Events
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- January 1 – RCA Victor announces a marketing plan called "Operation TNT." The label drops the list price on LPs from $5.95 to $3.98, EPs from $4.95 to $2.98, 45 EPs from $1.58 to $1.49 and 45's from $1.16 to $.89. Other record labels follow RCA's lead and begin to drop prices as well.
- January 7 – "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley & His Comets first appears on the British charts.
- January 14 – In New York City, Alan Freed produces the first rock and roll concert.
- February 19 – Dot Records introduces a new singer, Pat Boone, with an advertisement in Billboard magazine calling him "a great new voice".
- February 26 – For the first time since their introduction in 1949, 45 rpm discs begin to outsell standard 78s.
- Kay Starr leaves Capitol to sign with RCA.
- March 15 – Colonel Tom Parker becomes Elvis Presley's manager.
- March 19 – The film Blackboard Jungle is premièred in New York City. The film features Bill Haley & His Comets' "Rock Around the Clock" over the opening credits—the first use of a rock and roll song in a major film.
- March 22 – Decca Records signs DJ Alan Freed as an A&R man.
- March 26 – Bill Hayes tops the US charts for five weeks with "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" and starts a (fake) coonskin cap craze.
- May 13 – First riot at an Elvis Presley concert takes place in Jacksonville, FL
- May 21 – Chuck Berry records his first single, "Maybelline" for Chess Records in Chicago.
- May 22 – Bridgeport, CT authorities cancel a rock concert to be headlined by Fats Domino for fear of a riot breaking out.
- June –
- The ISCM Festival of contemporary music takes place in Baden-Baden
- The newly-formed Netherlands Chamber Orchestra gives its first performance at the Holland Festival.
- July 9 – "Rock Around the Clock" becomes the first Rock and roll single to reach Number One on the American charts.
- July 13 – The Beaux Arts Trio make their debut at the Berkshire Music Festival.
- August 19 – WINS radio station in New York City adopts policy of not playing white cover versions of black R&B songs.
- August 31 – A Londoner is fined for "creating an abominable noise" for playing "Shake, Rattle, and Roll" at top volume.
- September 3 – Little Richard records "Tutti Frutti" with significantly cleaned up lyrics (originally "Tutti Frutti, good booty" among other things).
- September 26 – "America's Sweethearts," Eddie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds marry.
- October 15 – Elvis Presley plays a concert in Lubbock, Texas. Opening act is local duo Buddy and Bob. Buddy is future rock star Buddy Holly.
- November 12 – Billboard magazine DJ poll names Elvis Presley as the most promising new country/western singer.
- November 20 – Bo Diddley makes his debut TV appearance on Ed Sullivan's "Toast Of The Town" show on CBS.
- November 22 – Colonel Tom Parker signs Elvis Presley to RCA Records.
- November 29 – Juan José Castro conducts the UK premiere of Carlos Chávez's Third Symphony at the Maida Vale Studios with the London Symphony Orchestra
- December – The Temperance Seven is founded, with three members.
- December 15 – Sun Records releases "Folsom Prison Blues" by Johnny Cash.
- Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel copyright a song, "The Girl For Me," with the Library of Congress and begin singing together as a duo while still in high school in New York, New York.
- Mirella Freni makes her debut as Micaela in Carmen at Modena.
- Nine-year-old Al Green forms a gospel quartet, the Green Brothers.
- Clyde McPhatter launches a solo career.
- Renato Carosone and Nicola Salerno meet and start their songwriting partnership
- Italian singers Natalino Otto and Flo Sandon's wed.
- Shivkumar Sharma gives his first public performance in Bombay.
- Aloys and Alfons Kontarsky begin performing as a piano duo.
