Births
1931: Nat
Adderley (Jazz Trumpet Player)
1941: Percy
Sledge (R&B Singer)
1959: Steve Rothery (Guitar for Marillion)
1960: Amy Grant (Pop and Christian Singer)
1964: Mark Lanegan (Vocals & Guitar for
Screaming Trees & Solo)
1965: Tim Armstrong (Guitar & Vocals for
Operation Ivy & Rancid)
1967: Rodney Sheppard (Guitar for Sugar Ray)
1967: Erick Sermon (Rapper in EPMD & Solo)
1971: Christina Applegate (Just because)
Events
1957: Gene
Vincent and the Blue Caps make their US television debut, performing
"Lotta Loving" and "Dance to the Bop" on CBS' Ed
Sullivan Show.
1961: The
Everly Brothers join the 8th Battalion of the US Marine Corps Reserve, arriving
at California's Camp Pendleton.
1965:
London's famed department store, Harrods, opens for the Beatles for two hours
after closing time in order to allow the members of the group to do their
Christmas shopping.
1966: The
Jimi Hendrix Experience makes its stage debut in front of a celebrity-filled
audience at London's Bag O'Nails club.
1968: CBS-TV
airs the Frank Sinatra special Francis Albert Sinatra Does His Thing,
featuring Diahann Carroll and The 5th Dimension.
1968: Cream
play their last concert at London's Royal Albert Hall to a fanatic crowd of
over 10,000 who chant "God save the Cream" as the group leaves the
stage.
1969: As a
protest against Britain's military involvement in foreign conflicts, John
Lennon returns his MBE (Member of the British Empire) medal, with an attached
letter that reads, puckishly, "Your Majesty, I am returning this MBE in
protest against Britain's involvement in the Nigeria-Biafra thing, against our
support of America in Vietnam, and against 'Cold Turkey' slipping down the
charts. With love, John Lennon of Bag."
1971: Rolling
Stone quotes the surviving members of the Doors as saying they intend to
continue on as a trio despite the loss of lead singer Jim Morrison.
1972: Hollies
lead singer Allan Clarke announces that he's leaving the group. (It doesn't
take.)
1974: Singer
Nick Drake died from an overdose of amitriptyline, a type of antidepressant at
age 26.
1975: Deep in
debt, Elvis Presley takes out a $350,000 loan from the National Bank of Commerce
in Memphis, TN. His Graceland estate is put up as collateral.
1976: The
Band and what seems like several dozen of the music industry's biggest stars
perform at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom for what is announced as the
group's last performance. The show is filmed and will go on to be released as
Martin Scorsese's acclaimed biopic The Last Waltz.
1984: The cream of the British pop world gathered
at S.A.R.M. Studios, London to record the historic ‘Do They Know It’s
Christmas?’ The single, which was written by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure, featured
Paul Young, Bono, Boy George, Sting and George Michael. It went on to sell over
three million copies in the UK, becoming the bestselling record ever, and
raised over $13.6 million worldwide.
1985: Bobby Brown announced that he was leaving New
Edition for a solo career.
1988: Having
successfully completed their stint in an Arizona rehab clinic, Ringo Starr
returns to England with his second wife, actress Barbara Bach.
1995: Radiohead singer Thom Yorke blacked out
halfway through a show in Munich, Germany, suffering from exhaustion.
1997: The
original Zombies lineup -- Rod Argent on organ, Colin Blunstone on vocals, Paul
Atkinson on guitar, Chris White on bass, and Hugh Grundy on drums -- reunites
onstage for the first time in 30 years at London's Jazz Cafe, performing two
songs only: "She's Not There" and "Time Of The Season" to
promote their new box set Zombie Heaven.
2000: An
unidentified thief burgles Alice Cooper's home in Paradise Valley, CA, stealing
$6,000 of his daughter's clothes and electronics as well as four of Alice's
gold records.
2003: Glen Campbell was arrested
in Phoenix Arizona with a blood alcohol level of .20 after his BMW struck a
Toyota Camry. He was charged with 'extreme' drunk driving, hit and run, and assaulting
a police officer. A police officer reported that while in custody, Campbell
hummed his hit 'Rhinestone Cowboy' repeatedly.
2003: Meat Loaf underwent heart
surgery in a London hospital after being diagnosed with a condition that causes
an irregular heartbeat. The 52-year-old singer had collapsed on November 17th
as he performed at London's Wembley Arena.
2007: Kevin Dubrow, the frontman
with metal band Quiet Riot, was found dead in his Las Vegas home at the age of
52 of a cocaine overdose. It was
reported that he had died 6 days before being found.
2008: Country singer Zac Brown has Lasik eye surgery in
Atlanta.
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