레이블이 University of Al Bookstore인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
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2013년 11월 26일 화요일

About 'university of south alabama book store'|Latest Lulu Travel Books: The Invisible South, the Gay and Lesbian Scene in China, Castles of the Caribbean & More







About 'university of south alabama book store'|Latest Lulu Travel Books: The Invisible South, the Gay and Lesbian Scene in China, Castles of the Caribbean & More








Musical               Calendar               
               JANUARY
               January               1:               The               Grateful               Dead               and               Big               Brother               &               the               Holding               Company               perform               at               the               New               Year's               Wail/Whale               in               San               Francisco.

Hell's               Angels               hosts               the               bash               to               thank               Haight-Ashbury               hippies               for               bailing               Angel               Chocolate               George               from               jail               (1967)
               January               2:               Five               thousand               people               attend               R&B               Star,               Johnny               Ace's               funeral               in               Memphis               after               he               accidentally               killed               himself               in               a               game               of               Russian               roulette               (1955)
               January               3:               Aretha               Franklin               was               the               first               woman               inducted               into               the               Hall               of               Fame               (1987)
               January               4:               The               Jimi               Hendrix               Experience               played               the               first               of               what               would               be               over               240               gigs               in               this               year               when               they               appeared               at               the               Bromel               Club,               Bromley               (1967)
               January               5:               Kinks               singer               Ray               Davies               was               shot               in               the               leg               while               on               holiday               in               New               Orleans.

The               59-year-old               singer-songwriter               was               shot               when               running               after               two               men               who               stole               his               girlfriend's               purse               at               gunpoint               (2004)
               January               6:               The               Rolling               Stones               begin               their               first               tour               as               a               headline               act               (with               the               Ronettes)               (1964)
               January               7:               San               Francisco's               underground               FM               station               KMPX               holds               a               ballot               among               its               listeners               to               find               out               who               would               be               the               best               candidate               on               a               pro-grass               ticket.

The               people               say               they               want               Bob               Dylan               for               president,               Paul               Butterfield               for               vice-president,               George               Harrison               as               U.N.

ambassador,               Jefferson               Airplane               as               the               Secretary               of               Transportation               (duh),               and               the               Grateful               Dead               as               attorney               general.

They               had               to               make               do               with               Nixon               (1968)
               January               8:               Elvis               Presley               born               (1935)
               January               9:               Mick               Jagger               was               refused               a               Japanese               visa               because               of               a               1969               drug               bust.

This               unfortunately               halted               the               Rolling               Stones'               plan               to               tour               the               Orient               (1973)
               January               10:               An               Australian               woman               will               face               court               today               charged               with               repeatedly               stabbing               her               partner               with               a               pair               of               scissors               in               the               back,               shoulder               and               thigh               because               he               played               Elvis               Presley's               song               "Burning               Love"               over               and               over               again               (2006)
               January               11:               .

The               Whiskey-a-Go-G0               nightclub               opened               in               Los               Angeles,               CA.

It               is               recognized               as               the               first               disco               in               the               U.S               (1963)
               January               12:               .

The               Supremes               appeared               in               an               episode               of               "Tarzan"               on               NBC-TV.

The               ladies               played               a               group               of               nuns               (1968)
               January               13:               Bobby               Brown               was               arrested               in               Augusta,               GA,               for               simulating               a               sex               act               onstage.

It               was               the               second               time               that               he               had               been               arrested               by               the               Augusta               police               department               for               the               same               offense               (1993)
               January               14:               The               term               "rock               &               roll"               is               coined               by               Alan               Feed               (1955)
               January               15:               Sean               Lennon's               remake               of               his               father's               "Give               Peace               A               Chance"               was               released               to               coincide               with               the               United               Nation's               midnight               deadline               for               Iraq               to               withdraw               from               Kuwait.

The               lyrics               were               updated               to               reflect               concerns               of               the               1990's               (1991)
               January               16:               Paul               McCartney               was               jailed               in               Tokyo               for               possession               of               a               half               pound               of               marijuana.

He               spent               ten               days               behind               bars               before               being               kicked-out               of               the               country               by               Japanese               authorities.