[edit]Albums released
In 1955, 1,615 albums and 4,542 pop singles were released in the US.[1]
- At the Cafe Bohemia, Vol. 1 – The Jazz Messengers
- At the Cafe Bohemia, Vol. 2 – The Jazz Messengers
- Day Dreams – Doris Day
- Blue Moods – Miles Davis
- Clifford Brown with Strings – Clifford Brown
- Cloud 7 – Tony Bennett
- Concert by the Sea – Erroll Garner
- Dinner in Caracas – Aldemaro Romero
- Doris Day in Hollywood – Doris Day
- Eddie Fisher Sings Academy Award Winning Songs – Eddie Fisher
- Especially for You... – Teresa Brewer
- Four Brothers – The Ames Brothers
- Happy Holiday – Jo Stafford
- The Hi-Lo's, I Presume – The Hi-Lo’s
- I Cry for You – Johnnie Ray
- I Love You – Eddie Fisher
- I'm in the Mood for Love – Eddie Fisher
- In a Blue Mood – Kay Starr
- In a Romantic Mood – Oscar Peterson
- In the Land of Hi-Fi – Sarah Vaughan
- In the Wee Small Hours – Frank Sinatra
- Jazz Spectacular – Frankie Laine & Buck Clayton
- Julie Is Her Name – Julie London
- Love Me or Leave Me – Doris Day
- Lovers' Laine – Frankie Laine
- Meet Betty Carter and Ray Bryant – Betty Carter and Ray Bryant
- Memory Songs – Jo Stafford
- Miles Davis Volume 1 – Miles Davis
- Miles Davis Volume 2 – Miles Davis
- Miles: The New Miles Davis Quintet – Miles Davis
- The Misty Miss Christy – June Christy
- Moments to Remember – The Four Lads
- Music Ala Carte – The Crew Cuts
- Musings of Miles – Miles Davis
- Noël Coward at Las Vegas – Noël Coward
- Oklahoma! – Original Broadway Cast
- Oscar Peterson Plays Count Basie – Oscar Peterson
- The One, the Only Kay Starr – Kay Starr
- Quintet/Sextet – Miles Davis
- Rain or Shine – Dick Haymes
- Rock Around the Clock – Bill Haley & His Comets
- Romance on the Range – Patti Page
- Satch Plays Fats – Louis Armstrong
- Shake, Rattle and Roll – Bill Haley & His Comets
- Shostakovitch: Symphony No. 10 in E Minor, Op. 93. Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York, Dimitri Mitropoulos, condector. 12-inch LP. Columbia Masterworks ML 4959.
- So Smooth – Perry Como
- Soft and Sentimental – Jo Stafford
- Songs of Scotland – Jo Stafford
- Songs from Pete Kelly's Blues – Peggy Lee, Ella Fitzgerald
- Starring Sammy Davis, Jr. - Sammy Davis, Jr.
- Study in Brown – Clifford Brown and Max Roach
- Swingin' Down Yonder – Dean Martin
- Thelonious Monk plays the Music of Duke Ellington – Thelonious Monk
- Voice of our Choice – Guy Mitchell
[edit]Biggest hit singles
The following singles achieved the highest chart positions in the set of charts available for 1955.
# | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart Entries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bill Haley & His Comets | Rock Around the Clock | 1955 | UK 1 – Oct 1955, US BB 1 – May 1955, US BB 1 of 1955, DDD 1 of 1954, POP 1 of 1955, Italy 3 of 1957, Global 4 (20 M sold) – 1954, Europe 5 of the 1950s, Scrobulate 8 of rock & roll, RIAA 12, Germany 17 – Jun 1968, Holland 27 – Jun 1968, 41 in 2FM list, Acclaimed 49, AFI 50, Rolling Stone 158, Party 180 of 1999 | |
2 | Tennessee Ernie Ford | Sixteen Tons | 1955 | UK 1 – Jan 1956, US BB 1 – Nov 1955, Australia 1 for 6 weeks May 1955, RYM 13 of 1955, US BB 20 of 1955, POP 20 of 1955, DDD 49 of 1955, RIAA 83, Acclaimed 276 | |
3 | Four Aces | Love is a Many Splendoured Thing | 1955 | US BB 1 – Aug 1955, Oscar in 1955, UK 2 – Nov 1955, Peel list 2 of 1955, Italy 3 of 1956, US BB 9 of 1955, POP 9 of 1955, RYM 29 of 1955 | |
4 | Chuck Berry | Maybellene | 1955 | RYM 1 of 1955, DDD 2 of 1955, US BB 5 – Aug 1955, US BB 6 of 1955, POP 6 of 1955, Scrobulate 17 of rock & roll, Rolling Stone 18, Acclaimed 99 | |
5 | Frank Sinatra | Love & Marriage | 1955 | US BB 2 of 1955, POP 2 of 1955, UK 3 – Jan 1956, US BB 5 – Nov 1955, Holland 9 – Apr 1991, RYM 16 of 1955, Scrobulate 47 of relaxing, Europe 83 of the 1950s |
[edit]US No. 1 hit singles
These singles reached the top of US Billboard magazine's charts in 1955.
