Thursday, August 1, 2013

August 1


Births
1779: Francis Scott Key (Composed The Star Spangled Banner)
1942: Jerry Garcia (Lead Guitar & Vocals for The Grateful Dead)
1946: Boz Burrell (Bass for King Crimson & Bad Company)
1951: Tommy Bolin (Guitar with Zephyr, The James Gang & Deep Purple)
1951: Tim Bachman (Guitar & Vocals for Bachman-Turner Overdrive)
1953: Robert Cray (Singer & Blues Guitarist)
1958: Rob Buck (Guitar for 10,000 Maniacs)
1958: Michael Penn (Singer / Songwriter)
1959: Joe Elliott (Singer for Def Leppard)
1960: Chuck D (Carlton Ridenhour) (Rapper for Public Enemy)
1960: Suzi Gardner (Guitar & Vocals for L7)
1963: Coolio (Artis Ivey Jr) (Rapper)
1964: Adam Duritz (Vocals for The Counting Crows)
1968: Dan Donegan (Guitar for Disturbed)

Events
1927: The Carter Family records for the first time in Bristol, Tennessee, with producer Ralph Peer. Among the trio's four songs are "Bury Me Under The Weeping Willow" and "The Storms Are On The Ocean".

1942: In response to what it sees as a threat from the new fad, phonograph records, the American Federation of Musicians goes on strike (but only for recording, not live gigs).

1954: Alan Freed presents his first Moondog Jubilee Of Stars Under The Stars revue at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York, featuring Fats Domino, The Clovers, The Orioles, Muddy Waters, and Little Walter. It is the first large racially mixed crowd at a concert of this size.

1958: Feeling that label head Sam Phillips is spending too much time promoting Jerry Lee Lewis and not enough promoting him, Johnny Cash leaves Sun Records and signs with Columbia.

1960: For his embodiment of decadent American culture, Elvis Presley is named "Public Enemy Number One" by the East Berlin newspaper Young World.

1960: Chubby Checker's "The Twist" was released.

1960: Aretha Franklin begins her first non-gospel recording session, an attempt at jazz-pop with the Columbia label.

1963: The first 'Beatles Monthly' was published. A magazine devoted to the group, it continued until 1969 and at its peak was selling over 350,000 copies a month.

1964: A report in Billboard claims that the harmonica is hip again thanks to the Beatles, Dylan, the Stones and Stevie Wonder.

1964: A brand new group called "The Steampacket," featuring lead vocals by one Rod Stewart, opens for the Rolling Stones at the London Palladium.

1965: Marianne Faithfull collapses during a performance in Lancashire, England, and is taken to a hospital, canceling the remainder of her tour.

1966: Birmingham radio station WACI calls for the first "Beatles Burn-In," a bonfire of Beatles records to protest John Lennon's recent published comments that his group was "bigger than Jesus."

1969: Carl Wilson of the Beach Boys is indicted in Los Angeles for failing to perform his required community service hours, which were imposed upon him after he refused to be drafted as a conscientious objector; rather than the janitorial duty he was sentenced to at LA County Hospital, Wilson taught music classes there instead.

1970: After two years of sitting on the shelf (namely due to shocking sex and violence scenes), the gangster movie Performance, featuring the acting debut of the Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger, premieres in London.

1971: The first big all-star rock benefit concert, The Concert For Bangla Desh, was held in New York's Madison Square Garden, helmed by George Harrison and featuring Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, Billy Preston, and Ringo Starr. The show raised $11 million for starving people in Bangladesh, a recently-liberated area of Pakistan.

1971: The Sonny And Cher Comedy Hour premieres on CBS television.

1971: Keyboardist Tony Kaye quit Yes to form Badger. He was replaced by Rick Wakeman.

1973: The first big oldies revival kicks off in earnest as George Lucas' new film, American Graffiti, premieres in Los Angeles. Portraying a night in the life of several California teenagers in 1961, it made stars out of Ron Howard, Richard Dreyfuss, Cindy Williams, Mackenzie Phillips and more, and also inspired the ABC-TV smash Happy Days.

1976: Gladys Knight gives birth to her third child, Shanga-Ali.

1977: Elvis: What Happened? a tell-all book written by his closest confidantes Red West and Sonny West, hit the bookshelves and made no impact until Presley's death two weeks later, when it confirmed what many had suspected: that Elvis had been abusing prescription drugs. Some say the revelatory book hurt Elvis and indirectly hastened his demise.

1978: George Harrison and his bride-to-be Olivia Trinidad Arias announce the birth of their first child, Dhani.

1980: George Harrison forms a movie production company called Handmade Films, which would go on to produce films like Monty Python's Life of Brian, The Long Good Friday, Time Bandits, and Shanghai Surprise.

1980: Def Leppard made their US live debut when they appeared at the New York City concert opening for AC/DC.

1981: Australian singer Rick Springfield started a two week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with 'Jessie's Girl'. Rick had played Noah Drake in the TV show 'General Hospital'.

1981: MTV made its debut at 12:01am. The first video to be shown was "Video Killed the Radio Star" by the Buggles.

1981: Kix and Barbara Brooks marry in Nashville. He oversleeps and barely makes it on time.

1984: Jermaine Jackson appears on an episode of CBS' long-running soap opera, As The World Turns.

1987: Eurythmics Dave Stewart married ex Bananarama member Siobham Fahey.

1987: Bob Seger scored his first US No.1 single with the Harold Faltermeyer penned 'Shakedown', which was taken from the film 'Beverly Hills Cop II'. The song was nominated for both the Academy Award for Best Original Song and Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, but it lost both awards to Dirty Dancing's '(I've Had) The Time of My Life'.

1988: Cincinnati AM radio station WCVG changes its format, becoming the first US all-Elvis radio station. The concept died out within the year.

1990: UB40 were deported from the Seychelles after police discovered marijuana in their hotel rooms.

1994: The Rolling Stones politely refuse an invitation to play at the Clinton White House, though they would go on to play his 60th birthday party in 2006.

1994: Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley announce their marriage in the Dominican Republic 11 weeks earlier.

1996: MTV launched another channel known as M2.

1998: Gospel Singer Sandra Crouch was ordained as pastor of her church. This was in spite of the ban on woman ministers by the Church of God in Christ.

2009: Billy Currington is hospitalized with a concussion after a concert stage collapses in a thunderstorm at the Big Valley Jamboree in Camrose, Alberta. Bass player Alex Stevens is pinned for a half-hour and requires surgery for a severed artery.

No comments:

Post a Comment