The               remainder               of               his               tour               was               canceled               (1980)
               January               17:               NBC               TV               bought               The               Monkees               series,               placing               it               on               their               1966               autumn               schedule               (1966)
               January               18:               First               jazz               concert               at               the               Met:               Louis               Armstrong               and               others               (1944)
               January               19:               The               soundtrack               of               the               film,               Easy               Rider,               the               movie               that               made               a               star               of               Peter               Fonda,               became               a               gold               record.

It               was               the               first               pop-culture,               film               soundtrack               to               earn               the               gold               award.(1917)
               January               20:               During               an               Ozzy               Osbourne               concert               in               Des               Moines,               Iowa,               a               member               of               the               audience               threw               an               unconscious               bat               onto               the               stage.

Thinking               it               was               one               of               his               rubber               fakes,               Ozzy               picked               it               up               and               bit               off               it's               head.

The               singer               was               taken               to               hospital               to               be               given               a               rabies               injection               (1982)
               January               21:               David               Palmer,               former               keyboard               player               for               Jethro               Tull               changed               his               name               to               Dee               Palmer               after               a               successful               sex               change               operation.

Palmer               was               the               keyboard               player               for               Jethro               Tull               between               1969               and               1980               (2003)
               January               22:               The               Columbia               Phonograph               Company               is               formed               in               Washington               D.C               (1889)
               January               23:               Rock               'n'               Roll               fans               under               the               age               of               18               in               Cleveland,               Ohio,               were               banned               from               dancing               in               public               (unless               accompanied               by               an               adult),               after               Ohio               Police               introduced               a               law               dating               back               to               1931               (1956)
               January               24:               The               producer               of               the               New               Kids               on               the               Block               LP               "Hangin'               Tough"sues               for               a               few               million               dollars               for               creative               contributions               and               royalties.

claiming               that               they               only               sang               about               20%               of               the               lyrics.

The               claim               is               eventually               dropped               (1992)
               January               25:               .

.

John               Lennon               and               Yoko               Ono               completely               shave               their               heads               and               declare               1970               as               'Year               One'.

Their               hair               is               donated               to               'Black               House',               an               interracial               community               centre               in               North               London               for               auction               (1970)
               January               26:               Peter               Green,               guitar               virtuoso,               Fleetwood               Mac's               first               lead               guitar               player,               was               committed               to               a               mental               hospital               in               England.

He               had               fired               a               pistol               in               the               general               direction               of               a               delivery               boy.

The               depressive,               Peter               had               left               the               band               in               May               of               1970               (1977)
               January               27:               After               controversy               over               Ice-T's               song,               "Cop               Killer.",               Warner               Brothers               Records               announces               that               it               is               releasing               him               from               his               contract               due               to               "creative               differences"               (1993)
               January               28:               By               request,               Ted               Nugent               carves               his               autograph               into               the               arm               of               a               fan               using               his               bowie               knife               (1978)
               January               29:               Warner               Bros.

Records               signs               Peter,               Paul               and               Mary               (1962)
               January               30:               In               the               U.K.,               Virgin               Megastores               report               that               John               Lydon's               role               on               the               TV               game               show               I'm               a               Celebrity               ...

Get               Me               Out               of               Here               has               bumped               sales               of               the               Sex               Pistols'               Never               Mind               the               Bollocks               album               up               20%               (2004)
               January               31:               Cher               sang               the               U.S.

national               anthem               at               Super               Bowl               XXXIII               (1999)
               
               FEBRUARY
               February               1:               Neil               Young,               at               age               17,               performed               his               first               professional               date               at               a               country               club               in               Winnipeg               (1963)
               February               2:               Sex               Pistols               bass               player               Sid               Vicious               died               of               a               heroin               overdose               in               New               York.