First week | Number of weeks | Title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
January 22, 1955 | 2 | "Let Me Go, Lover" | Joan Weber |
February 5, 1955 | 1 | "Hearts of Stone" | Fontane Sisters |
February 12, 1955 | 6 | "Sincerely" | McGuire Sisters |
March 26, 1955 | 5 | "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" | Bill Hayes |
April 30, 1955 | 10 | "Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White" | Perez Prado |
July 9, 1955 | 8 | "Rock Around the Clock" | Bill Haley & His Comets |
September 3, 1955 | 5 | "The Yellow Rose of Texas" | Mitch Miller |
October 8, 1955 | 1 | "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" | The Four Aces |
October 15, 1955 | 1 | "The Yellow Rose of Texas" | Mitch Miller |
October 22, 1955 | 1 | "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" | The Four Aces |
October 29, 1955 | 4 | "Autumn Leaves" | Roger Williams |
November 26, 1955 | 7 | "Sixteen Tons" | Tennessee Ernie Ford |
[edit]Top hits on record
- "Ain't That A Shame" – Pat Boone
- "Arrivederci Roma" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Band Of Gold" – Don Cherry
- "A Blossom Fell" – Nat King Cole
- "The Crazy Otto Medley" – Johnny Maddox
- "Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White" – Perez Prado
- "Cool Water" – Frankie Laine
- "Croce Di Oro" – Patti Page
- "Cry Me a River" – Julie London
- "Dance With Me, Henry" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Danger! Heartbreak Ahead" – Jaye P. Morgan
- "Darling, Je Vous Aime Beaucoup" – Nat King Cole
- "Earth Angel" – The Crew Cuts
- "Gum Drop" – The Crew Cuts
- "The Great Pretender" – The Platters
- "Hawkeye" – Frankie Laine
- "He", recorded by
- "Heart" – Eddie Fisher
- "How Important Can It Be?" – Joni James
- "Hummingbird", recorded by
- "I Hear You Knocking" – Gale Storm
- "I Need You Now" – Eddie Fisher
- "I Want You to Be My Baby" – Georgia Gibbs
- "If I Give My Heart to You", recorded by
- "In The Beginning" – Frankie Laine
- "It's A Sin To Tell A Lie" – Somethin' Smith and the Redheads
- "Let Me Go, Lover" – Joan Weber
- "Let's Go Fishin'" – Frankie Laine & Jimmy Boyd
- "Love Is A Many-Splendored Thing" – The Four Aces featuring Al Alberts
- "Love Me Or Leave Me" – Doris Day
- "Maybelline" – Chuck Berry
- "Melody of Love" – Billy Vaughn
- "Memories Are Made Of This" – Dean Martin
- "Moments to Remember" – The Four Lads
- "My Friend" – Frankie Laine
- "Never Look Back" – Doris Day
- "Only You (And You Alone)" – The Platters
- "Playmates" – The Fontane Sisters
- "Rock Around The Clock" – Bill Haley & His Comets
- "Rock And Roll Waltz" – Kay Starr
- "Same Old Saturday Night" – Frank Sinatra
- "Seventeen" – The Fontane Sisters
- "Sincerely" – McGuire Sisters
- "Sixteen Tons", recorded by
- "Smack Dab In The Middle" – The Mills Brothers
- "Song Of Seventeen" – Petty King
- "Speedo" – The Cadillacs
- "Stars Fell On Alabama" – Frankie Laine & Buck Clayton
- "Suddenly There's A Valley" – Gogi Grant
- "Teenage Prayer" – Gale Storm
- "That Old Feeling", recorded by
- "That's All I Want from You" – Jaye P. Morgan
- "Tweedle Dee" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Unchained Melody", recorded by
