ΤΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟ ΜΑΣ ΞΕΠΕΡΑΣΕ ΜΕΧΡΙ ΣΗΜΕΡΑ ΤΙΣ 2.800.000 ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΕΙΣ.

Monday, February 5, 2018

4 FEBRUARY

In Music History

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2017Black Sabbath play the final concert of their farewell tour at the Genting Arena in their English home city of Birmingham. Their final song of the night, "Paranoid," is streamed live on Facebook so fans around the world can witness the historic moment onstage.
2016Earth, Wind & Fire founder Maurice White dies at age 74 after a long battle with Parkinson's disease.
2013Reg Presley (lead singer The Troggs) dies of lung cancer, coupled with a series of strokes, at age 71.
2013R&B singer Darlene McCrea (of The Cookies) dies.
2013Jazz trumpeter Donald Byrd (of The Blackbyrds) dies at age 80.
2010A judge rules that the flute riff of the Men at Work song "Down Under" plagiarizes another Australian classic: the 1932 song "Kookaburra."More
2009Lux Interior (of The Cramps), real name: Erick Lee Purkhiser, dies of aortic dissection at age 62.
2008With digital delivery transforming the industry, some record companies package releases with additional goodies. The Virgin-owned Astralwerks label issues Laura Marling's debut album, Alas, I Cannot Swim, in what they call a "songbox" format, which includes a concert ticket and souvenirs representing each song along with the CD.
2008Phil Lesh, Bob Weir and Mickey Hart resurrect Grateful Dead for a benefit concert in support of presidential hopeful Barack Obama in San Francisco.
2008John Mellencamp becomes the first of many artists to accuse soon-to-be-Republican presidential nominee John McCain of using their music without authorization. McCain had been using the song "Our Country," and while he had the legal rights to do so, Mellencamp makes it clear he does not support McCain and asks that he refrain from using his music.
2007Razorlight members Johnny Borrell and Carl Dalemo clash onstage at a gig in Lyon. The concert is halted, but the band returns to finish the set.
2002On the occasion of civil-rights activist Rosa Parks' 89th birthday, Stevie Wondersings his song "Happy Birthday" to her at the premiere of her TV-movie biography The Rosa Parks Story. The song had originally been written by Wonder to help bring about a national Martin Luther King holiday.
1999In a daring move, Rykodisc becomes the first music label to give its stamp of approval to MP3, the controversial Internet-based music distribution format that struck fear into the hearts of many music industry executives.
1997The Offspring return with their fourth studio album, Ixnay on the Hombre - the follow-up to their 1994 breakthrough album Smash and the band's first after signing to Columbia Records in 1996.
1987Liberace dies of AIDS-related pneumonia at age 67.
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Fleetwood Mac Release Rumours

1977
Fleetwood Mac release their landmark album Rumours. The LP sets a record for most weeks at #1 with 31, and becomes one of the best-selling albums of all time, with worldwide sales estimated at about 40 million.

Rumours is recorded amid tensions that could support power lines: Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham are on the outs, Christine and John McVie are splitting up, and Mick Fleetwood is separating from his wife (and getting cozy with Nicks - the pair appear posed on the album cover). Unlike their previous album, which took about three months to record, Rumours is a slog, requiring about a year to complete.

The internecine discord plays out in the songs, notably "Go Your Own Way," where Buckingham directs his lyrical vitriol at Nicks:

Shacking up is all you want to do

Nicks' own struggles are expressed in the haunting "Gold Dust Woman" - she records the vocal in a dark studio.

The band is able to channel the melodrama into the music. It works because despite their differences, they have a common goal: make a great album. This unity plays out in "The Chain," the only song written as a group. Describing an unbreakable bond, the song becomes Fleetwood Mac's mantra and an emblem of their resilience.

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