There               had               been               a               party               in               the               flat               to               celebrate               Vicious'               release               on               $50,000               bail               pending               his               trial               for               the               murder               of               his               former               girlfriend,               Nancy               Spungen               (1979)
               February               3:               Buddy               Holly               (22),               Ritchie               Valens               (17),               and               the               Big               Bopper               (28)               died               in               a               plane               crash               in               Iowa               (1959)
               February               4:               Alice               Cooper               is               born               (1948)
               February               5:               Due               to               a               Musicians'               Union               ban,               the               Rolling               Stones               were               not               allowed               to               play               their               hit               "Let's               Spend               the               Night               Together"               when               they               appeared               on               an               ITV               show               (1967)
               February               6:               Bob               Marley               is               born               (1945)
               February               7:               Stephen               Stills               became               the               first               rock               performer               to               record               on               digital               equipment               in               Los               Angeles'               Record               Plant               Studio               (1979)
               February               8:               Carly               Simon's               "You're               So               Vain"               is               certified               gold               (1973)
               February               9:               Oprah               Winfrey               announced               that               Garth               Brooks               had               agreed               to               donate               his               earnings               from               sales               from               his               album               "Sevens"               for               a               seven-day               period.

The               money               went               to               "Oprah's               Angel               Network               (1998)
               
               February               10:               Michael               Jackson               granted               his               first               interview               in               15               years               to               Oprah               Winfrey.

In               the               interview,               Jackson               claimed               that               he               has               a               disorder               that               destroys               the               pigmentation               of               the               skin               and               that               he               had               had               very               little               plastic               surgery               (1993)
               February               11:               The               Beatles               record               their               entire               deput               LP               in               less               than               ten               hours               (1963)
               February               12:               David               Bowie               is               awarded               a               star               on               the               Hollywood               Walk               (1997)
               February               13:               Led               Zeppelin               was               forced               to               cancel               a               concert               in               Singapore               when               officials               wouldn't               let               them               off               the               plane               because               of               their               long               hair               (1972)
               February               14:               On               CBS               television               Walter               Cronkite               reported               that               the               Iranian               government               has               banned               rock               &               roll               becausee               it               is               against               the               concepts               of               Islam               and               also               a               hazard               to               health               (1958)
               February               15:               Big               Joe               Turner               recorded               the               original               "Shake,               Rattle               &               Roll"               (1954)
               February               16:               Jerry               Lee               Lewis               surrendered               to               federal               authorities               to               answer               income               tax               evasion               charges.

He               was               later               acquitted               (1984)
               February               17:               Kate               Bush               releases               "The               Kick               Inside"               (1978)
               February               18:               .

David               Gimour               replaces               Syd               Barrett               in               Pink               Floyd.

Barret               had               checked               himself               into               a               psychiatric               hospital               and               then               went               into               seclusion               (1968)
               February               19:               "Baywatch's"               Pamela               Anderson               marries               Motley               Crue               drummer               Tommy               Lee               on               a               Cancun               beach.

The               bride               wears               a               white               bikini               (1995)
               February               20:               Four               sets               of               Kiss               footprints               are               placed               in               the               sidewalk               outside               of               Grauman's               Chinese               Theatre               in               Hollywood               (1976)
               February               21:               For               the               first               time               in               seven               years,               Bruce               Springsteen               performed               live               with               the               E               Street               Band.

The               New               York               City               nightclub               appearance               was               for               a               video               for               Jonathan               Demme's               film               "Murder               Incorporated."               (1995)
               February               22:               The               Beatles               formed               their               Northern               Music               Publishing               Company.

Michael               Jackson               eventually               purchased               it               (1963)
               February               23:               Ringo               Starr               guest               starred               on               "Laugh-In."               It               was               his               first               solo               TV               appearance               (1970)
               February               24:               Lauryn               Hill               wins               five               Grammy's               for               her               debut               solo               album,               "The               Miseducation               of               Lauryn               Hill"               (1999)
               February               25:               Prince               filed               a               copyright               and               trademark               infringement               lawsuit               against               nine               Web               sites,               with               allegations               that               included               selling               bootlegged               recordings               and               offering               unauthorized               song               downloads               (1999)
               February               26:               Michael               Jackson's               "Thriller"               album               hits               No.

