Thursday, 12 July 2018

Today in rock history 6th July

1925 – Rock `n’ roll pioneer Bill Haley (William John Clifton Haley Jr.) is born in Highland Park, a section of Detroit.
1949 - Mike Shrieve-drummer for Santana is born
1956 – Paul McCartney meets John Lennon of The Quarry Men It was Saturday, July 6th, 1956 and John Lennon’s skiffle group, The Quarry Men, were playing Woolton Village Church Garden Fete.
1964 – A Hard Day’s Night premieres in London before Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon at the London Pavilion. The Beatles won’t get a chance to see the finished film until July 10.
1965 – No. 1 Chart Toppers Pop Hit: “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” The Rolling Stones. It is the Stones’ first No. 1 single in the U.S.
1967 – Pink Floyd perform for the third time on the BBC’s Top of the Pops, promoting their successful “See Emily Play” single.
1973 – Queen release their debut single in the U.K., “Keep Yourself Alive.”
1976 – The Damned give their performance debut at the 100 Club in London.
1980 – 36 Ted Nugent fans are arrested for supposedly smoking pot and throwing bottles at the Gonzo Rocker’s Concert, in Hollywood, Fla.
1991 – Van Halen’s “For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge’‘ debuts at No. 1 on Chart Toppers’s pop album chart.
1995 – A day after the Justice Department refuses to investigate Ticketmaster, Pearl Jam issues a statement saying they are “disappointed” in the result.
2002 – Jimmie Lee Robinson, a Chicago blues stalwart known for his pointed lyrics and storyteller’s sensibility is found dead in his car on Chicago’s southwest side. He is 71.
2002 - George Harrison's widow Olivia put the couple's home up for sale for 20 million pounds, saying she couldn't bear to live with the memories of the attack by schizophrenic Michael Abram who broke into the house in 1999.
2003 – Skip Battin, former bassist for the Byrds and other notable country-rock bands of the ’70s and ’80s, dies near Palm Springs, Calif., of complications from Alzheimer’s disease. He is 69.
2003 – Eight people are struck by lightning before a Dave Matthews Band concert in East Troy, Wisconsin.
2004 – Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl, Tenacious D and Liz Phair play a Los Angeles fundraiser for Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry.
2005 – Live 8 organizer Bob Geldof becomes the first member of the Boomtown Rats to ever be nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.
2012 – Celebrated American electric guitarist Eric Johnson kicks off his first ever solo UK tour.

