Tuesday, May 19, 2020

18 MAY

In Music History

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2014Italian-American singer Jerry Vale dies at home in Palm Desert, California, at age 83.
2012Rihanna makes her acting debut playing a naval weapons specialist in the action/sci-fi movie Battleship.
2007Amy Winehouse marries Blake Fielder at a secret ceremony in Miami.
2006Andy Capps (drummer for Built To Spill) is found dead at age 37 in his Idaho home. No cause of death is given.
2004Lenny Kravitz releases his seventh album, Baptism.
2004Clint Warwick (original bassist for The Moody Blues) dies at age 63 of liver disease.
2004Jazz drummer Elvin Jones (of The John Coltrane Quartet) dies of heart failure at age 76.
2002The Barry Manilow Ultimate Manilow special airs on CBS.
1999Jamaican record producer Augustus Pablo, known for his influential 1976 album King Tubbys Meets Rockers Uptown, dies at age 44 of a collapsed lung.
1996Soundgarden perform for the first (and only) time on Saturday Night Live, playing "Pretty Noose" and "Burden In My Hand." Jim Carrey hosts.
1996Brad Nowell of Sublime marries Troy Dendekker, the mother of his son, Jakob. He dies of a drug overdose a week later.
1992Sister Souljah, a rapper associated with the group Public Enemy, is quoted in The Washington Post saying, "If black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people?" It becomes a big moment in American politics when Bill Clinton denounces the comment, risking support from black voters. Clinton goes on to win the presidential election.
1991Bananarama release Pop Life, their first album without bandmate Siobhan Fahey, who left the group in 1988 amid tensions over their pop-oriented image. It's also their last release as a trio. Jacquie O'Sullivan replaces Fahey on the album, but leaves later that year due to the press constantly comparing her with the former 'Nana.
1991R.E.M. go to #1 in America with their seventh album, Out of Time, which features the tracks "Losing My Religion" and "Shiny Happy People."
1982Actor/singer Eric West is born Eric Rosa in New York City. Records the single "Can You Help Me?" in 2002, which becomes a huge hit in Latin America.
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Simple Minds Hit #1 With Breakfast Club Song

1985
After repeated attempts to break through in America, Simple Minds go to #1 with "Don't You (Forget About Me)," which is used in the movie The Breakfast Club.
Their 1984 album Sparkle in the Rain went to #1 in their native UK, but despite a US tour with the Pretenders, Simple Minds couldn't crack the American market. That changed when they recorded "Don't You (Forget About Me)," written specifically for the movie The Breakfast Club. Simple Minds wrote their own songs, but made an exception in this case. It was written by Keith Forsey and Steve Schiff, who first pitched it to Bryan Ferry, who turned it down. Simple Minds wasn't keen on it either, especially Jim Kerr, who couldn't make sense of the lyric, especially the lines: I won't harm you or touch your defenses Vanity, insecurity There was also a lot of la-la-la-la, which was a placeholder melody that stuck. Released in February 1985, the film resonates with young people who can relate to the deeply affected characters played by members of the "Brat Pack," including Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy and Emilio Estevez. The song becomes intimately associated with the film and gains traction, rising to #1 on May 18. It's the first American chart entry for Simple Minds, whose lead singer Jim Kerr is married to Pretenders frontwoman Chrissie Hynde. The song is used on the film's soundtrack, but doesn't appear on the next Simple Minds album, Once Upon a Time, released in October. That one also goes to #1 in the UK and gives them another American hit, "Alive and Kicking," which goes to #3. The song lives on as the musical embodiment of The Breakfast Club and is used in a number of TV shows and movies that spoof or pay homage to the iconic film. Jim Kerr is happy with how it worked out. "I've got to say that it fit beautifully," he told Songfacts. "You've got to say that it really worked."

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