Musical 
birthdays today include former Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Seiji
 Ozawa (87), ex-Sly and the Family Stone drummer Greg Errico (76), Barry
 Gibb (76), drummer Russ Kunkel (74), former Jam bassist Bruce Foxton (67), Gloria Estefan (65), 
Toto lead singer Joseph Williams (62), Franco-Tunisian pop singer Lââm (51), Scissor Sisters multi-instrumentalist Scott 'Babydaddy' Hoffman (46), Fall Out Boy guitarist Joe Trohman (38), and Tokio Hotel's Bill and Tom Kaulitz (33). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for composer Johann Pachelbel [of Canon in D fame],
 born on this date in 1653... for composer Engelbert Humperdinck, born 
in 1854... for jazz great Art Pepper, born today in 1925... for Conway 
Twitty, who would have been 89... for jazz-funk keyboardist Don 
Blackman, who would have been 69... for French horn virtuoso Dennis 
Brain, killed in a one-car crash today in 1957 at the age of 36... for 
Delta bluesman R.L. Burnside, who died on this day in 2005... for former
 Echo & the Bunnymen keyboardist Jake Brockman, killed in a 
motorcycle accident today in 2009... and for lyricist Hal David, who 
left us today in 2012. 
Also
 on September 1st: Atlantic Records buy Ray Charles' contract from the 
Swingtime label, where the pianist had been recording in the mellower 
style of Nat King Cole (1952)... An aspiring 19-year-old singer/pianist 
named Jerry Lee Lewis arrives at the Sun Studios in Memphis to ask for 
an audition. Told that owner Sam Phillips is on vacation in Florida, 
Lewis records some demos that Phillips will hear when he returns 
(1956)... James Brown makes his debut appearance on the popular ABC-TV 
music program Shindig! Booker T and the MGs are also on the bill 
(1965)... The Byrds open an 11-night run at L.A.'s Whiskey-A-Go-Go 
(1966)... David Bowie releases his first single, 'Love You till Tuesday'
 ~ it fails to chart... The Beatles hold a meeting at Paul McCartney's 
house in London to decide upon a course of action following the death of
 manager Brian Epstein. They decide to postpone a planned trip to India 
to begin work on the Magical Mystery Tour film for TV (1967)... Blondie 
sign their first major label contract, with Chrysalis Records... Bob 
Dylan takes a 5-year lease on a rehearsal space in Santa Monica, CA that
 he subsequently christens Rundown Studio. It will be an important 
centre for much of Dylan's late '70s and early '80s musical activity 
(1977)... U2 release their very first record, an EP entitled U2-3. With 
an initial run of 1,ooo individually numbered copies, it will be 
available only in Ireland (1979)... Fleetwood Mac wrap up a 9-month 
world tour with a concert at the Hollywood Bowl. After the final encore,
 Lindsay Buckingham tells the crowd "This is our last show for a long, 
long time" (1980)... Mick Jones is sacked by the Clash, whose other 
three members accuse him of 'drifting away from the original concept of 
the group' (1983)... Tina Turner has her first solo US № 1 single
 with What's Love Got to Do with It. The song was originally written in 
the late '70s, and was passed on by Cliff Richard and Donna Summer 
before finding a home with Turner (1984)... Louis Armstrong is honoured 
on a US postage stamp. Wynton Marsalis and sideman perform at the 
official launch in New Orleans (1995)... The № 1 single in the UK is Atomic Kitten's cover of the 1980 Blondie hit The Tide Is High (2002).
Wednesday, 31 August 2022
September 1st
Tuesday, 30 August 2022
August 31st
Musical 
birthdays today include Van 
Morrison (77), violinist Yitzhak Perlman (77), Scorpions guitarist 
Rudolf Schenker (74), violist Kim Kashkashian (70), Waterboys 
multi-instrumentalist Anthony Thistlethwaite (67), Go-Go's drummer Gina 
Schock (65), Squeeze lead singer Glenn Tilbrook (65), Debbie Gibson (52), and Biffy Clyro guitarist Simon Neil (43). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for songwriter and Broadway composer Alan Jay 
Lerner, born on this day in 1918... for Crickets drummer Jerry Allison, who would have been 83... for composer and guitarist Robbie 
Basho, and for studio 
musician and Jazz Crusaders founding member Wilton Felder, both of whom would have been 82... for one-time Fleetwood Mac member and 
solo artist Bob Welch, who would have been 77... for singer-songwriter 
and session guitarist Chris Whitley, who would have been 62.... and for 
jazz vibraphonist Lionel Hampton, who left us today in 2002. 
Also on August 31:
 In Paris, Rossini's opera William Tell has its premiere (1829)... In 
Berlin, Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera is performed
 for the first time (1928)... Elvis Presley plays for the last time 
outside of the US, at the Empire Stadium in Vancouver, BC. Some 26,000 
are in attendance (1957)... The Ronettes' 'Be My Baby', which will be 
the group's only stateside top 10 hit, enters the US charts. Lead singer
 Veronica Bennett will soon shorten her first name to Ronnie, and change 
her last name to Spector (1963)... After two previous LPs which 
attracted minimal notice, Dionne Warwick releases Make Way for Dionne 
Warwick, which will live up to its name by becoming her first album to 
hit the Billboard chart (1964)... Four days after the death of their 
manager Brian Epstein, The Beatles convene a press conference in London 
to announce that henceforth they shall be conducting their own financial
 affairs (1967)... Decca Records release what has often been called the 
Rolling Stones' most political song, Street Fighting Man, written after 
Mick Jagger attended a March, 1968 anti-war demonstration outside the US
 embassy in London, during which mounted police repeatedly charged the 
crowd of 25,000. The single will fail to crack the US top 40, as many 
radio stations will refuse to play it for its 'subversive content' 
(1969)... Neil Young releases After the Gold Rush (1970)... John Lennon 
testifies before an INS investigative committee that former president 
Richard Nixon initiated steps to have him deported for leading protests 
outside the Republic National Convention in Miami in 1972... Traffic 
play their last live show, at England's annual Reading Festival 
(1974)... George Harrison is found guilty of 'subconscious plagiarism' 
of the Ronnie Mack Song 'He's So Fine' when writing 'My Sweet Lord'. 
After earnings from the song have been paid to Mack's estate, the 
Chiffons reunite to record their own version of Harrison's 1970 
worldwide hit (1976)... Prince's film Purple Rain opens nationwide in 
the UK (1984)... The № 1
 album in the US is Dire Straits' Brothers in Arms (1985)... The largest
 pre-order of albums in the history of Columbia Records occurs when 2.5 
million advance copies of Michael Jackson's 'Bad' are shipped to record 
shops across the US. The album will go on to sell over 13 million copies
 (1987)... Oasis are at № 1 on
 the UK charts with their third release, Be Here Now. The album sold 1.2
 million copies on its first day of release (1997)... Dixie Chicks 
release the album Fly, which debuts at № 1
 on the Billboard chart. It will go on to sell some 12 million copies, 
making the Chicks the only country band to date, and the only all-female
 group in any genre, to have back-to-back RIAA-certified Diamond albums 
(1999)... The
 British medical magazine Thorax issues a warning to music fans saying 
that playing loud music in the car can induce a collapsed lung in the 
listener.  A 19-year-old had been treated in Bristol for the condition 
after repeatedly subjecting himself to the 1,000-watt bass box in his 
Fiat Panda (2004)... Blondie and Public Enemy perform at a rally in 
front of CBGB to save the landmark club, whose lease expires today 
(2005)... The New York Times runs a story about the contractual demands 
of rock stars when on tour. Ozzy Osbourne insists that there a be an 
eye, ear, nose & throat doctor on call at every venue. The Beach 
Boys require a licensed masseur, Meatloaf a mask and an oxygen tank. 
David Bowie requires that the temperature of his dressing room be 
between 14º  and 18º C
 at all times, and Paul McCartney must have arrangements of white 
Casablanca lilies. Mick Jagger has to have an onstage auto-cue with the 
lyrics to all the songs, and a reminder of the name of the city in which
 he is performing (2006)... The Verve hit № 1 in the UK with their final album, entitled Forth (2008). 
August 30th
Musical 
birthdays today include jazz singer Jewel Brown (85), Specials bassist 
Horace Panter (69), ex-Swing Out Sister and Magazine drummer Martin 
Jackson (64), classical pianist Dimitris Sgouros (53), Rancid frontman 
Lars Frederiksen (51), Edguy lead guitarist Jen Ludwig (45), former 
Panic! at the Disco lead guitarist Ryan Ross (36), and classical pianist Emily Bear (21).
Shoutout to the Great Beyond for country music legend Kitty Wells [née Ellen Deason] born
 on this day in 1919... for bebop trumpeter Kenny Dorham, born in 1926... for John Phillips, who would have been 86... for British DJ John Peel, who would have been 82... and for the Velvet 
Underground's Sterling Morrison, who left us today in 1995 two days after his 
48th birthday.
