, guitarist of The Kingsmen, passed away on his 77th birthday; the band is best known for their 1963 hit “Louie Louie”.

    Lew Lewis, English harmonica player and vocalist, died; he was known for his work with Eddie and the Hot Rods and collaborations with The Clash and The Stranglers.

    Barry Mason, a leading 1960s songwriter, passed away at age 85; he co-wrote hits like “Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)” and “I Pretend”.

  2. #1037
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    History For The 17 Of April

    1820
    General Gates sent to Sydney under guard
    The American sealer General Gates – named for a War of Independence general and commanded by Captain Abimileck Riggs – had sailed from Boston in October 1818.


    1880
    First inter-city brass band contest
    About 2500 people attended the first inter-city brass band competition in the Christchurch Drill Hall. The inaugural winners were the Invercargill Garrison Band.


    In Music History

    2020-Fiona Apple releases her fifth album, Fetch The Bolt Cutters, her first since 2012. The title is a reference to a line Gillian Anderson says in the TV series The Fall and is a metaphor for setting yourself free.

    2018-Tina Turner's life story, already depicted in the 1993 film What's Love Got To Do With It, is adapted for the stage as Tina: The Musical, opens in London's West End. It opens on Broadway the following year.

    2010-When Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros frontman Alex Ebert takes the stage at Coachella, he clumsily knocks a microphone stand into the crowd. A guy in the audience catches it with his forehead, and blood spills all over the place. Ebert, horrified, gives the guy his sportcoat and his shirt to staunch the bleeding, and performs the set topless. It proves a breakout performance for the band, whose song "Home" starts showing up everywhere.

    2009-Brad Paisley and his wife, Kimberly Williams, welcome their second child, Jasper. His song "Today" is about this event.

    2009-Davy Jones of The Monkees visits Bikini Bottom when he plays himself on the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "SpongeBob SquarePants vs. The Big One."

    2008-Danny Federici (organist, accordionist for Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band) dies at age 58 after three years of suffering with melanoma.

    2008-With Spirit, Leona Lewis becomes the first British woman to go straight to the top of the Billboard 200 album chart with a debut album.

    2007-Arcturus officially announces they are splitting up.

    2006-A big-budget Coke commercial with a new song by Jack White called "Love Is The Truth" hits YouTube, then quickly goes away.

    2003-Blues musician Earl King, composer of the standards "I Hear You Knocking" and "One Night," dies at age 69 of diabetes-related complications.

    2000-"I Will Survive" singer Gloria Gaynor makes an appearance on Ally McBeal.

    1998-Linda McCartney, Paul McCartney's wife and Wings bandmate, dies at age 56 after a three-year battle with breast cancer.

    1997-Country singer Toby Keith and his wife Tricia welcome new arrival Stelen Keith Covel to the family.

    1993-Susanna Hoffs of The Bangles marries screenwriter Jay Roach in Los Angeles.

    1991-Jack Yellen, lyricist and screenwriter who wrote "Happy Days Are Here Again" (1929), dies in Concord, New York, at age 98.

    1989-Neil Young releases an EP titled Eldorado. Released exclusively in Japan and Australia and recorded with a one-time backing band called The Restless, it contains three songs ("Don't Cry," "Eldorado" and "On Broadway") that will appear on Freedom six months later.

    1983-Joe Strummer of The Clash runs the London Marathon, finishing with a time of 4 hours 13 minutes. He claims that his training included 10 pints of beer the night before.

    1983-Felix Pappalardi (bassist, vocalist for Mountain), age 43, is shot and killed by his wife, Gail, in their East Side Manhattan apartment. Gail claims it was an accident and the charge of second-degree murder is lessened to criminally negligent homicide, which lands her a brief stint in prison.

    1982-Denison University freshman Laura Carter is killed when a bullet from a gunfight a block away strikes her in the chest while she is riding in a car with her parents. Christopher Cross, who is dating her best friend, writes "Think Of Laura" in her honor.

    1982-"The seventh Commodore," long-time manager and dear friend Benny Ashburn, dies from a heart attack. Only a short time later Lionel Richie officially announces his departure from the group to pursue his solo career.

    1982-Afrika Bambaataa & The Soulsonic Force release "Planet Rock," the first hip-hop hit with electronic elements and a rhythm powered by a Roland TR-808 drum machine. It's just the third rap song to reach the Hot 100, following "Rapper's Delight" by the Sugarhill Gang and "The Breaks" by Kurtis Blow.

    1982- The Greek composer Vangelis scores his first and only No.1 on the US album chart with "Chariots Of Fire."

    1980-Bob Marley performs at the Independence Day celebration in Salisbury, Zimbabwe.

    1974-Vinnie Taylor (lead guitarist for Sha Na Na) dies of an accidental heroin overdose at age 24.

    1974-Victoria "Posh Spice" Beckham (of Spice Girls) is born Victoria Adams in Harlow, Essex, England.

    1971-Three Dog Night's "Joy To The World" reaches #1, where it stays for six weeks.

    1971-Each of the four ex-Beatles has a solo single on the UK chart:

    John Lennon - "Power to the People"
    Paul McCartney - "Another Day"
    Ringo Starr - "It Don't Come Easy"
    George Harrison - "My Sweet Lord"

    1970-Rapper Redman is born Reginald Noble in Newark, New Jersey.

    1970-Paul McCartney releases his first solo album, McCartney. Unlike the grand Beatles' productions, this one is stripped-down, with Paul playing all the instruments himself.

    1970-Johnny Cash plays for President Richard Nixon at the White House, performing his song "What Is Truth." Nixon requested a song called "Welfare Cadillac," which Cash politely declines to play. Near the end of the show, Cash says, "We pray, Mr. President, that you can end this war in Vietnam sooner than you hope or think it can be done."

    1969-The first solo concert by The Band is held in San Francisco, California.

    1967-Liz Phair is born in New Haven, Connecticut; she is raised by her adoptive parents in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Winnetka, Illinois. She becomes a '90s indie-rock icon with her debut album, Exile In Guyville, a feminist treatment of the Rolling Stones' Exile On Main St.

    1965- Bob Dylan's second studio album, "The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan," becomes a chart-topping hit in the UK.

    1964-Them (with Van Morrison) make their first concert appearance, at Belfast's Maritime Hotel.

    1964-Tool vocalist Maynard James Keenan is born James Herbert Keenan in Ravenna, Ohio.

    1961-The Cleftones release their R&B version of "Heart and Soul."

    1960-Gene Vincent is seriously injured in a Wiltshire, England, car crash in which Eddie Cochran dies aged 21.

    1955-Singer/guitarist Pete Shelley is born Peter McNeish in Leigh, Lancashire, England. In 1976 he forms the Buzzcocks, a pioneering band that melds pop and punk, influencing bands like The Smiths, Green Day, and even The Go-Go's.

    1954-Songwriter and musician Michael Sembello is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    1953-Harry Belafonte makes his film debut in Bright Road, also starring Dorothy Dandridge. He soon becomes a star of stage and screen.

    1948-"Miami Vice" composer Jan Hammer is born in Prague.

    1943-Teen idol Bobby Curtola (1962's "Fortune Teller") is born in Port Arthur, Ontario, Canada.

    1943-Bass guitarist Roy Estrada (Captain Beefheart, Mothers of Invention, Little Feat) is born in Santa Ana, California.

    1940-Singer-songwriter Billy Fury is born Ronald William Wycherley in Liverpool, England. A fixture on the UK chart throughout the '60s, his hit singles include "Halfway to Paradise" and "Jealousy," among others.

    1936-"Robbin' the Cradle" (1959) singer Tony Bellus is born Anthony J. Bellusci in Chicago, Illinois.

    1934-Record producer and songwriter Don Kirshner (The Monkees, The Archies, Kansas) is born in The Bronx, New York City.

    1882-Classical pianist Artur Schnabel is born in Lipnik, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (now part of Bielsko-Biala, Poland).

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    History For The 18th Of April

    1840
    Samuel Revans prints first newspaper
    The first newspapers published in New Zealand were printed by Samuel Revans a month after he arrived in Port Nicholson (Wellington).


    1847
    Gilfillan killings near Whanganui
    A Māori raid on the Gilfillan farm at Matarawa, just east of Whanganui, left four members of the family dead. The artist John Gilfillan and one of his daughters were severely wounded.


    In Music History

    2025-Sinners opens in theaters, with 88-year-old Buddy Guy playing a character he inspired: a musician who somewhat literally goes through hell to become a blues legend and open his own club in Chicago. The film picks up a bunch of awards, including an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.

    2024-Longtime Allman Brothers Band guitarist Dickey Betts dies at 80 after years of health problems. Betts wrote many of their most popular songs, including "Blue Sky," written about his girlfriend, Sandy "Bluesky" Wabegijig.

    2021-The Simpsons parodies Morrissey with the character Quillougby, a British misanthrope who sings "Everyone Is Horrid Except Me (And Possibly You)" with Lisa. "I'm quite used to it," the real Morrissey replies. "I've had enough horror thrown at me that would kill off a herd of bison."

    2020-Lady Gaga, Paul McCartney, Stevie Wonder and several other stars perform from their homes on the One World: Together At Home concert to support frontline workers during the coronavirus pandemic.

    2014-Deon Jackson dies at age 68 from unknown causes. He was most famous for his 1966 sweet soul hit "Love Makes The World Go Round," but his output also made him a hero on both the South Carolina beach music and UK Northern Soul scenes.

    2013-Cordell "Boogie" Mosson (bassist for Parliament-Funkadelic) dies at age 60 of liver failure.

    2013-Public Enemy become the fourth hip-hop act inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (the others that preceded PE into the Hall were Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five, Run-DMC, and the Beastie Boys). Other 2013 inductees are Rush, Heart (which reunites their original lineup), Albert King, Donna Summer, and Randy Newman.

    2013-Storm Thorgerson, a visionary designer who did classic artwork for Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd, dies of cancer at age 69.

    2012-Pop music impresario and American Bandstand host Dick Clark dies of a heart attack at age 82. Many artists got a huge boost after appearing on Bandstand, which he hosted from 1956 to 1989.

    2009-Keith Urban lands his first #1 album on the Billboard 200 with Defying Gravity, which includes the hits "Kiss A Girl" and "Sweet Thing."

    2009-Sable Starr dies of brain cancer in Reno, Nevada, at the age of 51. In the 1970s she was a famous groupie, following rock stars around the venues of LA from the age of 14. At the time of her death she has retired from the rock and roll lifestyle and is working in a casino.

    2009- The Black Eyed Peas began a 26-week run at No.1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 with Boom Boom Pow and I Gotta Feeling.

    2008-Foxy Brown is released from Riker's Island jail after serving an eight month sentence for battery.

    2006- Elton John raised over $700,000 for AIDS charity through a five-day clothing sale at Rockefeller Center, NYC.

    2003-Etta James gets a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

    1997-Rock guitarist Jay Hening (of Demolition 23) dies from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

    1996-Bernard Edwards (bass guitarist for Chic) dies of pneumonia at age 43 after a Chic concert at the Budokan Arena in Tokyo, Japan.

    Gavin Rossdale Shirtless On Rolling Stone
    1996-Gavin Rossdale of Bush is shirtless on the cover of Rolling Stone, but the article inside trashes the band, calling them "Nirvanawannabes."

    1992- Annie Lennox’s debut solo album Diva reached No.1 in the UK, later winning British Album of the Year at the 1993 BRIT Awards.

    1988-The accused murderer of reggae legend Peter Tosh, Dennis "Leppo" Lobban, goes on trial in Jamaica.

    1988-Legendary Motown songwriters Holland/Dozier/Holland are inducted into the Songwriters' Hall of Fame.

    1987-MTV finally acknowledges the existence of heavy metal with the debut of Headbangers Ball, a weekly show dedicated to the genre.
    The Queen Of Soul Adds Another Jewel To Her Crown
    1987
    Aretha Franklin and George Michael's duet "I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)" hits #1 in the US, returning Franklin to the top spot for the first time since "Respect" in 1967. The feat breaks the record for the longest span between #1 hits.

    1985-Liberace breaks his own record at Radio City Music Hall, pulling in two million dollars for his latest engagement.

    1985- Wham! became the first Western act to release a pop album (Make It Big) in China.

    1981-Chris Squire and Alan White of Yes begin rehearsals with Jimmy Page and Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin. It doesn't lead anywhere, and Yes gets back together to release their 1983 album 90125.

    1977- Musical revue Side by Side by Sondheim opened at Music Box, NYC, running for 390 performances.

    1975- John Lennon gave his final public performance at a gala in NYC, performing “Slippin’ and Slidin’,” “Stand By Me,” and “Imagine”.

    1974-Guitarist Mark Tremonti is born in Detroit, Michigan. As a student at Florida State University, he forms Creed with lead singer Scott Stapp. When Creed splits in 2004, Tremonti and the other original musicians in the band form Alter Bridge with frontman Myles Kennedy.

    1974- James Brown received a Gold Plaque for his single The Payback, marking his second and final RIAA-certified Gold single.

    1973-The Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young documentary Journey Through The Past, directed by Neil Young, debuts at the Dallas Film Festival.

    1971-The Diana Ross television musical special Diana, featuring guest stars The Jackson 5, Bill Cosby, and Danny Thomas, airs on ABC.

    1971- The Jackson 5 appeared on Diana Ross’ solo TV special, performing alongside Danny Thomas and Bill Cosby.

    1970-Greg Eklund (drummer for Everclear) is born in Jacksonville, Florida.

    1970- Irish singer Dana topped the UK Singles chart with All Kinds of Everything, her Eurovision-winning song.

    1966-Ana Voog (lead singer of The Blue Up) is born Rachel Olson in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    1965- Marian Anderson concluded her 30-year singing career with a concert at Carnegie Hall, NYC.

    1964-Bez of Happy Mondays is born Mark Berry in Lancashire, England. A founding member and mainstay in the group, his role is dancing on stage and shaking maracas to create a vibe.

    1963-Bobby Bare records "Detroit City."

    1963-After a Beatles performance at Royal Albert Hall in London for the radio show Swingin' Sound '63, Paul McCartney meets the actress Jane Asher. They become one of the most popular couples in England and get engaged, but they never marry and split up in 1968. This relationship inspires several Beatles songs, including "All My Loving" and "I'm Looking Through You."

    1960-Bobby Rydell appears as "The Singing Delinquent" on an episode of the TV series Make Room For Daddy.

    1958-Les Pattinson (bass guitarist for Echo & the Bunnymen) is born in Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.

    1957-Second Lt. Buddy Knox is called up for six months active duty by the US Army Reserves.

    1953- Revival of Pal Joey starring Harold Lang and Vivienne Segal closed at Broadhurst Theater, NYC, winning 3 Tony Awards.

    1946-Skip Spence (of Quicksilver Messenger Service, Moby Grape, Jefferson Airplane) is born Alexander Lee Spence in Windsor, Ontario, Canada.

    1946-Actress and singer Hayley Mills is born in London, England, to English actors John Mills and Mary Hayley Bell. She joins older sister Juliet Mills.

    1946-Lennie Baker (saxophonist for Sha Na Na) is born in Whitman, Massachusetts.

    1944- Leonard Bernstein and Jerome Robbins’ ballet Fancy Free premiered at the Metropolitan Opera House, NYC.

    1943-Drummer Clyde Stubblefield, who plays on many of James Brown's recordings, is born in Chattanooga, Tennessee. When hip-hop emerges in the '80s and '90s, many of the tracks sample his drums, such as "Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud" and "Cold Sweat."

    1940-Mike Vickers (of Manfred Mann) is born in Southampton, Hampshire, England.

    1939-Pianist Glen Hardin is born in Wellington, Texas. In addition to playing with Buddy Holly's band The Crickets, Hardin will record with artists such as Elvis Presley, John Denver, Emmylou Harris, and Rick Nelson.

    1938-Jazz pianist Hal Galper - known for his work with Chet Baker, Stan Getz, Anita O'Day, and Joe Williams - is born in Salem, Massachusetts.

    1936- Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart’s musical Jumbo closed at the Hippodrome Theatre, NYC, after 233 performances.

    1935-Record producer Paul Rothchild (The Doors, Janis Joplin) is born in Brooklyn, New York.

    1924-Blues musician Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown is born in Vinton, Louisiana.

    1918-Guitarist Tony Mottola, known for working with Frank Sinatra and Perry Como, is born in Kearny, New Jersey.

    1796- The Archers by Benjamin Carr, the first opera by an American composer, was performed in New York City.



    Notable Births and Deaths
    1819- Composer Franz von Suppé was born.

    1863- Composer Felix Blumenfeld was born.

    1907- Composer Miklos Rozsa was born.

    1996- Bernard Edwards, co-founder of Chic, died at age 43 while on tour in Japan.

    2012- Richard “Dick” Clark, influential radio and television personality, died at age 82.

