1957: Buddy Holly released the single "Peggy Sue". (Note: one website reports the song was released in July. According to the Buddy Holly Center in his birthplace--Lubbock, Texas, the song was released September 20.)
backed with "Everyday".
1964: The Beatles appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, a repeat (rerun) of their performance on February 16.
1964: The Beatles wrapped up their first tour of North America with a charity concert at the Paramount Theatre in New York City.
1967: Rick Nelson and wife celebrated the birth of twins Gunnar and Matthew, who would go on to form the group Nelson ("(Can't Live Without Your) Love And Affection").
1969: During a band meeting in London, John Lennon announced he was leaving the Beatles.
1969: The self-titled Blind Faith album was #1 in the U.K.
1969: "Share Your Love With Me" by Aretha Franklin ran its winning streak to five weeks at #1 on the R&B chart.
1969: Blind Faith rose to #1 on the Album chart in the U.S. with their self-titled release. Johnny Cash at San Quentin fell and word of mouth was beginning to sell the great debut album Blood, Sweat & Tears. The Soundtrack to "Hair" came in fourth, just ahead of the mind-blowing move from 127 to #5 for Green River by CCR. The rest of the Top 10: In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida by Iron Butterfly in its 62nd week, the Best of Cream, Smash Hits from the Jimi Hendrix Experience at #8, The Soft Parade from the Doors, and the compilation Through the Past, Darkly (Big Hits Volume 2) by the Rolling Stones entered the Top 10.
1969: Elvis Presley had his biggest song in years and one of the fastest-risers as well--"Suspicious Minds", which moved from #77 to #36 on this date.
1969: Oliver reached #1 on the Easy Listening chart with "Jean" from the movie The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.
1969: Today was the day that "Sugar, Sugar" by the Archies first hit #1, besting "Honky Tonk Women" by the Rolling Stones.
1970: Jim Morrison was found guilty of indecent exposure and profanity in Miami, Florida. The charges stemmed from Morrison's desperate attempt to gain attention near the end of his life when he exposed himself while on stage in Miami. (Note: one website falsely says Morrison was arrested in Miami on this date. Morrison turned himself in to the Federal Bureau of Investigation on April 4, 1969. On September 20, Morrison was found guilty of the charges, according to 'CNN' and numerous other reliable sources.)
1971: Peter Frampton left the group Humble Pie to begin a solo career.
1973: Elton John, Carole King, Jackson Browne and Neil Young & Crazy Horse opened the Roxy in style in Los Angeles.
1973: The great Jim Croce, who was on the verge of superstardom, died at age 30 when his light plane crashed shortly after takeoff in Natchitoches, Louisiana.
1975: The Bay City Rollers appeared on the show called Howard Cosell's Saturday Night Live on ABC-TV.
1975: Between the Lines by Janis Ian was the #1 album, displacing the Isley Brothers LP The Heat is On. Two new entries in the Top 10: Born to Run from Bruce Springsteen moved from #84 to #8 while Pick of the Litter gave the Spinners a Top 10 album.
1975: Most will remember this gem from 1975--the #1 song on the R&B chart for Tavares--"It Only Takes A Minute".
1975: John Denver owned the top Easy Listening song with "I'm Sorry".
1975: Neil Sedaka and Elton John moved from 66 to 32 with "Bad Blood".
1976: The Captain & Tennille began their variety show on ABC-TV.
1977: Linda Ronstadt released her remake of the Buddy Holly classic "It's So Easy".
1980: Kate Bush owned the #1 album in the U.K. with Never for Ever.
1980: The Game by Queen took over on the U.S. Album chart from the great album Hold Out by Jackson Browne. Diana from Diana Ross was third with the Rolling Stones tumbling with their former #1 Emotional Rescue. The Cars moved from 12-5 with their third album Panorama while the self-titled Christopher Cross was still at 6. The rest of the Top 10: George Benson's Give Me the Night, two great movie soundtracks, "Xanadu" and "Urban Cowboy" and Pat Benatar's breakthrough album Crimes of Passion moved from 16-10.