Also on August 30:
 Handel completes his final oratorio Jephtha (1751)... Hank Williams 
goes into the studio in Cincinnati, OH to record 'I'm So Lonesome I 
Could Cry', a song about his troubled marriage (1949)... Bob Dylan 
releases Highway 61 Revisited (1965)... The Byrds release the pioneering
 country rock album Sweetheart of the Rodeo (1968)... Two weeks after 
Woodstock ends, the second Isle of Wight festival begins. Bob Dylan, The
 Band, Joe Cocker, The Moody Blues and The Who are the headliners 
playing for some 150,000 fans who have paid 25 shillings ($3) per 
ticket. Among those spotted in the crowd are John & Yoko, George, 
Ringo, Jane Fonda, Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor... The Texas 
International Pop Festival opens in Lewisville, TX with Led Zeppelin, 
Janis Joplin, Santana and Grand Funk Railroad headlining (1969)... 
Backed by Elephant's Memory, John & Yoko play Madison Square Garden 
to raise money for the One to One charity. The performance is recorded, 
and partially released on the Sometime in New York City album (1972)... 
The remaining Doors announce the official dissolution of the band, who 
have released two albums with dismal sales since the death of lead 
singer Jim Morrison in 1971 (1973)... The № 1
 single in the US is Steve Winwood's 'Higher Love' (1986)... Bruce 
Springsteen's wife Julianne Phillips files for divorce after salacious 
pictures of her husband and his backup singer Patti Scialfa  are 
published worldwide (1988)... James Taylor and Carly Simon perform live 
together before a crowd of 10,000 at Martha's Vineyard. It is the first 
time the pair have appeared on the same stage since 1979. The former 
couple play their own solo sets before joining forces in the concert to raise money for
 the local agricultural society (1995)... Stella McCartney marries 
publisher Alasdhiar Willis on the Isle of Bute in Scotland. Guests 
include dad Sir Paul, Madonna, Chrissie Hynde and Chris Martin (2003)...
 Kris Kristofferson is inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 
Nashville, TN (2004) 
Monday, 29 August 2022
August 29th
Musical 
birthdays today include Blood, Sweat & Tears multi-instrumentalist 
Dick Halligan (79), Radiators guitarist Dave Malone (70), Fairground 
Attraction singer & multi-instrumentalist Eddi Reader (63), Planet X
 guitarist Tony McAlpine (62), former Cocteau Twins lead singer Liz 
Fraser (59), Brian Jonestown Massacre founder Anton Newcombe (55), Ned's
 Atomic Dustbin bassist Alex Griffin (51), Simple Plan bassist David 
Desrosiers (42), and One Direction vocalist Liam Payne (29). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for Charlie Parker, born on this day in 1920... for
 Dinah Washington, born in 1924... for punk rocker GG 
Allin, who would have been 65... for Michael Jackson, who would have 
been 64... for bluesman Jimmy Reed, died on this day in 1976... and for producer Lee 'Scratch' Perry, who left us today.  
Also on August 29: Seated at a grand piano, John Cage gives the first public 'performance' of Four Minutes and Thirty Three Seconds of Silence for Any Instrument
 in Woodstock, NY (1952)... Roy Orbison's 'Oh, Pretty Woman' is released
 in the US. The lyric was inspired by a remark that Orbison's 
songwriting partner Bill Dees made when his [Orbison's] wife Claudette 
interrupted their conversation to say that she was going out. When 
Orbison asked if she was okay for money, Dees interjected "A pretty 
woman never needs any money" (1964)... The Beatles play their last 
scheduled concert, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, CA. They do not
 play any songs from Revolver, their most recent release, and close the 
show with 'Long Tall Sally' (1966)... Edwin Starr tops the US singles 
charts with 'War' (1970)...Paul and Linda McCartney are at №
 1 on both sides of the Atlantic with 'Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey'. 
Macca would later explain that the Uncle Albert in the title was his 
father's older brother, who would quote the Bible from memory every time
 he got drunk (1971)... Iggy Pop releases the album Lust for Life (1977)... The № 1
 single in the UK today is Rick Astley's 'Never Gonna Give You up' 
(1987)... U2 play the second rock concert in the history of Yankee 
Stadium [Billy Joel's in 1990 was the first] (1992)... Oasis release 
their debut album Definitely Maybe, which will become the 
fastest-selling debut of all time (1994)... Detroit police officials 
call for an indefinite ban on rap concerts in the city after numerous 
brawls broke out at a Master P and Scarface show over the weekend 
(1998)... During the VMAs at Radio City Music Hall, Madonna stuns a 
packed house by passionately kissing Britney Spears and Christina 
Aguilera while performing a racy version of 'Like a Virgin'... During an
 appearance as a guest DJ on the NYC radio station Q104.3, Mets catcher 
Mike Piazza plays 'IRS', a track that has been leaked from the 
forthcoming Guns N' Roses album Chinese democracy. The band's management
 immediately demands that the sound file be retrieved (2003)... 77-year-old
 Fats Domino is rescued by helicopter from the flooding in New Orleans 
caused by Hurricane Katrina. He had earlier told his agent that he 
planned to remain in his home despite the order to evacuate (2005). 
Sunday, 28 August 2022
August 28th
Musical 
birthdays today include operatic bass Paul Plishka (81), former Chicago 
drummer Danny Seraphine (74), ex-Stranglers lead guitarist Hugh Cornwell
 (73), Shania Twain (57), CKY drummer Jess Margera (44), country singer Jake Owen (41), LeAnn Rimes 
(40) and Florence + the Machine lead singer Florence Welch (36).  
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for song and dance man Donald O'Connor, born on 
this day in 1925... for Velvet Underground founding member Sterling 
Morrison, who would have been 80... for Czech composer Bohuslav Martinů, who died on this day in 1959... and for Hilly Krystal, founder and owner of CBGB, who left us today in 2007. 
Also
 on August 28: Richard Wagner's Lohengrin has its premiere in 
Weimar (1850)... Bob Dylan is one of the performers at the Washington 
Civil Rights March. In addition to performing duets with Joan Baez and 
folk revivalist Len Chandler [with the latter on the traditional 'Hold 
On'], Dylan solos on Blowin' in the Wind and Only a Pawn in Their Game 
(1963)... After playing a show at the Forest Hills Tennis Stadium in 
Queens, NYC, the Beatles meet Bob Dylan for the first time, at the 
Delmonico Hotel in Manhattan. Dylan and mutual journalist friend Al 
Aronovitz introduce the Beatles to marijuana (1964)... Bob Dylan kicks 
off his now legendary 1965-66 world tour with a show at the Forest Hills
 Stadium. The format presented at this show is to remain constant 
throughout the next nine months on the road. The 45-minute opening set 
features Dylan solo, just guitar and harmonica, followed by a 
similar-length electric set with the band. A large contingent in the 
audience boo throughout the second half, something else that will be a 
constant throughout the tour (1965)... Nearing the end of their final 
American tour, the Beatles play Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles before a 
crowd of 45,000. The group's attempt to escape from the stadium in an 
armored truck is thwarted when the main gate is found to be locked. and 
the Beatles have to spend two hours in the back of the vehicle before 
they can leave (1966)... Merle Haggard releases the classic country 
album Branded Man (1967)... Simon & Garfunkel's fourth studio album 
Bookends is at the top of the LP charts on both sides of the Atlantic...
 Working at London's Trident Studios, the Beatles begin recording John's
 new song Dear Prudence. They build the song instrument by instrument 
using 8-track equipment more advanced than anything at Abbey Road. Paul 
plays drums in place of Ringo, who has been AWOL from the group since 
the 22nd (1968)... David Bowie and his Spiders from Mars make their 
Carnegie Hall debut. Bowie soldiers through with a well-received 
performance in spite of suffering from the flu (1972)... Devo release 
their debut album Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo (1978)... Tina 
Turner is honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (1986)... 
Billy Joel is at № 1 on
 the US album charts with River of Dreams. According to the singer, he 
chose the title because most of the songs in the collection came to him 
in his sleep. Then-wife Christie Brinkley painted the cover, later voted
 worst album cover of the year by the readers of Rolling Stone (1993)...
 Isaac Hayes, co-author of the Sam & Dave classic 'Soul Man', writes
 a letter of protest to Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole, 
demanding that the Senator stop using his song, which supporters had 
changed to 'I'm a Dole Man' (1996)... Noel Gallagher quits Oasis, saying
 that he can no longer work with his brother Liam (2009).  
Friday, 26 August 2022
August 27th
Musical 
birthdays today include Alabama founding member Jeff Cook (73), Rush guitarist Alex 
Lifeson (69), original Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock (66), Yolanda 
Adams (61), No Doubt bassist Tony Kanal (52), Bloodhound Gang guitarist 
Jimmy Pop (50) and Arcade Fire violinist Sarah Neufeld (43). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for jazz great Lester 'Pres' Young, born on this 
day in 1909... for Cajun singer Jimmy C. Newman, born in 1927... for Alice Coltrane, who would have been 85... for Daryl Dragon, who would have been 80... for Beatles
 discoverer and manager Brian Epstein, who died on this date in 1967 at 
age 32... for Stevie Ray Vaughn, who was killed in a helicopter crash 
today in 1990 at the age of 45... and for pioneering British rocker 
Vince Taylor, who left us today in 1991. 
