Musical
 birthdays today include Tom Waits (71), singer-songwriter Ron Hynes 
(70), former Bucks Fizz vocalist Mike Nolan (66), Psychedelic Furs 
bassist Tim Butler (62), ex-The Fall guitarist Craig Scanlon (60), 
former Juniper multi-instrumentalist Damien Rice (47), Muse drummer 
Dominic Howard (43), ex-Kumbia Kings singer Frankie J (42), Sara Bareilles (41), and Aaron Carter (33). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for trumpeter & singer Louis Prima, born on 
this day in 1910... for fiddler Jean Carignan, born in 1916... for Harry
 Chapin, who would have been 78 today... for Dr. Peter Carl Goldmark, 
inventor of the microgroove LP vinyl record, who died on this date in 
1977... for punk rocker Darby Crash, who took his own life today in 1980
 at the age of 22... and for country singer Jerry Scoggins, who left us 
today in 2004. 
Also
 on December 7: The Royal Opera House at Covent Garden opens (1732)... 
Thelonious Monk completes the sessions for his Brilliant Corner album, 
his first in the Riverside label to contain his own compositions 
(1956)... The Beatles second album 'With The Beatles' starts a 21-week run at № 1 on
 the UK album chart. It replaces their first album 'Please Please me' 
which has been at the top of the charts since its release 30 weeks 
previously. Also today, all four Beatles appeared on BBC TV's 'Juke Box 
Jury'. Some of the songs group judge are ‘Kiss Me Quick’ by Elvis 
Presley, ‘The Hippy Hippy Shake’ by the Swinging Blue Jeans. ‘Did You 
Have a Happy Birthday’ by Paul Anka and ‘Where Have You Been All My 
Life’ by Gene Vincent... In America, Jeanine Deckers, AKA The Singing 
Nun, is at № 1 with
 'Dominique' (1963)... Brian Wilson marries Marilyn Rovell in Los 
Angeles... In Britain, Jerry Lee Lewis ~ on his first tour of the 
country ~ plays the Town Hall in Birmingham with the Yardbirds as his 
opening act (1964)... Otis
 Redding goes into the studio to record '(Sittin' on) The Dock Of The 
Bay'. The song goes on to be his biggest hit. Redding wrote the first 
verse of the song, under the abbreviated title 'Dock of the Bay', on a 
houseboat at Waldo Point in Sausalito, California, a short time after 
his appearance at the Monterey Pop festival. [Redding's familiar 
whistling heard before the song's fade was the singer fooling around ~ 
he had intended to return to the studio at a later date to add words in 
place of the whistling. When he was killed in a plane crash three days 
later, the single was mixed as it was and rushed into pressing]... In 
London, the
 Beatles' Apple boutique at 94 Baker Street W1 opens its doors (1967)...
 Paul McCartney & Wings release their debut album Wild Life (1971)...
 One-hit wonder Carl Douglas starts a two week run at № 1 on
 the US singles chart with 'Kung Fu Fighting'. The song, which was 
recorded in 10 minutes, went on to sell over 10 million copies 
(1974)... Mariah Carey's MTV Unplugged EP becomes the first Sony 
MiniDisc to be released in the US (1992)... Aretha Franklin's 'Christmas
 Extravaganza' concert at the Detroit church where her father was once 
pastor leaves hundreds of fans out in the cold, literally. The New 
Bethel Baptist Church sold 2,500 tickets but the church's benches and 
pews can only accommodate 1,500. The church will apologize for the snafu
 and issue refunds to those who were denied entrance (1996)... At the 
Children's Television Workshop studios in NYC, B.B. King performs with 
Elmo and Big Bird for an episode of Sesame Street (2000)... James Brown 
and Loretta Lynn receive lifetime achievement awards in a ceremony at 
the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC (2003)... The
 MBE medal that John Lennon returned to the Queen is found in a royal 
vault at St James' Palace. Lennon sent back the decoration in November, 
1969 with an accompanying letter
  saying, 'Your Majesty, I am returning my MBE as a protest against 
Britain's involvement in the Nigeria-Biafra thing, against our support 
of America in Vietnam and against Cold Turkey slipping down the charts. 
With Love, John Lennon'. Historians call for the medal to be put on 
public display (2005). 
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