1980: Dionne Warwick had one of The Top Adult Contemporary Songs of the 1980's*--"No Night So Long", which first reached #1 on this date.
1980: Larry Graham had the only new Top 10 song on the Popular chart--"One In A Million You".
1983: Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood performed at the ARMS benefit concert to raise money for multiple sclerosis research at Royal Albert Hall in London.
1985: Simple Minds released the single "Alive And Kicking".
1986: Oran "Juice" Jones hit #1 on the R&B chart with "The Rain".
1986: The Soundtrack to "Top Gun" took over the #1 position on the Album chart from Madonna's True Blue. Huey Lewis had the only new entry but it was a big one--the great album Fore! moved from #42 to #10 in its second week of release.
1986: Huey Lewis & the News grabbed the #1 spot with "Stuck With You" but Gloria Loring & Carl Anderson were close behind with their song "Friends And Lovers". Lionel Richie fell after peaking at 2 with "Dancing On The Ceiling". The rest of the Top 10: Run-D.M.C. with their remake of the Aerosmith classic "Walk This Way" (never remake classics...). The rest of the Top 10: Canada's Glass Tiger with "Don't Forget Me (When I'm Gone)", Daryl Hall's solo hit "Dreamtime", Janet Jackson had "When I Think Of You" which moved from 14 to 7, Stacey Q and "Two Of Hearts", Berlin was down with their former #1 "Take My Breath Away" and Billy Ocean's sixth but next-to-last Top 10 "Love Zone" was #10.
1986: Huey Lewis & the News were on top of the AC chart with "Stuck With You".
1991: Tom Cochrane released the single "Life Is A Highway". It did not become a hit until May of 1992.
1995: Natalie Merchant began her first solo tour after she had left the group 10,000 Maniacs.
1997: Elton John scored the #1 song in the U.K. with "Something About The Way You Look Tonight".
1997: Jewel's masterpiece album Pieces of You was still in the Top 10 on this date after 82 weeks of release; in fact, it was moving back up to #5.
2002: Nils Stevenson, former manager of Siouxsie and the Banshees and the Sex Pistols, died at the age of 49 in London.
2003: Nelly Furtado gave birth to daughter Nevis at a hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
2005: J.D. Fortune of Canada won an audition to replace the late Michael Hutchence as the new lead singer of INXS.
2006: The Rolling Stones continued their tour A Bigger Bang with the fall segment beginning at Gillette Stadium in Boston, Massachusetts.
2009: Muse had the top U.K. album with The Resistance.
Born This Day:
1924: Gogi Grant, who scored one of the biggest hits early in the Rock Era ("The Wayward Wind", #1 for eight weeks in 1956) and who dubbed Ann Blyth's vocals in The Helen Morgan Story, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; died March 10, 2016 in Los Angeles.
1945: Sweet Pea Atkinson of Was Not Was
1948: John Panozzo, drummer of Styx, was born in Chicago.
1957: Alannah Currie, saxophonist with the Thompson Twins, was born in Auckland, New Zealand. (Note: Allmusic.com reports the birth as September 28, but nearly every other source lists it as September 20.)
1960: Robert Wiggins of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five; died September 8, 1989 of a heart attack brought on by crack cocaine.
1966: Elite guitarist Nuno Bettencourt of Extreme was born in Praia da Vitória, Terceira, Açores, Portugal.
1967: Gunnar Nelson of the group Nelson, and the son of Rick Nelson, was born in Santa Monica, California.
1967: Matthew Nelson, Gunnar's twin brother and son of Rick, of the group Nelson was born in Santa Monica, California.
1968: Ben Shepherd, bassist of Soundgarden, was born in Okinawa, Japan.
1979: Rick Woolstenhulme, drummer of Lifehouse, was born in Gilbert, Arizona.
1964: The Beatles wrapped up their first tour of North America with a charity concert at the Paramount Theatre in New York City.
