Musical
birthdays today include German composer and Brian Eno collaborator
Hans-Joachim Roedelius (86), jazz trumpeter Eddie Henderson (80), Milton
Nascimento (78), Herman's Hermits guitarist Keith Hopwood (74), Bootsy
Collins (69), keyboardist & former Frank Zappa sideman Tommy Mars
(69), B-52s multi-instrumentalist Keith Strickland (67), Natalie
Merchant (57), country singer Keith Urban (53), and Yellowcard bassist
Josh Portman (41).
Shoutout
to the Great Beyond for composer Domenico Scarlatti, born on this date
in 1685... for Mahalia Jackson, born in 1911... for Jordanaires vocalist
Neal Matthews Jr., born in 1929... for country singer Hoyt
Axton, who died on this date in 1999... and for Blaque rapper Natina
Reed, who left us today in 2012, 2 days short of her 34th birthday.
Also
on October 26th: Bill Haley & the Comets play the first rock &
roll show in Germany, in West Berlin. The 7,000 fans present turn the
concert into a riot (1958)... John Coltrane and sidemen complete the
recording of the My Favorite Things album (1960)... At Curly Clayton Studios in Highbury, London, the
Rolling Stones, consisting of Keith Richard, Mick Jagger, Brian Jones,
pianist Ian Stewart and drummer Tony Chapman, make their first demo tape
. They record three songs: Jimmy Reed's 'Close Together', Bo Diddley's
'You Cant Judge A Book By The Cover' and Muddy Waters' 'Soon Forgotten'
(1962)... Queen
Elizabeth II invests the Beatles with their MBEs at Buckingham Palace.
According to an account by John Lennon, the group smoked marijuana
beforehand in one of the palace bathrooms to calm their nerves. Many
former recipients give their MBE's back in protest, to which John Lennon
responds "Lots of people who complained about us receiving the MBE
received theirs for heroism in the war, for killing people. We received ours for entertaining other people. I'd say we
deserve ours more." When asked how he enjoyed meeting the Queen, John
said "She's much nicer than she is in the photos" (1965)... A
wake is held at the Lion's Share in San Anselmo, California to
celebrate the life of Janis Joplin. The singer, who died of an
accidental drug overdose at the beginning of the month, had left $2,500
in her will to throw a party in the event of her demise. Attending are
her sister Laura and Joplin's close friends. Brownies laced with hashish
are passed around amongst the guests unbeknownst to them. Joplin was
cremated in the Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Mortuary in Los
Angeles, and her ashes scattered on Stinson Beach, north of San
Francisco (1970)... John Lennon releases his 'Mind Games' single
(1973)... Elton John closes out his latest US tour at Dodger Stadium
wearing a sequin-studded Dodgers uniform (1975)... Jefferson Starship
guitarist Paul Kantner suffers a stroke during a recording session. He
will make a full recovery after spending two weeks in a Los Angeles
hospital (1980)... Men at Work have the № 1 song in the US with 'Who Can It Be Now?' (1982)... Roman Catholic
churches in San Juan, Puerto Rico ask residents to tie black ribbons
around trees in protest against Madonna's first live appearance on the
island... Bob Dylan releases World Gone Wrong, his second consecutive
album of folk and blues standards (1993)... In a cricket ground in the state of Meghalaya, N.E. India, 1,730
guitarists play Dylan's 'Knocking On Heaven's Door' in a bid to break a
record. The guitarists hope their achievement will earn them a place in
the Guinness Book of World Records. The current Guinness mark is held
by a community guitar project from Kansas City, MO who assembled 1,683
pickers to play Deep Purple's 'Smoke On The Water' (2007)... A
coroner's inquest into the Amy Winehouse case reaches a verdict of
death by misadventure. The report explains that Winehouse's blood
alcohol content was 416 mg/decilitre at the time of her death, more than
five times the legal drink-drive limit. According to the coroner, ‘The
unintended consequence of such potentially fatal levels was her sudden
death' (2011).
Wednesday, 28 October 2020
October 26th
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