Births
1886: Al Jolson
(Singer)
1920: Peggy Lee (Norma Dolores Egstrom) (Singer)
1926: Miles Davis (Jazz
Trumpeter)
1940: Levon Helm (Drums & Vocals for The
Band)
1945: Verden Allen (Keyboards for Mott The
Hoople)
1946: Mick Ronson (Guitarist & Producer,
member of The Rats, then worked with David Bowie)
1948: Stevie Nicks (Singer for Fleetwood Mac and
Solo)
1949: Hank Williams Jr. (Country Singer)
1964: Lenny Kravitz (Singer & Guitarist)
1972: Alan White (Drums for Oasis)
1978: Jaheim (Jaheim Hoagland) (R&B Singer)
1981: Isaac Slade (lead singer and pianist for
The Fray)
Events
1933: Country singer Jimmie
Rodgers, suffering from tuberculosis, dies of a massive hemorrhage at the Hotel
Taft in New York.
1955: Decca
Records, home to Bill Haley and His Comets, announces that the group has sold
three million records in the past year, due mostly to "Rock Around The
Clock" and "Shake, Rattle And Roll."
1963: After a
Beatles performance at the Majestic Ballroom, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England,
John Lennon and Paul McCartney write "She Loves You" in their hotel
room, originally an answer song of sorts to the Bobby Rydell hit "Forget
Him."
1964: Marianne Faithful recorded the Mick Jagger
and Keith Richards song ‘As Tears Go By’, accompanied by future Led Zeppelin
members Jimmy Page on guitar and John Paul Jones on bass.
1966: The Beatles recorded ‘Yellow Submarine’ at
Abbey Road studios in London. Recovering from a case of food poisoning,
producer George Martin missed this recording, EMI engineer Geoff Emerick worked
on the session.
1968: Blues artist Little Willie
John died in prison after being convicted of manslaughter. Co-wrote and was the
first to record 'Fever' (covered by Peggy Lee in 1958), and 'Need Your Love So
Bad' covered by Fleetwood Mac.
1969: John and Yoko began an
eight-day 'bed in', in room 1742 of The Hotel La Reine Elizabeth, Montreal,
Canada, to promote world peace. They recorded ‘Give Peace a Chance’ in the
hotel room (Petula Clark can be heard on the chorus). The song was credited to
Lennon & McCartney, even though Paul had nothing to do with the record.
1971: WNEW-FM
in New York becomes the first radio station to play Don McLean's new single,
"American Pie," which it features in its 8:36 entirety.
1972: With
Mott The Hoople threatening to disband due to public indifference, David Bowie
gives the band two of his new, unrecorded songs. The band passes on
"Suffragette City" but decides to cut a song called "All The
Young Dudes," a massive hit that revives the group's career.
1973: Model
and singer Marsha Hunt, inspiration for the Rolling Stones song "Brown
Sugar," names Mick Jagger in a paternity suit, claiming the singer
fathered her two-year-old daughter Karis. That same day, Stones guitarist Keith
Richards is busted, along with girlfriend Anita Pallenberg, in his Chelsea home
for possession of heroin, illegal pharmaceuticals, guns, and ammo.
1973: Deep Purple's single "Smoke On The
Water" was released.
1973, The Edgar Winter Group went to No.1 on the US
singles chart with 'Frankenstein', the bands only US No. 1. The group featured
ex McCoys guitarist Rick Derringer.
1974: Tragedy struck at a David Cassidy concert
at London's White City when over 1,000 fans had to be treated by first aid
workers due to the frenzied excitement. One fan Bernadette Whelan died from
heart failure four days later.
1975: Cher's
divorce from Sonny Bono becomes final, leaving her free to marry Gregg Allman
of the Allman Brothers just four days later.
1977: The
rock group KISS provides Marvel Comics with a small vial of their blood to be
mixed with printers' ink for their upcoming faux-autobiographical comic.
1977: Elvis
Presley performs what would be his last concert, performing at the Market
Square Arena in Indianapolis, IN for a crowd of 18,000. Although Elvis appears
pale, weak, and overweight, as he had with increasing regularity, there is
nothing to suggest his impending death -- indeed, there is nothing unusual
about this show on the tour, except that Elvis for some reason introduces
practically everyone from his life while on stage. Some take this as
"proof" Elvis knew he was in his final days; others maintain that he
was worried about the imminent publication of Elvis: What Happened?, a
tell-all biography by former bodyguards Sonny and Red West that publicly broke
the story of his drug abuse, and what those revelations might do to his image.
The last song he performs from the stage is "Can't Help Falling In
Love." Footage of the final concert is taken but has not been widely seen
since; the audio portion can be heard on the LP The Last Farewell. Presley's father, Vernon, will pass away two
years later to the day.
1977: Billy Powell singer with The O'Jays died of
cancer.
1982: Roxy
Music leader Bryan Ferry marries his first wife, model Lucy Helmore. The same
day, Marie Osmond marries her first husband, Brigham Young University
basketball player Steve Craig.
1990: David Bowie was sued by his ex wife Angie
for $56 million.
1990: For the first time ever the Top five
positions on the US singles chart were held by female artists; Madonna was at
No.1 with 'Vogue', Heart were at No.2, Sinead O'Connor No.3, Wilson Phillips at
No.4 and Janet Jackson was at No.5
1993: Ron
Isley of the Isley Brothers marries his first wife, R&B singer Angela
Winbush.
1994: Michael
Jackson marries his first wife, Lisa Marie Presley, only daughter of Elvis, in
a secret ceremony held in the Dominican Republican. The couple would divorce
twenty months later.
1995: Flavor Flav (Public Enemy) was sentenced to
three months in jail for firing a gun at a neighbor in his New York apartment.
1996: A fire at the home of Eric Clapton caused
over two and a half million dollars worth of damage. Firemen arrived on the
scene to find Clapton braving the blaze to save his collection of guitars.
1997: Bob Dylan was admitted to a Malibu Hospital
with chest pains, causing all his summer tour to be cancelled.
1999: The Manic Street Preachers refused to play a
concert because Queen Elizabeth II was present. The group had vowed to never
perform for the monarchy because they considered it an outdated institution.
2000: Drummer Tommy Lee was jailed for five days
for drinking alcohol. Lee appeared in front of a LA court charged with
violating his probation by consuming alcohol, an act that directly contravenes
the terms of his parole.
2002: The first episode of 'At Home With The
Osbournes' was shown on MTV in the UK.
2006: Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale became
parents when their baby boy Kingston James McGregor Rossdale was born.
2008: Yale
awards Paul McCartney an honorary Doctorate of Music.
2009: A US judge ended a bitter two-year battle
over the late soul singer James Brown's estate. Judge Jack Early ruled half of
his assets will go to a charitable trust, a quarter to his wife and young son,
and the rest to his six adult children. Brown's family and wife Tomi Rae Hynie
Brown had fought over his fortune since he died of heart failure in 2006.
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