Sunday, October 13, 2019

12 OCTOBER

In Music History

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2013Pharrell Williams marries the model Helen Lasichanh. She inspires several tracks on his 2014 album, G I R L, including the song "It Girl."
2011Joel 'Taz' DiGregorio, keyboard player in the Charlie Daniels Band, is killed in a car accident before the band's gig at the Cumming Country Fair in Tennessee. DiGregorio, who was 67 at the time of his death, co-wrote many songs with the group, including "The Devil Went Down To Georgia."
2011Paul Leka, songwriter, pianist, arranger and orchestrator, dies of lung cancer in Sharon, Connecticut, at age 68. Co-wrote the '60s hits "Green Tambourine" and "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye."
2009Blue Cheer singer/bassist Dickie Peterson dies from liver cancer at the age of 63, in Erkelenz, Germany.
2003Rapper 50 Cent takes home all five trophies for which he is nominated at the World Music Awards, held in Monaco. Russian teen duo t.A.T.u. picks up three awards, while Norah Jones and Eminem win two.
2003The blind Puerto Rican singer Jose Feliciano performs the "The Star Spangled Banner" for the first time since his flavorful rendition at a Tigers/Cardinals World Series game in 1968. His performance in Miami at the Marlins/Cubs playoff goes off without incident.
2002Faith Hill is the musical guest on Saturday Night Live, hosted by Sarah Michelle Gellar, and performs "Cry" and "Free."
2002Bandleader/arranger Ray Conniff dies after he slips in his bathtub in Escondido, California, at age 85.
2002Court-TV's crime documentary series Forensic Files depicts the murder of Walter Scott, lead singer of the '60s rock 'n' roll band Bob Kuban & the In-Men. Scott disappeared in 1983 and his body was found hidden in a cistern four years later, leading to the arrest of his widow's new husband.
2001Limp Bizkit guitarist Wes Borland quits the band. A post on the group's website states, "Limp Bizkit and Wes Borland have amicably decided to part ways. Both Limp Bizkit and Borland will continue to pursue their respective musical careers."
1999Frank Frost, Delta blues harmonica player, dies of a cardiac arrest in Helena, Arkansas, at age 63.
1999David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash and Neil Young (Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young) appear at New York's Madison Square Garden to announce their forthcoming album and CSNY2K tour.
1997With Backstreet Boys mania building worldwide, the group has to cancel a free, open-air concert at the Mostenses Plaza in Madrid when too many fans show up.
1996Though they've refused to release it on video for 27 years, largely due to dissatisfaction over their own performance, The Rolling Stones finally release their landmark 1968 all-star BBC television special, The Rolling Stones' Rock And Roll Circus.
1995Tupac Shakur is released from jail after Death Row Records boss Suge Knight posts a $1.4 million bond to release him. Knight puts the rapper to work, flying Tupac to LA, to record his fourth album, All Eyez on Me. Tupac had been serving time on sexual abuse charges stemming from a 1993 incident.
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Jesus Christ Superstar Makes Broadway Debut

1970
Jesus Christ Superstar opens on Broadway, telling the story of the last seven days in the life of Jesus.
Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice starting working on the show about six months after completing their original, 30-minute version of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, also a Bible story. MCA Records insisted on a single before they would pay for an album and stage production, so the duo wrote "Superstar," which was recorded by Murray Head. Released in 1969, it did little damage in America or the UK, but sold well enough in Brazil and a few other countries to make the project viable.

Webber and Rice had been working on the play and had the songs ready in early 1970, but they faced a daunting task. "We had the colossal job of actually getting people to sing on the album," Tim Rice said. "That almost took longer than writing it."

Released in September 1970, Mary Magdalene's song about Jesus, "I Don't Know How To Love Him," sung by Yvonne Elliman, was a modest hit in the summer of 1971.

The play opens at the Mark Hellinger Theatre amid protests from religious groups, but proves very successful. Elliman plays Mary Magdalene, with Ben Vereen as Judas and Jeff Fenholt as Jesus. In 1973, a film version is released with Ted Neeley as Jesus, Carl Anderson as Judas, and Elliman once again in the role of Mary Magdalene.

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