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    History For The 19th Of April

    1919, the New Zealand Rugby Football team faced the French Army in a historic match at Twickenham. Despite conceding the opening try, the New Zealanders took control in the second half, winning the match decisively with a score of 20-3. The match was attended by 15,000 spectators, and the King congratulated the New Zealanders on their victory. This match is a significant event in New Zealand rugby history, showcasing the team's skill and determination.



    In Music History

    2024-Taylor Swift releases The Tortured Poets Department, an album filled with confessional songs written in the aftermath of breakups with Joe Alwyn and The 1975 singer Matt Healy. At 2 a.m. she surprise releases an additional 15 tracks in a second volume of the album called The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology.

    2021-Jim Steinman, who wrote Meat Loaf's operatic hits like "Two Out Of Three Ain't Bad" and "I'd Do Anything For Love (But I Won't Do That)," dies of kidney failure at 73.

    2019-The New York Yankees and Philadelphia Flyers pull Kate Smith's version of "God Bless America" when it is revealed that she sang racist songs in the 1930s, including "That's Why Darkies Were Born" and "Pickaninny Heaven."

    Kid Rock And Ted Nugent Go To The White House
    2017-Kid Rock and Ted Nugent join Sarah Palin at the White House, where they get a personal tour from President Trump.More

    2012-Levon Helm (drummer, lead vocalist of The Band) dies of cancer at age 71. Also an actor, he was known for his role as Loretta Lynn's father in Coal Miner's Daughter.

    2012-Greg Ham, multi-instrumentalist with the band Men At Work, best known for playing the saxophone on "Overkill" and "Who Can It Be Now," and the flute on "Down Under," dies of a heart attack at his home in Melbourne, Australia at age 58.

    2009-The Flaming Lips celebrate Earth Day with a performance on the National Mall in Washington, DC.

    2008-Donna Summer scores a #1 Dance hit with "I'm A Fire," making her the first artist to top that chart in every decade since its 1974 debut.

    2004-A stage musical version of the Elvis Presley film Jailhouse Rock opens in London.

    2003-Motown choreographer Cholly Atkins dies of pancreatic cancer at age 89 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    2003-Good Charlotte's "The Anthem" peaks at #43 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    2002-"Jeepster" by T. Rex becomes the first song successfully identified by Shazam in a pre-launch version of the service that requires the user to call a number and receive a text message with the name of the song.

    2002-Alice In Chains lead singer Layne Staley is discovered dead in his Seattle apartment after police break down his door to investigate reports that he is missing. Staley, whose addictions led him to cut off contact with friends and family, had died on April 5 of a drug overdose. He was 34.

    Baha Men And Britney Rule The Kids' Choice Awards
    2001-In a battle of the bark, Baha Men beat out Lil' Bow Wow at the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards, taking Fave Song with "Who Let The Dogs Out."

    1999-James Darren begins a five-episode stint on the primetime soap opera Melrose Place as an unscrupulous millionaire named Tony Marlin.

    1998- Robbie Williams topped the UK album chart with his debut solo album Life Thru A Lens, which spent 218 weeks on the chart.

    1997-Eldon "El Duce" Hoke (drummer, lead singer of The Mentors) dies at age 39 after being struck by a train in Riverside, California. The coroner's report calls the cause of death a "misadventure."

    1994- Rapper Nas released his debut studio album Illmatic, widely regarded as a hip-hop classic for its storytelling and production, establishing him as a master lyricist early in his career.

    1994-Nas releases his landmark debut album Illmatic at the age of 20, helping revive the flagging New York City rap scene and birth the era of lyricism. It goes on to be widely accepted as one of the greatest rap albums of all time.

    1993-Los Angeles session musician Steve Douglas (Brian Wilson, The Beach Boys, Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan) dies at age 54 of heart failure.

    1990-The TV movie Summer Dreams: The Story Of The Beach Boys airs on ABC.

    1988-Sonny Bono (Sonny & Cher) is inaugurated as mayor of Palm Springs, California.

    Prince Holds Top Spots With "Kiss" And "Manic Monday"
    1986
    You don't have to watch Dynasty to have an attitude: Prince hits #1 in the US with "Kiss." The #2 song is "Manic Monday" by the Bangles, which he wrote.

    1982-Simon & Garfunkel reunite for a world tour, but split up again in the midst of it.

    1980-Blondie's "Call Me," a song about a prostitute written for the film American Gigolo, hits #1 in America.

    1980-The Specials become the first ska band to guest on Saturday Night Live, where they play "Gangsters" and "Too Much Too Young." Their energetic performance wows the crowd but fails to break ska music in America.

    1980- R.E.M. performed their first gig as a band in Athens, Georgia.

    1978- Patti Smith released the single Because the Night, co-written with Bruce Springsteen, which became her only charting single, reaching No. 13.

    1975-The Raspberries split up.

    1973- David Bowie released his sixth studio album Aladdin Sane, which topped the UK charts and featured his iconic lightning bolt cover.

    1969-"Good Times, Bad Times," the first Led Zeppelin single, reaches its chart peak of #80 in America.

    1968-George Harrison and John Lennon, fearing that their instructor, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, is a fraud and has been preying on women at his meditation camp in India, leave the retreat two weeks early and distance themselves from the Maharishi. Harrison though, remains dedicated to the concept of Transcendental Meditation.

    1967-Nancy and Frank Sinatra's "Somethin' Stupid" goes to #1 in the UK.

    1964-Drummer Dawn Richardson of 4 Non Blondes, is born.

    1963- Johnny Cash released Ring of Fire, written by June Carter and Merle Kilgore, which became one of his signature songs.

    1962-Jackie Wilson makes his stage debut with a show at the Copacabana in New York City.

    1956- Chuck Berry recorded Roll Over Beethoven, a rock ‘n’ roll classic that blended rhythm and blues with early rock influences.

    1953-Rock drummer Rod Morgenstein (of Winger) is born in New York.

    1947-Mark Volman (of The Turtles, Flo and Eddie, Mothers of Invention) is born in Los Angeles, California.

    1945- The musical Carousel by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein opened at the Majestic Theatre in New York.

    1943-Eve Graham of The New Seekers is born Evelyn May Beatson in Auchterarder, Perth and Kinross, Scotland.

    1942-Rock guitarist Larry Ramos (of The Association) is born Hilario Ramos in Waimea, Hawaii.

    1940-Singer-songwriter Bobby Russell ("The Night The Lights Went Out In Georgia") is born in Nashville, Tennessee.

    1937-Life magazine publishes a three-page article headlined: "Lead Belly - Bad Ni--er Makes Good Minstrel."

    1934-Comedic songwriter Dickie Goodman is born in Brooklyn, New York. Known for spoofs like 1962's "Batman & His Grandmother" and a string of hits ribbing the popular TV series The Untouchables: "The Touchables," "The Touchables In Brooklyn," and "Santa And The Touchables."

    1892-French composer Germaine Tailleferre, the sole female member of the composers group Les Six, is born in Saint-Maur-des-Fossés, Val-de-Marne, France.





    Notable Births

    1928- Alexis Korner, British blues musician and radio broadcaster, considered the founding father of British blues.

    1942-Alan Price (original keyboardist for The Animals) for hits like House of the Rising Sun, is born in Fatfield, England.

    1944- Bernie Worrell, keyboardist and founding member of Parliament-Funkadelic, influential in funk and rock music.

    1947- Mark Volman, singer for The Turtles and part of the comedy rock duo Flo & Eddie.

    1957- Tony Martin, singer-songwriter and frontman of Black Sabbath during the late 1980s and 1990s.




    Notable Deaths

    2012- Levon Helm, drummer, singer, and multi-instrumentalist of The Band, passed away from throat cancer at age 71. He was known for classics like The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down and The Weight.

    2012- Greg Ham, multi-instrumentalist of Men At Work, died of a heart attack at age 58, remembered for hits like Down Under and Overkill.

    2021- Jim Steinman, songwriter and producer behind Meat LoafÂ’s Bat Out of Hell, passed away at 73.

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    History For The 20th Of April

    1958
    Mormon temple opens in Hamilton
    This was the first temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the southern hemisphere.


    1981
    Allison Roe wins Boston Marathon
    Allison Roe became the first New Zealand woman to win the prestigious Boston Marathon, burning off American star Patti Catalano and breaking the course record by nearly eight minutes.



    In Music History

    2024- The jukebox musical Hell's Kitchen, featuring music and lyrics by Alicia Keys, debuted on Broadway starring Maleah Joi Moon, Shoshana Bean, and Kecia Lewis Hallelujah.

    2020-Homebound during the coronavirus pandemic, Willie Nelson stages the "Come And Toke It" live stream to support efforts to legalize marijuana and free those incarcerated for it. Guests include Ziggy Marley, who does "One Love," and Kacey Musgraves, who performs "Slow Burn."

    2019-Michelle Branch marries Patrick Carney of The Black Keys.

    2018- Swedish DJ and producer Avicii (Tim Bergling) passed away at age 28, leaving a legacy of hits including Wake Me Up and collaborations with artists like Robbie Williams, Rita Ora, and members of ABBA.

    2017-The Main Ingredient lead singer Cuba Gooding Sr. dies at age 72. His son is the actor Cuba Gooding Jr.

    2013-Five days after three people were killed in bombings at the Boston Marathon, Neil Diamond makes a surprise appearance at Fenway Park, where he performs "Sweet Caroline" at the Red Sox game against the Kansas City Royals.

    2011-Indie rocker Gerard Smith (of TV on the Radio) dies at age 36 of lung cancer.

    2010-The stage adaptation of Green Day's American Idiot rock opera officially opens on Broadway, a year after its debut at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre.

    2006-Smashing Pumpkins, who split in 2000, announce their reunion. A year later they release a new album, Zeitgeist.

    2003-Jazz tenor saxophonist Teddy Edwards dies at age 78.

    Ashanti Has #1 Song And Album
    2002-Ashanti snags the top spot on the Hot 100 with her single "Foolish," and also goes to #1 with her self-titled debut album. The #2 song is "Always On Time," her collaboration with Ja Rule.More

    2002-Pop singer Alan Dale ("(The Gang that Sang) Heart of My Heart") dies at age 76. Also known for playing a rock 'n roll singer in the 1956 film Don't Knock the Rock, featuring Alan Freed, Little Richard, The Treniers, and Bill Haley & His Comets.

    2001-Italian composer Giuseppe Sinopoli dies of a heart attack at age 54 while conducting the Verdi opera Aida at the Deutsche Oper in Berlin, Germany.

    1999-Rapper Mase, 21, announces that he is retiring from music in order to "follow God." He returns with his third album, Welcome Back, in 2004.

    1999-At his concert at the Meadowlands in New Jersey, Billy Joel announces his retirement from touring and recording pop music, as he wants to focus on classical music. His retirement doesn't last long; he returns to the stage in December. After sitting out most of 2000, he embarks on the Face to Face tour with Elton John in 2001.

    1996- Mark Morrison’s Return of the Mack reached No.1 in the UK, becoming his signature hit.

    1994-Barbra Streisand begins her first tour since 1966, performing in London.

    1993-At 31, Toby Keith releases his self-titled debut album. The first single, "Should've Been A Cowboy," goes to #1 on the Country chart, the first of 20 chart-toppers for Keith on that tally.

    1993-Shania Twain's self-titled debut album is released. It's an impressive debut, establishing her in the world of country music. Her next three releases, produced by her husband Mutt Lange, make her a pop superstar.

    1993-Looking to mimic the success of New Kids on the Block, entrepreneur Lou Pearlman sets out to create his own boy band. After auditioning hundreds of performers, he chooses five unknowns to be his Backstreet Boys.

    1992-The remaining members of Queen hold the "Concert For Life" at Wembley Stadium in London, raising money for AIDS awareness in honor of their fallen frontman Freddie Mercury. David Bowie, Elton John, Guns N' Roses and George Michael all perform.

    1992-Blues singer and guitarist Johnny Shines dies at age 76 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

    1992- The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert at Wembley Stadium, London, celebrated the life of Queen’s frontman, featuring performances by Elton John, David Bowie, Guns N’ Roses, George Michael, and many others. The event raised funds for AIDS research and launched the Mercury Phoenix Trust, with tickets selling out in three hours and a broadcast reaching approximately one billion viewers worldwide.

    1991-John Fogerty marries his second wife, Julie Lebiedzinksi, in Elkhart, Indiana. The couple met at a party following one of his concerts in 1986. "Suddenly the crowd parted, and there was the most beautiful girl I'd ever seen in my life," Fogerty said.

    1991-Steve Marriott (guitarist, vocalist for The Small Faces, Humble Pie) dies in a house fire, possibly caused by a cigarette, at age 44.

    1985-The Commodores land their first (and only) post-Lionel Richie hit with "Nightshift," which reaches #3 in the US. The song is a tribute to Jackie Wilson and Marvin Gaye.

    1981-John Phillips of The Mamas & The Papas is sentenced to five years for helping a Los Angeles-area pharmacist sell fake prescriptions, as well as drug possession. His sentence will be reduced to one month, however, after he agrees to perform 250 hours of community service in the form of anti-drug lectures.

    1976-George Harrison, who is good friends with Eric Idle, joins Monty Python on stage at the comedy troupe's show at New York's City Center. Dressed as a Canadian Mountie, Harrison joins the chorus for "The Lumberjack Song." No mention is made of Harrison's appearance, and few in the audience recognize him. The next night, Nilsson shows up to perform the same feat, but with disastrous results, as he falls into the audience and breaks his arm.

    1974-The Soul Train theme song ("TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)" by MFSB featuring The Three Degrees) hits #1 in America. MFSB, which stands for Mother Father Sister Brother, is a studio group established by Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff at Philadelphia International Records.

    1971-Bass player Mikey Welsh is born in Syracuse, New York. In 1998, he replaces Matt Sharp in Weezer, and is replaced by Scott Shriner in 2001.

    4/20 Becomes A Day Of Reefer Madness
    1971
    Five friends at San Rafael High School in California coin the term "4:20" as a euphemism for smoking pot. April 20th becomes a popular day to spark one up, as does 4:20 pm. Note that the Boston song "Smokin'" clocks in at 4 minutes, 20 seconds, and if you multiply the title numbers in Bob Dylan's "Rainy Day Women #12 And #35," you get 420. Dude!

    1970-Phife Dawg of A Tribe Called Quest is born Malik Taylor in Queens, New York. His insistent delivery provides the counterweight to Q-Tip's smooth flows in the group. Stricken with diabetes, he dies in 2016 at 45.

    Submarine Churches Surface, Inspired By Beatles Song
    1970-The New York Times reports on "submarine churches" inspired by the Beatles' "Yellow Submarine." Their logos are variations of a submarine with the periscope forming a peace sign.More

    1970- Elvis Presley released his rendition of The Wonder of You, reaching No.1 in the UK and No.9 in the US.

    1969-Benny Benjamin aka "Papa Zita" (drummer for The Funk Brothers) dies of a stroke at age 43.

    1968- The Rolling Stones recorded Jumpin’ Jack Flash at Olympic Studios in London, which became a major international hit.

    1968-Deep Purple make their stage debut at the Vestpoppen, in Kastrup, Denmark.

    1968-Apple Music, the Beatles' new label, runs their famous "This Man Has Talent" ads in Britain's New Musical Express, seeking demo tapes from unknown artists. Most are never heard but pile up in Apple's offices, and the majority of the label's signings are acquired through acquaintances.

    1967-Drummer Mike Portnoy is born in Long Beach, New York. A founding member of Dream Theater, he also writes many of the band's lyrics.

    1963-Rick Nelson marries his first wife, Kris Harmon, daughter of college football legend Tom Harmon and sister of actor Mark Harmon, in Los Angeles. A pregnant Kris gives birth to daughter Tracy only six months later. The couple divorce in 1982.

    1959-Thirteen-year-old Dolly Parton releases her first single, the rockabilly-style love tune "Puppy Love."

    1951-R&B singer Luther Vandross is born in New York City.

    1949-Phil Spector's father commits suicide when Phil is just 9 years old. The title of the song "To Know Him Is To Love Him," which Phil Spector wrote for the Teddy Bears, comes from the inscription on his father's headstone.

    1948-Craig Frost (keyboardist for Grand Funk Railroad) is born in Flint, Michigan.

    1945-Keyboardist Jimmy Winston (The Moments, The Small Faces) is born in Stratford, London, England.

    1944-Judy Garland records "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas."

    1939-Singer-songwriter Johnny Tillotson is born in Jacksonville, Florida.

    1931-Louis Armstrong records "When It's Sleepy Time Down South" from the play Under A Virginia Moon. He adds the song to his live repertoire, and it becomes a jazz standard, later recorded by Billie Holiday, Louis Prima, Harry Connick, Jr. and many others.

    1923-Tito Puente, mambo musician and Latin jazz composer, is born Ernesto Antonio Puente in New York City.

    1908-Jazz musician Lionel Hampton is born in Louisville, Kentucky.

    1896- John Philip Sousa's operetta El Capitan premiered on Broadway at the Broadway Theatre in New York City.