Today in rock history 5th July

1943 – The Band’s Robbie Robertson is born in Toronto.
1950 – Huey Lewis (Hugh Cregg III) is born in New York City.
1950 - Michael Monarch-guitarist for Steppenwolf is born this day
1954 – Elvis Presley invents rock ‘n’ roll as he, Scotty Moore, and Bill Black start messing around on a song called “That’s All Right” at Memphis’ Sun Studios.
1964 – David Jones (aka David Bowie) and the King Bees release the single “Liza Jane.”
1964 – The Irish band Them, featuring Van Morrison, record “Gloria.”
1966 – Chas Chandler goes to see Jimi Hendrix play at Cafe Wha? in New York’s Greenwich Village. The former Animal later tells Hendrix he should move to London in order to launch his career.
1968 – John Lennon sells his psychedelic Rolls Royce.
1968 -  Creedence Clearwater Revival released their self-titled debut album which went on to peak at number fifty-two on the Billboard 200 Album Chart and sell one million copies in the U.S.
1969 -  The Who & Chuck Berry co-headlined the Pop Proms at London’s Royal Albert Hall.
1969 – The Rolling Stones turn their free Hyde Park concert into a memorial service for Brian Jones, who died in his swimming pool on July 3. Jagger reads Shelley’s “Adonais” by way of tribute and the band releases thousands of butterflies over the crowd. Sadly, most of the insects had themselves expired.
1971 – A Led Zeppelin gig in Milan turns violent when police fire tear gas at the crowd. The band escapes unharmed, but numerous arrests are made and a roadie is hit in the head with a bottle.
1975 - Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones was charged with possession of an offensive weapon and reckless driving in Arkansas. Hundreds of teenage girls gathered at the jail where he was being held.
1975 – Pink Floyd premiere their Wish You Were Here album in a performance that takes in fireworks, Spitfire planes flying overhead, and even a model plane that crashes into the stage.
1978 – EMI halts production of the Rolling Stones’ Some Girls album after some of the celebrities featured complain about the use of their images in the cover art.
1988 – A movement to ban Grateful Dead concerts in the town of Oxford, Maine, crumbles after the protestors learn that they would have to ban concerts at the county fair too.
1989 – Rod Stewart is knocked unconscious after hitting his head onstage.
1990 - Kiss had to cancel a scheduled concert in New Haven, CT due to Paul Stanley sustaining neck & back injuries in a car accident the previous day in Pelham, NY.
1995 – More than 100 Grateful Dead fans were hurt when a wooden deck collapsed at a campground lodge in Wentzville, Missouri. Hundreds of people were on or under the deck sheltering from heavy rain. More than 4,000 Deadheads were staying at the campground while attending Grateful Dead concerts in the St. Louis suburb.
1995 – Sorry, Pearl Jam. The Justice Department announces that it will not be investigating antitrust charges against Ticketmaster.
2005 - Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour, who’s seen Pink Floyd’s record sales go up after Live 8 suggested that all other Live 8 performers donate their royalties to charity.
2015 - The four surviving members of The Grateful Dead gave what they said would be their final performance, playing to some 70,000 singing, dancing and tearful fans at Chicago's Soldier Field.

Today in rock history 4th July

1943 – Guitarist Alan Wilson of Canned Heat is born in Boston.
1948 – Guitarist Jeremy Spencer, who played with Fleetwood Mac before they moved to California, is born in Lancashire.
1962 – Chris Blackwell starts up Island Records, which would become the home of Bob Marley and U2, among others.
1964 – The Rolling Stones appear on Juke Box Jury.
1966 – In the Philippines, President Ferdinand Marcos pulls the Beatles’ police protection after his wife claims the band snubbed her by not attending one of her parties.
1969 – The Kinks’ Ray Davies is in Hollywood mixing the Turtles’ final album, Turtle Soup.
1982 – In a year that has seen him bite the head off a bat and watch his guitarist Randy Rhoads die in a plane crash… metal madman Ozzy Osbourne marries his manager, Sharon Arden.
1987 – Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead kick off a short tour together in Foxboro, Mass. The Dead encourage Dylan to reach deep into his back catalogue and adopt the practice of not deciding on a set list before going on stage.
1987 – In New York, Keith Richards finishes the mixing for the Chuck Berry documentary Hail! Hail! Rock ‘n’ Roll.
1987 – “The July Fourth Disarmament Festival” in the Soviet Union features the Doobie Brothers, Santana, Bonnie Raitt and Soviet music groups.
1995 – At Lollapalooza in George, Wash., Courtney Love belts Bikini Kill singer Kathleen Hanna. Charged with assault, Love receives a suspended one-year sentence and is required to take courses in anger management.
1995 – The Ramones release “Adios Amigos.’‘ It’s speculated to be the band’s last album ever.
2000 – A man dies after plunging 80 feet from the top of Ravens Stadium in Baltimore shortly before a Metallica concert.
2003 -Metallica, Limp Bizkit, Linkin Park, the Deftones and Mudvayne kick off the Summer Sanitarium tour in Pontiac, Michigan.
2007 – Former laboratory worker Devon Townsend admitted to a court in Albuquerque, New Mexico of stalking Chester Bennington lead singer with Linkin Park. Townsend used US government computers to obtain his personal information, accessing Bennington’s e-mail account and mobile phone voicemail.
2009 - 77-year-old Allen Klein, the former manager of The Rolling Stones and later The Beatles, died after a battle with Alzheimer's disease.
2013 - After years of feuding over the right to use the name The Doors, guitarist Robby Krieger and drummer John Densmore announced that they would come together one last time to honour keyboardist Ray Manzarek, who died from cancer in May at the age of 74.
2015 - Billy Joel married former Morgan Stanley executive Alexis Roderick in an intimate ceremony at his estate in Long Island, N.Y.

