Thursday, March 10, 2011

March 10th


Birthdays
1903: Bix Beiderbecke
1940: Dean Torrence (Jan and Dean)
1947: Tom Scholtz (Boston)
1954: Tina Charles
1963: Jeff Ament (Pearl Jam)
1964: Neneh Cherry
1965: Edie Brickell
1966: Dave Krusen (Pearl Jam)
1971: Timbaland
1973: John LeCompt (Evanescence)

Events
1937: Benny Goodman plays a gig for 21,000 jitterbugging fans at New York City's Paramount Theatre.
1955: Trumpeting their new signing, RCA Victor places a half-page ad in Billboard announcing Elvis Presley as the "new singing rage."
1956: Bobby Darin makes his first television appearance, singing "Rock Island Line" on CBS-TV's Dorsey Brothers Stage Show.
1961: Jeff Barry, later half of the famous Brill Building songwriting team Barry-Greenwich, lands his first big gig with a publisher, signing to Trinity Music.
1962: Bruce Channel started a three week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with 'Hey! Baby'.
1963: Three days after an emotional public service, Patsy Cline's body is buried quietly at Shenandoah Memorial Park in Winchester, VA.
1964: Simon and Garfunkel record "The Sounds Of Silence".
1967: Sonny and Cher guest star as "Jerry and Ramona" on tonight's "The Hot Number Affair" episode of the NBC-TV spy spoof The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
1971: Manager Allan Klein, picked by John, George, and Ringo to handle the Beatles' affairs in the wake of Brian Epstein's death, is forbidden from managing the group after Paul, who instead preferred his father-in-law Eastman, sues for dissolution of the group. As night falls, the other three members allegedly visit Paul's home on Cavendish Avenue in London and throw a brick through one of the windows.
1973: The Pink Floyd album 'Dark Side Of The Moon' was released in America, it spent over 740 weeks on the Top 200 Albums chart over a 14-year period.
1977: At 7:00 in the morning on a trestle table set up out-side Buckingham Palace, London, The Sex Pistols signed to A&M Records. The contract lasted for six days.
1979: Gloria Gaynor started a three week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with 'I Will Survive'. The song was originally released as the B-side to a song first recorded by The Righteous Brothers called 'Substitute.'
1988: Younger brother of The Bee Gees, Andy Gibb, died in a hospital. His death from myocarditis (inflammation of the heart) followed a long battle with cocaine addiction, which had weakened his heart.
1979: In what has to be one of the more bizarre appearances at Nashville's Grand Ole Opry, James Brown takes the stage at the Ryman Auditorium on the invite of his good friend Porter Wagoner. James plays it straight, delivering surprisingly traditional renditions of "Tennessee Waltz" and "Your Cheatin' Heart," but also unleashing "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag." Jean Shepard is vocal in her dislike of Brown's set, but Barbra Mandrell, for one, applauds the unusual guest appearance.
1981: Jimmy Page joins Jeff Beck at a concert In London for three encore jams, marking the first time the Led Zeppelin guitarist has taken the stage since the breakup of his band.
1997: American rhythm and blues singer Lavern Baker died from coronary complications aged 57. She had the 1958 US No.6 single 'I Cried A Tear.'
2000: Pretenders singer Chrissie Hynde was arrested for leading an animal rights protest against the clothing firm Gap, who were accused of using leather from cows slaughtered 'illegally and cruelly'. The protest took place in a store in Manhattan.
2003: The Righteous Brothers, AC/DC, Elvis Costello and the Attractions, The Clash, The Police, and Floyd Cramer are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in New York City.
2003: Cat Stevens, now known as Yusuf Islam, makes his first recording since leaving the business and becoming a Muslim in 1978, covering his own 1971 hit "Peace Train" in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.
2005: Michael Jackson shows up at his child molestation trial in Los Angeles an hour late and still in his pajamas. After being threatened with jail time for making the court wait, Jackson listens to testimony from one of his former visitors at his Neverland Ranch, a teenager who testifies that the singer tried to get him drunk on soda cans filled with red wine, which he reportedly called "Jesus' Blood," and white wine or "Jesus Juice."
2008: The Dave Clark Five, The Ventures, Little Walter, Leonard Cohen, John Mellencamp, and Madonna are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in New York City.