Wednesday, February 19, 2020

18 FEBRUARY

In Music History

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2017Clyde Stubblefield, the funky drummer who played on many tracks for James Brown, dies at age 73.
2006Bill Cowsill of The Cowsills dies at age 58.
2003The Rolling Stones bring some local flavor to the Australian leg of their Licks world tour, bringing Jet as the opening act. The first show in the country takes place at the Enmore Theater in Sydney. Jet had to fly back from Los Angeles, where they were recording their debut album, Get Born, to take advantage of the opportunity.
2001James Taylor marries his longtime girlfriend Kim Smedvig at a small ceremony in Boston. It's Taylor's third wedding, and later in 2001 the couple have twin boys through a surrogate mother.
1999Pop-star-turned-disc-jockey Bob Geldof, organizer of Live Aid, wins substantial but undisclosed damages from The Sun newspaper in London in a libel case over a story that falsely alleged he had "groped, fondled and kissed" a nightclub stripper.
1998Robert Smith of The Cure battles Barbra Streisand on the show South Park.
1995Bob Stinson (lead guitarist for The Replacements) dies at age 35 after years of drug and alcohol abuse takes its toll on his health.
1995Denny Cordell, who produced Tom Petty & The Hearbreakers, The Moody Blues, and Procol Harum, dies in Dublin of lymphoma, aged 51.
1990At the BRIT Awards in London, Queen collect the BPI award for Outstanding Contribution to British Music. It is Freddie Mercury's last public appearance with the band, as he dies the following year.
1980Filming begins on Ringo Starr's new comedy Caveman.
1977Fela Kuti's residence is sacked by nearly a thousand soldiers, inspiring his song "Zombie."
1977Kiss play Madison Square Garden (in their hometown, New York City) for the first time.
1973The nationally syndicated radio concert series The King Biscuit Flower Hour premieres, featuring Blood, Sweat & Tears, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band.
1973At Elvis Presley's concert in Las Vegas, four men climb on stage and try to shake his hand. They are quickly thwarted by security and Elvis' bass player Jerry Scheff. Elvis tells the crowd, "Immobilize the men using karate moves." No charges are filed. Elvis tells the audience: "I'm sorry I didn't break his goddamned neck, is what I'm sorry about."
1972Neil Young's album Harvest is certified Gold.
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Rolling Stones Rock 1.5 Million In Rio

2006
A week before Carnival, the Rolling Stones play a free concert to an estimated 1.5 million people at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro.
Mick Jagger wears a T-shirt with the Brazilian flag and speaks to the crowd in Portuguese during the 20-song set, which opens with "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and ends with "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction." While admission is free, The Stones get paid (Jagger has an economics degree, after all), and the show is filmed for DVDs and documentary footage. The concert is simulcast on Brazilian TV and radio, and also shown in some movie theaters in the US. Brazil is a stronghold for The Stones, who first came to the country in the late '60s and wrote "Sympathy For The Devil" with the samba rhythms of Carnival in mind. Jagger also has a thing for Brazilian models: his son Lucas was born to Luciana Gimenez, a popular television personality there.

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