Tuesday, 3 July 2018

Today in rock history 3rd July

1951 – Born on this day, Mike Corby, The Babys
1965 – The Beatles played the final night of a two week European tour at the Plaza de Toros Monumental in Barcelona, Spain.
1967 – Beatles John, George, and Paul turn up at a party thrown in the Monkees’ honour in London.
1969 – Brian Jones is found dead in his swimming pool in Hartford, England. The Rolling Stones founder’s death was later ruled to be an accident.
1969 – Some 78,000 people show up for this year’s Newport Jazz Festival in Rhode Island. The big crowd may have had a bit to do with the non-jazz headliners James Brown, Led Zeppelin, Johnny Winter, and Blood, Sweat & Tears.
1969 – John Lennon holds a press conference to announce the release of “Give Peace a Chance,” but can’t show up as he and Yoko are recovering from a car crash in Scotland. Ringo fills in instead.
1970 – The Allman Brothers Band appears at the Atlanta Pop Festival.
1971 – Jim Morrison of the Doors dies of a heart attack in Paris at the age of 27.
1973 – As the Ziggy Stardust tour comes to a close David Bowie announces, “it is the last show I will ever do.”
1981 – Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman releases the single “(Si Si) Je Suis un Rock Star” on his own label.
1981 – Robby Krieger, Ray Manzarek, and John Densmore lead fans in a graveside memorial for Jim Morrison in Paris.
1982 – Van Halen hits #38 with “Dancin’ in the Street”.
1988 - The final Texas Jam took place at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas which featured the U.S. Monsters of Rock tour which included Van Halen, the Scorpions & Metallica. During Van Halen’s set, Sammy Hagar lost his voice & promised to play a free concert in Dallas which they did three years later.
1995 – Stone Temple Pilot Scott Weiland is in court pleading not guilty to drug charges.
2000 – DirecTV broadcasts the 1939 film “The Wizard Of Oz,” with Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side Of The Moon” in sync on the alternate Second Audio Program (SAP). While no one involved with Pink Floyd has ever admitted to any link between the bands seminal 1973 album and the classic film, urban legend purports that the album was conceived as an alternate soundtrack to Dorothy’s adventures in Oz.
2002 – Sir Elton John became the first person to be made an honorary doctorate from the Royal Academy Of Music.
2002 – The wife of Ozzy Osbourne, Sharon Osbourne underwent an emergency operation after being diagnosed with cancer.
2003 – The White Stripes’ Jack White (the talented one with the guitar) announces he’s producing tracks for C&W legend Loretta Lynn.
2004 – David Crosby was fined $5,000 (£2,745) by a US court after admitting attempted criminal possession of a weapon.
2007 – Pete Doherty escaped jail after a judge decided to defer sentencing him for drugs offences on condition he went into rehab.
2012 - Meat Loaf launched a legal battle against tribute artist Dean Torkington who had registered the domain name meatloaf.org in 2000. Although he was seeking $100,000 in damages, Meat Loaf would later settle for $25,000 and control of the website.
2012 - KISS announced that they were set to release a guitar size book containing unseen photographs from their 40-year career.