1967: Rick Nelson and wife celebrated the birth of twins Gunnar and Matthew, who would go on to form the group Nelson ("(Can't Live Without Your) Love And Affection").
1969: During a band meeting in London, John Lennon announced he was leaving the Beatles.
1969: The self-titled Blind Faith album was #1 in the U.K.
1969: "Share Your Love With Me" by Aretha Franklin ran its winning streak to five weeks at #1 on the R&B chart.
1969: Blind Faith rose to #1 on the Album chart in the U.S. with their self-titled release. Johnny Cash at San Quentin fell and word of mouth was beginning to sell the great debut album Blood, Sweat & Tears. The Soundtrack to "Hair" came in fourth, just ahead of the mind-blowing move from 127 to #5 for Green River by CCR. The rest of the Top 10: In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida by Iron Butterfly in its 62nd week, the Best of Cream, Smash Hits from the Jimi Hendrix Experience at #8, The Soft Parade from the Doors, and the compilation Through the Past, Darkly (Big Hits Volume 2) by the Rolling Stones entered the Top 10.
1969: Elvis Presley had his biggest song in years and one of the fastest-risers as well--"Suspicious Minds", which moved from #77 to #36 on this date.
1969: Oliver reached #1 on the Easy Listening chart with "Jean" from the movie The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.
1969: Today was the day that "Sugar, Sugar" by the Archies first hit #1, besting "Honky Tonk Women" by the Rolling Stones.
1970: Jim Morrison was found guilty of indecent exposure and profanity in Miami, Florida. The charges stemmed from Morrison's desperate attempt to gain attention near the end of his life when he exposed himself while on stage in Miami. (Note: one website falsely says Morrison was arrested in Miami on this date. Morrison turned himself in to the Federal Bureau of Investigation on April 4, 1969. On September 20, Morrison was found guilty of the charges, according to 'CNN' and numerous other reliable sources.)
1971: Peter Frampton left the group Humble Pie to begin a solo career.
1973: Elton John, Carole King, Jackson Browne and Neil Young & Crazy Horse opened the Roxy in style in Los Angeles.
1973: The great Jim Croce, who was on the verge of superstardom, died at age 30 when his light plane crashed shortly after takeoff in Natchitoches, Louisiana.
1975: The Bay City Rollers appeared on the show called Howard Cosell's Saturday Night Live on ABC-TV.
1975: Between the Lines by Janis Ian was the #1 album, displacing the Isley Brothers LP The Heat is On. Two new entries in the Top 10: Born to Run from Bruce Springsteen moved from #84 to #8 while Pick of the Litter gave the Spinners a Top 10 album.
1975: Most will remember this gem from 1975--the #1 song on the R&B chart for Tavares--"It Only Takes A Minute".
1975: John Denver owned the top Easy Listening song with "I'm Sorry".
1975: Neil Sedaka and Elton John moved from 66 to 32 with "Bad Blood".
1976: The Captain & Tennille began their variety show on ABC-TV.
1977: Linda Ronstadt released her remake of the Buddy Holly classic "It's So Easy".
1980: Kate Bush owned the #1 album in the U.K. with Never for Ever.
1980: The Game by Queen took over on the U.S. Album chart from the great album Hold Out by Jackson Browne. Diana from Diana Ross was third with the Rolling Stones tumbling with their former #1 Emotional Rescue. The Cars moved from 12-5 with their third album Panorama while the self-titled Christopher Cross was still at 6. The rest of the Top 10: George Benson's Give Me the Night, two great movie soundtracks, "Xanadu" and "Urban Cowboy" and Pat Benatar's breakthrough album Crimes of Passion moved from 16-10.
1980: Dionne Warwick had one of The Top Adult Contemporary Songs of the 1980's*--"No Night So Long", which first reached #1 on this date.
1980: Larry Graham had the only new Top 10 song on the Popular chart--"One In A Million You".
1983: Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood performed at the ARMS benefit concert to raise money for multiple sclerosis research at Royal Albert Hall in London.
1985: Simple Minds released the single "Alive And Kicking".