    1759- Composer George Frideric Handel was buried in Westminster Abbey, London, honoring his contributions to classical music.

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    History For The 21st Of April

    1509- King Henry VIII of England ascended to the throne when his father, King Henry VII died.

    1802-a band of Wahhabis from Najd in central Saudi Arabia attacked the central Iraqi city of Karbala, with the purpose of punishing those Iraqi Muslims for failing to follow the ultra-conservative religious teachings of Ibn Taymiyya (1263-1328), a Sunni Muslim scholar who had taught a “renewal” of the Islamic faith apparently at odds with the brand of Islam practiced in Karbala, which was of the Shia variety.

    1894- Norway accepted the product of their own gun designers, Ole Krag and Erik Jorgensen, as their standard battle rifle.



    1934- The Daily Mail publishes a grainy black and white photograph which it claims is proof of the existence of the Loch Ness Monster. The image is named the ‘Surgeon’s Photograph’, due to the photographer’s wish to remain anonymous. Interest in the mysterious creature reaches fever pitch, and the picture will become one of the most famous photographs of the 20th Century.



    In Music History

    2025-The video for Madonna's "La Isla Bonita" becomes her first to tally a billion views on YouTube, far outpacing "Hung Up," in second place with 531 million. The song is huge with Gen Z thanks to a series of TikTok trends.

    2016-Prince dies at age 57 after overdosing on fentanyl, a highly addictive opioid.

    2014-Big Sean becomes the first rapper to perform at the White House when he duets with Ariana Grande on "Right There" at the annual Easter Egg Roll

    2013-Christina Amphlett (frontwoman of The Divinyls) dies after a long battle with breast cancer at age 53.

    2012-Marcus Mumford of the British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons marries actress Carey Mulligan, his former childhood penpal, at a farm in Somerset, England. Mumford was previously romantically linked to folk singer-songwriter Laura Marling.

    2012-Keith Urban becomes the first Australian inducted into the Grand Ole Opry and also the first born outside of North America.

    2012-Nicki Minaj goes to #1 in America with Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded, becoming the first female rapper with a #1 album since Eve in 1999.

    2008-Soul singer Al Wilson dies at age 68 of kidney failure.

    2007-Rock guitarist Lobby Loyde (of Billy Thorpe and The Aztecs, The Coloured Balls) dies at age 65 of lung cancer.

    2006-Faith Hill and Tim McGraw kick off their Soul2Soul II tour in Columbus, Ohio, which becomes the highest-grossing country tour of all time. On some dates, their opening act is a young singer named Taylor Swift.

    2004-Future Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson gets voted off season three of American Idol, where she finishes in seventh place.

    2004-Michael Jackson is officially charged with child molestation after a California grand jury determines there is enough evidence to proceed with allegations made against him for time spent at his Neverland Ranch.

    2003-EMI and Universal Music sue the file-sharing service Napster for copyright violations.

    2003-British pop group S Club 7 announces it is splitting up after five years.

    2003-Nina Simone dies at age 70 after a long battle with breast cancer.

    2001-Peter Buck of R.E.M. gets unruly on a British Airways flight and is arrested. He is accused of drinking 15 glasses of wine, overturning a service cart and engaging in other bad behavior, but charges are eventually dropped. Buck claimed that ingesting both a sleeping pill and wine caused him to lose it.

    2000-Neal Matthews Jr. (of Elvis Presley's backing group, The Jordanaires) dies of a heart attack at age 70.

    1998-Faith Hill releases her third album, Faith, which delivers her first pop hit, "This Kiss."

    1993-Bill Wyman, formerly of The Rolling Stones, marries his third wife, 33-year-old fashion designer Suzanne Accosta, in Saint-Paul-de-Vence, France.

    1992-The Cure release their ninth studio album, Wish, which features their hit single "Friday I'm In Love." Their highest-charting album, it debuts at #1 in the UK and #2 in the US.

    1990-The International Ska Festival & Earth Day Celebration goes down at the Greek Theatre in San Francisco, with performances by The International Beat, The Uptones, and Bad Manners. With 10,000 attending, it's an early indicator that ska is finding an audience in America.

    1990-Sinead O'Connor's cover of the Prince song "Nothing Compares 2 U" goes to #1 in America, where it stays for four weeks. It thrusts O'Connor into the spotlight, which she quickly rejects, finding the rituals of fame vapid and materialistic. Two years later, she makes news for tearing up a picture of the Pope on live TV.

    1990-Paul McCartney sets a new world record for attendance at a concert by a single artist when his tour-ending show at the Maracana Stadium in Rio draws 184,000 people.

    1984-"Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now)" goes to #1 on the Hot 100, giving Phil Collins his first solo chart-topper on the tally. He will have six more.

    1981-Weird Al Yankovic (along with his drummer, Jon "Bermuda" Schwartz) makes his TV debut, playing the Queen parody "Another One Rides The Bus" on Tom Snyder's The Tomorrow Show.

    1979-Amii Stewart's "Knock On Wood" hits #1 in America. The song was originally recorded by Eddie Floyd in 1966.

    1978-31-year-old Fairport Convention lead singer Sandy Denny dies of a cerebral hemorrhage after four days in a coma.

    1977-Elvis Presley begins his last concert tour in Greensboro, North Carolina.

    1977-Having spent a full decade as a draft exile in Canada, singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester returns to the US.

    1977-ABC airs Frank Sinatra's TV special Frank Sinatra And Friends, featuring guest stars Natalie Cole and John Denver.

    1976-A night after George Harrison joins Monty Python during their performance of "The Lumberjack Song" at a New York show, Harry Nilsson tries it. While Harrison blended in as a member of the chorus (dressed as a Mountie), Nilsson wears dark glasses and makes a spectacle. When he goes to the front of the stage to shake hands with audience members, he falls into the crowd and breaks his arm.

    1973-Tony Orlando and Dawn's "Tie A Yellow Ribbon Round The Ole Oak Tree" hits #1 in the US. The song is based on a fictional newspaper story about a man returning from jail who asks his wife to tie a yellow handkerchief on the landmark oak tree in town if she still loves him.

    1973-Powered by a gnarly stage show and the tracks "No More Mr. Nice Guy" and "Elected," Alice Cooper's album Billion Dollar Babies hits #1 in America (it hits the top spot in the UK three days later).

    1970-Elton John makes his stage debut as a solo act when he opens for T. Rex, Spooky Tooth, and Jackie Lomax at the Roundhouse in London.

    1970-Chicago blues guitarist Earl Hooker dies of tuberculosis at age 41.

    1969-Mick Jagger sends a letter to Andy Warhol, who has agreed to design the artwork for the Rolling Stones album Sticky Fingers. Jagger writes: "In my short sweet experience, the more complicated the format of the album... the more f--ked up the reproduction and agonising delays." Warhol eventually delivers a design with a working zipper, which becomes one of the most memorable album covers ever made, but is very difficult to mass produce.

    1962-Elvis Presley's "Good Luck Charm" hits #1.

    1960-For about 20 years, it was common practice for record companies to pay DJs to play songs, but now the US government is cracking down on what they call "Payola." Dick Clark testifies before congress and admits that he took money and gifts to play records - estimating 27% of his playlist to be paid. Clark emerges more powerful than ever, selling off conflicting interests and expanding his music empire. On the other hand, another prominent DJ and TV host, Alan Freed, refuses to admit that he took payola, insisting that he was a consultant to the industry. His career never recovers despite his massive influence and succes

    1959-Johnny Mathis records "Misty."

    1959-Robert Smith of The Cure is born in Blackpool, Lancashire, UK.

    1959-Alt rocker Michael Timmins (guitarist for Cowboy Junkies) is born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

    1958-The Platters' "Twilight Time" hits #1.

    1958-Mike Barson (keyboardist for Madness) is born in Edinburgh, Scotland.

    1957-At his first session with Atco Records, an offshoot of Atlantic Records, Bobby Darin records "Don't Call My Name," "Pretty Betty," and "So Mean."

    1956-Elvis Presley's breakout hit "Heartbreak Hotel" goes to #1 in America.

    1951-Les Paul and Mary Ford's "How High The Moon" hits #1.

    1951-Nickey Barclay (keyboardist for Fanny) is born.

    1948-Singer-songwriter Paul Davis is born in Meridian, Mississippi.

    1947-Iggy Pop is born James Newell Osterberg Jr. in Muskegon, Michigan. As a solo artist and with his band The Stooges, he literally bleeds on stage, often rolling shirtless in broken glass. His most POP-ular songs are "The Passenger" and "Lust For Life," both released in 1977.

    1947-Rock musician John Weider (guitarist for The Animals, bassist for Family) is born in Shepherd's Bush, London, England.

    1947-Alan Warner (lead guitarist for The Foundations) is born in Paddington, West London, England.

    1945-One of the world's first great R&B labels, Modern Records, is formed by Saul and Jules Bihari in Los Angeles. It would prove to be the launching pad for everyone from John Lee Hooker to Etta James.

    1931-Country singer-songwriter Carl Belew, known for '50s hits like "Am I That Easy To Forget" and "Lonely Street" (made popular by Andy Williams), is born in Salina, Oklahoma.

    1924-Gospel singer Clara Ward (leader of The Famous Ward Singers) is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    1919-'50s pop singer Don Cornell ("It Isn't Fair," "Hold My Hand") is born Luigi Varlaro in The Bronx, New York City.

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    History 22nd Of April

    1936
    Rātana and Labour seal alliance
    The alliance between the Rātana Church and the Labour Party was cemented at an historic meeting between Tahupōtiki Wiremu Rātana and Prime Minister Michael Joseph Savage.


    In Music History

    2021-Digital Underground leader Shock G dies of a fentanyl overdose at 57. The group is best known for their 1990 hit "The Humpty Dance" where he plays the character Humpty Hump, a fun-loving, smooth-talking rapper with a huge nose.

    2020-At the Jersey 4 Jersey virtual benefit concert, surviving members of Fountains of Wayne reunite (from their homes) with Sharon Van Etten to pay tribute to Adam Schlesinger, who died of coronavirus three weeks earlier. Bruce Springsteen also performs, and Bon Jovi debut a new song called "Do What You Can." The event raises nearly $6 million for coronavirus relief.

    2013-Singer-songwriter Richie Havens, who became famous as the first performer at Woodstock in 1969, dies of a heart attack age 72.

    2011-LeAnn Rimes marries actor Eddie Cibrian at their engagement party that's actually a surprise wedding. The couple's controversial affair sparked while filming the 2009 TV movie Northern Lights.

    2011-At age 51, Bryan Adams becomes a father for the first time when his baby girl Mirabella Bunny is born.

    2011-Bluegrass singer-songwriter Hazel Dickens, known for her pro-union anthems and feminist songs, dies at age 75 from complications of pneumonia.

    2010-Poison lead singer Bret Michaels suffers a brain hemorrhage that nearly kills him. After almost two weeks in intensive care, he makes a full recovery. Throughout the ordeal, he leaves his headband on, explaining, "If I'm going out, I want to go out rocking."

    2009-Jeff Beck is joined onstage by Rod Stewart for the first time in over 25 years at the El Rey Theatre in Los Angeles, California.

    2009-Liz Phair wins her first ASCAP award as Top Television Composer for her work on the teen drama 90210.

    2008-Singer-songwriter Paul Davis, known for his soft rock hits of the '70s, dies of a heart attack just one day after his 60th birthday.

    2003-The White Stripes begin a week-long stint as musical guests on Late Night with Conan O'Brien. They're Conan's favorite group; when the show ends in 2009, they play the final episode.

    2003-Songwriter Felice Bryant dies of cancer at age 77 in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Known for a string of hits with co-writer husband Boudleaux Bryant, including The Everly Brothers' "All I Have to Do Is Dream" and "Bye Bye Love."

    2000-N.W.A.'s reunion single "Chin Check" debuts at #71 on the Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. This is the group's only single without its core members DJ Yella and the late Eazy-E and their first one with Ice Cube since his departure in 1989.

    1999-Sinead O'Connor is ordained in Lourdes, France, as the first female priest in the Latin Tridentine Church, a dissident Roman Catholic group.

    1998-Faith No More announce that they are no more.

    1993-The Broadway play Tommy, based on The Who's album, opens at St. James Theater.

    1990-Machine Gun Kelly (MGK) is born Colson Baker in Houston, Texas. After a rough childhood, he becomes a rapper, but in the late 2010s he takes a melodic turn and mostly sings. He also takes on acting roles, including the 2019 Mötley Crüe biopic The Dirt, playing Tommy Lee.

    1989-Kid 'N Play's biggest hit, "Rollin' With Kid 'N Play," hits #11 on the Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, as their debut album 2 Hype (which was released six months earlier) debuts at #9 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.

    1989-Despite (or thanks to) a generous heaping of controversy over its video where she dances in front of burning crosses, Madonna's "Like A Prayer" hits #1 in the US as the album also lands at the top spot, where it stays for six weeks. It's her third consecutive #1 album.

    1989-Public Enemy make the video for "Fight The Power," directed by Spike Lee, in Brooklyn. The shoot doubles as a rally, with locals joining in to serve as extras. The song later debuts on the soundtrack to Lee's film Do The Right Thing.

    1988-Barbara "Sandi" Robison passes away from toxic shock poisoning after initially falling ill her during an April 6, 1988 performance in Butte, Montana.

    1985-Prince releases his seventh album, Around The World In A Day, the follow-up to Purple Rain. It's his first issued on his Paisley Park imprint and primarily recorded at his Paisley Park studios.

    1983-Jazz pianist Earl "Fatha" Hines dies at age 79.

    1980-The Cure release their second studio album, Seventeen Seconds, which features their first Top 40 hit on the UK Singles chart: "A Forest."

    1979-Keith Richards serves his punishment for a Toronto arrest on heroin charges when The Rolling Stones play the first of two concerts in Ontario to raise money for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, which is his court-ordered community service.

    1979-Alt-rocker Daniel Johns (frontman for Silverchair) is born in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.

    Belushi And Aykroyd Become The Blues Brothers
    1978
    1978-The Blues Brothers (John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd) make their debut on Saturday Night Live, later becoming the first characters from the show to get their own movie.

    1978-Bob Marley headlines the historic One Love Peace Concert in Jamaica, the singer's first appearance in his home country since an assassination attempt two years before. At the concert, Marley manages to unite Jamaican Prime Minister Michael Manley with rival Edward Seaga, who had both been using local warlords to battle for power.

    1978-Steve Martin performs "King Tut" on Saturday Night Live, popularizing goofy Egyptian dancing. The song, which portrays the pharaoh as his "favorite honky," goes on to sell over 500,000 copies.

    1978-Performing at the Ottawa Civic Centre on the Bat Out Of Hell tour, Meat Loaf falls off the stage and mangles his knee, requiring surgery. He does the next few shows from a wheelchair but completes the tour.

    1978-Gerry Rafferty releases "Baker Street."

    1975-Elvis Presley releases "T-R-O-U-B-L-E."

    1974-The Who begin filming the movie version of Tommy, with Tina Turner's turn as the Acid Queen filmed first. The task of producing the complex soundtrack drives Pete Townshend to another nervous breakdown.

    1972-A crowd of 25,000 attend "Roberta Flack Human Kindness Day" at the Washington Mall in honor of the singer. Human Kindness Day becomes an annual event until 1975, when it turns violent.

    Deep Purple - "Machine Head" (1972): Deep Purple's sixth studio album, "Machine Head," reached No.1 in the UK. This album is considered a pioneer of the heavy metal genre and remains one of the band's most successful works.

    1969-The Carpenters sign with A&M Records.

    1969-On the roof of Apple headquarters at 3 Savile Row, London, John Lennon has his name legally changed from John Winston Lennon to John Winston Ono Lennon.

    1968-"This Guy's in Love With You" becomes a huge hit after Herb Alpert sings it to his wife on the TV special The Beat of the Brass. The song, written by Burt Bacharach, is released as a single two days later thanks to viewer demand.

    1967-Elvis Presley's 23rd film, Easy Come, Easy Go, premieres in Hollywood.

    The Troggs - "Wild Thing" (1966): The Troggs released their hit single "Wild Thing" in the US, which would go on to become a garage rock anthem and reach No.1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    1966-Kimberley Dahme (rhythm guitarist, bassist for Boston) is born.

    1966-The Beatles continue work on their Revolver album, with Ringo adding cowbell to "Taxman" and George Harrison putting sitar on "Tomorrow Never Knows."

    The Beatles - "Ticket to Ride" (1965): The Beatles scored their seventh consecutive No.1 single in the UK with "Ticket to Ride." This song also topped charts internationally, marking a significant milestone in their career.

    1964-The President of England's National Federation of Hairdressers makes headlines when he offers a free haircut to the next rock group to reach Number One.

    1962-Jerry Lee Lewis loses his first son, Steve Allen (named after the TV host and good friend), in a tragic drowning accident at the age of three.

