Sunday, July 14, 2013

July 14


Births
1912: Woody Guthrie (Folk Singer)
1952: Chris Cross (Bass for Ultravox)
1952: Bob Casale (Guitar & Keyboards for Devo)
1962: Jeff Olson (Drummer for TROUBLE)
1966: Ellen Reid (Keyboards for Crash Test Dummies)
1966: Tanya Donelly (Guitar for Belly & Throwing Muses)
1971: Nick McCabe (Lead Guitar for The Verve)
1975: Taboo (Jaime Luis Gómez) (Rapper & Singer in The Black Eyed Peas)

Events
1964: The Rolling Stones score their first #1 hit in the UK with their cover of Bobby Womack's "It's All Over Now."

1967: The Who begin their first large-scale American tour, playing the first of 55 dates opening for... Herman's Hermits.

1973: Glam-rocker Gary Glitter makes his live stage debut in Mecksham, England.

1973: A drunk driver killed guitarist Clarence White of The Byrds while he was loading equipment after a gig in Palmdale, California.

1977: Elvis Costello and The Attractions made their live debut supporting Wayne County at The Garden, Penzance, Cornwall, England.

1980: In France, Roxy Music's Bryan Ferry contracts a kidney infection and is flown to London after collapsing in his hotel room.

1980: Former Beatles and Rolling Stones manager Allen Klein begins a two-month jail term for income tax evasion.

1980: Malcolm Owen, singer with The Ruts, died from a heroin overdose at the age of 26.

1984: Phillippe Wynne lead singer with The Detroit Spinners died of a heart attack while performing at Ivey's nightclub in Oakland, California, aged 43.

1986: Motley Crue's Vince Neil begins 30-day sentence for vehicular homicide.

1987: Steve Miller receives a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame.

1988: Michael Jackson gave himself a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for setting a new attendance record, when he played the first of seven nights at Wembley Stadium in London. The shows on his Bad World Tour were attended by a total of 504,000 fans beating the record previously held by Genesis, with four sold out nights.

1988: At the height of "Elvis is Alive" mania, Nashville radio station WYHY offers a million dollars to anyone who shows up at the studios with the King.

1989: "Judge Judy" Sheindlin, not yet a TV star and still a Family Court Judge in New York, orders singer Tom Jones to pay $200 weekly in child support to model Katherine Berkery.

1992: Aretha Franklin opens the 1992 Democratic National Convention in New York by singing the national anthem.

1992: Olivia Newton-John makes public her bout with breast cancer, which she will eventually beat.

2000: It was announced that the Go-Go's had gotten back together again for a tour, new album, a book and a movie.

2006: Primal Scream singer Bobby Gillespie had his nose broken when he was attacked in a hotel bar in Madrid in Spain. The singer had to postpone a Top Of The Pops recording due to the injuries.

2011: Country-pop band Rilo Kiley officially broke up.  Guitarist Blake Sennett said that he "felt like there was a lot of deception, disloyalty, greed," and the band had reached a point where it could no longer exist under such toxic circumstances.

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