Births
1946: Pete
Agnew (Bass for Nazareth)
1947: Jon
"Bowzer" Bauman (Sha Na Na)
1949: Steve
Gaines (Guitar for Lynyrd Skynyrd)
1950: Paul
Kossoff (Guitar for Free)
1959: Morten Harket (Lead Vocals for A-Ha)
1967: John Power (Bass & Vocals for The La's)
1969: Tyler Perry (Actor)
1969: DJ Kay Gee (DJ in Naughty By Nature)
1970: Craig Montoya (Bass for Everclear)
1970: Mark Webber (Guitar for Pulp)
1973: Nas (Nasir Jones) (Rapper)
1981: Ashley Roberts (Singer in The Pussycat
Dolls)
1983: Amy Winehouse (Singer / Songwriter)
1985: Paolo Gregoletto (Bass for Trivium)
Events
1814:
Francis Scott Key wrote the lyrics to the "Star-Spangled Banner." The
song became the official U.S. national anthem on March 3, 1931.
1963: The
Beatles' "She Loves You" becomes England's best-selling single of all
time, a record that wouldn't be broken until 1977, when ex-Beatle Paul
McCartney will release "Mull Of Kintyre."
1963: Pete
Seeger finally agrees to break a general folk music boycott of the ABC-TV
variety show Hootenanny and appear, only to change his mind when the
network asks him to sign a loyalty oath first.
1964: The
ill-fated sitcom The Bing Crosby Show debuts on ABC-TV.
1968: CBS-TV
debuts the animated show The Archies. The recording group had
contributions from Ron Dante, Andy Kim, Jeff Barry and others. Rock mogul, Don
Kirshner (who also brought us The Monkees), was put in charge of the studio
group. The following year The Archies started a eight-week run at No.1 on the
UK singles chart with 'Sugar Sugar', becoming the longest running one hit
wonder in the UK.
1968: Rolling
Stone reports that the Who's Pete Townshend is working on a "rock
opera" about a boy who is deaf, dumb, and blind.
1968: The US
Information Agency sends 40 foreign diplomats to a Blood Sweat and Tears show
in Washington CD, considering it a crash course in America's new cultural
scene.
1968: Tragedy
strikes Roy Orbison when his Hendersonville, TN home burns down during his
European tour, trapping and killing two of his three sons, Roy Jr. (age 10) and
Tony (age 6).
1969: Genesis
take the stage for the first time, playing at the cottage owned by leader Peter
Gabriel's former Sunday School teacher.
1970: Stevie
Wonder marries his first wife, singer and former Motown secretary Syreeta
Wright, in Detroit. They would divorce in 1972.
1976: Bob
Dylan's Hard Rain concert airs on NBC-TV.
1979: Kenny
Rogers is awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6666 Hollywood Blvd.
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley also officially declares today "Kenny Rogers
Day" in the city.
1979: The
film version of Quadrophenia, the Who's 1973 rock opera about growing up
Mod in London, opens in theaters.
1985: The MTV Awards are held for the first time.
Bette Midler and Dan Aykroyd co-hosted the show.
1987: Though
already on its last legs, ABC-TV's American Bandstand today becomes the
longest-running entertainment show in America at the time.
1992: Atlantic releases John Michael Montgomery's
first single, "Life's A Dance".
1994: The
Temptations are awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7060 Hollywood
Blvd.
1994: Singer Steve Earle was sentenced to 1 year
in jail after being found guilty of possession of crack cocaine.
1997: Over 2000 fans watched Pete Townshend
unveil an English Heritage Blue Plaque at 23 Brook Street, Mayfair London, to
mark where Jimi Hendrix had lived in 1968-69. Hendrix was the first pop star to
be awarded with the plaque.
1999: The Strokes made their live debut at The
Spiral in New York.
2000: Paul
Simon, Crosby Stills and Nash, and the Eagles' Don Henley and Glenn Frey
perform at the joint VH1/Rolling Stone fundraiser for Al Gore.
2001: In the
wake of the horrific September 11th attacks, Clear Channel Communications
releases its infamous list of songs banned from radio stations until further
notice for possibly being upsetting to American listeners. Included are
improbably traumatizing oldies such as Louis Armstrong's "What A Wonderful
World," The Beatles' "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds,"
"Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da," and "Ticket To Ride," Petula Clark's
"Sign Of The Times," Sam Cooke's "Wonderful World,"
Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Travelin' Band," Bobby Darin's
"Mack The Knife," The Drifters' "On Broadway," The Jimi
Hendrix Experience's "Hey Joe," The Hollies' "He Ain't Heavy,
He's My Brother," Elton John's "Bennie And The Jets,"
"Daniel," and "Rocket Man," John Lennon's
"Imagine," Martha and the Vandellas' "Nowhere To Run" and
"Dancing In The Street," Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels'
"Devil With A Blue Dress On," Ricky Nelson's "Travelin'
Man," Elvis Presley's "(You're The) Devil In Disguise," The
Rolling Stones' "Ruby Tuesday," Simon and Garfunkel's "Bridge
Over Troubled Water," Cat Stevens' "Morning Has Broken" and
"Peace Train," The Surfaris' "Wipeout," The Youngbloods'
"Get Together," Zager and Evans' "In The Year 2525," and
the Zombies' "She's Not There."
2002: No Doubt singer Gwen Stefani married Gavin
Rossdale of Bush in St. Paul's church London.
2005: Britney Spears gave birth to a baby boy by
Caesarean section. Spears and husband Kevin Federline had been taken to the
UCLA Medical Center, Santa Monica, under police escort, early in the morning.
2005: Actress Renee Zellweger files for an annulment
of her marriage to Kenny Chesney in Los Angeles, barely four months after the
couple exchanged vows.
2005: The newly refurbished Grateful Dead's
original tour bus went on display at the Volo Auto Museum in Volo, Illinois.
The 1965 Gillig bus, which Jerry Garcia and the rest of the Dead dubbed ‘Sugar
Magnolia’ was used by the band on their frequent tours across the US between
1967 and 1985. The ceiling was lined with hundreds of vintage rock posters
featuring The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Janice Joplin and others who had visited
the bus.
2006: Singer Marianne
Faithfull announces she's undergoing treatment for breast cancer.
2006: Whitney Houston filed for divorce from
singer Bobby Brown, after 14 years of marriage.
2008: Iron Maiden singer Bruce Dickinson was one
of the pilots who flew specially chartered flights after 85,000 tourists were
stranded in the US, the Caribbean, Africa and Europe after Britain's
third-largest tour operator went into administration. The singer, who had
worked for the airline Astraeus for nine years, took up flying during a low
point in his solo career after he quit the band in 1993.
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