    1959-The Alan Freed "Rock and Roll movie" Go, Johnny, Go premieres in New York, featuring Chuck Berry, Jackie Wilson, Ritchie Valens, Eddie Cochran, The Cadillacs, and The Flamingos.

    1951-Pop-rock singer-songwriter Paul Carrack (Ace, Squeeze, Mike + The Mechanics) is born in Sheffield, Yorkshire, England.

    1950-Peter Frampton is born in Beckenham, Kent, England. After forming Humble Pie, he finds success as a solo artist; his 1976 album Frampton Come Alive! is one of the most successful live albums of all time.

    1948-Larry Groce, singer of the hit 1976 novelty tune "Junk Food Junkie" and host of the NPR-distributed radio program Mountain Stage, is born in Dallas, Texas.

    1944-Guy Lombardo & His Royal Canadians hit #1 in America with "It's Love-Love-Love."

    1939-Pop/soul singer Mel Carter, known for the 1965 hit "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me," is born in Cincinnati, Ohio.

    1937-Jack Nitzsche, musician, songwriter, and film composer who worked alongside Phil Spector throughout the '50s and later co-wrote the Academy Award-Winning "Up Where We Belong" for An Officer and a Gentleman, is born Bernard Alfred "Jack" Nitzsche in Chicago, Illinois.

    Glen Campbell Is Born
    1936-Glen Campbell is born in Billstown, Arkansas. Raised in abject poverty as the seventh of 12 children, he makes his way to Los Angeles in 1960 and becomes a sought-after session musician.

    1931-Conga drummer Joe Cuba - dubbed the "Father of Latin Boogaloo" - is born Gilberto Miguel Calderón in New York City.

    1927-Caribbean singer Laurel Aitken, aka "The Godfather of Ska," is born Lorenzo Aitken in Cuba, but will settle in Jamaica.

    1922-Jazz double bassist Charles Mingus is born in Nogales, Arizona.

    1921-Afro-Cuban jazz percussionist Candido Camero is born in Cuba.



    Additional Context

    Gioachino Rossini's Early Performance (1804): At just 12 years old, Rossini showcased his talent as a singer in Italy, foreshadowing his future success as a composer of iconic operas.

    Tchaikovsky's "Swan Lake" Completion (1876): This day marks the completion of Tchaikovsky's famous ballet, which has become a staple in classical music and ballet repertoires.

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    History For The 23 Of April

    1979
    Blair Peach killed in London
    New Zealander Blair Peach died after a clash between police and protesters at an anti-fascism rally in Southall, London.



    1983
    Prince William meets 'buzzy bee'
    Among the highlights of the April 1983 royal tour were photographs of the Prince and Princess of Wales’ infant son, Prince William, playing with New Zealand’s iconic ‘buzzy bee’ toy.


    In Music History

    2018-After a screening of her documentary Horses: Patti Smith And Her Band at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City, Bruce Springsteen joins Smith to perform "Because The Night." Springsteen wrote the music and chorus lyrics to that song in 1976, and Smith filled in the verses a year later. When it appeared on her Easter album in 1978, it became her biggest hit.

    2017-Kerry Turman, bassist for The Temptations, dies at age 59 following a performance in Missouri.

    Bananarama Reunite
    2017-Bananarama announce their intention to reunite with a UK tour. Aside from a brief regroup for a Eurovision special years earlier, the original trio hasn't performed together since Siobhan Fahey's departure in 1988.More

    2016-Bruce Springsteen salutes the recently deceased Prince by opening his show in Brooklyn with a rendition of "Purple Rain" (Nils Lofgren takes the guitar solo). The E Street Band wears purple for the show, deviating from their usual black.

    2015-System Of A Down play the Armenian capitol of Yerevan in their first concert in that country. The band, which is of Armenian descent, is raising awareness of the Armenian genocide, which began 100 years earlier.

    2012-Neil Diamond, 71, marries his longtime manager, Katie McNeil, 42.

    2011-Tom King (founder of the rock band The Outsiders) dies at age 68 of congestive heart failure.

    2007-Bevan Davies replaces Will Hunt as drummer for Static-X.

    2005-YouTube launches. It works so well that Google can't beat it (they try with something called Google Video), so in 2006 they buy it. It eventually becomes the most popular place to hear music for free.

    Shirtless, Shoeless Kenny Chesney Releases First #1 Album
    2002-Kenny Chesney releases his sixth studio album, No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems. Featuring five Top 10 country singles, including the hit title track, it's his first album to top both the Country and Billboard 200 charts.

    2002-Nine months after the album was rejected by Reprise Records, Wilco release Yankee Hotel Foxtrot on Nonesuch Records. It earns nearly universal acclaim from critics and goes Gold, earning the group a legion of new fans.

    2001-Metallica start recording their album St. Anger, which turns into some kind of monster: Frontman James Hetfield ends up in rehab during the sessions, and the band only complete it with the help of a psychologist who talks them through their issues in group therapy.

    1996-Hootie & the Blowfish release their second album, Fairweather Johnson. It doesn't approach the 21 million in sales of their debut (Cracked Rear View), but still sells an impressive 3 million.

    1995-The Sunday Times of London breaks the story that a welder in Liverpool named Peter Hodgson found a reel of Beatles material in his attic. The recordings turn out to be legit, as Hodgson's father had loaned the recorder to Paul McCartney. After hearing the recordings, McCartney buys the reel and uses some of it on the Anthology collection. Songs include the Lennon/McCartney original "Hello Little Girl" and the Ray Charles cover "Hallelujah, I Love Her So."

    1994-Pink Floyd's album The Division Bell goes to #1 in the US, where it stays for four weeks.

    1991- Johnny Thunders, a guitarist known for his work with the New York Dolls, passed away under mysterious circumstances in New Orleans., he was 38.

    1988-Whitney Houston's "Where Do Broken Hearts Go" hits #1 on the Hot 100 for the first of two weeks. It's her seventh #1 on that tally.

    1988-Enjoying a comeback as interest in his music surges, Roy Orbison celebrates his 52nd birthday at a Bruce Springsteen concert in Los Angeles, where Bruce brings him onstage so the crowd can sing him "Happy Birthday." Orbison dies that December of a heart attack.

    1987-Carole King sues her former label head and mentor, Lou Adler, for $400,000 in royalties and the publishing rights to some of her older recordings from the late-'60s.

    1986-Songwriter Harold Arlen ("Over The Rainbow," "Stormy Weather") dies at age 81.

    1985-Liberace appears on the soap opera Another World.

    1983-"Come On Eileen" by Dexys Midnight Runners goes to #1 in the US. It's the only American hit for the English group, but they are far more successful in the UK, where among their hits is the #1 "Geno."

    1981-Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins, who are in Germany appearing at different festivals, join Johnny Cash on stage in Stuttgart for a performance that is recorded and released as the album The Survivors. The trio toured together back in 1957.

    1977-Thelma Houston's disco plea "Don't Leave Me This Way," originally recorded by Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes in 1975, hits #1 in America.

    Ramones Debut Album Creates The Punk Sound
    1976
    The Ramones release their self-titled debut album, a punk rock landmark filled with frantic 2-minute songs like "Blitzkrieg Bop" and "Beat On The Brat."

    1976-The Rolling Stones release their album Black And Blue, which contains "Fool To Cry" and "Hot Stuff."

    1971-The Rolling Stones release Sticky Fingers, which includes "Brown Sugar," "Wild Horses" and "Can't You Hear Me Knocking?" It's the first album released on their own label, Rolling Stones Records.

    1970- Norman Greenbaum's "Spirit in the Sky" was awarded a Gold Disc for selling 1 million copies.

    1969-Los Angeles' famed folk and rock club The Ash Grove, launching pad for everyone from Linda Ronstadt to Canned Heat, catches fire and nearly burns to the ground.

    1968-Stan Frazier (drummer for Sugar Ray) is born Charles Stanton Frazier in Orange County, California.

    1965-Life magazine runs a 22-page cover story on Frank Sinatra, the longest feature on an entertainer in the publication's history.

    1964-The Beatles shoot the "Can't Buy Me Love" scene for their movie A Hard Day's Night on a south London athletic field augmented with a helipad.

    1964- The pop duo Peter & Gordon reached number one in the UK with "A World Without Love."

    1963-Bob Dylan records "Girl Of The North Country," "Masters Of War," "Talking World War III Blues," and "Bob Dylan's Dream."

    1960-Paul McCartney and John Lennon perform as "the Nerk Twins" at the Fox and Hounds pub in Reading, England. The pub is owned by McCartney's cousin and her husband. The duo play another set the next day.

    1960-Def Leppard guitarist Steve Clark is born Stephen Maynard Clark in Sheffield, England.

    1956-Elvis Presley plays Vegas for the first time with a two-week residency at the New Frontier hotel. He returns to the city in 1969 to launch his comeback.

    1952-Narada Michael Walden, a producer who helped stage Aretha Franklin's comeback in the '80s, is born in Kalamazoo, Michigan.

    1949-British rocker John Miles is born in Jarrow, County Durham, England.

    1947-Rock bassist Glenn Cornick (of Jethro Tull) is born in Barrow-in-Furness, Lancashire, England.

    1940-Doo-wop singer Dale Houston (of Dale & Grace) is born Robert Dale Houston in Seminary, Mississippi.

    1939-'60s pop singer Ray Peterson is born in Denton, Texas.

    1936-Roy Orbison is born in Vernon, Texas. He has a run of hits in the early '60s that include "Crying," "In Dreams" and "(Oh) Pretty Woman," and in the '80s he makes a remarkable comeback when he's championed by the likes of George Harrison, Bruce Springsteen and Tom Petty.

    1564-William Shakespeare, whose works inspire centuries of song lyrics, is born in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. (The date is a best estimate; it's known that he was baptized on April 26.)

    1616-William Shakespeare dies at 52. His play Romeo and Juliet becomes an archetype for songs about love that ends in tragedy.

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    History For The 24th Of April

    1920
    Prince of Wales arrives for New Zealand tour
    King George V’s son, Edward, Prince of Wales (who later reigned briefly as Edward VIII), visited New Zealand to thank the Dominion for its contribution to the Empire’s war effort.


    1922
    New Zealand's first poppy day
    A total of 245,059 small poppies and 15,157 larger versions were sold, earning £13,166. Of that amount, £3695 was sent to help war-ravaged areas of northern France; the remainder went to unemployed returned soldiers and their families.


    1941
    Sinking of the Hellas
    Disaster struck during the hurried evacuation of Allied forces from Greece when hundreds of civilians and Commonwealth troops, including New Zealanders, were killed while they were boarding the Greek yacht Hellas at the port of Piraeus, near Athens.

    1951
    First New Zealander killed in battle in Korean War
    Kayforce suffered its first fatal battle casualty with the death of Second Lieutenant Dennis Fielden.



    In Music History

    2024-Keyboard player Mike Pinder, the last living member from the original lineup of The Moody Blues, dies at 82.

    2017-Ed Sheeran's "Shape Of You" tops Australia's singles chart (ARIA) for the 14th week, breaking the record set by Coolio's "Gangsta's Paradise" in 1995.

    2016-Philadelphia soul singer Billy Paul dies of cancer at age 81. His biggest hit, "Me And Mrs. Jones," was written by the team of Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. The pair release a statement upon Paul's death saying, "Billy's voice combined both jazz, R&B and soul vocals, making him one the great artists to come out of Philly and to be celebrated worldwide."

    Waitress Premieres On Broadway
    2016-Waitress, a musical about a pregnant woman trying to escape an abusive marriage by winning a pie-baking contest, opens on Broadway. The most popular number is "She Used To Be Mine," which inspires covers from several fans.More

    2012-The Beach Boys begin their 50th anniversary tour, which reunites Brian Wilson with fellow founders Mike Love and Al Jardine, along with longtime members Bruce Johnston and David Marks.

    2011-American Idiot: The Musical, based on Green Day's 2004 album, closes after 422 performances.

    2009-Robin Thicke performs his smash hit "Lost Without U" after The Oprah Show on the "Oprah Fridays Live" segment. So many viewers complain about missing the performance that Oprah brings Robin back for an unprecedented repeat performance only one month later.

    2008-Jane's Addiction reunite to rock the NME Awards.

    2007-US President George W. Bush is denied a luxury suite at the Imperial Hotel in Vienna when Mick Jagger, in town with The Rolling Stones on a tour, books it first.

    2006-Country singer-songwriter Bonnie Owens, former wife of Buck Owens and, later, Merle Haggard, dies at age 76.

    2006-Billy Joel becomes the first non-athlete to earn a banner at Madison Square Garden when he sells out the venue for the 12th time on his tour. His #12 hangs alongside retired greats who played in the Garden like Willis Reed, Walt Frazier and Mark Messier.More

    2005-After 94 performances, the Broadway musical and Beach Boys tribute Good Vibrations closes.

    2003-The Fox TV network airs the 2-hour special The Michael Jackson Interview: The Footage You Were Never Meant to See. The show contains footage of Michael Jackson's home movies, and is the superstar's rebuttal to the documentary Living with Michael Jackson, which aired in February on ABC. In that one, Jackson talks about sharing his bed with children.

    2002-Pop singer Jewel breaks a collarbone and a rib when she is thrown from a horse at the Texas ranch of her boyfriend, rodeo star Ty Murray.

    2001-R&B singer Al Hibbler ("Unchained Melody") dies at age 85 in Chicago, Illinois.

    2000- Limp Bizkit announced their 24-date Back to Basics tour, including performances with Cypress Hill.

    1996-After being forced to cancel shows, Stone Temple Pilots issue a statement saying that lead singer Scott Weiland has "become unable to rehearse or appear for these shows due to his dependency on drugs. He is currently under a doctor's care in a medical facility." Weiland sees this as a betrayal, and his relationship with his bandmates turns rocky.

    1995- Oasis scored their first UK No.1 with “Some Might Say”, from their album (What’s The Story) Morning Glory?, marking the last recording with original drummer Tony Carroll.

    1993- Farm Aid VI took place in Ames, Iowa, featuring performances by Willie Nelson, Neil Young, Johnny Cash, and others.

    1992-The Cleveland Orchestra sues Michael Jackson for $7 million after it discovers the singer used part of their recording of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony on his hit album Dangerous.

    1992-Problems for Wilson Pickett, who hits 86-year-old Pepe Ruiz with his car, which has open beer and vodka bottles in it.

    1992-David Bowie marries his second wife, the Somalian-born supermodel and entrepreneur Iman, in a private ceremony in Switzerland. The couple relocate to New York City soon after, and in 2000, Iman gives birth to Alexandria Jones - Bowie's second child (his son, the film director Duncan Jones, was born to his first wife, Angela Barnett, in 1971).

    Initially Rejected By MCA, Tom Petty Issues Full Moon Fever
    1989-Initially rejected by his label, the Tom Petty album Full Moon Fever is finally released, the first credited to him as a solo artist.More

    1988-Mick Fleetwood marries the singer Sara Recor (who partly inspired the song "Sara") at their Malibu home. His Fleetwood Mac bandmate John McVie is best man; attendees include Bob Dylan, Dick Clark, George Harrison, Jeff Lynne and Mac members Stevie Nicks, Christine McVie and Lindsey Buckingham. The couple divorce a few years later.

    1984-Jerry Lee Lewis gets married again, this time to the 22-year-old president of his fan club, Kerrie McCarver. The marriage lasts 21 years.

    1984-Tyson Ritter (frontman of The All-American Rejects) is born in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

    1983-With Los Angeles punk rock running afoul of authorities, the Minutemen play a guerilla concert in the Mojave desert, where fans are bussed in. It's the first of a series of "Desolation Center" concerts that are the precursor to Burning Man and other desert music festivals.

    1982- Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney’s duet “Ebony and Ivory” topped the UK Singles chart and became a worldwide hit.

    1982-Kelly Clarkson is born in Fort Worth, Texas. In 2002 she becomes the first winner of American Idol, and she lives up to the hype, becoming one of the top pop stars of the next two decades.

    1979-Ray Charles sings "Georgia On My Mind" at a ceremony where it is named the official state song of Georgia.

    1977-At the Volkshaus in Zurich, Talking Heads begin their first European tour, supporting their Sire labelmates The Ramones.

    1976- Paul McCartney & Wings’ album Wings at the Speed of Sound reached No.1 on the US Billboard 200, while Led Zeppelin’s Presence topped the UK Albums chart.

    1976-With rumors of a Beatles reunion swirling, Saturday Night Live executive producer Lorne Michaels goes on camera to offer the guys $3,000 (union scale) to reunite on the show. Paul McCartney and John Lennon are watching at Lennon's New York City apartment and consider showing up on a lark, but pass up the opportunity.

    1975-Pete Ham of Badfinger hangs himself in his London home. 27-year-old Ham, who was the group's lead singer and primary songwriter, was despondent over the business dealings that saw the band's album Wish You Were Here pulled from stores and his income cut off. He leaves behind a pregnant girlfriend who gives birth to a daughter the following month.