Also
 on August 27: The 9-year-old Metropolitan Opera House in NYC is gutted 
by fire. The 1892-93 season will be cancelled while the structure is 
rebuilt along its original lines (1892)... The final 'Louisiana Hayride'
 show is broadcast. What started as a radio program and later became a 
TV show made its debut in 1948, and was transmitted live from Shreveport
 Municipal Memorial Auditorium, helping to launch the careers of 
numerous legends in country and early rock and roll (1960)... On
 the last day of a 5-day break during their current American tour, the 
Beatles visit a Byrds recording session in L.A., then in the evening 
meet Elvis for the first time, at his mansion in Beverly Hills. The 
encounter is an awkward one, leading John Lennon to conclude that the 
King's personality is "unmagnetic". Asked what it was like meeting 
Elvis, Lennon replies "It was like meeting Engelbert Humperdinck" 
(1965)... The Beach Boys' 'God Only Knows' peaks at № 2
 on the UK singles chart. In addition to being one of the first pop hits
 to use 'God' in its title, producer Brian Wilson used many unorthodox 
instruments, including the French horns used in the song's introduction.
 Paul McCartney later calls the tune 'the greatest pop song ever 
written' (1966)... In response to pressure from the British media, Bob 
Dylan agrees to a press conference at a hotel on the Isle of Wight in 
anticipation of his appearance at the festival three days hence. At one 
point, Dylan claims that his 1966 stage act "...was all for publicity. I
 don't do that kind of thing anymore". After the Q&A, which Dylan 
cuts short by standing up and announcing "I think I've answered enough 
questions", there is a brief photo session on the seafront before the 
singer is whisked back to his rehearsals with the Band (1969)... Louis 
Armstrong's ex-wife Lil, a pianist and bandleader in her own right, dies
 of a heart attack on stage whist performing 'St. Louis Blues' during a 
tribute concert in Chicago to her former husband (1971)... At Townhouse 
Studios in London, Bob Dylan finishes recording the soundtrack to 
'Hearts of Fire', the upcoming film in which he plays his first dramatic
 role since Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1986)...  Pearl Jam release 
their debut album Ten (1991)... Singer-songwriter Janis Ian marries 
her partner Patricia Snyder in Toronto. It is the second marriage for 
both (2003).  
August 26th
Musical 
birthdays today include former Hawkwind sax & winds player Nik 
Turner (82), Velvet Underground drummer Maureen Tucker (78), Valerie 
Simpson (76), film & TV score composer Mark  Snow (76), Leon Redbone
 (73), Branford Marsalis (62), Garbage lead singer Shirley Manson (56), 
The Donnas guitarist Allison Robertson (43), and rapper Big K.R.I.T. [né Justin Scott] (36). 
Shoutout to the Great Beyond for jazz vibraphonist Peter Appleyard, born on this day in 1929... for original
 Deep Purple drummer Chris Curtis, who would have been 81... for English
 composer Ralph Vaughn Williams, who died on this date in 1958.... for 
operatic soprano Lotte Lehmann, who died in 1976... for Lee Hays of The 
Weavers, who passed away in 1981... and for Laura Branigan, who left us 
today in 2004 at the age of 47. 
Thursday, 25 August 2022
August 25th
Musical 
birthdays today include Wayne Shorter (89), Gene Simmons (73), Judas 
Priest lead singer Rob Halford (71), former Yes & Asia keyboardist 
Geoff Downes (70), Elvis Costello (68), Billy Ray Cyrus (61), Def 
Leppard guitarist Viv Campbell (60), Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy (55), 
Belle & Sebastian lead singer Stuart Murdoch (54), country singer Jo
 Dee Messina (52) and Amy Macdonald (35). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for Leonard Bernstein, born on this day in 1918... 
for former Siouxie and the Banshees and PiL guitarist John McGeoch, who 
would have been 66 today... for Mia Zapata of The Gits, who would have 
been 56... for jazz legend Stan Kenton, who died on this date in 1979...
 for film score composer and longtime Neil Young sideman Jack Nitzsche, 
who left us today in 2000... and for Aaliyah, who was killed in a plane 
crash today in 2001 at the age of 22. 
Also
 on August 25: Little Eva, babysitter to the songwriting team of Gerry 
Goffin and Carole King, takes the couple's tune The Loco-motion to № 1
 on the US charts (1962)... Two female Beatles fans hire a helicopter to
 fly them over the house in Beverly Hills that the group are renting. 
They jump from a height of approximately 50 feet and land unhurt in the 
swimming pool (1965)... The Beatles depart for Bangor in North Wales by 
train for a bank holiday weekend of study and meditation with the 
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi...  The № 1
 song in the US today: Bobbie Gentry's 'Ode to Billy Joe'. The song will
 stay in the top spot for the next month... In Honolulu, Brian Wilson 
plays live with the Beach Boys for the first time in two years, as the 
group promote the recently released Heroes and Villains album (1967)... A
 party to celebrate the grand opening of Electric Ladyland Studios is 
held in NYC... Elton John makes his live debut in America as he 
opens a 17-date tour with a show at the Troubador in Los Angeles. Also 
making their live debut, in the UK, are Emerson, Lake and Palmer, who 
are performing in Plymouth (1970)... At the Las Vegas Hilton, Bobby 
Darin gives his final live performance (1973)... Bruce Springsteen 
releases Born to Run (1975)... R.E.M.
 appear at the Scorpio in Charlotte, NC. The gig is billed as 
'Charlotte's first gay new wave disco and costume party.' Admission is 
$3, with all funds raised to go to local lesbian and gay charities 
(1981)... Snoop Doggy Dogg is released on $1 million bail after being 
accused of involvement in the murder of a member of the By Yerself Gang 
in L.A. He will be acquitted of the charges in 1996 (1993)... Jimmy Page
 and Robert Plant record their MTV Unplugged set in London... Jimmy 
Buffett crashes his Grumman G-44 Wigeon seaplane on takeoff from 
Martha's Vineyard, MA. He swims away from the wreckage uninjured... An 
escaped mental patient attempts to set fire to the stage on which 
Michael Jackson is performing in Helsinki, Finland. The man splashes 
gasoline on the stage from a jerry can, but is subdued by security 
before he can light it... The marriage of Billy Joel and Christie 
Brinkley is dissolved (1994)... Bob Dylan reveals on his weekly radio 
show that he is speaking to a number of car companies about becoming the
 voice for their satellite navigation systems. The 68-year-old singer 
says he thinks that drivers might enjoy hearing his distinctive voice 
say such things as "Take a left at the next street... No,  right... You 
know what? Just go straight" (2009).  
Tuesday, 23 August 2022
August 24th
Musical 
birthdays today include Quicksilver Messenger Service founding member 
David Freiberg (84), former Bob Dylan backup singer Ronee Blakely (77), 
Average White Band saxophonist Malcom Duncan (77), Jean-Michel Jarre 
(74), Madness bassist Mark Bedford (61), former Anthrax lead singer John
 Bush (59), Phantom Planet lead guitarist Darren Robinson (44), and King Krule (28). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for bluesman and songwriter Arthur 'Big Boy' 
Crudup, born on this day in 1905... for Quicksilver messenger Service 
co-founder John Cippolino, who would have been 79... for saxophonist and
 Dizzy Gillespie sideman Don Byas, who died on this date in 1972... and 
for big band leader and pop singer Louis Prima, who left us today in 
1978. 
Also on August 24: At the Royal Albert Hall, Elgar's March №
 4 in D ~ better known to generations of US high school and college 
graduates as 'Pomp and Circumstance' ~ is performed for the first time 
(1904)...  Stevie Wonder becomes the first artist since the inception of the Billboard charts to have the № 1
 single ['Fingertips part 2', also the first live recording to reach the
 ranking] and album [Little Stevie Wonder, the 12-Year-Old Genius] in 
the same week (1963)... The Doors go into Sunset Sound Recording Studios
 in Los Angeles to begin recording their debut album (1966)... The film 
based on Arlo Guthrie's song 'Alice's Restaurant' and co-starring the 
singer goes into general release in US cinemas (1969)... Queen begin 
recording Bohemian Rhapsody at a studio in south Wales. The sessions 
will continue for 10 to 12 hours a day for 3 weeks as Freddie Mercury 
pursues the sound that he wants. There are 180 vocal overdubs in the 
finished version of the song (1975)... One week after being named an 
honorary police chief in his hometown of Luckenbach, Texas, Waylon 
Jennings is arrested for cocaine possession (1977)... Mark David Chapman
 is sentenced to 20 years to life (1981)... R.E.M.'s debut EP Chronic Town is released by IRS Records (1982)... Jerry
 Lee Lewis' fifth wife [0f 77 days], 25-year-old Shawn Stevens, is found
 dead  of a Methadone overdose at the couple's Mississippi home 
(1983)... Folkways Records releases A Vision Shared, an album-length 
tribute to Woody Guthrie (1988)... The Who perform Tommy at the 
Universal Amphitheatre in L.A. with the help of Steve Winwood, Phil 
Collins, Elton John, Patti LaBelle and Billy Idol (1989)... Oasis lead 
singer Liam Gallagher fails to turn up for the recording of the band's 
MTV Unplugged session at the Royal Albert Hall. The band go on with 
Liam's brother Noel taking over the vocals. In fact, Liam is sitting in 
the audience in disguise for the entire show (1996)... Christina 
Aguilera releases her self-title debut album (1999)... The Los Angeles 
county coroner rules Michael Jackson's death a homicide, caused by a mix
 of drugs intended to treat insomnia. Proceedings begin to indict the 
singer's personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray (2009).  