1               and               stays               for               37               weeks               (1983)
               February               27:               Paul               McCartney               and               Stevie               Wonder               record               "Ebony               and               Ivory"               (1981)
               February               28:               Michael               Jackson               won               a               record               eight               Grammy               awards               connected               to               the               album               "Thriller."               (1984)
               February               29:               The               glasses               that               Buddy               Holly               had               been               wearing               when               he               died               were               discovered               in               a               police               file               in               Mason,               Iowa               after               being               there               for               over               21               years               (1980)
               
               MARCH
               March               1:               Queen               begin               their               first               headling               UK               tour               in               Blackpool               (1974)
               March               2:               "Sound               of               Music"               opens               (1965)
               March               3:               Cab               Calloway               and               his               orchestra               record               "Minnie               the               Moocher"               (1931)
               March               4:               John               Lennon's               statement               that               The               Beatles               were               'more               popular               than               Jesus               Christ'               was               published               in               The               London               Evening               Standard.

"Christianity               will               go.

It               will               vanish               and               shrink.

We're               more               popular               then               Jesus               now;               I               don't               know               which               will               go               first,               rock               'n'               roll               or               Christianity.

Jesus               was               alright,               but               his               disciples               were               thick               and               ordinary."               Lennon               later               apologized               (1966)
               March               5:               Rod               Stewart               met               Swedish               actress,               Britt               Ekland               at               a               party               in               Los               Angeles,               the               couple               went               on               to               have               a               high               profile               love               affair               (1975)
               March               6:               Bonnie               Raitt               inducted               into               the               Rock               and               Roll               Hall               of               Fame               (2000)
               March               7:               The               Beastie               Boys               became               the               first               rap               act               to               have               a               No.1               album               in               the               US               with               their               debut               album,               'Licensed               To               Ill.'               (1987)
               March               8:               Jimi               Hendrix's               rendition               of               "Star               Spangled               Banner"               is               broadcast               by               Radio               Hanoi               (1971)
               March               9:               Robert               Plant               played               a               secret               gig               at               Keele               University,               England               with               his               new               band               The               Honey               Drippers               (1981)
               March               10:               Pretenders               singer               Chrissie               Hynde               was               arrested               for               leading               an               animal               rights               protest               against               the               clothing               firm               Gap,               who               were               accused               of               using               leather               from               cows               slaughtered               'illegally               and               cruelly'.

The               protest               took               place               in               a               store               in               Manhattan               (2000)
               March               11:               Paul               McCartney               is               knighted               by               Queen               Elizabeth               II               (1997)
               March               12:               .

.

A               Philadelphia               court               sentenced               jazz               singer               Billie               Holiday               to               a               year's               probation               after               being               found               guilty               of               narcotics               possession               (1958)
               March               13:               Eric               Clapton               left               The               Yardbirds,               dissatisfied               with               the               group's               'too               commercial'               direction               (1965)
               March               14:               "Grease"               opened               off-Broadway,               where               it               ran               for               the               next               decade               for               a               total               of               3,388               performances               (1972)
               March               15:               Pretenders               inducted               into               Rock               and               Roll               Hall               of               Fame               (2005)
               March               16:               Trouble               broke               out               during               a               Metallica               gig               at               Orlando               Arena               when               fans               dangled               an               usher               by               his               ankles               from               the               balcony.

The               band               was               charged               $38,000               (£22,353)               for               repairs               and               cleaning               after               the               audience               trashed               the               building               (1992)
               March               17:               Billboard               reports               that               Ray               Charles               had               started               Tangerine,               his               own               record               label               (1962)
               March               18:               Four               guns               and               25               boxes               of               ammo               were               confiscated               from               Kurt               Cobain               (Nirvana)               after               his               wife,               Courtney               Love,               called               police               fearing               he               was               going               to               commit               suicide.

He               did               commit               suicide               about               3               weeks               later               (1994)
               March               19:               Elvis               Presley               buys               "Graceland"               (1957)
               March               20:               .

.

The               first               ever               Motown               package               tour               arrives               in               London,               with               Stevie               Wonder,               Martha               and               the               Vandellas,               Temptations               and               the               Supremes               (1965)
               March               21:               Dick               Clark               announced               that               he               would               no               longer               be               hosting               the               show               "American               Bandstand."               He               had               been               the               host               for               33               years               (1989)
               March               22:               Electric               Circus               club               in               New               York,               is               damaged               by               a               bomb               (1970)
               March               23:               Pink               Floyd               release               "Dark               Side               of               the               Moon"               (1974)
               March               24:               During               a               Lou               Reed               show               in               Buffalo,               New               York,               a               fan               jumped               on               stage               and               bit               Lou               on               his               bottom.

