1988At age 16, Tiffany becomes the youngest female singer with a #1 album in the US when her self-titled debut tops the chart.
1966Police arrest Jim Morrison for kissing a young woman, but the charges are really just a way for them to get to the bottom of a suspected murder that supposedly occurred weeks before.More
1965Petula Clark's "Downtown" climbs to #1 on the Hot 100, making her the first UK female singer to reach the summit on the US singles chart since Vera Lynn in 1952.
2018Trumpet player Hugh Masekela, one of the most popular musicians in his native South Africa, dies at 78 after a battle with prostate cancer. In 1968, he had a #1 US hit with "Grazing In The Grass."
2017Bobby Freeman, who had hits with "Do You Want To Dance" and "C'mon And Swim," dies of a heart attack at 76.
2015Pop singer Mandy Moore and alt rocker Ryan Adams announce their split after nearly six years of marriage, with Moore filing the divorce proceedings.
2007David "Disco D" Shayman, a hip-hop record producer and composer who rose to prominence with 50 Cent's "Ski Mask Way," commits suicide at age 26.
2000Britney Spears guest stars on The Simpsons in the episode "The Mansion Family," where she presents the award for Springfield's oldest man.
1999Eagle-Eye Cherry's debut single, "Save Tonight," peaks at #5 on the Hot 100.
1997"Louie Louie" composer (and original performer) Richard Berry dies of heart failure at age 61.
1991The Albuquerque, New Mexico, radio station KLSK FM plays the Led Zeppelin song "Stairway To Heaven" over and over for 24 hours to inaugurate a format change to classic rock. It plays more than 200 times, eliciting hundreds of angry calls and letters. Police show up with guns drawn after a listener reports that the DJ had apparently suffered a heart attack, later because of suspicion that - this being eight days into the Gulf War - the radio station had been taken hostage by terrorists dispatched by Zeppelin freak Saddam Hussein. Weirdest of all, lots of listeners don't move the dial: "Turns out a lot of people listened to see when we would finally stop playing it."
1990Original Lynyrd Skynyrd guitarist Allen Collins, a survivor of their 1977 plane crash, dies of pneumonia - a complication of paralysis caused by a 1986 car accident.
1981Orchestral composer Samuel Barber dies of cancer at age 70. Barber won the Pulitzer Prize for Music twice: first for the 1956 opera Vanessa and then for his 1962 Concerto for Piano and Orchestra.
1979Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys divorces his wife Marilyn (one-time member of the Honeys and mother of Wendy and Carnie Wilson of Wilson Phillips).
1978Terry Kath (singer and original guitarist for Chicago) dies at age 31 when he accidentally shoots himself in the head.
Rock Hall Inducts First Class
1986
The first inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame include Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and Fats Domino.
Led by Atlantic Records' founder Ahmet Ertegun, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation was formed in 1983 to recognize the pioneering figures of the genre, including performers (eligible for consideration 25 years after the release of their first single), producers and engineers. The annual event becomes a point of contention for many snubbed artists who call it an over-hyped popularity contest, but no one can dispute the roster of tonight's honorees. The first induction ceremony is held at New York City's Waldorf-Astoria, and welcomes some of rock's most influential trailblazers, including Elvis Presley, Fats Domino, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, Ray Charles, Sam Cooke, James Brown, Jerry Lee Lewis, and the The Everly Brothers.
Keith Richards, who joins Berry on stage with "Reelin' and Rockin'," inducts his hero, quipping, "It's very difficult for me to talk about Chuck Berry because I lifted every lick he ever played."
Meanwhile, Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top salutes the inaugural class for setting a crazy high standard for future rockers: "We get the beat from Bo [Diddley], we got the poetry from Chuck, and we got the insane madness vocal from Little Richard. Those three combined, if you could possibly invent something beyond that, we'd be on another planet - but I think we're already there anyway (laughs)."
Non-performers also get their due, with honors for Cleveland disc jockey Alan Freed, who is credited with coining the phrase "rock 'n' roll," and Sun Records founder Sam Phillips. Columbia Records A&R man John Hammond snags the first Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of his keen eye for talent, with Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin and Bob Dylan among his biggest discoveries.
The highlight of the evening is what becomes the most-anticipated moment in future ceremonies: the jam session. Backed by Late Night with David Letterman's house band, The World's Most Dangerous Band, rock's past and present collide onstage for an all-star jam. Inductees rock out alongside guests Billy Joel, Steve Winwood, John Fogerty, Neil Young and ZZ Top to a set packed with seminal tunes like "Johnny B. Goode," "The Twist," and "Great Balls of Fire."
Keith Richards, who joins Berry on stage with "Reelin' and Rockin'," inducts his hero, quipping, "It's very difficult for me to talk about Chuck Berry because I lifted every lick he ever played."
Meanwhile, Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top salutes the inaugural class for setting a crazy high standard for future rockers: "We get the beat from Bo [Diddley], we got the poetry from Chuck, and we got the insane madness vocal from Little Richard. Those three combined, if you could possibly invent something beyond that, we'd be on another planet - but I think we're already there anyway (laughs)."
Non-performers also get their due, with honors for Cleveland disc jockey Alan Freed, who is credited with coining the phrase "rock 'n' roll," and Sun Records founder Sam Phillips. Columbia Records A&R man John Hammond snags the first Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of his keen eye for talent, with Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin and Bob Dylan among his biggest discoveries.
The highlight of the evening is what becomes the most-anticipated moment in future ceremonies: the jam session. Backed by Late Night with David Letterman's house band, The World's Most Dangerous Band, rock's past and present collide onstage for an all-star jam. Inductees rock out alongside guests Billy Joel, Steve Winwood, John Fogerty, Neil Young and ZZ Top to a set packed with seminal tunes like "Johnny B. Goode," "The Twist," and "Great Balls of Fire."
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