- "A Woman in Love" – Frankie Laine
- "The Yellow Rose Of Texas" – Mitch Miller & The Gang
- "You Are My Love" – Joni James
[edit]Top R&B and Country Hits on record
- "Ain't That A Shame" – Fats Domino
- "Earth Angel" – The Penguins
- "Flip, Flop and Fly" – Big Joe Turner
- "Tutti Frutti" – Little Richard
- "Tweedle Dee" – LaVern Baker
- "Folsom Prison Blues" – Johnny Cash
[edit]Published popular music
- "Adelaide" – w.m. Frank Loesser
- "Ain't That A Shame" – w.m. Antoine Domino & Dave Bartholomew
- "Ain't That Lovin' You Baby" – w.m. Jimmy Reed
- "All At Once You Love Her" – w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Richard Rodgers
- "Arrivederci Roma" – w. (Eng) Carl Sigman m. Renato Ranucci
- "Ballad Of Davy Crockett" – w. Tom Blackburn m. George Bruns
- "Band Of Gold" – w. Bob Musel m. Jack Taylor
- "The Bible Tells Me So" – w.m. Dale Evans
- "Black Denim Trousers And Motorcycle Boots" – w.m. Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
- "Blue Monday" – w.m. Antoine "Fats" Domino & Dave Bartholomew
- "Blue Star" w. Edward Heyman m. Victor Young
- "Blue Suede Shoes" – w.m. Carl Perkins
- "Bo Diddley" – w.m. Ellas McDaniel
- "Charlie Brown" – w.m. Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
- "Christmas Alphabet" – Buddy Kaye, Jules Loman
- "Dance With Me, Henry" – w.m. Johnny Otis, Hank Ballard & Etta James aka "Wallflower"
- "Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)" – trad West Indies arr. William Attaway and Irving Burgie (aka Lord Burgess)
- "Domani" – w. Tony Velona m. Ulpio Minucci
- "Don't Be Angry" – w.m. Nappy Brown, Rose Marie McCoy & Fred Mendelsohn
- "Dreamboat" – w.m. Jack Hoffman
- "Dungaree Doll" – w. Ben Raleigh m. Sherman Edwards
- "Folsom Prison Blues" – w.m. Johnny Cash
- "Forever Darling" w. Sammy Cahn m. Bronislau Kaper. Introduced by Desi Arnaz in the 1956 film Forever, Darling
- "The Great Pretender" – w.m. Buck Ram
- "Hallelujah I Love Her So" – w.m. Ray Charles
- "He" – w. Jack Mullan m. Jack Richards
- "He's a Tramp" w.m. Peggy Lee and Sonny Burke. Introduced by Peggy Lee in the animated film Lady and the Tramp
- "Heart" – w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross
- "Hey, Mister Banjo" – w.m. Freddy Morgan & Norman Malkin
- "I Hear You Knocking" – w.m. Dave Bartholomew & Pearl King
- "I Never Has Seen Snow" – w. Truman Capote & Harold Arlen m. Harold Arlen
- "I'll Never Stop Loving You" w. Sammy Cahn m. Nicholas Brodszky. Introduced by Doris Day in the film Love Me or Leave Me.
- "I'm In Love Again" – w.m. Antoine Domino & Dave Bartholomew
- "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning" w. Bob Hilliard m. Dave Mann
- "Innamorata" – w. Jack Brooks m. Harry Warren Introduced by Dean Martin in the film Artists and Models
- "It's Almost Tomorrow" – w. Wade Buff m. Gene Adkinson
- "Jamaica Farewell" – w.m. Lord Burgess
- "Jim Dandy" – w.m. Lincoln Chase
- "Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)" – w.m. Forest Wilson, Jake Porter & Eunice Levy
- "Learnin' The Blues" – w.m. Dolores Vicki Silvers
- "Life Could Not Better Be" – w.m. Sylvia Fine & Sammy Cahn. Introduced by Danny Kaye in the film The Court Jester.