    1974-David Bowie releases Diamond Dogs. The cover is a painting of Bowie as a half-dog, half-man creature created by the Dutch artist Guy Peellaert.

    1972-John Lennon releases the controversial song "Woman Is The Ni--er Of The World." It was his wife, Yoko Ono, who came up with the title. The song is about how women aren't valued like the should be.

    1971-The Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young live album 4 Way Street, recorded at various stops on their 1970 tour, hits #1 in America.

    1970-Chicago blues pianist Otis Spann dies at age 40 of liver cancer. His grave will go unmarked for nearly 30 years until blues enthusiasts unite to raise money for a headstone. Unveiled in 1999, it reads: "Otis played the deepest blues we ever heard – He'll play forever in our hearts."

    1970-Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane, invited to a White House tea party by Tricia Nixon because they both attended Finch College, shows up with Abbie Hoffman and a plan to slip LSD into Richard Nixon's tea. They never get past security.

    1970- Elton John released “Border Song” in North America, marking his first chart appearance in Canada at No.34.

    1970-Ringo Starr's debut solo album, a collection of standards called Sentimental Journey, is released in the US.

    1969-The Cowsills' "Hair" is certified Gold.

    1969-Bob Dylan records "Living The Blues" and "Spanish Is The Loving Tongue."

    1968-"What a Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong goes to #1 in the UK, where it becomes the top-selling single of 1968. In America, it stalls at #116; it's revived there in 1988 when it appears in the movie Good Morning, Vietnam.

    1968-The newly formed Apple Records - a label founded by The Beatles - takes a pass on signing the relatively unknown David Bowie, sending his manager a stock rejection letter ("we don't feel he's what we're looking for at the moment").

    1968- Louis Armstrong, at 66, became the oldest artist to top the UK Singles chart with “What a Wonderful World” / “Cabaret”.

    1968-Spin Doctors drummer Aaron Comess is born in Phoenix, Arizona.

    1967-Patty Schemel (drummer for Hole) is born in Seattle, Washington.

    1965-Written by Clint Ballard, "Game of Love" by Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders hits #1.

    1963-18-year-old Brenda Lee marries 19-year-old Ronnie Shacklett in Nashville, where they raise two daughters together: Jolie and Julie.

    1963-Billy Gould (bassist for Faith No More) is born in Los Angeles, California.

    1961- Del Shannon’s “Runaway” began a four-week run at No.1 on the Billboard Hot 100, also topping charts in five other countries.

    1961-Bob Dylan makes his professional recording debut when he plays harmonica on the Harry Belafonte recording of "Midnight Special." Dylan makes $50 for the session.

    1959-The Drifters release "There Goes My Baby."

    1959- Buddy Holly reached No.1 in the UK with “It Doesn’t Matter Anymore”, a Paul Anka composition.

    1959-After running on Saturday nights on radio for 24 years and TV for the last nine, the final installment of the musical countdown show Your Hit Parade airs on NBC. The final Top Five: Elvis Presley, "I Need Your Love Tonight" (#5), Brook Benton, "It's Just A Matter Of Time" (#4), Ricky Nelson, "Never Be Anyone Else But You" (#3), Dodie Stevens, "Pink Shoe Laces" (#2), and the Fleetwoods at #1 with "Come Softly To Me."

    1958-Dion & The Belmonts release "I Wonder Why."

    1957-Boris Williams (drummer for The Cure) is born in Versailles, France.

    1957-Bass player David John Haskins, who goes by David J, is born in Northampton, England. He forms the band Bauhaus, which later becomes Love and Rockets, minus vocalist Peter Murphy.

    1955- Frankie Laine topped the UK Singles chart with “I Believe”, holding the number one spot for nine consecutive weeks, becoming the ninth artist to achieve this feat in the UK.

    1954-Keeping an eye on the new trends, Billboard publishes an article titled, "Teenagers Demand Music With A Beat - Spur Rhythm And Blues."

    1948-Bass player Steve York, who plays in Manfred Mann and Graham Bond Organization, is born in London.

    1947-Hubert Ann Kelly (of the pop-soul trio Hues Corporation) is born in Fairchild, Alabama.

    1945-Doug Clifford (drummer for Creedence Clearwater Revival) is born in Palo Alto, California.

    1945-Robert Knight ("Everlasting Love") is born in Franklin, Tennessee.

    1944-Welsh composer Ivor Novello is convicted at Bow Street, London, of conspiracy to misuse petrol coupons; he is given an eight week jail sentence.

    1943-Vocalist Glen Dale (of The Fortunes) is born Richard Garforth in Deal, Kent, England.

    1943-Country singer Richard Sterban (of The Oak Ridge Boys) is born in Camden, New Jersey.

    1934-Country singer Red Foley and his second wife, Eva Alaine Overstake, welcome baby daughter Shirley Lee Foley. Shirley will marry pop singer Pat Boone in 1953.

    1933-'60s soul singer-songwriter Freddie Scott is born in Providence, Rhode Island.

    1928-Jazz tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin is born in Chicago, Illinois.

    1942-Barbra Streisand is born in Brooklyn, New York City.




    Notable Births and Milestones

    David Bowie married supermodel Iman in 1992 on April 24.

    Paul McCartney publicly denied the “Paul is dead” rumors in 1969.

    Mike Pinder, founding member of The Moody Blues, passed away at 82, recognized for his work with the Mellotron.

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    History For The 25th Of April

    Anzac Day
    / Te Rā o Ngā Hōia

    Anzac Day is held annually on 25 April to remember all New Zealanders killed in war and honour our returned service personnel.



    In Music History

    2023-Harry Belafonte dies from heart failure at 96. He brought calypso music to the fore in the 1950s, most famously with "The Banana Boat Song (Day-O)."

    Kanye Tweets For Trump
    2018-Kanye West tweets his love for Donald Trump, earning him plaudits from the President but criticism from fans.More

    2007-"Monster Mash" singer Bobby "Boris" Pickett at age 69 of complications from leukemia.

    2006-Bruce Springsteen releases We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions, a collection of songs popularized by Pete Seeger. The album brings Seeger into the spotlight, drawing attention to his work as a musicologist and scion of folk music. "I've managed to survive all these years by keeping a low profile," Seeger says. "Now my cover's blown."

    2004-Billy Joel, who is much better behind a piano than at the wheel of a car, gets in another car accident - his third in two years.

    2003-Liv Tyler, whose stepfather is Todd Rundgren and biological is Steven Tyler, marries Spacehog frontman Royston Langdon at a ceremony in New York attended by celebrity guests that include David Bowie and Kate Hudson. The couple split in 2008.

    2003-The parents of the late Doors frontman, Jim Morrison, sue the remaining members for touring with a new singer as "The Doors 21st Century" using the band's image and logo.

    2002-30-year-old Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes (of TLC) dies in a car accident in La Ceiba, Honduras, after swerving to avoid an oncoming vehicle and losing control. The only passenger fatally injured, she's thrown from the car and dies instantly.

    2000-Papa Roach releases the album Infest, a nu-metal milestone with the hits "Last Resort" and "Broken Home."

    2000-Eric Clapton is reunited with his former Derek & the Dominos keyboard player Bobby Whitlock for their first performance together in 29 years. The setting is the London-based BBC TV series Later With Jools Holland.

    1999-Funk percussionist Larry Troutman (of Zapp), age 54, fatally shoots his brother and bandmate Roger Troutman, age 47, outside a recording studio in Dayton, Ohio, before turning the gun on himself. With no known witnesses, the motive for the murder-suicide is unclear, but family members suggest conflict over finances.

    1999-It's Joe DiMaggio Day at Yankee Stadium, where Paul Simon performs "Mrs. Robinson," which contains the classic line, "Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?"

    1995-Ginger Rogers, Academy Award-winning actress and longtime dance partner of Fred Astaire, dies at age 83 of a heart attack.

    Michael Bolton Found Guilty Of Ripping Off The Isley Brothers
    1994-A jury rules that Michael Bolton's 1991 hit "Love Is a Wonderful Thing" plagiarizes The Isley Brothers 1966 song of the same name and awards $5.4 million in damages, the largest ever in a music plagiarism case.

    1994-Maggie Rogers is born in Easton, Maryland.

    1994-Eagles play the first of two identical shows at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California for their appearance on MTV Unplugged, which will promote their upcoming reunion tour and album Hell Freezes Over.

    1993-RuPaul performs "Supermodel (You Better Work)" at the LGBT March on Washington.More

    1993-Legendary album artist Stanley "Mouse" Miller, designer of Grateful Dead's "skull and roses" logo, has his upcoming liver transplant financed by the band.

    1992-"Jump" by Kris Kross hits #1 in the US, where it stays for eight weeks. Kris Kross is the rap duo of Chris Kelly and Chris Smith, who are both 13. The track is produced by Jermaine Dupri, who goes on to supply beats for another youngster: Lil Bow Wow.

    1990-A London auction house sells the Fender Stratocaster on which Jimi Hendrix played the US national anthem at Woodstock for $295,000.

    1987-U2's fifth album, The Joshua Tree, hits #1 in America, giving the band their rock star bona fides in that country (they've been huge in their native Ireland for years). It holds the top spot for an impressive nine weeks, finally dethroned by Whitney Houston's Whitney.

    1985-Exodus release their first studio album, Bonded By Blood.

    1985-The musical Big River, based on Mark Twain's work and featuring a score by Roger Miller, opens on Broadway. Miller would go on to win a Tony Award for the music.

    1981-Denny Laine leaves Wings, essentially leaving Paul McCartney a solo act once more.

    1977-Christian singer-songwriter Matthew West is born in Downers Grove, Illinois.

    1977-Elvis Presley makes his last-ever recordings at a session after a show in Saginaw, Michigan.

    1975-A forebear to Michael Jackson's "Thriller" video, the Alice Cooper horror/music special Alice Cooper: The Nightmare (featuring Vincent Price) airs on ABC.

    1975-Israeli singer Mike Brant, 28, commits suicide by leaping from an apartment window in Paris.

    1975-The original New York Dolls break up after Jerry Nolan and Johnny Thunders leave the band in the middle of a tour in Florida. They carry on with replacements into 1976, but disband that year, returning again in 2004.

    1974-Pamela Courson, who was Jim Morrison's girlfriend and the one who found him dead in a bathtub, dies of a heroin overdose at age 27.

    1974-The streaking fad hits its peak as Rolling Stone reports that Yes and Gregg Allman concerts have been interrupted by naked people running around the venues.

    1973-Sweet's "Little Willy" is certified Gold.

    1970-After a show in Nashville, James Brown takes his band directly to a nearby studio and records "Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine." It's the first recording with his new band, which he hired in March when his previous group complained about how they were treated. The bass player is 18-year-old Bootsy Collins, who later joins the P-Funk family.

    1970-The Jackson 5 bump The Beatles ("Let It Be") off the top spot in America with "ABC."

    1965-Jane's Addiction bass player Eric Avery is born in Los Angeles.

    1964-Synthpop singer Andy Bell (of Erasure) is born in Dogsthorpe, Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England.

    1961-Performing at Bloch Arena in Hawaii, Elvis Presley makes his last stage appearance for nearly eight years.

    1960-Eddie Cochran is laid to rest at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Cypress, California, six days after his untimely death in a car accident.

    1960-Thrash metal singer Paul Baloff (of Exodus) is born in San Francisco, California.

    1960-Elvis Presley scores his first #1 of the '60s (and 13th of his career) when "Stuck on You" hits the top spot in America.

    1955-The UN's commission on narcotics releases a report stating "definite connection between increased marijuana smoking and that form of entertainment known as bebop and rebop."

    1955-David Sikes (bass player for Boston, Giuffria) is born near Cambridge, England, but will be raised in California.

    1950-Steve Ferrone (drummer for Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, The Average White Band) is born in Brighton, England.

    1949-Baroque pop keyboardist Michael Brown (of The Left Banke) is born Michael David Lookofsky in New York to jazz violinist Harry Lookofsky.

    1946-Ronnie Gilbert (bass guitarist for Blues Magoos) is born.

    1945-Stu Cook (bass guitarist for Creedence Clearwater Revival) is born in Oakland, California.

    1945-Bjorn Ulvaeus (of ABBA) is born in Gothenburg, Sweden.

    1944-Michael Kogel (lead singer of Los Bravos) is born in Berlin, Germany.

    1932-Jazz tenor saxophonist Willis "Gator" Jackson is born in Miami, Florida.

    1923-Lyricist Jerry Leiber, who will go on to pen several Elvis Presley hits with composing partner Mike Stoller, is born in Baltimore, Maryland.

    1923-Blues guitarist Albert King is born on a cotton plantation in Indianola, Mississippi.





    Key Events

    In 1958, Marvin Rainwater topped the UK Singles chart with “Whole Lotta Woman”.

    1960 marked Elvis Presley’s comeback after military service, with “Stuck on You” reaching No.1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    The Jackson Five scored their second US No.1 single of 1970 with “ABC”.

    Queen’s anthem “We Are the Champions” was certified Platinum by the RIAA in 1978.

    Madonna became the first female artist to achieve four UK No.1 hits when “La Isla Bonita” topped the chart in 1987.

    U2’s album The Joshua Tree hit No.1 on the US Billboard 200 in 1987, beginning a nine-week run.

    Elvis Presley made his final recordings during a concert at the Saginaw, Michigan Civic Center in 1977, with tracks later appearing on Moody Blue.

    TLC member Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes tragically died in a car accident in 2002 at age 30.




    Notable Births
    Stu Cook (CCR bassist) and Björn Ulvaeus (ABBA vocalist) were born on April 25, 1945.

    Michael Brown (The Left Banke keyboardist) was born in 1949.
    Steve Ferrone (session drummer) in 1950, Derek ‘Fish’ Dick (Marillion) in 1962, and Andy Bell (Erasure) in 1964.

    Earlier historical figures include Earl Bostic (1912), Ella Fitzgerald (1917), and Albert King (1923),.



    Significant Deaths

    Mike Brant, Israeli singer-songwriter, died by suicide in 1975 at age 28.

    Brian MacLeod, Canadian guitarist and producer, died in 1992 at age 39.

    Jazz musician Dexter Gordon passed away in 1990, and British jazzman Humphrey Lyttleton in 2008.




    Milestones and Releases

    Puccini’s opera Turandot premiered at La Scala in Milan in 1926, conducted by Toscanini.

    The Beatles began recording the Magical Mystery Tour theme at Abbey Road in 1967.

    Deram Records released On the Threshold of a Dream by The Moody Blues in 1969.

    Ornette Coleman recorded Of Human Feeling in 1979, blending free jazz with funk elements.

    Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder’s “Ebony and Ivory” reached No.1 on the UK singles chart.

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    History For The 26th Of April

    1943
    New Zealand ship torpedoed in Tasman Sea
    Like many New Zealand merchant ships, the Union Steam Ship Company freighter Limerick undertook military missions during the Second World War, carrying munitions, food and equipment between New Zealand, Australia, North America and the Middle East.



    1945
    Death of John Mulgan
    At the time of his death by suicide in Cairo, many New Zealanders knew little about the Christchurch-born author of Man alone


    2005
    Civil unions come into effect
    Couples − heterosexual or homosexual − were now able to register their relationship as a civil union. All couples in New Zealand, whether married, in a civil union, or in a de facto partnership now had the same legal rights and obligations.




    In Music History

    2024-Eric Church polarizes fans with a headlining set at the Stagecoach festival where he does a one-man show of mostly cover songs backed by a gospel choir. "I knew there were going to be 30,000 TikTokers who were there to be seen," he says. "The show wasn't for them."

    2023-Pras Michel of Fugees is found guilty of acting as a go-between for a Malaysian businessman trying to gain access to the United States government on behalf of China. Details are Byzantine, but it's clear a lot of money flowed through Pras. In 2025 he's sentenced to 14 years in prison.

    2017-Father John Misty releases his video for "Total Entertainment Forever," which stars Macaulay Culkin as a crucified Kurt Cobain.More

    2013-Deep Purple release Now What?!, their first album produced by Bob Ezrin.

    2013-Country singer George Jones dies at age 81 from hypoxic respiratory failure, just a couple weeks after his final concert in Knoxville, Tennessee.

    2013-X marks the spot for the Ohio-born Twenty One Pilots, who pledge their devotion to their hometown fans by getting "X" tattoos midway through a performance at the Lifestyles Community Pavilion in Columbus. Frontman Tyler Joseph tells the crowd: "This X is dedicated to you guys. Columbus, Ohio is where we're from and it will always be where we are from. Whenever someone asks what that X means, I am going to say this is for all of you."

    2011-The Voice debuts on NBC with coaches Adam Levine, Christina Aguilera, CeeLo Green and Blake Shelton, who each choose teams of contestants who then compete against each other. Levine's pick, Javier Colon, goes on to win. The series is a hit and draws lots of famous names as coaches in subsequent seasons, including Kelly Clarkson, Pharrell Williams and Usher.

    2011-Folk singer-songwriter Phoebe Snow dies at age 60 after being in a coma for three months due to a cerebral hemorrhage.

