Thursday, 22 March 2018

March 22nd


Musical birthdays today include Stephen Sondheim (88), Jeremy Cly singer James House (63), The Mighty Wah! frontman Pete Wylie (60), soul singer Beverley Knight (45), Limp Bizkit drummer John Otto (41), and Danity Kane vocalist Shannon Bex (38). 

lShoutout to the Great Beyond for Yardbirds lead singer Keith Relf, who would have been 75 today... for McCoys bassist Randy Jo Hobbs, who would have been 70... for composer Jean-Baptiste Lully, who died on this date in 1687... for banjo player & early Grand Ole Opry star Uncle Dave Macon, who died in 1952... for Kingston Trio founding member Dave Guard, who passed away in 1991... for former Bill Haley & the Comets guitarist Billy Williamson, who died in 1996... and for Foghat guitarist Rod Price, who left us today in 2005. 

Also on March 22nd: The Great Opera House of Frankfurt is destroyed in an RAF air raid (1944)... En route to New York for an appearance on the Perry Como Show, the car that Carl Perkins in travelling in is involved in an accident. Carl sustains injuries that will keep him in hospital for several months, while his brother Jay, who is driving, is killed (1956)... Ornette Coleman goes into Atlantic Studios in NYC with his sidemen. Unusually, Coleman is playing the tenor saxophone rather than his usual alto, so the album that will emerge from the session today and from one five days from now will be called, unsurprisingly, Ornette on Tenor. It is also Jimmy Garrison's last date with the group before leaving to join John Coltrane's quartet (1961)... The Beatles' debut album Please Please Me is released in Britain (1963)... Bob Dylan's transitional album Bringing It All Back Home is released (1965)... Led Zeppelin start a six-week run at № 1 on the US album chart with Physical Graffiti, the group's fourth chart-topping LP. On its first day of release in the US, the album shipped a million copies – no other album in the history of Atlantic records had generated so many sales. Physical Graffiti has since been certified 16 times Platinum by the RIAA (1975)... The Police sign their first contract with A&M Records (1978)... The Rutles' 'All You Need Is Cash', an affectionate mockumentary spoofing The Beatles' career, is broadcast for the first time on NBC (1978)... Pink Floyd's 'Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)' is the № 1 single in the US... In the UK, the Jam's latest single 'Going Underground' debuts at the top of the chart for their first № 1 in their home country (1980)... With the L.A. Latino punk rockers The Plugz as his backing band, Bob Dylan appears on the David Letterman Show, performing the Sonny Boy Williamson classic 'Don't Start Me Talking', along with 'License to Kill' and 'Jokerman' from his latest album Infidels... Queen film the video for ‘I Want To Break Free’ at Limehouse Studio in London. Directed by David Mallet, it is a parody of the British soap opera Coronation Street, with the band members dressed in drag. Guitarist Brian May will later say that the video, which is initially banned by MTV, ruined the band in America (1984)... Polygram Records officially announce that Tears for Fears have split up (1992)... Puff Daddy scores his first US № 1 with 'Can't Nobody Hold Me Down' (1997)... Yusuf Islam, i.e. the former Cat Stevens, joins the campaign to preserve a law banning the 'promotion of homosexuality' in UK schools. He praises peers in the House of Lords for fighting the government's plans to scrap Section 28, as the measure is officially known (2000)... A new book claims that Elvis Presley's ancestors came from a small village called Lonmay in N.E. Scotland. Author Allan Morrison says he found evidence that the King's great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather was married in the village 300 years ago (2004).

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