- "Little One" – w.m. Cole Porter
- "Love and Marriage" – w. Sammy Cahn m. James Van Heusen
- "Love Is A Many-Splendored Thing" – w. Paul Francis Webster m. Sammy Fain
- "Maybelline" – w.m. Chuck Berry, Russ Frato & Alan Freed
- "Memories Are Made Of This" – w.m. Terry Gilkyson, Rich Dehr & Frank Miller
- "Mind if I Make Love to You?" – w.m. Cole Porter
- "Moments To Remember" – w. Al Stillman m. Robert Allen
- "Mr. Wonderful" – w.m. Jerry Bock, George David Weiss & Larry Holofcener
- "My Boy - Flat Top" – w.m. Boyd Bennett & John Young Jr
- "No, Not Much" – w. Al Stillman m. Robert Allen
- "Once-A-Year Day" – w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross from the musical The Pajama Game
- "An Occasional Man" w.m. Ralph Blane & Hugh Martin. Introduced by Gloria DeHaven in the film The Girl Rush
- "Paper Roses" – w. Janice Torre m. Fred Spielman
- "Pet Me Poppa" – w.m. Frank Loesser
- "Pete Kelly's Blues" – w. Sammy Cahn m. Ray Heindorf
- "Relax-Ay-Voo" – Sammy Cahn & Arthur Schwartz
- "Robin Hood" w.m. Carl Sigman. Theme song of the Television series starring Richard Greene.
- "The Rock And Roll Waltz" – w. Dick Ware m. Shorty Allen
- "Rock-A-Beatin' Boogie" – w.m. Bill Haley
- "Same Old Saturday Night" – w. Sammy Cahn m. Frank Reardon
- "See You Later Alligator" – w.m. Robert Guidry
- "Seven-And-A-Half Cents" – w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross
- "The Siamese Cat Song" – w.m. Peggy Lee & Sonny Burke. Introduced by Peggy Lee in the animated film Lady and the Tramp.
- "A Sleepin' Bee" – w. Truman Capote & Harold Arlen m. Harold Arlen. Introduced in the musical House of Flowers by Diahann Carroll, Ada Moore, Dolores Harper and Enid Mosier
- "Smokey Joe's Cafe" – w.m. Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
- "Softly, Softly" – Pierre Dudan, Paddy Roberts & Mark Paul
- "Something's Gotta Give" – w.m. Johnny Mercer. Introduced by Fred Astaire in the musical film Daddy Long Legs.
- "Speedoo" – w.m. Esther Navarro
- "Stereophonic Sound" – w.m. Cole Porter from the musical Silk Stockings
- "A Story Untold" – Leroy Griffin
- "Suddenly There's A Valley" – w.m. Chuck Meyer & Biff Jones
- "(Love Is) The Tender Trap" w. Sammy Cahn m. James Van Heusen. Introduced by Frank Sinatra in the film The Tender Trap.
- "Theme From "East Of Eden"" – m. Leonard Rosenman
- "Tina Marie" – w.m. Bob Merrill
- "Tutti Frutti" – w.m. Richard Penniman, D. La Bostrie & Joe Lubin
- "Two Lost Souls" – w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross. Introduced by Gwen Verdon and Stephen Douglass in the musical Damn Yankees
- "Unchained Melody" – w. Hy Zaret m. Alex North
- "Wake The Town And Tell The People" – w. Sammy Gallop m. Jerry Livingston
- "The Wallflower" (aka "Dance With Me Henry") – w.m. Johnny Otis, Hank Ballard & Etta James
- "Whatever Lola Wants" – w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross. Introduced by Gwen Verdon in the musical Damn Yankees. Gwen also performed the song in the 1958 film version.