1986: Oran "Juice" Jones hit #1 on the R&B chart with "The Rain".
1986: The Soundtrack to "Top Gun" took over the #1 position on the Album chart from Madonna's True Blue. Huey Lewis had the only new entry but it was a big one--the great album Fore! moved from #42 to #10 in its second week of release.
1986: Huey Lewis & the News grabbed the #1 spot with "Stuck With You" but Gloria Loring & Carl Anderson were close behind with their song "Friends And Lovers". Lionel Richie fell after peaking at 2 with "Dancing On The Ceiling". The rest of the Top 10: Run-D.M.C. with their remake of the Aerosmith classic "Walk This Way" (never remake classics...). The rest of the Top 10: Canada's Glass Tiger with "Don't Forget Me (When I'm Gone)", Daryl Hall's solo hit "Dreamtime", Janet Jackson had "When I Think Of You" which moved from 14 to 7, Stacey Q and "Two Of Hearts", Berlin was down with their former #1 "Take My Breath Away" and Billy Ocean's sixth but next-to-last Top 10 "Love Zone" was #10.
1986: Huey Lewis & the News were on top of the AC chart with "Stuck With You".
1991: Tom Cochrane released the single "Life Is A Highway". It did not become a hit until May of 1992.
1995: Natalie Merchant began her first solo tour after she had left the group 10,000 Maniacs.
1997: Elton John scored the #1 song in the U.K. with "Something About The Way You Look Tonight".
1997: Jewel's masterpiece album Pieces of You was still in the Top 10 on this date after 82 weeks of release; in fact, it was moving back up to #5.
2002: Nils Stevenson, former manager of Siouxsie and the Banshees and the Sex Pistols, died at the age of 49 in London.
2003: Nelly Furtado gave birth to daughter Nevis at a hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
2005: J.D. Fortune of Canada won an audition to replace the late Michael Hutchence as the new lead singer of INXS.
2006: The Rolling Stones continued their tour A Bigger Bang with the fall segment beginning at Gillette Stadium in Boston, Massachusetts.
2009: Muse had the top U.K. album with The Resistance.
Born This Day:
1924: Gogi Grant, who scored one of the biggest hits early in the Rock Era ("The Wayward Wind", #1 for eight weeks in 1956) and who dubbed Ann Blyth's vocals in The Helen Morgan Story, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; died March 10, 2016 in Los Angeles.
1945: Sweet Pea Atkinson of Was Not Was
1946: Mick Rogers (real name Michael Oldroyd), guitarist, singer and songwriter of Manfred Mann's Earth Band, was born in Dovercourt, Essex, England. (Note: some websites falsely spell the name Dover Court. The correct spelling is Dovercourt.)
1948: Not one but two sets of musical twins born today--Chuck Panozzo, bassist of Styx, was born in Chicago, Illinois. (Note: the birth years of both Chuck and John are reported as 1947 or 1949 by some websites. According to the official website for fellow Styx member Tommy Shaw, the Panozzo's were born in 1948.)1948: John Panozzo, drummer of Styx, was born in Chicago.
1957: Alannah Currie, saxophonist with the Thompson Twins, was born in Auckland, New Zealand. (Note: Allmusic.com reports the birth as September 28, but nearly every other source lists it as September 20.)
1960: Robert Wiggins of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five; died September 8, 1989 of a heart attack brought on by crack cocaine.
1960: David Hemingway of the Housemartins was born in Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England.
1966: Elite guitarist Nuno Bettencourt of Extreme was born in Praia da Vitória, Terceira, Açores, Portugal.
1967: Gunnar Nelson of the group Nelson, and the son of Rick Nelson, was born in Santa Monica, California.
1967: Matthew Nelson, Gunnar's twin brother and son of Rick, of the group Nelson was born in Santa Monica, California.
1968: Ben Shepherd, bassist of Soundgarden, was born in Okinawa, Japan.
1979: Rick Woolstenhulme, drummer of Lifehouse, was born in Gilbert, Arizona.
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