August 23rd
Musical 
birthdays today include jazz pianist & film score composer [best 
remembered for the soundtrack to Godard's 'Breathless'] Martial Solal 
(95), satirist Mark Russell (90), South African jazz singer Letta Mbulu 
(80), Rick
 Springfield (73), Survivor frontman Jimi Jamison (71), Bucks Fizz 
singer Bobby G (69), ex-Orange Juice frontman Edwin Collins (63), Stone 
Temple Pilots guitarist Dean DeLeo (60), Happy Mondays lead singer Shaun
 Ryder (59), jazz pianist Brad Mehldau (52), folk singer Eliza Carthy 
(47), Strokes frontman Julian Casablancas (44) and Lianne La Havas 
(33). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for singer-songwriter and activist Malvina 
Reynolds, born on this day in 1900... for song & dance man Gene 
Kelly, born in 1912... for Keith Moon, who would have been 76 today... 
and for jazz trumpeter and bandleader Maynard Ferguson, who left us 
today in 2006. 
Also
 on August 23: President Harry Truman's daughter Margaret, an aspiring 
classical singer, presents her first concert before a crowd of 15,000 at
 the Hollywood Bowl. Reviews are generally negative, prompting a 
famously scathing letter from dad to Paul Hume, music critic for the 
Washington Post. Hume will keep the letter framed in his office for the 
rest of his career (1947)... John Lennon marries Cynthia Powell at the 
Mount Pleasant registry office in Liverpool. He then plays  gig with the
 Beatles that night at the Riverpark Ballroom (1962)... The Rolling 
Stones make their first of 20 appearances on the pop music show Ready, 
Steady, Go! (1963)... 'She Loves You' enters the British singles charts 
at no. 1 (1963)... In Jerusalem, Stravinsky's oratorio Abraham and Isaac
 is performed for the first time. Dedicated to the people of Israel, the
 Israel Festival Orchestra play under the baton of Robert Kraft 
(1964)... The Beatles play Shea Stadium for the last time, with some 
11,000 seats unsold... At home, the group are atop the British singles 
charts again with the double A-side Yellow Submarine/Eleanor Rigby. 
According to Paul, he came up with the name of the latter song after 
working with actress Eleanor Bron in the film Help!, and from frequent 
patronage of a wine & spirits shop in Bristol called Rigby & 
Evens Ltd. (1966)...  In the course of a wild 21st birthday party during
 the Who's current US tour, Keith Moon drives a Lincoln Continental 
limousine into the swimming pool of the Holiday Inn in Flint, 
Michigan... Joni Mitchell plays live in the UK for the first time when 
she opens for folk rockers The Piccadilly Line at the Marquee Club in 
London (1967)... Joy Division lead singer Ian Curtis marries high school
 sweetheart Deborah Woodruff ~ they are 19 and 18, respectively 
(1975)... The Heatwave Festival takes place in Toronto, Talking Heads, 
the B-52s, the Pretenders and Elvis Costello are among those on the 
bill. Tickets cost $30, and with only 50,000 attending, the event loses 
over $1 million... David Bowie goes to № 1 on the UK singles chart with 'Ashes to Ashes'. The release of the song was also accompanied by a video costing some £250,000 [a record at the time], but which will be seen only sporadically until the launch of MTV the following year (1980)...
 Bob Dylan's childhood home at 2425 7th Avenue East in Hibbing, MN is 
sold to an anonymous buyer (1990)... 'The Bigger They Come', a 
previously unreleased track by Peter Frampton and Steve Marriott, is 
heard for the first time on the soundtrack of the Don Johnson vehicle 
'Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man' at the film's Los Angeles 
premiere (1991)... Queen become the first western rock group to receive 
official approval in Iran since the Khomeini revolution in 1979. Freddy 
Mercury was of Iranian ancestry, and bootleg CDs and tapes had been 
available for years (2004).  
Monday, 22 August 2022
August 22nd
Musical 
birthdays today include Ron Dante, lead singer of The Archies (77), 
former Grateful Dead vocalist Donna Godchaux (75), Beach Boys founding 
member David Marks (74), Bangles drummer Debbi Peterson (61), Tori Amos 
(59), Gary 'GZA' Grice (56), The Hold Steady frontman Craig Finn (51), Backstreet Boy Howie 
Dorough (49) and Simple Plan lead guitarist Jeff Stinco (44). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for composer Claude Debussy, born on this day in 
1862... for John Lee Hooker, born in 1917... for avant-garde composer 
Karlheinz Stockhausen, born in 1927... for Chuck Brown, 
the Godfather of Go-go, and rock 'n' roll pioneer Dale Hawkins, both of 
whom would have been 84... for Alice in Chains lead singer Layne Staley, who would have been 54... for announcer Al Dvorin, who coined the 
phrase 'Elvis has left the building' [At a Las Vegas gig in the early 
'70s, Colonel Tom Parker asked him to inform the audience that Elvis 
would not be doing an encore ~ Dvorin took the stage and announced 
"Ladies and gentlemen, Elvis has left the building ~ thank you and 
goodnight"], and who passed away on this date in 2004... for The 
Knack drummer Bruce Gary, who died today in 2006... and for Jerry Lieber
 and Nick Ashford, two great songwriters who both left us today in 2012. 
Also
 on August 22: Handel begins work on The Messiah. Working in the white 
heat of inspiration [many musical biographers and historians today 
believe that the composer was bipolar], he will finish the oratorio in 
three weeks (1741)... Elvis
 Presley begins work on his first film, Love Me Tender (1956)... The 
first television appearance of the Beatles is recorded by 
Manchester-based Granada TV, who film a lunchtime session at the Cavern 
Club [the episode will be broadcast on the 17th of October] (1962)... 
Billy J Kramer & the Dakotas are at no. 1 on the UK charts with 'Bad
 to Me', which John Lennon wrote while on holiday in Spain with Brian 
Epstein. It is the first Lennon-McCartney composition to be a hit for an
 act other than the Beatles themselves (1963)... The Supremes go to № 1 on
 the Billboard chart with 'Where Did Our Love Go?' The 
Holland-Dozier-Holland team originally offered the song to The 
Marvelettes, who rejected it as 'childish' (1964)... Jimi Hendrix is 
part of another curious lineup as he appears on the BBC's Simon Dee Show
 following Kiki Dee and Cat Stevens (1967)... Ringo storms out of the 
White Album sessions, saying that he can't take the bickering and 
tension in the group anymore and announcing that he's quitting. The news
 of the drummer's departure is kept secret, and he will rejoin the group
 on the 3rd of September. In the meantime, the remaining Beatles record 
'Back in the USSR' with John on bass and Paul on drums (1968)... The 
Beatles meet at John's Tittenhurst Park estate for what will be their 
final photo session together. Two of photographer Ethan Russell's shots 
will form the front and back of the US compilation album Hey Jude. Yoko 
Ono and a heavily pregnant Linda McCartney [she will give birth to 
daughter Mary 6 days later] also appear in some of the pictures... 
Ornette Coleman's drummer Don Blackwell teams up with Don Cherry for the
 first time, as the two begin the sessions that will produce the album 
Mu (1969)... Creedence Clearwater Revival start a 9-week run at the top 
of the US album charts with Cosmo's Factory. The name of the album came 
from the Berkeley, CA warehouse where the band rehearsed ~ drummer Doug 
Clifford, nicknamed Cosmo, had begun calling the space 'the Factory' 
owing to John Fogerty's insistence on long daily practices (1970)... Sid
 Vicious makes his last live stage appearance, at London's Electric 
Ballroom with Rat Scabies of the Damned, former Sex Pistol Glen Matlock 
and Nancy Spungen. In the audience are Elvis Costello, Debbie Harry and 
Joan Jett, among others (1978)... In through the Out Door, Led 
Zeppelin's final album with all 4 original members, is released. 'Fool 
in the Rain' is issued simultaneously as the first single from the album
 (1979)... Levon Helm discovers the perils of playing the Stone Pony in 
Asbury Park, NJ, when Bruce Springsteen spontaneously jumps on stage 
after the opening riff of 'Up on Cripple Creek' and commandeers lead 
vocals (1987)... Sting and longtime girlfriend Trudie Styler are 
married. The band at the reception is The Troggs, who will be joined by 
the former Policemen themselves for two numbers (1992)... At a Lilith 
Fair stop in Toronto, Prince appears during Sheryl Crow's set to jam on 
'Every Day Is a Winding Road' (1999)... The Times of London publishes an
 open letter from Pink to Prince William urging the future monarch to 
stop hunting on behalf of furry animals everywhere (2003).  