Today in rock history 2nd July

1941 – The ageless Charlie Watts of the Rolling Stones is born in Islington.
1949 – Roy Bittan, pianist with Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, is born.
1956 – Elvis Presley records “Don’t Be Cruel,” “Hound Dog” and “Anyway You Want Me” in New York. It marks the first time he uses the Jordanaires as background singers.
1964 – Paul McCartney is at the piano as Liverpudlian diva Cilla Black records the Beatles’ “It’s for You.”
1969 – Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell quit the Jimi Hendrix Experience, however there is some good news for rock enthusiasts as Leslie West and Felix Pappalardi team up to create Mountain.
1976 – Brian Wilson rejoins the Beach Boys for the first time on stage since deciding he’d rather spend his life in bed. Aside from singing “In My Room” at the Anaheim, Calif., performance, he mostly sits staring at his keyboard.
1980 – Bob Weir and Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead are arrested with their manager, Danny Rifken, on charges of inciting a riot. They were alleged to have interfered with a drug-related arrest during a concert at the San Diego Sports Arena.
1981 – Bruce Springsteen plays his first show at New Jersey’s Brendan Byrne Arena. He sold out six shows at the venue in the space of an hour.
1982 – Clash drummer Topper Headon is charged with stealing a bus stop sign.
1984 – This Day in Dio: Dio release their album The Last in Line.
1986 – Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead perform together at a show in Akron, Ohio. Dylan joins the Dead on three songs.
1987 – Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones emerges from retirement to begin producing the Mission’s Children.
1991 – Several people are injured at a Guns’ N’ Roses concert in Maryland Heights, Mo., a St. Louis suburb. Lead singer Axl Rose is charged with third-degree assault and property damage but doesn’t turn himself in for a year.
1995 – Grateful Dead fans riot outside a Noblesville, Ind., concert. Seventeen arrests are made after gates are torn down and rocks thrown.
1997 – After he is awarded Sweden’s Polar Music Prize, Bruce Springsteen gives the cash portion of the award to a Swedish school programme that keeps teenagers off the streets.
2001 – Yoko Ono visits the Beatle’s hometown of Liverpool, England, to attend a ceremony announcing the renaming of the Liverpool Airport as the Liverpool John Lennon Airport in honour of her late husband.
2003 – After various delays, Lollapalooza kicks off again, with headliners Jane’s Addiction and a line-up that includes Incubus, hip-hop act Jurassic Five and Audioslave.
2003 – In Billboard, the Who’s Pete Townshend dismisses those who’ve passed judgment on him after his arrest for child porn, and instead cares about its effect on “friends, fans, family and strangers who feel they know me through my work.”
2003 – Great White are forced to cancel their tour to benefit the victims of the Rhode Island club fire due to money troubles and insurance issues.
2005 – Live 8 concerts are held in locations from London to Philadelphia to Tokyo to raise awareness of African poverty. Among the performers are Madonna, Green Day, Paul McCartney, U2, Stevie Wonder, Jay-Z, a reunited Pink Floyd with Roger Waters, Stevie Wonder, Bjork, Jet, Simple Plan, Neil Young, Maroon 5, Pet Shop Boys
2015 - Buddy Holly's widow, Maria Elena Holly, announced that she had entrusted the publishing rights to her late husband's influential catalogue to the artist's performance rights group, BMG.