The               man               was               thrown               out               of               the               theatre               and               Reed               completed               the               show               (1973)
               March               25:               Pearl               Jam               front               man               Eddie               Vedder               was               rescued               after               a               riptide               carried               him               250               feet               offshore               in               New               Zealand               (1995)
               March               26:               Diana               Ross               Born               (1944)
               March               27:               Donnie               Wahlberg               of               The               New               Kids               on               the               Block               was               arrested               in               Louisville,               KY,               for               first-degree               arson.

He               allegedly               poured               vodka               on               a               hotel               carpet               and               set               it               on               fire               (1991)
               March               28:               More               than               6,000               radio               stations               play               "We               are               the               World"               simultaneously               (1986)
               March               29:               Led               Zeppelin               had               all               their               six               albums               in               the               US               Top               100               chart               in               the               same               week               (1975)
               March               30:               .

.

Jimi               Hendrix               set               fire               to               his               guitar               on               stage               for               first               time               at               Finsbury               Park               at               start               of               a               24               date               UK               tour               with               Walker               Brothers,               Cat               Stevens               and               Engelbert               Humberdinck               (1967)
               APRIL
               April               1:               The               first               auto-change               gramophone               is               introduced               by               HMV,               price               £125               (1928)
               April               2:               Steve               Winwood               left               the               Spencer               Davis               Group               to               form               Traffic               &               The               Beatles               finished               recording               the               album               "Sgt.

Pepper's               Lonely               Hearts               Club               Band."               the               biggest               selling               album               of               the               60's               in               the               UK               (1967)
               April               3:               Bob               Dylan               made               his               first               entry               into               the               UK               charts               with               his               single               'The               Times               They               Are               A-Changin'               (1964)
               April               4:               The               Beatles               hold               the               top               five               chart               positions               simultaneously               (1965)
               April               5:               Kurt               Cobain               found               dead               from               an               apparent               suicide               (1994)
               April               6:               Carly               Simon               was               introduced               to               James               Taylor               after               her               show               at               the               Troubadour,               Los               Angeles.

The               couple               married               on               3rd               November               1972               (1972)
               April               7:               Billie               Holiday               born               (1915)
               April               8:               .

BBC               banned               the               song               '100               Pounds               of               Clay'               (Gene               McDaniels               and               Craig               Douglas)               because               it               had               reference               to               woman               being               created               from               building               materials               -               considered               to               be               blasphemous.

The               song               reached               No.

9               in               the               UK               charts               by               April               20th               (1961)
               April               9:               ABBA's               "Dancing               Queen"               hits               No.

1               (1977)
               April               10:               27               year               old               Paul               McCartney               announces               he's               quit               the               Beatles               with               no               future               plans               to               record               or               appear               with               The               Beatles               again,               or               to               write               any               music               with               John               Lennon.

He               also               added               he               is               forming               'McCartney               Productions',               and               that               he's               bought               the               film               rights               to               'Rupert               the               Bear'               (1970)
               April               11:               Bob               Dylan               makes               his               New               York               City               debut               at               Gerde's               Folk               City               (1961)
               April               12:               US               Greyhound               bus               company               begins               a               guided               tour               service               of               'Hippyland'               in               San               Francisco               (1967)
               April               13:               Led               Zeppelin               became               the               first               band               to               sell               out               the               Montreal               Forum               (1970)
               April               14:               Motown               Records               and               Stevie               Wonder               held               a               news               conference               to               announce               he               had               signed               a               "$13               million-plus"               contract               with               the               label               (1976)
               April               15:               Tone               Loc's               Loc-ed               After               Dark               becomes               first               black               rap               LP               to               hit               No.

1               in               US               (1989)
               April               16:               Queen               held               its               first               U.S.

concert               at               Regis               College               in               Denver,               CO               (1974)
               April               17:               Johnny               Cash               played               at               the               White               house               for               President               Nixon,               who               requested               that               he               played               'A               Boy               Named               Sue.'               (1970)
               April               18:               The               Neil               Young               movie               "Journey               Through               the               Past"               debuted               at               the               Dallas               Film               Festival               (1973)
               April               19:               "The               Music               Man"               starring               Robert               Preston,               opens               on               Broadway               (1957)
               April               20:               Robert               Plant               appeared               at               Disney's               Theatre               of               the               Stars               in               Orlando,               Florida               to               leave               his               handprints               outside               the               theatre               (2000)
               April               21:               Janis               Joplin,               accompanied               by               her               newly               formed               band               made               her               first               London               concert               appearance               at               Royal               Albert               Hall.