- "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" – w.m. Frankie Lymon & George Goldner
- "A Woman in Love" – w.m. Frank Loesser
- "You Are My Love" w.m. Jimmie Nabbie
- "You Don't Know Me" – w.m. Cindy Walker & Eddy Arnold
- "You're Sensational" – w.m. Cole Porter. Introduced by Frank Sinatra in the musical film High Society
[edit]Other notable songs
- "Mera Joota Hai Japani" by Shankar Jaikishan
- "Moscow Nights" by Vasily Solovyov-Sedoy and Mikhail Matusovsky
- "Satumaa" by Unto Mononen
[edit]Classical music
- Arthur Bliss – Violin Concerto
- Henry Cowell – Symphony No. 12
- George Crumb
- Diptych for orchestra
- Sonata for solo cello
- Mario Davidovsky
- Quintet for Clarinet and Strings
- Suite Sinfonica Para "El Payaso" for orchestra
- Einar Englund – Piano Concerto No. 1
- Ferenc Farkas – Bukki Varlatok
- Gerald Finzi – Cello Concerto
- Hans Werner Henze – Symphony No. 4
- Alan Hovhaness – Symphony No. 2 Mysterious Mountain
- Witold Lutosławski – Dance Preludes (2nd version for clarinet and chamber group)
- Bohuslav Martinů
- The Epic of Gilgamesh
- Oboe Concerto
- Darius Milhaud
- Symphony No. 5
- Symphony No. 6
- Luigi Nono
- Il Canto Sospeso, for soli, chorus, and orchestra
- Incontri, for 24 instruments
- Walter Piston – Symphony No. 6
- Edmund Rubbra – Piano Concerto
- John Serry, Sr. – American Rhapsody
- Karlheinz Stockhausen – Klavierstücke V–VIII
- Alexandre Tansman
- Concerto for Orchestra
- Capriccio for Orchestra
- Michael Tippett – Sonata for Four Horns
- Ernst Toch – Symphony No. 3
- Ralph Vaughan Williams – Symphony No. 8
- William Walton – Johannesburg Festival Overture
- Franz Waxman – Sinfonietta for Strings and Timpani
- Iannis Xenakis – Pithoprakta for orchestra
[edit]Opera
- Carlisle Floyd – Susannah
- Dmitri Kabalevsky – Nikita Vershinin
- Lukas Foss – Griffelkin (opera in three acts, libretto by A. Reed after H. Foss, premiered on November 6, 1955, on NBC television)
[edit]Musical theater
- The Amazing Adele – Philadelphia production
- Ankles Aweigh – Broadway production
- Catch A Star – Broadway production
- Damn Yankees (Richard Adler and Jerry Ross) – Broadway production
- Kismet – London production opened at the Stoll Theatre on April 20 and ran for 648 performances
- The Pajama Game (Richard Adler and Jerry Ross) – London production opened at the Coliseum on October 13 and ran for 501 performances
- Phoenix '55 – Broadway production
- Pipe Dream (Rodgers & Hammerstein) – Broadway production
- Plain and Fancy – Broadway production
- Romance in Candlelight London production opened at the Piccadilly Theatre on September 15 and ran for 53 performances
- Seventh Heaven – Broadway production opened at the ANTA Playhouse on May 26 and ran for 44 performances
- Shoestring Revue – Broadway production
- Silk Stockings – Broadway production
- Wonderful Town (Leonard Bernstein, Betty Comden and Adolph Green) – London production opened at the Princes Theatre on February 24 and ran for 207 performances
[edit]Musical films
- Artists and Models released November 7 starring Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis
- As Long as They're Happy starring Jack Buchanan, Janette Scott, Jeannie Carson, Jerry Wayne, Diana Dors and Joan Sims
- The Benny Goodman Story
- Daddy Long Legs
- Gentlemen Marry Brunettes
- The Girl Rush starring Rosalind Russell, Fernando Lamas, Eddie Albert and Gloria DeHaven.
- It's Always Fair Weather
- Jupiter's Darling starring Howard Keel, Esther Williams, Marge Champion and Gower Champion
- King's Rhapsody starring Anna Neagle and Errol Flynn
- Kismet
- Lady and the Tramp – Animated feature
- Love Me or Leave Me
- Oklahoma!
- Pete Kelly's Blues
- The Seven Little Foys
- A Star Is Born
[edit]Musical television
- Heidi – television production
- Our Town – television production
- Together With Music – CBS television production by Noël Coward
[edit]Births
- January 3 – Helen O'Hara, British musician
- January 8 – Mike Reno, Loverboy
- January 13
- January 17 – Steve Earle, folk singer
- January 19 – Sir Simon Rattle, conductor
- January 26 – Eddie Van Halen, musician
- January 27 – Richard Young (Kentucky Headhunters)
- February 18 – Riff Regan, lead singer of London.