Sunday, 21 August 2022
August 21st
Musical 
birthdays today include former Statler Brothers bass 
vocalist Harold Reid (83), Jackie DeShannon (78), ex-Journey drummer 
Steve Smith (68), System of a Down frontman Serj Tankian (55), Prodigy 
founder Liam Howlett (51), Kelis Rogers AKA Kelis (43), and former 
Burning the Masses lead singer Cameron 'Big Chocolate' Argon (32). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for Count Basie, born on this day in 1904... for 
bebop trumpeter Art Farmer, born in 1928... for Kenny Rogers, who would have been 83 today... for Joe Strummer, 
who would have been 70... for Robert Moog, inventor of the synthesizer 
that bears his name, who died on this date in 2005... for Nashville 
session drummer Buddy Harman, who played on Patsy Cline's 'Crazy' [see 
below] and Tammy Wynette's 'Stand by Your Man', and passed away in 
2008... and for Don Everly, who left us one year ago today.  
 Also
 on August 21: The US Marine Corps Band gives its first performance for 
the general public in Washington, DC (1800)... Motown release The 
Marvelettes' 'Please Mr. Postman', which will become the label's first № 1 single (1961)... Patsy
 Cline records the classic Willie Nelson song, ‘Crazy’. Cline is still 
on crutches after going through a car windshield in a head-on collision 
two months earlier and has difficulty reaching the high notes of the 
song at first due to her broken ribs. 'Crazy'will spend 21 weeks on the 
charts and eventually become one of her signature tunes.(1962)... During
 today's Beatles concert in Las Vegas, the band stop the show twice to 
plead with the fans to stop pelting the stage with jellybeans. This has 
become a regular occurrence at the group's gigs ever since they revealed
 that the spherical snacks are among their favourite treats (1964)... The Rolling Stones top the US album charts for the first time with their LP 'Out of Our Heads' (1965)... On
 their final US tour, the Beatles perform in two cities because of a 
cancellation due to rain the previous day. First they play at Crosley 
Field in Cincinnati. They then fly to St. Louis for a concert at Busch 
Stadium, where they perform under a tarpaulin due to a downpour. Paul 
McCartney will later say it was this gig that convinced him that the 
Beatles should stop performing live (1966)... The Doors go into the 
studio in Los Angeles to begin recording their second album (1967)... 
Linda Ronstadt makes her Broadway debut in a production of Gilbert &
 Sullivan's 'Pirates of Penzance' (1980)... Bono marries longtime 
girlfriend Alison Stewart at All Saints Church in the Dublin suburb of 
Raheny. Adam Clayton is best man (1982)... Ramones
 guitarist Johnny Ramone has a four-hour neurosurgical operation at 
Bellevue Hospital after being found unconscious on a Lower East Side 
street where he had been involved in a brawl (1983)... In Columbus, OH, 
Bob Dylan plays the 600th show on his so-called 'Never-ending Tour' 
(1994)... David Byrne's lawyers file for an injunction to keep the other
 members of the band from touring as The Heads. The lawsuit will be 
settled out of court (1996)... Oasis'
 third album 'Be Here Now', becomes one of the fastest selling albums 
ever, shifting over 350,000 units on the first day of release (1997)... A Beatles fan in America foils three men breaking into a shop in Liverpool, England. The man, who had logged onto a site streaming live footage of Mathew Street and a forthcoming Beatles festival, saw
 the men smash the window of a shop and climb inside. He phoned 
Merseyside Police, who arrested the perpetrators at the scene (2006)... Paedophile
 and ex-pop star Gary Glitter returns to Thailand after being refused 
entry to Hong Kong. Chinese authorities inform the UK Foreign Office 
that they barred Glitter from entry. He was earlier deported from 
Vietnam after spending almost three years in jail for sexually abusing 
two pre-teen girls. He flew to Hong Kong from Bangkok after refusing to 
fly to the UK, and had made a plea for medical treatment after saying he
 was suffering a heart attack (2008). 
Saturday, 20 August 2022
August 20th
Shoutout to the Great Beyond for jazz legend Jack Teagarden, born on this day in 1905... for country singer Jim Reeves, born in 1923... for original Flying Burrito Brother and country rock pioneer Sneaky Pete Kleinow, who would have been 88... for The Seeds frontman Sky Saxon, who would have been 84... for Isaac Hayes, who would have been 80... for Thin Lizzy frontman Phil Lynott, who would have been 73... for The Knack lead singer Doug Fieger, who would have been 70... for Joe Dassin, who died today in 1980... and for Bread member and widely employed session man Larry Knechtel, who left us today in 2009.
Also on August 20: Tchaikovsky conducts the orchestra in the premiere performance of his 1812 Overture in Moscow (1882)... Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham and his partner found Immediate Records. The launch party is attended by Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton and Nico, among others. The new label's first release will be the McCoys' 'Hang on Sloopy', and will go on to become the home of the Small Faces and the Nice, as well as the place where Jimmy Page will serve his apprenticeship as a producer... The Rolling Stones release (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction in the UK, some 2 1/2 months after its American debut (1965)... Dr. David R. Lipscomb, director of the audio lab at the University of Tennessee, reports that guinea pigs subjected over a 3-month period to 90 hours of rock music recorded at 120 decibels at a Knoxville club have suffered acute inner ear damage. NYC disco owner Steve Paul is quoted as saying "In the event that we notice a rise in guinea pig attendance at The Scene, we will bear their comfort in mind" (1968)... Frank Zappa announces that he has disbanded The Mothers of Invention. he will form a new lineup the following year... After finishing 'I Want You (She's So Heavy)', The Beatles begin working on the running order for the Abbey Road album. The medley is initially slated for side 1 of the record, and Octopus' Garden and Oh! Darling are in reverse order from the final version. This day also marks the last time all four Beatles are together in the Abbey Road studio (1969)... The Stones release the single 'Angie' (1973)... Bob Dylan visits Michael Bloomfield at the guitarist's home in Marin Co., CA to play him some of the material from the yet-to-be-recorded Blood on the Tracks. He is considering using Bloomfield on some of the sessions. The visit does not go well, however, and the atmosphere is tense as Dylan runs through song after song without a pause. Bloomfield is unable to follow the chord changes, and Dylan seems uninterested in helping him learn the songs (1974)... Dylan releases Slow Train Coming, his first album following his conversion to Christianity (1979)... Def Leppard drummer Rick Allen makes his first live appearance with the band since losing his left arm in a car accident (1986)... A doctor in Phoenix, AZ files a $35 million lawsuit against the Southwest Bell phone company. He alleges that his wife died because he could not get through to 911, all lines being jammed by callers trying to purchase Garth Brooks concert tickets (1992)... Madame Tussaud's opens an interactive Pop Idol display with a speaking waxwork of judge Simon Cowell. The waxwork makes such comments as "That was extraordinary... Unfortunately, I mean extraordinarily bad", and "Thank you, goodbye, and that was the worst performance I have ever heard" (2003)... A man in Stoke-on-Trent, England names Bryan Adams as the 'other man' in a divorce action after years spent trying to cope with his wife's obsession with the singer. Rob Tinsley says that he has been living for years with a life-size cutout standing at the foot of the marital bed, and posters of the Canadian rocker covering most of the wall surfaces of the house (2004).
Friday, 19 August 2022
August 19th
Musical 
birthdays today Billy J. 
Kramer (79), country singer Eddy Raven (78), Ian Gillan (77), Queen 
bassist John Deacon (71), Europe lead singer Joey Tempest [né Rolf 
Larsson (59), country singer Lee Ann Womack (55), rapper Fat Joe [né 
Joseph Cartagena] (52), stage musical singer Darius Campbell (41), and 
rapper Romeo Miller [AKA Romeo] (33). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for jazz pianist & longtime Billie Holiday 
accompanist Jimmy Rowles, born on this day in 1918... for Ginger Baker, who would have been 83 today... for Johnny Nash, who would have been 82... for rapper Nate 
Dogg [né Nathaniel Hale], who would have been 53... for Blind 
Willie McTell, who died on this date in 1959... for rockabilly pioneer 
Dorsey Burnette, who passed away in
 1979... for soul singer Betty Everett, who died in 2001... and for 
R&B singer Donna Hightower and jazz pianist & Art Blakey sideman
 Cedar Walton, both of whom left us ftoday in 2014. 
 
Also
 on August 19: Monteverdi becomes musical director of St. Mark's in 
Venice (1613)... In Washington, D.C., West Side Story premieres in its 
pre-Broadway run (1957)... The Beatles kick off their latest North 
American tour at the Cow Palace in San Francisco with The Righteous 
Brother, The Exciters and Jackie DeShannon as opening acts (1964)... 'All
 You Need is Love' goes to the top of the US charts, giving The Beatles 
their 14th stateside № 1  (1967)... After 58 episodes, The Monkees' TV 
show airs on NBC for the last time (1968)... Joni Mitchell, Steven 
Stills, David Crosby and Jefferson Airplane all appear on the Dick 
Cavett Show from Television Center in NYC... Miles Davis begins 
three days of sessions that will yield the landmark fusion album Bitches
 Brew (1969)... Kris Kristofferson and Rita Coolidge are married in 
Malibu, CA. The couple will divorce in 1979 (1973)... The Three Degrees 
score their only UK № 1 with When Will I See You Again. The girl group
 were reportedly Prince Charles' favourite band of the '70s (1975)... 