Janis               Joplin               &               Her               Kozmic               Blues               Band,               which               contained               a               horn               section               had               a               southern               soul               leaning               and               feeling.

This               performance               was               considered               one               of               the               best               of               her               career.
               April               22:               John               Belushi               and               Dan               Aykroyd               made               their               first               ever               appearance               as               The               Blues               Brothers               when               they               appeared               on               US               TV's               'Saturday               Night               Live'.

(NBS,               1978)
               April               23:               Whitney               Houston               becomes               first               artist               to               hit               No.

1               on               US               Hot               100               with               seven               consecutive               singles               as               'Where               Do               Broken               Hearts               Go'               hits               the               top.

Previous               record               holders               (with               six               each)               were               Beatles               and               Bee               Gees.

She               becomes               only               the               second               artist               to               release               four               No.

1s               from               the               same               LP               (1988)
               April               24:               The               pipeless               organ               was               patented               by               Laurens               Hammond               (1934)
               April               25:               The               Beatles               refused               to               perform               for               the               Queen               of               England               at               a               British               Olympic               Appeal               Fund               show               because               "Our               decision               would               be               the               same               no               matter               what               the               cause.

We               don't               do               benefits."               (1968)
               April               26:               Rod               Stewart               is               mugged;               the               gunman               steals               his               $50.000               Porsche               (1982)
               April               27:               Bee               Gees               debut               on               UK               chart               with               "New               York               Mining               Disaster"               and               Traffic               debut               on               US               charts               with               their               LP               "Mr.

Fantasy"               (1967)
               April               28:               Apple               launches               its               Itunes               Music               Store               (2003)
               April               29:               Jazz               musician               Duke               Ellington               receives               the               Presidential               Medal               of               Freedom               (1969)
               April               30:               BBC               TV               launched               The               Cilla               Black               Show,               making               Cilla               the               first               British               female               performer               to               have               her               own               TV               show.

The               theme               song,               'Step               Inside               Love',               was               written               by               Paul               McCartney               (1968)
               
               MAY
               
               May               1:               The               Mozart               opera               "The               Marriage               of               Figaro"               premiered               in               Vienna               (1786)
               May               2:               Ed               Sullivan               announced               he               would               never               have               Mick               Jagger               and               the               Rolling               Stoneson               his               CBS-TV               Sunday               night               show               again.

In               time,               he               did               invite               them               back               (1965)
               May               3:               New               York               City's               Philharmonic               Hall               at               Lincoln               Center               announced               that               it               would               begin               presenting               rock,               pop               and               jazz               concerts               as               well               as               classical               (1971)
               May               4:               Sony               launches               its               Connect               music               store               (2004)
               May               5:               Carnegie               Hall               opens               in               New               York               (1891)
               May               6:               In               a               Clearwater,               Florida               hotel               room,               Keith               Richards               starts               writing               for               the               Stones,               he               and               Jagger               worked               out               the               opening               riff               of               the               song               Satisfaction,               following               Richard's               purchase               of               a               Gibson               fuzz-box               that               day               (1965)
               May               7:               Ringo               Starr,               Brian               Jones               and               members               of               The               Beach               Boys               and               The               Moody               Blues               were               in               the               audience               to               watch               Jimi               Hendrix               who               played               two               shows               at               London's               Saville               Theatre               (1967)
               May               8:               Tom               Waits               won               $2.5               million               when               a               Los               Angeles               court               ruled               that               Frito-Lay               unlawfully               used               a               Waits               sound               alike               in               its               Doritos               ads               (1990)
               May               9:               The               Guess               Who               hit               No.

1               with               "American               Woman"               (1970)
               May               10:               Frank               Sinatra's               version               of               'My               Way'               made               the               British               Top               ten               for               the               first               time.