- February 23 – Howard Jones, singer-songwriter
- March 2 – Jay Osmond, singer and songwriter (The Osmonds)
- March 4 – Boon Gould, guitarist (Level 42)
- March 10 – Bunny DeBarge (DeBarge)
- March 15 – Dee Snider (Twisted Sister)
- March 28 – Reba McEntire, country singer
- March 31 – Angus Young (AC/DC)
- April 13 – Louis Johnson, bassist (The Brothers Johnson)
- April 17 – Pete Shelley (Buzzcocks)
- May 9 – Anne Sofie von Otter, operatic mezzo-soprano
- May 12 – Kix Brooks, country singer (Brooks & Dunn)
- May 20
- Steve George, keyboardist (Mr. Mister)
- Zbigniew Preisner, composer
- May 21 – Stan Lynch (Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers)
- May 28 – John McGeoch (Magazine, PiL, and Siouxsie and the Banshees) (d. 2004)
- May 29 – Pascal Dusapin, French composer
- May 30 – Topper Headon (The Clash)
- June 7 – Joey Scarbury, singer
- June 23 – Glenn Danzig, lead singer of Danzig
- June 26 – Mick Jones (The Clash)
- June 28 – Thomas Hampson, opera singer
- July 4 – John Waite, singer
- July 10 – Stan Munsey (Shenandoah)
- July 18 – Terry Chambers (XTC)
- July 21 – Howie Epstein (Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers)
- July 25 – Jem Finer (The Pogues)
- August 6 – Eric Paulin, drummer (The Meetles)
- August 17 – Colin Moulding (XTC)
- August 28 – Beres Hammond, reggae singer
- August 29 – Diamanda Galás, singer, composer, pianist and performance artist
- September 3 – Steve Jones (The Sex Pistols)
- September 9 – Ivan Smirnov, guitarist
- September 13 – Andreas Staier, classical harpsichordist and fortepianist
- October 2 – Philip Oakey, singer (The Human League)
- October 7 – Yo-Yo Ma, cellist
- October 16 – Leonid Desyatnikov, composer
- October 21:
- Fred Hersch, American jazz pianist
- Rich Mullins, singer-songwriter (d. 1997)
- October 25 – Matthias Jabs (Scorpions)
- October 29 – Kevin Dubrow (Quiet Riot)
- November 21 – Kyle Gann, composer, teacher and critic
- November 23 – Ludovico Einaudi, Italian composer and pianist
- November 30 – Billy Idol, singer
- December 6 – Bright Sheng, composer
- December 15 – Paul Simonon, The Clash
- date unknown – Susan Addison, sackbut player
[edit]Deaths
- January 10 – Annette Mills, partner of "Muffin the Mule" (b. 1894)
- February 14 – Charles Cuvillier, composer of operettas, 77
- March 12 – Charlie Parker, jazz saxophonist, 34 (lobar pneumonia, bleeding ulcer and cirrhosis of liver)
- April 10 – Oskar Lindberg, composer, 67
- April 12 – W. H. Anderson, composer, 72
- May 4 – George Enescu, composer, 73
- May 15 – Oskar Adler, violinist and music critic, 79
- May 17 – Francesco Balilla Pratella, composer and musicologist, 75
- June 11 – Marcel Samuel-Rousseau, organist, composer and opera producer, 72
- June 19 – Willy Burkhard, composer, 55
- June 28 - Göta Ljungberg, Wagnerian soprano, 56
- July 4 - Ruth Vincent, operatic soprano, 78
- July 7 – Franco Casavola, Futurist composer, 63
- July 25 – Isaak Dunayevsky, conductor and composer, 55
- August 5 – Carmen Miranda, singer and dancer, 46 (heart attack)
- August 13 - Florence Easton, soprano, 72
- August 22 - Olin Downes, music critic, 69
- August 24 – Edgar Henrichsen, organist and composer, 76
- October 7 - Frieda Hempel, operatic soprano, 70
- October 14 – Harry Parr-Davies, composer and songwriter, 41 (perforated ulcer)
- October 20 – Adolf Mišek, double bassist and composer, 80
- October 27 - Bernardo de Muro, operatic tenor, 73
- November 11 – Jerry Ross, songwriter
- November 22 – Guy Ropartz, composer and conductor, 91
- November 27 – Arthur Honegger, composer, 63
- November 30 – Josip Štolcer-Slavenski, composer
- December 5 – Lucien Durosoir, violinist and composer, 67
- December 11 – Franz Syberg, composer, 51
- December 21 - Gladys Ripley, operatic contralto, 47
- date unknown
- Bessie Brown, blues singer
- Vernon Isley, original Isley brother, killed in an accident aged 13
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