    2006-Country singer Kellie Pickler gets voted off Season Five of American Idol.

    2005-Bruce Springsteen releases Devils & Dust.

    2005-Amerie releases "Touch."

    2004-Sean Combs (aka Puff Daddy) makes his Broadway debut starring as Walter Lee Younger in the revival of A Raisin In The Sun.

    2003-David Cassidy guests on the CBS show The Agency.

    2003-The Morgan Creek Bridge in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, is renamed the James Taylor Bridge in honor of the singer, who mentioned it in his song "Copperline."

    1999-English post-punk rocker Adrian Borland (The Sound, The Outsiders) commits suicide at age 41 by throwing himself under a train at London's Wimbledon Station.

    1995-The movie Friday, written, produced and starring Ice Cube, hits theaters. The soundtrack goes to #1 and the film becomes a franchise, with two sequels.

    Johnny Cash Revives His Career with American Recordings
    1994-Johnny Cash releases American Recordings, the first of a series of albums produced by Rick Rubin that revitalize his career.

    1994-Live release their third album, Throwing Copper. It very slowly finds an audience as radio stations and MTV warm to tracks like "Lightning Crashes" and "I Alone." The album goes to #1 in America a year after its release and sells over 8 million copies.

    1991-A tribute concert for Tim Buckley, who died in 1975 at 28, is held at St. Ann's Church in Brooklyn. It's the first time his son, Jeff Buckley, performs his father's music.

    1986-Van Halen prove there is life after David Lee Roth as their album 5150, their first with Sammy Hagar, hits #1 in the US for the first of three weeks.

    1984-Count Basie, famed jazz pianist and orchestra leader, dies of pancreatic cancer at age 79.

    1982-Rod Stewart is mugged on Hollywood's Sunset Boulevard.

    The Last Waltz Opens In Theaters
    1978-The Last Waltz, director Martin Scorsese's acclaimed documentary of The Band's star-studded last concert, opens in theaters. The film features performances by Neil Young, Eric Clapton, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Neil Diamond, The Staple Singers and Dr. John.

    1977-The most famous club of the disco era, Studio 54, opens for business at 254 West 54th Street in New York City. Over the next three years, celebrity guests include Cher, Elton John, Michael Jackson, Brooke Shields, and Liza Minnelli. Donald Trump and his wife, Ivana, attend on opening night.

    1977-Jim Steinman's play Neverland opens at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. Five months later, three of the songs he wrote for the production appear on Meat Loaf's seminal album Bat Out Of Hell, which would become one of the 10 best-selling albums of all time.

    1978-Ringo Starr's TV special Ringo airs on NBC.

    1976-Jose Pasillas (drummer for Incubus) is born in Calabasas, California.

    1975-B.J. Thomas' "(Hey Won't You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song" goes to #1 in America.

    1975-John Lennon's cover of "Stand By Me" reaches #20 in the US.

    1975-Nathan "Joey" Jordison, Slipknot's drummer from 1995-2013, is born in Des Moines, Iowa. He dies in 2021 at 46; the cause of death is not disclosed.

    1970-Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins (TLC) is born in Des Moines, Iowa.

    1969-Walter Carlos's album Switched-On Bach, notable for being the first successful album to remix classical music compositions on the newly-invented Moog synthesizer, reaches #10 on the Billboard Albums chart. The popularity of the album is the commercial breakthrough for Moog synthesizers, which go on to be part of the soundtrack in the films Tron, The Shining, and A Clockwork Orange. This in part brings synthesized music to mainstream popularity, paving the way for disco (especially the 'hi-NRG' style) in the '70s.

    1969-"Oh Happy Day" by The Edwin Hawkins Singers enters the Hot 100 at #72, becoming the first pure gospel song to make that chart.

    1962-Sam Cooke records "Having A Party" and "Bring It On Home To Me."

    1961-Chris Mars (drummer for The Replacements) is born in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    1960-Roger Taylor (drummer for Duran Duran) is born in Nechells, Birmingham, England. He remains with the band until their performance at the Live Aid concert in Philadelphia in 1985 - but rejoins a decade later.

    1957-Larry Williams records "Short Fat Fannie."

    1946-John "Bucky" Wilkin (Ronny of Ronny & the Daytonas) is born in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

    1943-'70s rock singer Gary Wright is born in Cresskill, New Jersey.

    1942-'60s teen idol Bobby Rydell is born Robert Louis Ridarelli in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    1941-R&B singer Claudine Clark, known for composing and performing the 1952 hit "Party Lights," is born in Macon, Georgia.

    1940-Synthpop pioneer Giorgio Moroder is born in Italy. As Donna Summer's producer, he crafts a disco sound on hits like "I Feel Love" and "Bad Girls" that elevates her to queen of the genre. In the '80s he writes and produces the soundtrack hits "Flashdance... What a Feeling" and "Danger Zone."

    1938-Twang guitar pioneer Duane Eddy is born in Corning, New York. His signature staccato riff powers hits like "Rebel Rouser" and "Because They're Young," and influences acts like The Ventures and The Shadows.

    1938-Maurice Williams of Maurice Williams & the Zodiacs is born in Lancaster, South Carolina. He writes their #1 hit "Stay" as well as another doo-wop classic: "Little Darlin'" by The Diamonds.

    1925-Jazz and pop guitarist Jorgen Ingmann is born in Copenhagen, Denmark.

    1915-Blues singer and guitarist Johnny Shines is born in Frayser, Memphis, Tennessee.

    1913-13-year-old Mary Phagan is found murdered in the basement of a pencil factory in Atlanta, Georgia. Her death inspires the song "Little Mary Phagan."

    188Blues singer Ma Rainey is born Gertrude Malissa Nix Pridgett in Columbus, Georgia.




    In 1835, Frédéric Chopin premiered his Grand Polonaise Brillante in Paris, showcasing his virtuosic piano style and contributing to Romantic-era music history.

    1855 saw composer Gioachino Rossini leave Italy for the final time, returning to Paris.

    Dmitri Shostakovich completed his 4th Symphony in 1936, a work reflecting his evolving compositional voice.

    Charles Ives’ 4th Symphony premiered posthumously at Carnegie Hall in 1965, 11 years after his death.

    Broadway highlights include the opening of Stephen Sondheim’s musical Company in 1970, which ran for 705 performances and won six Tony Awards. Other notable musicals include Hallelujah, Baby! (1967) and The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1973) in London’s West End.


    Rock, Pop, and Chart-Topping Events
    1969: Led Zeppelin performed Whole Lotta Love live for the first time at the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco.

    The cast recording of the rock musical Hair began a 13-week run at number one on the US Billboard 200 in 1969.

    1975- BJ Thomas topped the US Billboard Hot 100 with (Hey Won’t You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song, earning a Grammy for Best Country Song.

    1980- Blondie’s Call Me reached No.1 in the UK, Canada, and the US.

    1986- Van Halen’s album 5150, the first with Sammy Hagar, topped the US Billboard 200.

    1994- OutKast released their debut album Southerplayalisticadillacmuzik, introducing a Southern perspective to hip-hop with live instrumentation.

    1997-Depeche Mode’s album Ultra became a UK chart-topper and achieved international success.




    Notable Births
    1942- Bobby Rydell, teen idol and singer of hits like Wildwood Days and Volare, was born in Philadelphia.

    Chris Mars, drummer of The Replacements, was born on this day, later contributing to alternative rock.




    Notable Deaths
    2013- Country music legend George Jones, known for He Stopped Loving Her Today, passed away.

    1984- Jazz icon Count Basie, founder of the Count Basie Orchestra, died at age 79.

    1999- Adrian Borland, frontman of post-punk band The Sound, committed suicide at age 41.




    Other Significant Events
    1977- Studio 54, New York’s legendary disco club, opened its doors, becoming a cultural hub for music and nightlife.

    1978- Ringo Starr’s TV special Ringo, a musical adaptation of The Prince and the Pauper, aired in the US.

    Elvis Presley began production on his post-Army film G.I. Blues, which became a major box office success.

    Jerry Lee Lewis returned to London for a tour following personal tragedy, performing 32 shows.

    Sam Cooke recorded hits Bring It On Home To Me and Having A Party at RCA Studio 1 in Hollywood.







    Music History Events April 26 - Songfacts
    2013 Deep Purple release Now What?!, their first album produced by Bob Ezrin. 2013 X marks the spot for the Ohio-born Twenty One Pilots, who pledge their devotion to their hometown fans by getting "X" …

    Van Halen Succeeds With Sammy 1986 Van Halen prove there is life after David Lee …






    This Day In Music

    What Happened on April 26th in Music | This Day In Music
    On this day in music, April 26, 2013, country music icon George Jones passed away. Born in Saratoga, Texas, Jones, who was noted for his distinctive singing style, …



    On This Day: April 26 in Music History - SoundOD
    What happened on this day April 26 in music history. Birthdays, events, singles and album releases, No.1s, and much more in one place


    Rock 'n' Roll History For April 26 - ClassicBands.com
    April 26 Count Basie, the Big Band leader who scored a #28 hit on the Billboard Top 100 in 1956 with "April In Paris", died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 79.


    On This Day in Music: 26 April - by Stephen Huppert
    Apr 26, 2024 · Dubbed the "Father of Disco," Moroder is credited with pioneering euro disco and electronic dance music. His work with synthesizers had a huge influence on several music genres, …


    What Happened April 26th In Pop Music History
    It’s April 26th and these are some of the things that happened on this day in pop music history: - In 1960, Roger Andrew Taylor was born in England. He taught …

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    History For The 27th Of April

    1806
    Moehanga becomes first Māori to visit England
    Moehanga of Ngāpuhi became the first recorded Māori visitor to England when the whaler Ferret berthed in London. Moehanga (Te Mahanga) had boarded the Ferret when it visited the Bay of Islands late in 1805.


    1893
    Death of Premier John Ballance
    Ballance was the first Liberal premier. He laid the foundation for a government that was widely seen as making New Zealand ‘the social laboratory of the world’.



    In Music History

    2023-In Amsterdam, Metallica launch their M72 Tour, with each stop a weekend of two shows with different setlists and opening acts.

    2021- Australian singer-songwriter Anita Lane passed away at age 61.

    2016-Beyoncé kicks off her Formation tour with a show in Miami. Her first solo stadium tour, it features new tracks from her album Lemonade and new takes on many of her old hits.

    2015-Journey keyboard player Jonathan Cain marries celebrity preacher Paula White and begins recording worship music, releasing the album What God Wants To Hear in 2016. It's the third marriage for both.More

    2014-BBC Radio Devon DJ David Lowe (not to be confused with the composer of the same name), plays an early version of "The Sun Has Got His Hat On" on his program, which results in his resignation due to the racial slurs in the lyrics.

    2012-Bob Dylan receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest honor awarded to a United States civilian citizen, from US President Barack Obama. Dylan is only the 29th musician to receive the award; previous recipients include Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, and Irving Berlin.

    2009-Pearl Jam bass player Jeff Ament is robbed outside the Atlanta studio where the band is recording. Thieves steal cash and equipment in the attack, which is reported by Rolling Stone.

    2008- British supergroup The Last Shadow Puppets scored their first UK No.1 album with The Age Of The Understatement.

    2008-Prince makes the crowd go crazy by covering Radiohead during an epic headlining set after being a last-minute addition to the Coachella Festival.

    2008-A nearly naked photo of 15-year-old Miley Cyrus makes the entertainment news when it appears in Vanity Fair. Shot by Annie Leibovitz, the photo is more tasteful than scandalous, revealing Miley's back but not much else. Cyrus, under contract with Disney, later claims she was coerced into taking the photo.

    2007-Russian cellist and conductor Mstislav Rostropovich dies at age 80 of intestinal cancer.

    2006-62-year-old Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones falls out of a palm tree while vacationing in Fiji and goes to the hospital with a concussion, creating a rare news event on the island.

    2004-Elton John publicly responds to American Idol's snub of Jennifer Hudson by declaring the call-in voters "incredibly racist."

    2003-Iggy Pop reunites with The Stooges for the first time in 30 years to close out the Coachella festival. In 2010, the Stooges enter the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

    2002-Hillous Butrum (bass player for Hank Williams' backing band, Drifting Cowboys) dies at age 74.

    2002-For the first time since 1963, there are no British acts in the US Hot 100, as Americans reject acts like Blur, Oasis and Robbie Williams.

    2000-Vicki Sue Robinson, who had a disco hit with "Turn The Beat Around," dies of cancer at age 45.

    1999- The Verve announced their split after the success of Urban Hymns, which included hits like “Bitter Sweet Symphony” and “The Drugs Don’t Work”.

    1999-Jazz trumpeter Al Hirt dies at age 76 of liver failure.

    1999-R.E.M. appear on a scripted series for the first time when they guest on Party of Five.

    1994-Ace of Base's Jenny Berggren is attacked in her parents' home by Manuela Behrendt, a 21-year-old German "fan" wielding a hunting knife. After stabbing Berggren's mother in the hands during a scuffle, Behrendt is arrested and banned from returning to Sweden.

    1994-San Francisco's legendary rock venue the Fillmore Auditorium reopens with performances by The Smashing Pumpkins and American Music Club.

    1992-French composer Olivier Messiaen dies in Paris, France, at age 83.

    1992-Go-Go's singer Belinda Carlisle and husband Morgan Mason have their first child in Los Angeles. They name the boy after his grandfather, actor James Mason.

    1991-LeAnn Rimes, a pint-sized country music prodigy from Garland, Texas, competes as a junior vocalist on Star Search, where she wins the round singing the Marty Robbins classic "Don't Worry."More

    1988-Lizzo is born Melissa Jefferson in Detroit, Michigan. She moves to Minneapolis in 2011 and appears on the 2014 Prince song "BoyTrouble" before releasing her breakthrough single, "Truth Hurts," in 2017.

    1987-U2 make the cover of Time magazine with the headline "Rock's Hottest Ticket."

    1985-The Judds' "Girls' Night Out" goes to #1 Country, where it stays for one week. It's the second chart-topper from the duo's debut album, Why Not Me.

    1985- The charity album We Are the World by various artists hit No.1 on the U.S. Billboard 200 for the first of three weeks.

    1984-Patrick Stump, lead singer of Fall Out Boy, is born Patrick Martin Stumph in Evanston, Illinois. He grows up in nearby Glenview.

    1984-Blues singer Arziel "Z.Z." Hill, known for the 1982 Down Home album that was a fixture on the soul album chart for nearly two years, dies at age 48 when a blood clot caused by a car accident months before spurs a heart attack.

    1982-John Osborne, the older of the Brothers Osborne, is born in Deale, Maryland.

    1981-The Beatle and the Bond Girl: Ringo Starr marries actress Barbara Bach after meeting her on the set of the movie Caveman. They defy Hollywood odds and stay together.

    1979- George Harrison released the single “Love Comes to Everyone” from his self-titled album.

    1979-Stevie Wonder makes a surprise appearance at a Duke Ellington tribute concert held at Royce Hall on the UCLA campus. Wonder performs his Ellington encomium "Sir Duke" along with Ellington's "C-Jam Blues."

    1978-Jim James is born James Edward Olliges Jr. in Louisville, Kentucky. He plays around his hometown in a too-loud rock band called Month Of Sundays until his acoustic urges lead him to start up a folksy alt-country band named My Morning Jacket.

    1976-After a trip to Moscow, David Bowie is detained in vain on a train at the Poland-Russian border by customs officers who don't appreciate his collection of Nazi books and mementos. Bowie claims he is researching a film on Joseph Goebbels, and is released after a few hours.

    1974-Ray Stevens releases "The Streak."

    1974- Rock band Chicago topped the U.S. Billboard 200 with their sixth studio album Chicago VII.

    1973-The Cream compilation Heavy Cream is released in the US.

    1972-24-year-old Phil King, a former booking agent for Blue Oyster Cult, is murdered over a gambling debt, inspiring the band's song "Deadline."

    1970-John Lennon's explicit "Bag One" lithographs are returned to the London Arts Gallery exhibition after a High Court judge rules them "unlikely to deprave or corrupt."

    1969-Joe Cocker makes his TV debut, singing "Feelin' Alright" on The Ed Sullivan Show.

    1968-Simon and Garfunkel release "Mrs. Robinson."

    1967- Sandie Shaw’s “Puppet On A String” began a three-week stint at No.1 in the UK, following her Eurovision Song Contest win representing the UK

    1964-John Lennon's first book of prose and poetry, In His Own Write, is published in the US.

    1964- The Beatles released “Love Me Do” and its B-side “P.S. I Love You” in the United States; “Love Me Do” later topped the Billboard Hot 100, while the B-side reached No.10.

    1963-With The Beatles yet to enter the picture, some unusual acts rule the pop chart. Little Peggy March is at #1 with "I Will Follow Him."

    1963- Little Peggy March became the youngest female singer to top the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 with her single “I Will Follow Him”, achieving this at just 15 years old and holding the number one spot for three weeks.