Over               the               next               three               years               it               re-entered               the               Top               50               singles               chart               eight               times               (1969)
               May               11:               Reggae               legend               Bob               Marley               dies               (1981)
               May               12:               Tiny               Tim               declared               himself               a               New               York               City               mayoral               candidate.

He               did               not               win               in               the               election               (1989)
               May               13:               Forty-three               people               were               arrested               and               more               than               fifty               were               injured               after               youths               started               throwing               bottles               outside               a               Jackson               Five               concert               at               RFK               stadium               in               Washington               DC               (1974)
               May               14:               Led               Zeppelin               reunited               for               the               Atlantic               Records               40th               anniversary               party               in               New               York,               appearing               with               the               son               of               John               Bonham,               Jason               on               drums               (1988)
               May               15:               Pink               Floyd               perform               two-and-a-half-hour               set               at               Crystal               Palace,               complete               with               fireworks               and               fifty-foot               inflatable               octopus.

The               concert               is               so               loud               that               fish               die               in               the               lake               (1970)
               May               16:               The               Beach               Boys               release               "Pet               Sounds"               (1966)
               May               17:               The               first               Monterey               Folk               Festival               was               held               featuring               Joan               Baez,               Bob               Dylan,               Pete               Seeger               and               Peter               Paul               and               Mary               (1963)
               May               18:               ACID               1.0               music               creation               software               is               released               (1998)
               May               19:               Peter               Gabriel               releases               "So"               (1986)
               May               20:               Pete               Cetera,               bass               player               and               singer               with               Chicago,               undergoes               five               hours               of               emergency               surgery               after               losing               four               teeth               in               a               fight               at               a               Dodgers-cubs               baseball               game.

Four               rednecks               objected               to               the               length               of               his               hair               (1971)
               May               21:               1975               Elton               John               performs               the               first               of               eight               concerts               in               the               USSR               -               The               first               Western               rock               star               to               play               there.

4,000               people               see               the               show               (1975)
               May               22:               Jerry               Lee               Lewis               arrives               at               Heathrow               for               start               of               UK               tour,               accompanied               by               his               fourteen-year-old               wife               (and               third               cousin),               Myra               (1958)
               May               23:               The               Who               release               "Tommy",               the               first               rock               opera               (1969)
               May               24:               BBC               television               aired               the               first               '33               &               A               Third               Revolutions               Per               Monkee',               guests               included               Fats               Domino,               Jerry               Lee               Lewis,               Little               Richard               and               Julie               Driscoll               (1969)
               May               25:               Miles               Davis               born               (1926)
               
               May               26:               In               the               Irish               television               guide;               at               4.00               'Top               Cat',               4.30               'Skippy'               and               at               5.30               'Youngline'               (a               series               for               young               people               highlighting               their               interests)               featuring               a               new               pop               group               U2               (alias               Hype)               (1978)
               May               27:               Siouxsie               Sioux               born               (1957)
               May               28:               "Billboard"               reported               that               "The               Ballad               of               Davy               Crockett"               was               the               most               popular               song               in               the               U.S               (1955)
               May               29:               One               of               rock's               first               outdoor               events               takes               place               (in               the               rain)               at               Herndon               Stadium               in               Atlanta.

Ray               Charles,               B.B.

King,               Ruth               Brown               and               Drifters               are               on               the               bill               (1959)
               May               30:               Irish               acts               held               No.

1               and               No.

3               on               Hot               100               with               U2's               'With               or               Without               You'               and               Chris               de               Burgh's               'Lady               in               Red'               (1987)
               May               31:               Geri               Halliwell               (Ginger               Spice)               leaves               the               Spice               Girls               (1998)
               
               JUNE
               June               1:               After               leaving               the               political               rock               group               the               Clash,               drummer               Topper               Headon               was               arraigned               in               London               for               stealing               a               bus               stop               sign               and               receiving               stolen               stereo               equipment               (1982)
               June               2:               The               Beatles               release               "Sgt.

Peppers               Lonely               Hearts               Club               Band"               (1967)
               June               3:               The               Rolling               Stones               began               their               "Exile               on               Main               Street"               tour               before               17,000               fans               in               Vancouver.