Today in rock history 1st July

1915 – Bluesman Willie Dixon is born in Vicksburg, Miss.
1945 – Deborah Harry is born in Miami.
1952 – Comedian/actor/writer/Blues Brother and House of Blues co-founder Dan Aykroyd is born in Ottawa, Canada.
1962 - Gene Vincent was the featured act at The Cavern Club in Liverpool, along with an up and coming local group called The Beatles.
1968 – John Lennon opens an exhibition of his drawings titled “You Are Here.”
1968 – John Lennon and Yoko Ono are hospitalized after an auto accident in Scotland.
1969 – The Doors release their album The Soft Parade.
1970 – Jimi Hendrix records his first session at Electric Ladyland Studios, New York.
1971 - Jethro Tull's first US Top Ten album, "Aqualung" is awarded a Gold record.
1973 – Bob Dylan releases his soundtrack to Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid.
1975 – Former Beatle Ringo Starr divorces his wife, Maureen Cox
1979 – The Doobie Brothers celebrate their 10th anniversary with an all-star jam session at the Friar’s Club in Los Angeles.
1981 – Rushton Moreve of Steppenwolf dies in an auto wreck at age 35.
1983 - A New Jersey based quintet calling themselves Bon Jovi are signed to Phonogram's Mercury label.
1987 – The Grateful Dead release their In the Dark album, featuring the single “Touch of Grey.” Rolling Stone says, “This album bespeaks an effortlessness long absent from their oeuvre.”
1995 – Gravel-voiced DJ Wolfman Jack dies of a heart attack in Belvidere, N.C., at age 57
1997 – Radiohead release their third album, OK Computer.
1998 – A track from metal-funk band White Zombie’s 1993 Geffen album “La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Volume One” has the dubious distinction of being played repeatedly to ward off paparazzi at the wedding of Barbra Streisand and James Brolin.
1999 - Guy Mitchell, who scored two US number one hits with "You Got Me Singing The Blues" in 1956 and "Heartaches By The Number" in 1959, died at the age of 72 from complications following surgery.
2003 – The New York Post reports that it’s all over for Kid Rock and Pam Anderson. The actress tells the Las Vegas Sun, “We remain good friends, but we have two different lives right now. I am with my kids and I couldn’t be happier.”
2006 - The first Hyde Park Calling festival took place at Hyde Park in London. Roger Waters headlined the first day playing The Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety & The Who headlined the following day.
2008 – Whitesnake guitarist Mel Galley, died at the age of 60 from cancer of the oesophagus. Galley also played with Trapeze, Glenn Hughes, Cozy Powell and the Blue Jays.
2013 - Boston guitarist Tom Scholz was ordered to pay $132,000 in court fees to the Boston Herald after he unsuccessfully sued the newspaper. The Herald had suggested that Scholz was responsible for the 2007 suicide of Boston lead singer Brad Delp, but a Superior Court judge ruled that the paper could not be held liable for defaming Scholz because it's impossible to know what caused Delp to kill himself.
2015 - Bruce Springsteen made a surprise appearance at Brian Wilson's show in Holmdel, New Jersey where he joined the Beach Boys legend on "Barbara Ann" and "Surfin' USA".

Today in rock history June 30th

1944 – Vocalist Glenn Shorrock of the Little River Band is born in Rochester
1949 - Andy Scott-guitarist for Sweet born today
1963 – Yngwie Malmsteen is born in Stockholm Sweden
1966 – The Beatles played the first of three concerts at the Nippon Budokan Hall, Japan.
1973 – George Harrison knocked Paul McCartney from the top of the US singles chart with ‘Give Me Love, Give Me Peace On Earth’. His second US No.1, a No.8 hit in the UK.
1974 – Gregg Allman marries Cher four days after her divorce from Sonny Bono. After nine days, Cher announces she wants another divorce. They separate and divorce about 3 1/2 years later.
1989 – The surviving Beatles sue for an injunction against Dave Clark, formerly of the Dave Clark Five, banning him from selling copies of the old Ready Steady Go! TV show featuring the Beatles. The case is later settled out of court.
1990 – Pink Floyd headline the Knebworth festival
1994 – Virgin Records rushes the Rolling Stones’ Voodoo Lounge into stores early after the album is played on the radio.
1996 – Neil Young premieres his album, “Broken Arrow” via the Internet. The album is slated for release on July 2, two days after its technologically advanced premiere.
1999 – Eric Clapton performs a benefit concert at Madison Square Garden for his Crossroads rehab center in Antigua. His guests include Sheryl Crow, Mary J. Blige, and Bob Dylan.
2004 – Kinks founder member Dave Davies was left paralysed on the right-hand side of his body after suffering a stroke. The 57-year-old guitarist and brother of fellow Kinks star Ray Davies had been promoting his solo material when he collapsed.
2004 – David Bowie cancels the remainder of his Reality tour after suffering a pinched nerve in his shoulder.
2013 – Lou Reed was rushed to a Long Island hospital! Reed, who recently received a liver transplant, reportedly had been sick to his stomach a number of times and there were concerns that his body might be rejecting the new organ.
2015 - Deen Castronovo, drummer for Journey, was jailed after being charged with having sexual intercourse "by forcible compulsion".