The Sex Pistols began an incognito tour under the name The Spots [an 
acronym for Sex Pistols on Tour Secretly] (1977)... On the 100th 
anniversary of the introduction of the first jukebox, Patsy Cline's 
'Crazy' and Elvis Presley's 'Hound Dog' are announced by the Record 
Industry of America as the most selected songs of the 20th century 
(1988)... At the Tanglewood Festival, Leonard Bernstein makes his final 
concert appearance, conducting the Boston Symphony in a performance of Beethoven's 7th 
(1990)... James Brown, a man with a history of domestic violence, offers
 to turn over all of the proceeds from a Montauk, NY concert to a local 
shelter for battered women, but his contribution is refused (1996)... 
The Fleetwood Mac reunion album The Dance is released (1997)... A 
life-size bronze statue of Phil Lynott is unveiled on Harry Street in 
Dublin. The ceremony is attended by the singer/guitarist's former Thin 
Lizzy bandmates Gary Moore, Brian Robertson and Scott Gorham (2005). 
Thursday, 18 August 2022
August 18th
Musical 
birthdays today include Hugues Aufray [known in France for his 
translations and performances of Bob Dylan's songs] (93), Northern Irish
 singer Ronnie Carroll [the only performer to date to have represented 
the UK in the Eurovision song contest two years in a row] (86), Barbara 
Harris, formerly of The Toys (77), Split Enz bassist Nigel Griggs (73), 
ex-Foreigner drummer Dennis Elliott (72), Men at Work lead guitarist Ron
 Strykert (65), House of Pain frontman Erik 'Everlast' Schrody (53) and 
Arcade Fire multi-instrumentalist Régine Chassagne (45). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for composer Antonio Salieri, born on this date in 
1750... for folk singer and Woody Guthrie collaborator Cisco Houston, 
born in 1918... for pioneering Dixieland jazz trumpeter Paul Mares, who 
died on this date in 1949... for Searchers bassist Tony Jackson, who 
passed away in 2003... for film score composer Elmer Bernstein, who died
 in 2004... and for Scott McKenzie [best remembered for 'San Francisco 
(Be Sure to Wear Some Flowers in Your Hair')], who left us today in 2012.  
Also
 on August 18th: As this year's Mozart Festival in Salzburg gets 
underway, Mahler conducts the orchestra in a performance of The Marriage
 of Figaro. Richard Strauss is billed to conduct Cosi Fan Tutte
 tomorrow
 (1906)... At Columbia's 30th St. Studio in NYC, Dave Brubeck and 
sidemen finish the sessions for the Time Out album (1959)... Ringo Starr
 makes his debut with the Beatles at the Horticultural Society Dance at 
Birkenhead, Merseyside, after a single 2-hour rehearsal with the band 
(1962)... Nearly 10,000 frenzied fans meet the Beatles as they arrive in
 America to begin another tour. The band are taken into a fenced-off 
enclosure so that photographers can take pictures of them. As fans press
 against the barrier, it comes crashing down just seconds after the Fab 
Four have managed to make their escape (1964)... Mick Jagger is 
accidentally shot in the hand during the filming of the movie 'Ned 
Kelly' in Australia. The film has been dogged by problems since the 
start of production, including the attempted suicide by leading lady 
Marianne Faithfull shortly after arrival in Sydney (1969)... Benny 
Goodman and Gene Krupa play together in public for the last time, in a 
concert at the New School, NYC... Jethro Tull have the № 1 album in the US with A Passion Play (1973)... Patrick
 Moraz offcially replaces Rick Wakeman on keyboards in Yes (1974)... The
 Police make their live debut at Rebecca's in Birmingham, England 
(1977)... The Who release Who Are You, their final album with Keith Moon
 (1978)... Nick Lowe marries Johnny Cash's stepdaughter Carlene in Los 
Angeles (1979)... The city of Liverpool names four streets after the Fab
 Four: John Lennon Drive, Paul McCartney Way, George Harrison Close and 
Ringo Starr Drive (1982)... R.E.M. play before their biggest audience to
 date as they open for the Police at Shea Stadium. Following the Athens,
 GA quartet on the bill are Joan Jett & the Blackhearts (1983)... 
Bon Jovi release the album Slippery When Wet, which will go on to sell 
more than 28 million copies worldwide (1986)... Kurt Cobain becomes a 
father when his wife Courtney Love gives birth to their daughter Frances
 (1992)... Kanye West calls for an end to homophobia in the hip-hop 
community during an MTV interview (2005)... French perfume makers Etat 
Libre d'Orange announce that they have teamed up with The Sex Pistols to
 bottle the scent of the punk era by launching the band's first 
fragrance. The press kit says: 'To wear this scent, you must resist 
tradition, fight conformity, and disregard aromatic conventions' 
(2010).  
Wednesday, 17 August 2022
August 17th
Musical birthdays today include bossa nova pianist & composer João Donato (88), Box Tops guitarist Gary Talley (75), Dexys Midnight Runners frontman
 Kevin Rowland (69), Belinda Carlisle (64), ex-Lone Justice lead singer 
Maria McKee (58), Black Crowes drummer Steve Gorman (56), jazz singer 
Maysa Leak (55), Donnie Wahlberg (53), and Cage the Elephant lead singer
 Matthew Shultz (39). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for jazz and popular singer Georgia Gibbs, born on 
this day in 1919... for Native American activist and country singer 
Floyd Red Crow Westerman, and Bahamian
 calypso singer Ronnie Butler, both of whom would have been 85 today... for guitarist 
and longtime Howlin' Wolf sideman Luther Allison, who would have been 82... for Boston drummer Sib Hashian, who would have been 73... for lyricist Ira Gershwin, who died on this date in 1983... and 
for Pearl Bailey, who left us today in 1990. 
Also on August 17: The London newspaper The General Advertiser reports
 that Handel is now blind (1752)... In Bayreuth, the first complete 
performance of Wagner's Ring concludes with Die Götterdämmerung 
[Twilight of the Gods] (1876)...  Elvis Presley releases his first № 1 hit, 'I Forgot to Remember to Forget', with a version of Mystery 
Train on the B side (1955)... Columbia releases Miles Davis' Kind of Blue 
(1959)... The Beatles begin their first Hamburg engagement, at the Indra
 Club, where they are booked for 48 nights (1960)... Glasgow council in 
Scotland announces that all men with Beatles moptops will be required to
 wear bathing caps in public swimming pools henceforth, as hair from 
'Beatle-cuts' is clogging the filters (1964)... The Byrds are forced to 
cancel a concert on their UK tour when only 250 out of 4,000 tickets to 
their show at The Guildhall, Portsmouth are sold (1965)... The Doors 
have the № 1 album in the US with Waiting for the Sun. The top spot on
 the singles chart is held by the Rascals with 'People Got to Be Free' 
(1968)... The final day of the Woodstock Festival is held on Max 
Yasgur's farm (1969)... Eric Clapton starts a four week-run at №
 1 on the US album chart with 461 Ocean Boulevard. The house featured on
 the album cover is 461 Ocean Blvd. in the Miami, FL suburb of Golden 
Beach, where Clapton lived while making the record (1974)... Bob
 Dylan is interviewed by Neil Hickey of TV Guide for a cover story the 
magazine is doing to promote the singer's upcoming 'Hard Rain' 
television special. Dylan is generally forthcoming, though he bristles 
slightly when the journalist asks him how he imagines God, replying "How 
come no one ever asks Kris Kristofferson questions like that?" (1976)...
 A Run DMC concert in Long Beach, CA becomes a battleground for two 
rival gangs, with 42 injuries resulting (1986)... Nirvana shoot the 
video for 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' in a Culver City, CA studio for 
under $50,000, and using Nirvana fans recruited through classified ads 
as audience members (1991)... Jackson Browne files a copyright 
infringement lawsuit against Republican Party US presidential candidate 
John McCain for using the song 'Running on Empty' in a campaign ad 
without the singer's permission. Browne is seeking $75,000 in damages 
(2008)... Three members of the Russian punk group Pussy Riot are 
sentenced to two years' imprisonment after they staged a performance 
inside Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Savior in a protest directed at 
the open support of the Orthodox Church patriarchate for Vladimir Putin 
during his recent election campaign (2012).   
Tuesday, 16 August 2022
August 16th
Musical 
birthdays today include outlaw country singer Billy Joe Shaver (84), 
Golden Earring frontman Barry Hay (75), Stooges drummer Scott 'Rock 
Action' Asheton (73), Tubes founding member Bill Spooner (73), INXS 
guitarist Tim Farriss (65), Madonna (64), The Chicks 
multi-instrumentalist Emily Strayer (50), and singer-songwriter Vanessa Carlton (42).