    1959-Lloyd Price releases "Personality."

    1959-Sheena Easton is born in Glasgow, Scotland, the youngest of six children.

    1958-Kate Pierson is born in Weehawken, New Jersey. In the early '70s she moves to Athens, Georgia, where she forms The B-52s. Her voice is one of the most recognizable in rock, heard on the group's hits like "Love Shack" and "Rock Lobster," and also on R.E.M.'s "Shiny Happy People."

    1957-Elvis Presley makes his second and last appearance outside of the US, wearing his classic gold lame suit for the last time as he plays Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens.

    1956-Capitol Records signs Gene Vincent, intending to market him as the next Elvis.

    1956-Bryan Harvey (frontman for House Of Freaks, Energy Crisis) is born in Richmond, Virginia.

    1951-Ace Frehley of Kiss is born Paul Frehley in the Bronx, New York. The lead guitarist in the group from 1973-1982 and again from 1996-2002, his persona is the Spaceman.

    1950- The musical revue Tickets, Please opened at the Coronet Theater in New York City, later transferring to the Mark Hellinger Theatre.

    1949-Soul singer Herbie Murrell (The Stylistics) is born in Lane, South Carolina.

    1948-Clive Taylor (bass guitarist for Amen Corner) is born in Cardiff, Wales.

    1947-Badfinger frontman Pete Ham is born in Swansea, Wales.

    1947-Memphis soul singer-songwriter Ann Peebles is born in St. Louis, Missouri.

    1946-Singer and multi-instrumentalist Gordon Haskell (Les Fleur de Lys) is born in Verwood, England.

    1944-Cuba Gooding Sr. (lead singer for The Main Ingredient) is born in New York City. Known for the early-'70s hits "Everybody Plays the Fool" and "Just Don't Want to Be Lonely." Of course, he also becomes the father to actor Cuba Gooding Jr.

    1940-Hoots Mon! opens in the UK. The movie stars comedian Max Miller, who sings his signature tune "Mary From The Dairy."

    1933-Jazz guitarist Calvin Newborn is born in Whiteville, Tennessee.

    1932-Country singer Maxine Brown (of The Browns) is born in Campti, Louisiana.

    1932-Casey Kasem, a DJ famous for hosting American Top 40 and for being the voice of Shaggy on Scooby-Doo, is born Kemal Amen Kasem in Detroit, Michigan.

    1904-Syd Nathan, King Records founder who signed James Brown, is born in Cincinnati, Ohio.

    1877- Jules Massenet’s opera Le Roi de Lahore premiered at the Palais Garnier in Paris.

    1867- Charles Gounod’s opera Roméo et Juliette debuted at the Théâtre Lyrique in Paris.

    1810-Beethoven composes his "Bagatelle No. 25 in A minor," (better known as "Für Elise".) The piece is dedicated to Therese Malfatti, a friend and student of Beethoven's.


    1749-George Handel’s Music for the Royal Fireworks premiered in Green Park, London, celebrating the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, though the event was marred by a fire.

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    History For The 28th Of April

    1888-The first British rugby team to tour New Zealand played its first match, against Otago, at Dunedin’s Caledonian Ground in front of 10,000 spectators.


    1941-Jack Hinton awarded the Victoria Cross
    Southlander Jack Hinton was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions on the night of 28 April 1941 at Kalamata during the evacuation from Greece.


    1995-14 die at Cave Creek
    Fourteen people standing on a viewing platform at Cave Creek in Paparoa National Park on the West Coast died when it suddenly collapsed and fell into the creek-bed below.




    In Music History

    2017-Brad Paisley releases the first visual album in country music: a special edition of Love and War with videos for each of the 16 tracks.

    2017-At the WXTB Rockfest, in Tampa, Florida, Soundgarden launch what will be their final tour with Chris Cornell, who dies on May 17 at a stop in Detroit.

    2013-Bass player Lonnie Turner, a founding member of The Steve Miller Band, dies of lung cancer at age 66.

    2006-ABBA member Bjorn Ulvaeus is accused by the Swedish government of $12 million US in delinquency of back taxes.

    2005-Eddie Montgomery of country duo Montgomery Gentry seriously injures his left wrist during a show in Asheville, North Carolina, after he falls to the arena floor from a speaker cabinet onstage.

    2005-Jazz bassist Percy Heath dies of bone cancer two days before his 82nd birthday.

    2003-Apple launches the iTunes store, the first widely successful legal music download app, thanks to the emergence of the iPod, which lets people take their music with them. At first, the service is available only to Mac users, with the music files encoded in Apple's proprietary format (AAC) restricting where they can be played
    2001-Dido's song "Thank You" climbs to #3 in America after Eminem samples it for the hook of his song "Stan." The song first appeared on Dido's 1999 debut album, No Angel, which goes on to sell over 10 million copies worldwide.

    2000-James Brown Enterprises, which handles tours for The Godfather Of Soul, has its offices destroyed by fire, destroying music and memorabilia. An employee is later charged with arson in connection with the incident.

    1999-Members of The Verve release a statement announcing their second breakup (their first was in 1995). The band reunites in 2007, but that only lasts two years.

    1994-Warren G releases his debut single, "Regulate," taking G-Funk in a bold new direction by sampling the laid-back groove to Michael McDonald's "I Keep Forgettin'" and some dialogue from the movie Young Guns. The song climbs to #2, where it spends three weeks behind "I Swear" by All-4-One.

    1991-Bonnie Raitt marries her first husband, actor Michael O'Keefe. Her father, the singer John Raitt, wears a kilt as a nod to their Celtic heritage and sings a song called "My Heart's Darlin'." The couple divorce in 1999.

    1989-Jon Bon Jovi marries his high-school sweetheart Dorothea Hurley at the Graceland Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas.

    1988-Country/pop singer B.W. Stevenson, known for the original 1973 version of "My Maria," dies at age 38 while undergoing heart valve surgery.

    1987-Ray Charles appears before Congress to urge more funding for hearing research, stating "My eyes are my handicap, but my ears are my opportunity."

    1985-Bryan Ferry releases "Slave To Love."

    1981-Original T. Rex bass player Steve Currie dies in a car accident at age 33, four years after the group's lead singer Marc Bolan met his demise in a similar fashion.

    1980-Tommy Caldwell (original frontman for The Marshall Tucker Band) dies at age 30 when his Jeep overturns during an accident.

    Cheap Trick Play Budokan
    1978-Cheap Trick play the first of two shows at the Budokan arena in Toyko, Japan, where the band is huge. The shows are recorded and released as the album Cheap Trick At Budokan, breaking the band in their homeland of America, with the live version of "I Want You To Want Me" becoming a huge hit.More

    1976-Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band play the Grand Ole Opry at the Opryland USA theme park in Nashville. It's the first time a rock band has played the Opry since The Byrds in 1968.

    1976-Bob Dylan performs "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" live for the first time.

    1975-Two ex-Beatles are on NBC: Ringo Starr performs "No No Song" on The Smothers Brothers Show; John Lennon guests on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.

    1975-Rock 'n Roll DJ Tom Donahue, who also formed the San Francisco-based Autumn Records, dies of a heart attack at age 46. In 1996, Donahue becomes just one of three disc jockeys to ever be inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

    1972-Violent J (Joseph Bruce) of Insane Clown Posse is born in Michigan.

    Chicago Release First Album
    1969-The self-titled, debut album by Chicago Transit Authority is released. For their next album, the group shortens their name to Chicago.More

    1968-The Seeds guest star as "The Warts" on the "How Not To Manage A Rock Group" episode of the NBC-TV sitcom The Mothers-In-Law.

    1968-Daisy Berkowitz (lead guitarist for Marilyn Manson) is born Scott Mitchell Putesky in Florida.

    1967-"Mama" Cass Elliot of The Mamas & The Papas becomes a real mama, giving birth to her only child, a daughter named Owen Vanessa. Elliot doesn't name the father, but Owen later learns that it's a bass player named Chuck Day.

    1966-Rapper Too Short, known for hits like "The Ghetto" and "Blow the Whistle," is born Todd Anthony Shaw in Los Angeles, California.

    1965-Barbra Streisand's first television special, My Name Is Barbra, airs on CBS.

    1964-Elvis Presley releases "Viva Las Vegas," the title song to his movie, which opens six weeks later.
    1963Cliff Richard and The Shadows are #1 on the UK albums chart for the 14th week with the soundtrack to the movie Summer Holiday. It's the last time an artist other than The Beatles or The Rolling Stones tops the chart for two years.

    1963-19-year-old Andrew Loog Oldham, who did some PR work for The Beatles, checks out The Rollin' Stones at a show in Richmond, England. He becomes their manager a little later and makes them add the "g."

    1958-David Seville's "Witch Doctor" hits #1. The song is his first using sped-up vocals to create the squeaky sound that later becomes The Chipmunks.

    1956-Rock singer-songwriter Jimmy Barnes, who performs with Cold Chisel and INXS, is born James Dixon Swan in Glasgow, Scotland.

    1955-Eddie Jobson, violinist and synth player for Curved Air, Roxy Music, Frank Zappa, King Crimson, Jethro Tull and Yes, is born in Billingham, England.

    1952-Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth is born in Rochester, New York. She is raised in Los Angeles, California.

    1945-John Wolters (drummer for Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show) is born in New Jersey.

    1943-Soul singer The Fantastic Johnny C, known for the 1967 hit "Boogaloo Down Broadway," is born Johnny Corley in Greenwood, South Carolina.

    1941-Ann-Margret is born in Sweden. She has a few hits as a singer but is best known for her movie roles, which include Bye Bye Birdie and Viva Las Vegas, which she stars in with Elvis Presley.

    1940-Glenn Miller records "Pennsylvania 6-5000," the title taken from the phone number of the Pennsylvania Hotel in New York City.

    1934-Delta blues musician Charley Patton dies of a mitral valve disorder.

    1924-Jazz singer Blossom Dearie is born in East Durham, New York.






    Featured Events

    DMB Release Titanic-sinking #1 Album
    1998-The Dave Matthews Band release their fourth album (third on a major label), Before These Crowded Streets. Fans get a glimpse of the band's darker side with the moody lead single, "Don't Drink The Water." It debuts at #1 to sink the Titanic soundtrack.More

    1990-Axl Rose of Guns N' Roses marries Erin Everly (daughter of Don Everly of The Everly Brothers) at Cupid's Inn Chapel in Las Vegas. The rocky union lasts just nine months.

    1987-The Art Of Excellence by Tony Bennett becomes the first album to be initially released on CD instead of the traditional vinyl format.

    1979-Blondie's "Heart Of Glass" hits #1 in America, the first of their four chart-toppers in that country.

    1978-The movie FM, about a radio station with a motley collection of DJs, debuts in theaters. Linda Ronstadt, Jimmy Buffett and REO Speedwagon all appear in the film, and Steely Dan does the theme song. FM is the basis for the TV series WKRP in Cincinnati, which appears later in the year.

    1973-Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon hits #1 on the Billboard Albums chart. It stays at the top for just one week, but goes on to eclipse the record for most weeks on the tally, with over 880 (non-consecutive).



    In 1892, Antonín Dvořák’s orchestral work Carnival Overture was performed for the first time, highlighting his mastery in orchestral composition.

    1965 marked Luciano Pavarotti’s debut at La Scala in Milan, performing in Franco Zeffirelli’s production of La bohème alongside Mirella Freni, a pivotal moment in operatic history.

    Barbra Streisand’s first television special, My Name Is Barbra, premiered on CBS in 1965, earning multiple Emmy Awards and a Peabody Award.

    David Diamond’s 5th Symphony premiered in 1966 with the New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Bernstein, dedicated to the conductor.

    The musical Chess by Benny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus, and Tim Rice opened at the Imperial Theater in NYC in 1988, running for 68 performances.




    Chart-Topping Singles and Albums

    1958- David Saville reached No.1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 with Witch Doctor.

    1964- Elvis Presley released Viva Las Vegas, one of his most recognizable songs.

    1966- Dusty Springfield’s English version of You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me reached No.1 in the UK.

    1973- Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon topped the US Billboard 200, beginning its record-breaking run of over 996 non-consecutive weeks on the chart.

    1973- David Bowie released Starman, his first major hit since Space Oddity, peaking at No.10 in the UK.

    1979- Blondie’s Heart of Glass reached No.1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and topped charts internationally.



    Significant Television and Media Appearances

    In 1975, Ringo Starr performed No No Song on The Smothers Brothers Show, while John Lennon gave his final television interview on Tom Snyder’s Tomorrow program, both on NBC.

    1965-Barbra Streisand’s TV special not only showcased her singing but also her versatility as a performer, influencing future music television productions.



    Other Historical Highlights

    1940- Glenn Miller recorded Pennsylvania 6-5000 in New York City, which became one of his signature jazz hits.

    1969- The rock band Chicago Transit Authority released their debut album, which set a record for the longest-charting album on the Billboard 200 at the time.

    1973 Faces reached number one in the UK with their album Ooh La La, marking a milestone in British rock.

  14. #1049
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    History For The 29th Of April

    1864
    Assault on Gate Pā
    The British attacked the Ngāi Te Rangi stronghold of Pukehinahina (Gate Pā), defended by just 230 Māori fighters, after a heavy artillery bombardment.


    Wreck of the Tararua
    1881
    131 perish in worst civilian shipwreck in New Zealand waters
    The steamer Tararua, en route from Port Chalmers to Melbourne, struck a reef at Waipapa Point, Southland. Of the 151 passengers and crew on board, 131 were lost, including 12 women and 14 children.


    1951-1952 ANZUS treaty comes into force
    Signed by Australia, New Zealand and the United States, the ANZUS treaty recognised that an armed attack in the Pacific area on one member would endanger the peace and safety of the others.


    In Music History

    2023-Willie Nelson celebrates his 90th birthday with a concert at the Hollywood Bowl. Guest performers include Norah Jones, The Chicks, and Snoop Dogg, who joins Nelson on their duet "Roll Me Up And Smoke Me When I Die."

    2023-Metallica's album 72 Seasons debuts at #2 behind Morgan Wallen's One Thing At A Time, in its seventh week at the top. It's the first Metallica album since ...And Justice for All in 1988 that doesn't debut at #1.

    2022-Dolly Parton appears as an angel in the last episode of the TV series Grace And Frankie, reuniting her with Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin, her co-stars in the 1980 movie 9 to 5.

    2016-Jimmy Fallon and Paul Rudd do a shot-for-shot remake of the Styx video for "Too Much Time On My Hands."More

    2015-Cyndi Lauper testifies before the Senate Appropriations Committee, speaking on behalf of homeless LGBTQ youth, whom she says are often kicked out of shelters and denied services. Lauper co-founded the True Colors Fund in 2008 to advocate for the cause.

    2014-Paul Goddard (bassist for Atlanta Rhythm Section) dies at age 68 of a brief, sudden illness.

    2014-Midnight Oil drummer Rob Hirst publishes Willie's Bar and Grill, a memoir about the Aussie band's North American tour post-9/11.

    2007-Rage Against The Machine reunite to close the Coachella Festival, their first show in seven years. They keep performing together until 2011 but don't release any new music. In 2022 they tour again for the last time.

    2005-Mary Travers of Peter, Paul and Mary undergoes a bone marrow transplant to battle leukemia.

    2003-The movie Only The Strong Survive (with many R&B legends, including Jerry Butler) premieres in New York.

    1999-Following his reunion with Pamela Anderson Lee, Tommy Lee quits Mötley Crüe to devote time to his new band, Methods of Mayhem, and his family.

    1998-While performing "Mama Kin" at a show in Anchorage, Alaska, Steven Tyler of Aerosmith loses control of his microphone stand, which hits him in the leg. He falls, tearing his ACL. This forces the band to postpone the rest of their tour while Tyler recovers from surgery.

    1997-Lynyrd Skynyrd release the album Twenty, which is titled after the fact that it's being released 20 years after the plane crash that claimed the lives of three band members. It's their ninth studio album.

    1996-Phil Spector calls off a planned project to produce Celine Dion when they can't agree to terms.

    1995-Tupac Shakur marries Keisha Morris inside the Clinton Correctional Facility, while Shakur is serving a four-and-a-half-year jail term for sexual assault.

    1993-Mick Ronson, a guitarist best known for his work with David Bowie, dies of cancer at age 46.

    1993-Barry White guests on The Simpsons, where he serves as MC of Whacking Day.

    1986-Amy Heidemann of Karmin is born in Seward, Nebraska. She becomes Amy Noonan when she marries her Karmin partner, Nick. When Karmin is retired in 2017, she becomes the rapper Qveen Herby.

    1985-Freddie Mercury releases his solo album Mr. Bad Guy. Although it sells okay in the UK, in the US it doesn't make even the top 150.

    1982-Adam Ant and Marco Pirroni are named Songwriters of the Year at the Ivor Novello Awards, while their "Stand And Deliver" is named the best selling single.

