15
Featured Events
2012A virtual Tupac Shakur performs at the Coachella festival, rapping "Hail Mary" and "2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted" before disappearing in a flash. Often reported as a hologram, the technology used to bring Tupac to life is later revealed to be a system of mirrors, glass and computer animation.
1989Roy Orbison's posthumous single "You Got It" climbs to #9 in America four months after his death. It's his first Top 10 hit in that country since "(Oh) Pretty Woman" in 1964.
1972Billy Joel plays a concert at Sigma Sound Studios in Philadelphia which is broadcast by the local radio station WMMR. After the show, the station puts his performance of "Captain Jack" in rotation, and Joel builds a following. This leads to a contract with Columbia Records, which releases Joel's breakthrough album, Piano Man, in 1973.
1972Roberta Flack's "First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" hits #1 in America, where it stays for six weeks. The song was written by Ewan MacColl in 1957.
1971The Beatles win their only Oscar, taking Best Original Song Score for their movie Let It Be.
1967Nancy and Frank Sinatra's "Somethin' Stupid" goes to #1 in America for the first of four weeks. It's the only father-daughter duet ever to top the Hot 100.
1964After a long day of filming their first movie, Ringo Starr tells the other Beatles it's been "a hard day's night." John Lennon turns the phrase into a song, and the movie title is changed from Beatlemania! to A Hard Day's Night.
15
In Music History
2018Carrie Underwood debuts her song "Cry Pretty" at the Academy of Country Music Awards. It's her first appearance since a fall six months earlier that required over 40 stitches in her face.
2017Allan Holdsworth, an innovative guitarist who influenced John McLaughlin, Eddie Van Halen and Carlos Santana, dies at age 70.
2017Sylvia Moy, who co-wrote the Stevie Wonder hits "My Cherie Amour" and "Uptight (Everything's Alright)," dies at age 78. She was just the second black woman inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame (following Valerie Simpson).
2017Jethro Tull hits #1 on the Classical Albums chart with Jethro Tull: The String Quartets.
2016J. Cole, Alicia Keys, Chance the Rapper, Ludacris, Nicki Minaj and Wale attend a White House sit down with President Obama to discuss criminal justice reform and the My Brother's Keeper Initiative.
2014Years of alcohol abuse take their toll on Sum 41 frontman Deryck Whibley, who collapses in his kitchen and is placed in an induced coma. He makes a slow and painful recovery in which he has to relearn guitar.
2011Kent Morrill, keyboardist and vocalist for the Fabulous Wailers, dies.
2008Tom Morello kicks off the Tom Morello Justice Tour 2008 in Los Angeles, California.
2006"Be Without You" by Mary J. Blige remains at #1 on the R&B chart for its 15th week, breaking the record of 14 weeks set the previous year by Mariah Carey with "We Belong Together."
2006Elton John cleans out his closet and raises over $700,000 for his AIDS Foundation when he sells over 10,000 articles of clothing in his Elton's Closet sale in New York.
1997INXS release Elegantly Wasted, their last album with lead singer Michael Hutchence, who dies six months later.
1996The remainder of Grateful Dead leader Jerry Garcia's ashes are scattered near the Golden Gate bridge in San Francisco; a week earlier, a portion had been scattered into India's Ganges river.
1995Dave Matthews Band appear on Saturday Night Live for the first time, performing "What Would You Say" and "Ants Marching."
1991MC Hammer's Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em becomes the first rap album to go Diamond, for sales of 10 million copies in America.
1989Tone-Loc's debut album, Loc-ed After Dark, hits #1 on the Billboard 200, thanks to the success of his platinum hit "Wild Thing."
Punk Icon Joey Ramone Dies
2001Joey Ramone of the Ramones dies of lymphoma at age 49.
Joey Ramone was signature punk from top to bottom, starting from his shoulder-length mane of black hair and ubiquitous rose-colored shades, down a lithe frame outfitted in a motorcycle jacket and torn jeans. As the Ramones' frontman for nearly two decades, Joey chewed up and spit out lyrics to punk classics like "Sheena Is A Punk Rocker," "Blitzkrieg Bop" and "I Wanna Be Sedated." Before that, he was Jeffrey Hyman, a gangly Jewish kid born and bred in Queens, New York, where he escaped the cruelty of schoolyard bullies and the pain of his parents' divorce by diving headfirst into music. A steady diet of The Beatles, The Who, David Bowie, and Phil Spector-helmed girl groups left him craving more. Under the name Jeff Starship, he began performing with the glam rock band Sniper in 1974 before founding the Ramones with pals John Cummings (Johnny Ramone) and Douglas Colvin (Dee Dee Ramone) later that year. The Ramones disbandment in 1996 marks the beginning of the end for Joey, who is diagnosed with lymphoma. Five years later, he dies while listening to U2's "In A Little While," just one month before his 50th birthday. Twice engaged but never married, Joey leaves behind a legacy of music, including 14 Ramones albums and the critically acclaimed She Talks to Rainbows album he produced for Ronnie Spector. His solo LP Don't Worry About Me is posthumously released in 2002.
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