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for Nadia Boulanger, the first woman to conduct a 
major metropolitan orchestra [the Boston Symphony], born on this date in
 1887... for jazz pianist Bill Evans, born in 1930... for Soft 
Machine guitarist Kevin Ayers, who would have been 78... for bluesman 
Robert Johnson, who died today in 1938 at the age of 28... for Elvis 
Presley, who died in 1977... and for Alan Caddy, lead guitarist
 of The Tornadoes [their 1962 hit 'Telstar' was the first single by a 
British act to hit the top 5 on the US Billboard chart], who passed away
 today in 2000... and for Aretha Franklin, who left us two years ago today. 
Also
 on August 16: Beethoven completes his Piano sonata in e minor, op. 90 
(1814)... At the Van Gelder Studio in Hackensack, NJ, John Coltrane and 
sideman record the tracks that the Prestige label will release as the 
album Lush Life after the saxophonist's departure for Atlantic in 1961 
(1957)...  12-year-old Little Stevie Wonder releases his first Motown 
single, entitled 'I Call It Pretty Music (But the Old People Call It the
 Blues)'. The session musicians include Marvin Gaye on drums... 
Brian Epstein informs Pete Best of his firing, but still asks the 
drummer to play with the Beatles tonight at the Riverpark Ballroom in 
Chester. When Best refuses, Johnny Hutchinson of local act The Big Three
 takes his place in the drummer's chair (1962)... The Byrds play the 
Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco for the first time... The Monkees 
release their first single, 'Last Train to Clarksville' (1966)... The 
Jackson Five make their debut before the general public, opening for The
 Supremes at the Great Western Forum in Los Angeles... The Beatles spend
 most of the day in the studio working on 'While My Guitar Gently 
Weeps', going through 14 takes... Bruce Springsteen's new band Earth 
make their debut at the Off Broad Street Coffee House in Red Bank, NJ ~ 
admission is 75 cents. The group will last for six months before 
breaking up (1968)... On day two of Woodstock, Hippie leader Abbie 
Hoffmann is bodily thrown offstage by Pete Townshend during The Who's 
set. Townshend will later say that he didn't recognize the activist at 
the time (1969)... 'Lola' by The Kinks reaches №
 2 on the UK singles chart, its peak position. It is kept out of the top
 spot only by Elvis Presley's 'The Wonder of You', the singer 16th 
British № 1 (1970)...  The
 Ramones play their first public gig, at a recently opened club on the 
Bowery called CBGB (1974)... Peter Gabriel announces that he is leaving 
Genesis. The group will audition more than 400 singers over the next 18 
months before promoting from within, deciding that long-time drummer 
Phil Collins could front the band (1975)... The Knack's 'My Sharona' is 
awarded a gold record (1979)... Paul Simon marries Carrie Fisher 
(1983)... Madonna marries Sean Penn (1985)... On the 20th anniversary of
 Elvis Presley's death, over 30,000 fans descend on Memphis, TN to 
complete a 10-minute mourning circuit circling the King's grave. A poll 
shows that approximately a third of those present are keeping an eye out
 for Elvis in the crowd (1997)... Madonna's 47th birthday turns less 
than happy when the singer suffers three cracked ribs, a broken 
collarbone and a fractured hand in a horse-riding accident on her 
country estate in Wiltshire. The singer is treated at hospital in 
Salisbury (2005).  
Monday, 15 August 2022
August 15th
Shoutout to the Great Beyond for Leon Theremin, inventor of the eerie-sounding instrument that bears his name, and who was born on this date in 1896... for Joe Garland, composer of the standards 'In the Mood' and 'Leapfrog', born in 1907... for Rose Marie, born in 1923... for jazz pianist Oscar Peterson, born in 1925... for Bill Pinkney, the last surviving member of the original Drifters, born on the same day... for Bobby Helms of 'Jingle Bell Rock' fame, who would have been 88... for coloratura soprano Rita Shane, who would have been 86... for legendary producer Jerry Wexler, who died on this date in 2008... and for the great Brazilian choro flautist Altamiro Carrilho, who left us today in 2014.
Also on August 15: Elvis Presley attends a meeting in Memphis with his current manager Bob Neal, his father Vernon and Colonel Tom Parker [not a real colonel at all, but rather a Dutch immigrant named Andreas Cornelius van Kujik, whose honorary title was given to him in 1948 by the governor of Louisiana]. Elvis signs a contract naming the latter a 'special advisor' and giving him control over virtually every aspect of the singer's career (1955)... Elvis scores his first post-US Army US № 1 with 'It's Now or Never' (1960)... The Kinks go to № 1 in the UK for the first time with 'You Really Got Me'; topping the US chart is Dean Martin's 'Everybody Loves Somebody' (1964)... The Beatles set new world record for largest attendance at a pop concert when they play before 55,600 screaming fans at Shea Stadium. Bob Dylan visits them at their hotel after the show (1965)... Five members of the Ku Klux Klan led by the Grand Wizard of Maryland picket the Beatles concert at DC Stadium (1966)... The three-day Woodstock Music & Art Fair ['3 Days of Peace & Music'] opens on Max Yasgur's farm near Bethel, NY (1969)... George Harrison publishes his first book, 'I Me Mine', a collection of song lyrics and spiritual reflections (1980)... Diana Ross & Lionel Richie begin a nine-week run at the top of the US singles chart with 'Endless Love' (1981)... Paul Simon plays a free concert in NYC's Central Park for an estimated audience of three-quarters of a million (1991)... Boyz II Men begin their record-setting 13-week run at the top of the US charts with 'End of the Road' (1992)... Boyzone become the first Irish act to have four no. 1 singles in the UK, as 'No Matter What' tops the charts. They also become the first band in British chart history to hit the top 5 with their first 12 releases (1998)... David Bowie and his wife Iman welcome their first child, a daughter named Alexandria Zahra Jones (2000)... A memorial to John Lennon is unveiled in the remote Scottish village of Durness, where the future Beatle spent his summer holidays from the ages of 7 to 15. The lyrics to 'In My Life' are engraved on three stones (2002)... George Michael/Wham! superfan Brian Turner of Newcastle is ordered by a judge to pay a fine of £200 and further court costs of £215 for disturbing the peace. Neighbours brought the action against him, calling the police after Turner played 'Last Christmas' more than a hundred times in a row in the middle of the night at peak volume (2007)... U2's first gig on their current tour breaks the attendance record for a concert at Wembley Stadium, as more than 88,000 attend the show (2009).
Sunday, 14 August 2022
August 14th
Musical
 birthdays today include 
David Crosby (81), country singer Connie Smith (81), former bassist for Sly and the Family Stone Larry Graham (76), ex-Steeleye Span lead 
singer Maddy Prior (75), Replacements guitarist Slim Dunlap (71), Sarah 
Brightman (62), Charlatans guitarist Mark Collins (56), Scissor Sisters 
lead singer Ana Matronic (48), and rapper & producer Black Milk [né Curtis Cross] (39). 
Shoutout to the Great Beyond for pioneering American jazz violinist Stuff Smith, born on this date in 1900...  for avant-garde composer & acoustician Pierre Schaeffer, born in 1910... for  jazz singer & pianist Buddy Greco, born in 1926... for
 Augustus Montague Toplady, composer of the hymn 'Rock of Ages', who 
died on this day in 1778... for bluesman Big Bill Broonzy, who passed 
away in 1958... for singer Johnny Burnette (best known for the top 10 
hit 'You're Sixteen'), who was killed in a boating accident in 
California at the age of 30 today in 1964... for guitarist Roy Buchanan,
 who hanged himself in his cell in the Fairfax Co., VA jail with his own
 shirt on this day after being arrested for public drunkenness. Buchanan
 released 15 solo albums and was a sometime collaborator with Jeff Beck 
(1988)... for The Platters' lead singer Tony Williams, who died in 
1992... and for Lita Roza, the first woman to have a № 1 single in the UK [with a version of 'How Much Is That Doggie in the Window' in 1953] who left us today in 2009.
Also on August 14: The first performance of Wagner's Ring Cycle in its entirety in one location begins at the Bayreuth Festival (1876)... Unhappy
 with Pete Best's role in The Beatles, Brian Epstein and the other three
 members of the group decide to sack him. John Lennon places a call to 
Ringo Starr, nearing the end of a 3-month engagement with Rory Storm 
& the Hurricanes at a Butlin's Holiday Camp in north Wales, to offer
 him the job. Best will play his final show with the group at the Cavern
 tomorrow night (1962)... Sonny and Cher top the US charts with 'I Got 
You, Babe'. Bono is said to have been inspired to write the song by Bob 
Dylan's use of the term of endearment in 'It Ain't Me, Babe' (1965)... 
16-year-old Bruce Springsteen plays his first public show, as lead 
singer of The Castiles at a gig at the Surf 'n' See Club in Seaside, 
NJ. Also on the bill are Little Anthony and the Imperials, with lead 
guitarist Steve van Zandt (1966)... The № 1
 song in the UK today is 'Fire' by The Crazy World of Arthur Brown. 
