Births
1933: John
Barry (Composer)
1945: Nick Simper (Bass for
Deep purple)
1948: Lulu (Lulu Kennedy-Cairns) (Pop Singer)
1954: Adam Ant (Stuart Goddard) (Singer)
1960: Ian McNabb (Guitar & Vocals for Icicle
Works)
1971: Sticky Fingaz (Kirk Jones) (Rapper in Onxy)
1973: No. 7 (Mick
Thomson) (Guitar for Slipknot)
1978: Tim
McIlrath (Lead Vocals for Rise Against)
Events
1957:
CBS-TV's Ed Sullivan Show accidentally cuts off Sam Cooke mid-song when
"You Send Me" isn't given enough time at the end of tonight's show.
Sullivan invites the singer back the next month to make up for it.
1960: Merle Haggard is released from San Quentin
Prison and allowed to complete the more than two years remaining on his
sentence on parole.
1964: Mayor
Ralph Locker of Cleveland, OH, bans the Rolling Stones from playing the city
ever again after a teenager falls from a balcony during the group's concert.
Locker is quoted as commenting, "Such groups do not add to the community's
culture or entertainment."
1967: The
Beatles complete filming on their movie Magical Mystery Tour.
1972: Carly
Simon and James Taylor, icons of the Seventies singer-songwriter movement and
the highest-paid couple in entertainment, are married at Simon's apartment in
Manhattan. Later, at a celebratory concert at Radio City Music Hall, Taylor
quips: "I don't know whether to be more nervous about the concert or the
marriage." The union lasts eleven years.
1977: Elton
John announces his retirement during a concert at London's Empire Pool. He
would return to the music business within a year and a half.
1983: RCA records signed Latin teen sensations
Menudo for $30m. The line up of five young boys all had to sign a contract
agreeing to leave the group when they reached 16, (when too old for the group).
Ricky Martin was once a member.
1990: After
being featured prominently in the smash hit film Ghost, the Righteous
Brothers' version of "Unchained Melody" returns to the top of the
charts after 25 years.
1990: 'Ice Ice Baby', by Vanilla Ice became the
first rap record to top the US singles chart. The track was initially released
as the B-side to the rapper's cover of 'Play That Funky Music', and became the
A-side after US DJ's started playing the track.
1991:
Legendary rock promoter Bill Graham's funeral in San Francisco is attended by
over 300,000 people, though the many musical acts that perform -- the Grateful
Dead, Crosby Stills, Nash and Young, Santana, Journey and Joan Baez -- may have
helped the turnout.
1995: Hootie
and the Blowfish reach an out-of-court settlement with Bob Dylan for an
undisclosed amount after courts rule group lifted lyrics from Dylan's
"Tangled Up In Blue" for their recent hit "Only Wanna Be With
You."
1997: In
Santa Monica, CA, Billy Preston is sentenced to three years in prison for
cocaine possession and violating parole.
1997: Metallica came to a out of court agreement
with a fan who claimed he lost his sense of smell after being dropped on his
head by fans at one of their shows four years earlier.
2004: Eric
Clapton is made a CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) by
Princess Anne at Buckingham Palace.
2006: A man who had been stalking US singer,
actress Hilary Duff was arrested for threatening to kill her. According to
legal papers, Maksim Miakovsky had gone to the U.S. "for the sole purpose
of meeting and becoming romantically involved with Ms. Duff". He was later
sentenced to 117 days in jail and five years probation after pleading no
contest to the charges.