Sunday, August 20, 2017

19 AUGUST

In Music History

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2016Former music mogul Lou Pearlman, creator of 'N Sync and the Backstreet Boys, dies at age 62 while serving a 25-year sentence at the Federal Correctional Institution in Texarkana, Texas. In 2008, he was convicted of conspiracy and money laundering related to a massive Ponzi scheme.
2008Saxophonist/arranger LeRoi Moore (of The Dave Matthews Band) dies after being injured in an ATV accident in Charlottesville, Virginia, at age 46.
2003MTV debuts the reality series Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica, following the recent marriage of Jessica Simpson and 98 Degrees' Nick Lachey. The show is a hit thanks to Jessica's "dumb blonde" antics and lasts three seasons, after which the couple promptly divorce.
2001Soul singer/pianist Betty Everett dies from heart-related issues in South Beloit, Illinois, at age 61.
1990Leonard Bernstein conducts his final concert, playing Benjamin Britten's "Four Sea Interludes" and Beethoven's Seventh Symphony with the Boston Symphony at Tanglewood in Massachusetts.
1989Lou Reed breaks his ankle after a soundcheck in Cleveland, and is forced to cancel the remainder of his tour.
1989Rapper Lil' Romeo is born Percy Romeo Miller Jr. in New Orleans, Louisiana. 
1983Having been sporadic since it was originally shut down in 1968, "pirate radio" station Radio Caroline makes its comeback on board the ship Ross Revenge in the North Sea's international waters. Six years to the day later, it would be shut down again.
1979Dorsey Burnette (of Johnny Burnette and the Rock and Roll Trio) dies of a massive coronary in Canoga Park, California, at age 46.
1972Chicago's LP Chicago V hits #1.
1969The Beatles finish recording "Here Comes The Sun."
1969Cleanup begins at Max Yasgur's farm in Bethel, New York, where the Woodstock festival has finished up. Bulldozers are used to wrangle the trash into a pit, where it is burned.
1969Crosby, Stills and Nash appear on the Dick Cavett Show, giving a first-hand account of the Woodstock festival that took place over the weekend. Joni Mitchell, who skipped the festival to make sure she could keep her appearance on the show, performs a song she wrote about it called "Woodstock."
1968The final episode of The Monkees TV show, starring the eponymous band, airs on primetime TV.
1967The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" hits #1, where it stays for one week.
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Rap Single Certified Gold For The First Time

1980
"The Breaks" by Kurtis Blow becomes the first rap single certified Gold.
With an original beat and a huge party vibe, the song extends the reach of rap well past the Bronx, where Kurtis grew up. The song is a tribute to the break dancers in the area, with lots of wordplay on the different meanings of "breaks."

Running nearly 8-minutes long, it's a 12-inch single, just the second one to go Gold, following the Donna Summer and Barbra Streisand disco duet "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)." Perfect for club play, it fills dancefloors throughout the summer of 1980.

By melding with disco, rap crosses over to a new audience; in 1981 Debbie Harry busts some rhymes in the Blondie song "Rapture," which becomes the first #1 hit with a rap. As disco fades, so does hip-hop, but it proves far more than a fad when it comes alive a few years later, with Run-D.M.C.Beastie Boys and LL Cool Jleading the way. 

Kurtis Blow never reaches the heights of "The Breaks," but in 1985 he releases "If I Ruled The World," later a huge hit for Nas. In later years, Kurtis becomes an ambassador for classic hip-hop, always getting a huge reaction when he does "The Breaks."

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