    1979-Matt Tong (drummer for Bloc Party) is born in Bournemouth, England.

    1979-Pop singer-songwriter Jo O'Meara (of S Club 7) is born in Romford, Greater London, England.

    1975-Hawkwind begin their North American Warrior On The Edge Of Time tour at the Ambassador Theatre, St. Louis.

    1973-Mike Hogan (bassist for The Cranberries) is born in Limerick, Ireland, to a family that already includes brother and future bandmate, Noel.

    1972-Roberta Flack's debut album, First Take, released three years earlier in 1969, goes to #1 thanks to the Clint Eastwood movie Play Misty For Me, which uses the song "Feel Like Makin' Love." It's a huge career boost for Flack, who lands another huge hit the next year with "First Time Ever I Saw Your Face."

    1970-Rapper/entrepreneur Master P is born Percy Robert Miller in New Orleans, Louisiana. In 1998 his No Limit Records releases 16 albums that are certified Gold, including Ghetto Fabulous by Mystikal, Charge It 2 Da Game by Silkk The Shocker, and his own MP Da Last Don.

    1968-Featuring the hippie anthem "Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In," the musical Hair opens on Broadway at the Biltmore Theatre. The show is made into a movie in 1979.

    1968-Carnie Wilson (of Wilson Phillips) is born in Bel Air, California, to The Beach Boys' Brian Wilson and his first wife, Marilyn Rovell.

    1961-Folk singer-songwriter Cisco Houston, frequent collaborator of Woody Guthrie, dies of terminal stomach cancer two months after recording his final album, Ain't Got No Home.

    1961-The renown tenor Luciano Pavarotti makes his opera début in the role of Rodolfo in La Bohème by Puccini in the Italian town of Reggio Emilia.

    1959-Ronnie Hawkins records "Mary Lou."

    1957-Great White guitarist Mark Kendall is born in Loma Linda, California. A primary songwriter in the band, he keeps it going in the 2010s and 2020s when it competes with Jack Russell's Great White, the offshoot led by the group's longtime frontman.

    1947-Rock and roll singer Tommy James is born Thomas Gregory Jackson in Dayton, Ohio.

    1947-Rock drummer Joel Larson (of The Grass Roots) is born in San Francisco, California.

    1943-Country singer Duane Allen (of The Oak Ridge Boys) is born in Taylortown, Texas.

    1942-Klaus Voorman (bassist for Manfred Mann), who designs The Beatles album cover for Revolver, is born in Hamburg, Germany.

    1936-Pop singer April Stevens is born Carol LoTempio in Niagara Falls, New York. She and her brother, Nino Tempo, will perform as a duo and win a Grammy Award for the 1963 single "Deep Purple."

    1934-Blues guitarist and singer Otis Rush is born in Philadelphia, Mississippi.

    1931-Lonnie Donegan, known as the King of Skiffle, is born Anthony James Donegan in Glasgow, Scotland.

    1929-Latin jazz musician Ray Barretto is born in New York City.

    1928-Rock and roll singer Carl Gardner (of The Coasters) is born in Tyler, Texas.

    1899-Duke Ellington is born in Washington, D.C.

    1798-Joseph Haydn's oratorio The Creation is first performed in Vienna in a concert for the city's aristocrats. The oratorio depicts and celebrates the creation of the world as described in the Book of Genesis and Paradise Lost.


    "White Christmas" Signals American Evacuation From Vietnam
    1975
    Bing Crosby's "White Christmas" marks the end of the Vietnam War as the American Radio Service plays the tune during the Fall of Saigon - a signal for American personnel to evacuate. Many songs were written in reaction to the war, which ramped up in the late '60s. A few songs, notably "Still in Saigon" by The Charlie Daniels Band and "Born In The U.S.A." by Bruce Springsteen, explore the plight of veterans on their return home.


    Featured Events
    2011-Prince William marries Catherine Middleton at a lavish ceremony at Westminster Abbey in London. Ellie Goulding performs at the reception, singing a cover of Elton John's "Your Song" for the first dance. "It was all very secretive," Goulding said. "I thought I was a decoy for someone else."

    1992-Paula Abdul marries actor Emilio Estevez in what at the time is an A-list union. The marriage lasts two years.

    1980-Black Sabbath launch their first tour with Ronnie James Dio as lead vocalist, replacing Ozzy Osbourne.

    1976-Bruce Springsteen, fresh from playing a Memphis concert on his Born To Run tour, tries to climb over the fence at Elvis Presley's Graceland estate in an attempt to see Presley. He is escorted off the premises by guards who inform him the King is not at home.More

    1933-Willie Nelson is born in Abbott, Texas.

  15. #1050
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    History For The 30th Of April

    1864
    Pai Mārire defeated at Sentry Hill, Taranaki
    In one of their first armed operations, several hundred Pai Mārire fighters attacked a British redoubt at Te Mōrere (Sentry Hill) in Taranaki. Scores were killed and wounded.

    Robert FitzRoy, c. 1860
    1865
    Former Governor FitzRoy dies by suicide
    Robert FitzRoy, the second governor of New Zealand (1843-45), took his own life at his home near London. Opinion on his governorship has always been divided.


    1917
    William Sanders awarded New Zealand's only naval VC
    William Sanders received the Victoria Cross (VC) for bravery during a German U-boat (submarine) attack on his ship. He became the first – and only – New Zealander to win the British Empire’s highest military decoration in a naval action.



    In Music History

    2024-Duane Eddy, who developed a twangy guitar sound that led the way to surf rock, dies of cancer at 86. He had several instrumental hits from 1958-1963, including "Rebel Rouser" and "Forty Miles Of Bad Road."

    2022-Country music star Naomi Judd dies by suicide at 76, one day before she's inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame with The Judds, the duo she formed with her daughter Wynonna.

    2020-On his 100th birthday, Captain Tom Moore lands the UK #1 hit with a new version of "You'll Never Walk Alone." Moore, a decorated veteran of World War II, raised money for coronavirus relief by walking in his garden. The song was assembled by Michael Ball using Moore's vocals.

    2019-Dipak Rao, director of Deep Purple's royalty management firms, is sentenced to six years in jail for stealing £2.2million from the group's accounts, which he put toward money-losing schemes.

    2015-Ben E. King, songwriter and singer of "Stand By Me," dies at age 76.

    2014-Larry Ramos (guitarist, banjo player for The New Christy Minstrels, The Association) dies at age 72 from malignant melanoma.

    2013-Actress and singer Deanna Durbin dies in Neauphle-le-Château, France, at age 91.

    2011-Mariah Carey and her husband Nick Cannon welcome twins: daughter Monroe and son Moroccan.

    2008-Mariah Carey marries rapper and TV personality Nick Cannon at a secret ceremony in the Bahamas. They separate in 2014 and divorce in 2016.

    2007-Zola Taylor (of The Platters) dies after suffering numerous strokes and contracting pneumonia at age 69 in Riverside, California.

    2006-Madonna plays a festival for the first time when she appears at Coachella.

    2005-Bauhaus reunite to play the Coachella Festival, opening their set with "Bela Lugosi's Dead," which lead singer Peter Murphy performs hanging upside down.

    2004-Michael Jackson is arraigned on his child molestation charges, pleading not guilty to ten different criminal counts, also including extortion and false imprisonment.

    2003-1960s soul icon Earl King is buried in his hometown of New Orleans with an authentic jazz funeral. Paul McCartney and Eric Clapton send their condolences.

    2002-Roger Daltrey of The Who plays a music teacher on the "That '70s Musical" episode of That '70s Show.

    1999-Darrell Sweet (drummer for Nazareth) dies of a heart attack at age 51 while on tour promoting the band's Boogaloo album.

    1996-With "Satellite" from their 1994 major-label debut album Under The Table and Dreaming still getting airplay, The Dave Matthews Band release Crash, which provides a new set of radio hits, including "Crash Into Me," "So Much To Say" and "Too Much."

    1994-Ireland wins the Eurovision Song Contest for the third time in a row. Paul Harrington and Charlie McGettigan's performance of "Rock 'N' Roll Kids" at the Point Theatre in Dublin wows the international voting panels and gives the country a record sixth win. The show's interval features the first ever performance of Michael Flatley's Riverdance, which goes on to massive global success.

    1991-Rapper Travis Scott (real name: Jacques Bermon Webster II) is born in Houston, Texas.

    1988-Celine Dion wins the Eurovision Song Contest with her performance of the French song "Ne partez pas sans moi." She's from Canada but represents Switzerland at the contest because they asked her to. Already famous in France and Canada, the win earns her many new fans throughout Europe and sets the stage for her American breakthrough two years later.

    1988-After a two-year hiatus, Little River Band reunite, kicking off a tour with a show at the World Expo in Brisbane, Australia. Glenn Frey is their support act for the tour.

    1983-Blues musician Muddy Waters dies of heart failure at age 70 in his Westmont, Illinois, home.

    1983-The original lineup of Manfred Mann re-forms to play the 25th anniversary celebration of the Marquee Club in London, where they played when they were just starting out.

    1982-Renowned music critic Lester Bangs, who wrote for Creem and Rolling Stone, dies at age 33 from an accidental drug overdose.

    1981-Justin Vernon of Bon Iver is born in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. His minimalist, emotionally fraught debut album, For Emma, Forever Ago, earns him a record deal in 2007, and his self-titled 2011 follow-up leads to a Grammy win for Best New Artist.

    1977-Glen Campbell's "Southern Nights," written by Allen Toussaint, hits #1 in the US.

    1976-Human rock stereotype Keith Moon of The Who adds to his legend when he pays nine New York City cab drivers $100 each to block both ends of a street so he can throw furniture out of his room at the Hotel Navarro. Details of this story may have been exaggerated or embellished, but it is consistent with his behavior.

    1975-The Vietnam War ends with the fall of Saigon. Many returning veterans suffer ill effects, which is the subject of the song "Still in Saigon" by The Charlie Daniels Band.

    1973-Pop singer Jeff Timmons (of 98 Degrees) is born in Canton, Ohio.

    1973-The second Wings album, Red Rose Speedway, is released in America. There is some braille on the back cover spelling out the message, "We love you baby," aimed at Stevie Wonder.

    1971-R&B singer Chris "Choc" Dalyrimple (of Soul For Real) is born in Wheatley Heights, New York.

    1971-The Doobie Brothers release their self-titled debut album. Despite a hardy promotional push from their label, Warner Bros., it goes nowhere, but their next effort, Toulouse Street, connects.

    1970-Allman Brothers tour manager Twiggs Lyndon is arrested for stabbing a club manager to death over a contract dispute. Incredibly, Lyndon gets off by pleading temporary insanity caused by being the tour manager for The Allman Brothers Band.

    1967-Rapper Turbo B (frontman for Snap!) is born Durron Maurice Butler in McKeesport, Pennsylvania.

    1967-Dishwalla leader J.R. Richards is born in Santa Barbara, California.

    1966-The Young Rascals' "Good Lovin'," a song originally recorded by The Olympics a year earlier, goes to #1 in America.

    1966-Folk singer and novelist Richard Farina dies in a motorcycle accident in Carmel, California, at age 29.

    1965-Herman's Hermits make their US stage debut, with The Zombies as opening act.

    1965-Bob Dylan begins the tour immortalized in the documentary Don't Look Back, performing at the City Hall in Sheffield, England.

    1962-The Orlons record "Wah Watusi."

    1960-Fats Domino records "Walking To New Orleans."

    1959-Buddy Holly's "It Doesn't Matter Anymore" (written by Paul Anka) goes to #1 in the UK nearly three months after his death. It's his only UK #1.

    1957-Elvis Presley records "Jailhouse Rock" and "Young And Beautiful."

    1955-Perez Prado's "Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White" hits #1 in America, where it stays for 10 weeks.

    1953-Merrill Osmond (of The Osmonds) is born in Ogden, Utah.

    1948-MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer is born in Detroit, Michigan.

    1947-Col. Bruce Hampton, leader of the Hampton Grease Band and the Aquarium Rescue Unit, is born Gustav Valentine Berglund III in Knoxville, Tennessee.

    1945-Singer-songwriter Mimi Farina is born Margarita Mimi Baez in Palo Alto, California, to a family that includes older sister Joan Baez. She marries fellow activist and folk singer Richard Farina at age 18.

    1944-Folk rock singer Richard Shoff (of The Sandpipers) is born in Seattle, Washington.

    1943-Pop singer Bobby Vee is born Robert Thomas Velline in Fargo, North Dakota.

    1941-Rock and roller Johnny Farina (of Santo & Johnny) is born in Brooklyn, New York.

    1931-Folk singer-songwriter Peter La Farge is born in New York City.

    1930-Blind Willie Johnson, best known for "Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground," records for the very last time.

    1925-The musical On With The Dance opens at the London Pavilion.

    1925-Country/rockabilly singer Johnny Horton is born in Los Angeles, California.

    1923-Jazz bassist Percy Heath is born in Wilmington, North Carolina.


    1978-The Clash are among the acts at a "Rock Against Racism" concert, playing to over 50,000 in London's Victoria Park to combat the National Front, a neo-Nazi group in the UK whose slogan is "Keep Britain White."




    30 APRIL
    Featured Events
    2018The #MuteRKelly campaign picks up steam when Ava DuVernay tweets her support. The campaign is designed to marginalize R. Kelly, who has been accused of sexual misconduct.More

    2008At the Coachella festival, Roger Waters' giant inflatable pig escapes, roams the countryside and ultimately deflates.

    2005Cher wraps up her Living Proof: The Farewell Tour with a show at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. Running nearly three years, the tour brings in over $200 million, making it the highest earning tour in history for a female artist, a record that stands until Madonna's 2008-2009 Sticky & Sweet Tour. Retirement doesn't suit Cher: She tours again in 2014 and in 2018.



    2004Ray Charles appears at his Los Angeles recording studio to attend a ceremony marking it as a national historic landmark. It is his last public appearance; he dies on June 10.

    1988After hanging on at #198 the week before, Pink Floyd's album Dark Side Of The Moon drops out of the Billboard Albums chart for the first time in 11 years. The band is still on the chart though, with A Momentary Lapse Of Reason at #62.

    "Beat It" Tops The Hot 100 As Thriller Takes Off
    1983Michael Jackson's fight is funky and strong, as "Beat It" hits #1 in America for the first of three weeks.More


    1977Led Zeppelin play to 76,229 fans at the Pontiac Silverdome, breaking their own record (56,800 at a 1973 show in Tampa) for largest attendance for a single-act concert.


    Muddy Waters (McKinley Morganfield), the “Father of Modern Chicago Blues,” died in 1983 at age 68. He influenced British rock bands like The Rolling Stones, who took their name from his 1950 single “Rollin’ Stone”.
    2
    Ben E. King, soul singer known for “Stand By Me,” passed away in 2015 at age 76.
    1
    Naomi Judd, country star and part of The Judds duo, died in 2022 at age 76.
    1
    Richard Farina, American folk singer and novelist, died in a motorcycle accident in 1966 at age 29.
    1


    2 Sources
    Landmark Album Releases
    The Rolling Stones’ “Aftermath” (1966) became their first album of entirely original material, topping the UK charts.
    2
    Paul McCartney & Wings’ “Red Rose Speedway” (1973) was released, featuring the hit single “My Love” and achieving chart success in the US, Spain, and Australia.
    2
    Various albums have been released on April 30 in later years, including tribute albums like Can Anybody Hear Me? (2021),.
    1


    4 Sources
    Chart-Topping Singles and Performances
    Johnnie Ray topped the UK Singles chart with “Such a Night” in 1954.
    1
    The Young Rascals reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 with “Good Lovin’” in 1966.
    1
    Spandau Ballet scored their only UK No.1 with “True” in 1983.
    2
    Michael Jackson achieved his second US number one of the year with “Beat It” in 1983.
    1
    Celine Dion won the Eurovision Song Contest for Switzerland with “Ne partez pas sans moi” in 1988.
    2
    Glen Campbell topped the Billboard Hot 100 with “Southern Nights” in 1977.
    1


    3 Sources
    Historic Concerts
    Led Zeppelin set a world record for concert attendance in 1977 at the Pontiac Silverdome, Michigan, with 76,229 attendees.
    3
    Rock for the Rainforest benefit concert in 1997 at Carnegie Hall featured Sting, Elton John, Stevie Wonder, and others.
    1


    4 Sources
    Classical and Opera Milestones
    Anton Rubinstein’s opera “Dmitri Donskoi” premiered in 1852 in St. Petersburg.
    1
    Claude Debussy’s “Pelléas et Mélisande”, his only completed opera, premiered in 1902 in Paris.
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    Darius Milhaud’s 4th Piano Concerto premiered in 1954 in Haifa, Israel.
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    Other Notable Events
    16th Academy of Country Music Awards in 1981 honored Barbara Mandrell and George Jones.
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    UNESCO celebrated the first International Jazz Day in 2012 with concerts in Paris, New Orleans, and New York City featuring Tony Bennett, Herbie Hancock, and others.
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