1957: Ricky Nelson recorded "Be-Bop Baby" at Master Recorders in Hollywood, California.
1957: The Everly Brothers recorded "Wake Up Little Susie" in Nashville, Tennessee.
1957: Buddy Holly & the Crickets played at none other than the Apollo Theater in the neighborhood of Harlem in Manhattan, New York for one week beginning on this date. The tour was set up by Norman Petty, working with promoter Irving Feld. (Note: contrary to the movie 'The Buddy Holly Story' and numerous websites, which indicate that the Apollo didn't know the group was white, and did not discover this until they showed up, management at the Apollo did indeed know. The Schiffman family, which owned the theatre, were aware that the Crickets were white. Frank Schiffman's sons, Bobby and Jack, had seen the Crickets in Washington, D.C. during the first leg of the tour, according to the book 'Buddy Holly: A Biography' by Ellis Amburn. Unlike the other theatres which booked the Crickets only to be shocked that they were white, the Apollo booked them because black record-buyers were sending "That'll Be The Day" to the top of the R&B charts.)
1960: Elvis Presley began filming of the movie Flaming Star.
1962: Twelve-year-old Stevie Wonder released his first 45, "I Call It Pretty Music (But The Old People Call It The Blues)". Marvin Gaye was the drummer.