Musical
birthdays today include Julie Andrews (87), Cajun accordion master Marc
Savoy (82), Herb Fame [of Peaches & Herb] (80), ex-Sly & the
Family Stone saxophonist Jerry Martini (79), former Wishbone Ash bassist
Martin Turner (75), April Wine guitarist Brian Greenway (71), OMD
keyboardist Martin Cooper (64), Youssou N'Dour (63), Better Than Ezra
frontman Kevin Griffin (55), Suede guitarist Richard Oakes (46), and rapper Dizzee Rascal [né Dylan Mills] (37).
Shoutout
to the Great Beyond for Vladimir Horowitz, born on this date in 1903...
for pioneering doo-wop singer Grady Chapman and for country singer
Bonnie Owens, both of whom were born in 1929... for bluesman Albert
Collins, who would have been 90... for Brownsville Station frontman Cub
Koda, who would have been 74... for Booker T & the M.G.s drummer Al
Jackson, Jr., who was murdered in a home robbery today in 1975 at the
age of 40... and for Buffalo Springfield bassist Bruce Palmer,
who left us today in 2004.
Also
on October 1: John Phillip Sousa is appointed conductor of the US
Marine Band (1880)... The Curtis Institute of Music opens in
Philadelphia with a $12 million endowment from Mary-Louise Curtis Bok,
heiress to the Saturday Evening Post publishing fortune (1924)...
Following an overwhelmingly negative reaction from screening audiences
to Elvis Presley's death at the end of the film Love Me Tender, the King
is called back to re-shoot the scene. In the new ending, the hero lives
(1956)... Shostakovich's Symphony № 12 in D Minor, subtitled The Year of 1917, premieres in Leningrad (1961)... Brian
Epstein signs a 5-year management contract with the Beatles (1962)...
Bob Dylan plays his first electric show at Carnegie Hall, backed by
Levon & the Hawks... At Camelot Sound Studios in Lynwood, WA, John
Coltrane and sidemen record the album Om, which will be released
posthumously. Controversy persists to this day as to whether or not
Coltrane and fellow saxophonist Pharaoh Sanders were under the influence
of LSD at the time (1965)... Jimi Hendrix plays live in the UK for the
first time when he is invited onstage by Cream to jam with them at a gig
at London Polytechnic (1966)... Pink Floyd arrive at JFK airport to
begin their first US tour (1967)... Jimi Hendrix is laid to rest in the
Greenwood Cemetery, over the road from the Dunlop Baptist Church in
Seattle. Among the graveside mourners are Miles Davis, Eric Burdon and
Johnny Winter (1970)... The Pretenders are forced to cancel the
remaining shows on their current US tour after drummer Martin Chambers
punches out a windowpane, severing tendons and nicking an artery in the
process (1981)... Sony unveils the CDP-101, the world's first
commercially released Compact Disc Player. The system retails for
168,000 yen, or c. $1,730 in today's dollars (1982)... Robert Plant
wraps up his first solo North American tour at the PNE Coliseum in
Vancouver, BC (1983)... British
tabloid The Daily Mirror publishes a cover photo of Michael Jackson in a
scoutmaster's uniform along with 5 young scouts. A spokesman for the
Boy Scouts makes a statement the next day that the singer has no
association with the organization (1994)... The surviving members of
Nirvana release From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah, a compilation of
live recordings made between 1989 and 1994 (1996)... The № 1 album
in America today is Madonna's latest release, Music (2000)... The Lord
Mayor of Melbourne, Australia officially unveils the street sign for the
newly named AC/DC Way. The local council ordered two dozen of the signs
in anticipation of future thefts... As part of the John Kerry campaign
in swing states, Bruce Springsteen, R.E.M., John Fogerty and Bright Eyes
kick off the Vote for Change tour in Philadelphia (2004)... The Spice
Girls London reunion concert sells out in 38 seconds after fans are
informed that tickets have gone on sale. More than one million people in
the UK had pre-registered for notification. The show is scheduled for
December 15 at the O2 Arena (2007).
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