Brown frequently performs the number live whilst wearing a top hat set 
alight (1968)... The 3-day Yorkshire Folk, Blues and Jazz festival opens
 in Calderton, W. Yorks. Atomic Rooster, Yes, The Kinks and Elton John 
are among those performing. Headliners Pink Floyd will miss their spot 
on the first day because they are fogbound at Orly Airport in Paris, and
 will not appear (1970)... In a peculiar case of life imitating art, a 
woman calling herself Billie jean Jackson files a $150 million paternity
 suit in a Los Angeles court, naming Michael Jackson (1987)... Foo 
Fighters make their US network television debut, performing 'This Is a 
Call' on the Late Show with David Letterman (1995)... An oil-stained 
pizza menu signed by John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison 
goes for $48,000 to an anonymous collector bidding by phone at an 
auction in Melbourne, Australia. Ringo Starr, suffering from laryngitis,
 was not on the tour (2001)... Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts 
announces that he is being treated for throat cancer (2004)... Boy 
George is spotted sweeping streets on the Lower East Side of Manhattan 
as part of a five-day community service sentence. He will be moved into a
 fenced-off area only 30 minutes later after being mobbed by the media 
and fans. The 45-year-old former Culture Club frontman was found guilty 
earlier in the year of cocaine possession and filing a false burglary 
report (2006). 
Saturday, 13 August 2022
August 13th
Musical 
birthdays today include R&B keyboardist Dave 'Baby' Cortez (84), 
operatic soprano Sheila Armstrong (80), Sha Na Na vocalist Scott Powell 
(74), former Undertones lead singer Feargal Sharkey (64), his bandmate, 
bassist Michael Bradley (63), Danny Bonaduce [of the Partridge Family] 
(63), Tal Bachman (54), The Bravery guitarist Sam Endicott (48), and 
singer-songwriter James Morrison (38). 
Shoutout
 to the Great Beyond for composer John Ireland, born on this date in 
1879... for Anna Mae Winburn, leader of the Sweethearts of Rhythm, the 
first known racially integrated all-female orchestra in jazz history, 
and who was born today in 1914... for British jazz pioneer George 
Shearing, born in 1919... for Don Ho, born in 1930...
for Dan Fogelberg, who would have been 71... for French composer Jules 
Massenet, who died on this date in 1912... for saxophonist Curtis Ousley
 AKA King Curtis [who played on the Coasters' 'Yakety Yak' as well as 
sessions for John Lennon], fatally stabbed by a vagrant on the steps of 
his Harlem brownstone today in 1971... and for singer and electric 
guitar pioneer Les Paul, who left us today in 2009. 
Also on August 
13: Handel departs Dublin for England to organize the London premiere of
 The Messiah (1742)... The original version of 'Hound Dog' is recorded 
by Willie Mae 'Big Mama' Thornton (1952)... Gerry Mulligan plays his 
first session with Thelonious Monk (1957)... Manfred Mann hits № 1
 in the UK with 'Do Wah Diddy Diddy'. The song was originally recorded 
in 1963 by the American girl group The Exciters... The Supremes 
release 'Baby Love'. The song will go on to be the group's first UK № 1,
 and the second of five straight chart-toppers stateside [where it would be the № 1 song the day I was born - editor's note] (1964)... 
Jefferson Airplane make their live debut at San Francisco's Matrix Club.
 The cover shot of the group's biggest selling album, Surrealistic 
Pillow, was taken at the Matrix after a 1967 show there... The Beatles 
arrive at JFK airport for their second extended US visit. John Lennon, 
who has already grown disenchanted with the touring process, will take 
to screaming off-mike obscenities at the audiences (1965)... Starting a 
3-week run at the top of the US charts today: 'Summer in the City' by 
the Lovin' Spoonful (1966)... Fleetwood Mac make their live debut at the
 British National Jazz and Blues Festival at Windsor. Also on the bill 
are Jeff Beck, Cream, Donovan and Pink Floyd (1967)... Buffalo 
Springfield release their final album, Last Time around (1968)... John 
Lennon flies from Heathrow to JFK ~ the former Beatle will never set 
foot on British soil again (1971)... Pink Floyd play their first ever 
Australian date when they appear at Melbourne's Festival Hall. The 
group, who just completed an Asian tour, conclude their only visit Down 
Under with a show in Sydney two days later (1971)... Two years after his
 death, Duke Ellington's bllet Three Black Kings has its premiere at 
Lincoln Center, with the Duke's son Mercer conducting the orchestra 
(1976)... Yes score their second UK № 1 album
 with Going for the One, which also marks the return of keyboard 
virtuoso Rick Wakeman, who had quit the band in 1974 because of creative
 differences.. Bachman Turner Overdrive announce that they are 
disbanding (1977)... On the 25th anniversary of the original festival, 
Woodstock '94 is held in Saugerties, New York. Headliners include Green 
Day, Nine Inch Nails, Aerosmith and the Red Hot Chili Peppers (1994)... 
Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall's marriage is annulled by the High Court in 
London, forestalling what had been expected to be a lengthy court battle
 (1999)... Adam Ant pleads guilty to endangering patrons at the Prince 
of Wales pub in London earlier this year. The former '80s pop star 
returned to the establishment with a starter's pistol and discharged it 
after being refused entry. He also threw the alternator from his car 
engine through a window, showering several customers with broken glass 
(2002).  
Friday, 12 August 2022
August 12th
Musical 
birthdays today include Mark Knopfler (73), August Darnell, AKA Kid 
Creole (72), Pat Metheny (68), Culture Club multi-instrumentalist Roy 
Hay (61), Felt and Go Kart Mozart frontman Lawrence Hawyward (60), 
Anthony 'Sir Mix-a-Lot' Ray (59), Tanita Tikaram (53), hip hop MC Del 
the Funky Homosapien [né Terence Delvon Jones] (50), ex-Murderdolls frontman Wednesday 13 [né Joseph Poole] (46), and former Sweetbox lead singer Jade Villalon (42). 
Shoutouts
 to the Great Beyond for country legend Porter Waggoner, born on this 
day in 1928... for Buck Owens, born in 1930... for Czech composer Leoš Janáček, who died on this date in 1928... and for American avant-garde composer John Cage, who left us today in 1992.
Also
 on August 12: Thomas Edison receives the patent for the phonograph 
(1877)... A live concert is broadcast on radio for the first time, as 
WJZ in NYC transmits the New York Philharmonic playing a program of 
Mendelssohn, Brahms, Gluck and Saint-Saens from the Lewisohn Stadium as 
part of the orchestra's summer series (1922)... Art Kane photographs 57 
notable jazz musicians in the black and white group portrait 'A Great 
Day in Harlem' in front of a brownstone at 17 E. 126th St. in Manhattan 
(1958)... Pete Best auditions to become the Silver Beatles drummer. He 
passes and is asked if he would be available to accompany the band to 
Hamburg for its next set of dates. Before departing, the group will 
shorten its name to The Beatles (1960)... A Hard Day's Night opens in 
America on general release to rave reviews (1964)... Jimmy Page, Robert 
Plant, John Paul Jones and John Bonham play together for the first time 
when they rehearse at a Gerrard Street studio in London's West End. The 
first song they play is 'The Train Kept A-rollin'. They also work up an 
early version of Dazed and Confused called 'I'm Confused'. At this 
point, the group are still known as The New Yardbirds, a name which they
 will keep through the first few live dates before changing to Led 
Zeppelin next month (1968)... No. 1 on the UK singles chart today is 
Alice Cooper's School's out for the Summer (1972)... Joni Mitchell, Neil
 Young and The Eagles are on the bill at the Corral Club in Topanga 
Canyon (1973)... The Commodores hit no. 1 on the US and UK singles 
charts simultaneously with Three Times a Lady. Reportedly, Lionel 
Ritchie came up with the tune first, and then was unable to decide 
whether he wanted to write a lyric to his wife, his mother or his 
grandmother ~ hence the 'Once, twice, three times a lady' written to one
 unnamed woman (1978)...  The two day Moscow Music Peace Festival is 
held at the city's Lenin Stadium. Western headliners include Motley 
Crue, Ozzy Osbourne, The Scorpions and Bon Jovi. For the first time, 
fans are permitted to stand up and dance at a stadium rock concert in 
the USSR ~ previously, all concertgoers were required to remain seated 
(1989)... A mass wake is held for Jerry Garcia in San Francisco's Golden
 Gate Park (1995)... Alanis Morissette plays the Darien Lake Performing 
Arts center in Buffalo, NY with Radiohead as her opening act (1996)... 
Members of the NY state chapter of the National Organization for Women 
demonstrate outside the office of Woodstock '99 promoter John Scher to 
protest the violence against women that allegedly occurred at the July 
23-25 event. Several rapes and numerous incidents of sexual harassment 
and assault were reported after the event... A record-setting 15-night 
sold out stand by Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band at the 
Continental Airlines Arena in E. Rutherford, NJ comes to a close 
(1999)... eBay auctioneer Anthony DeFontes says that he will sell one of
 Elvis' teeth separately, after the molar combined with a lock of the 
King's hair fails to attract a high enough initial bid (2003).  
Thursday, 11 August 2022
August 11th