I               t               was               the               Stones'               first               North               American               appearance               in               three               years.

Keith               Richards               blew               out               two               guitars               during               the               show,               which               was               only               tepidly               received               by               the               audience.

Stevie               Wonder               was               the               opening               act               (1972)
               June               4:               "The               Monkees"               TV               show               won               an               Emmy               award               for               outstanding               comedy               series               (1967)
               June               5:               Cyndi               Lauper               hits               No.

1               with               "Time               After               Time"               (1984)
               June               6:               Roy               Orbison's               "Only               the               Lonely"               was               released.

It               would               reach               number               two               on               the               Billboard               Hot               100               and               inspire               Bruce               Springsteen               to               write               "Born               to               Run."               (1960)
               June               7:               "The               Johnny               Cash               Show"               debuts               on               ABC-TV               (1969)
               June               8:               Keyboards               player               Rick               Wakeman               left               the               progressive               rock               band               Yes               following               completion               of               the               album               "Tales               From               Topographic               Oceans."               Wakeman               openly               expressed               his               bewilderment               and               disillusionment               with               the               album               and               the               band.

Wakeman               rejoined               Yes               in               1976,               but               split               from               the               group               again               in               1980               (1974)
               June               9:               Les               Paul               born               (1915)
               June               10:               The               rock               supergroup               Asia               was               formed               by               Steve               Howe               and               Geoff               Downes               from               Yes,               Carl               Palmer               of               Emerson,               Lake               and               Palmer               and               John               Wetton               of               Uriah               Heep               (1981)
               June               11:               Janis               Joplin               performed               for               the               first               time               with               Big               Brother               and               the               Holding               Company               at               the               Avalon               Ballroom               in               San               Francisco               (1966)
               June               12:               Madonna               arrived               in               Japan               to               begin               her               world               tour               (1987)
               June               13:               Live               Aid               concert               is               staged               in               London
               June               14:               The               Rolling               Stones               announced               the               formation               of               their               own               record               company.

Rolling               Stone               magazine               said               the               proposed               name               of               the               label               was               Pear,               but               it               became               simply               Rolling               Stones               Records,               a               subsidiary               of               Atlantic               (1969)
               June               15:               Egyptian               officials               cancelled               a               Peter               Gabriel               concert               at               a               resort               near               the               Israeli               border.

7,000               Israelis               had               been               expected               to               cross               the               border               for               the               show,               and               local               officials               on               the               Egyptian               side               feared               there               would               be               trouble               (1994)
               June               16:               The               Blues               Brothers               movie               premieres               in               Chicago               (1980)
               June               17:               Latin               pop               singer               Jon               Secada               fell               through               the               rostrum               as               he               was               approaching               the               stage               to               perform               to               an               estimated               one-billion               television               viewers               during               the               opening               ceremonies               of               the               World               Cup               soccer               tournament               in               Chicago.

Secada               was               unable               to               extricate               himself               from               the               hole,               and               since               the               band               had               already               started               playing,               he               began               singing               with               only               his               head               above               the               stage               level.

He               was               eventually               pulled               from               the               hole,               and               moved               to               centre               stage               to               finish               his               performance.

Secada               was               later               diagnosed               with               a               dislocated               shoulder               (1994)
               June               18:               The               Blues               Brothers"               movie               opened               in               the               US               and               Canada               (1980)
               June               19:               Ben               &               Jerry's               Ice               Cream               announces               new               flavor               Cherry               Garcia               (               1987)
               June               20:               British               synthesizer               band               Depeche               Mode               cancelled               a               concert               at               the               Ottawa               Civic               Centre               after               asbestos               fell               from               the               ceiling               as               the               group's               crew               was               setting               up               equipment               (1990)
               June               21:               Pete               Townshend's               use               of               the               British               slang               term               "bomb"               to               describe               the               success               of               the               Who's               rock               opera               "Tommy"               caused               him               to               be               detained               at               the               Memphis               airport.

FBI               agents               thought               it               was               a               bomb               threat               (1970)
               June               22:               Todd               Rundgren               born               (1948)
               June               23:               Alice               Cooper               broke               six               of               his               ribs               after               he               fell               off               the               stage               during               a               concert               in               Vancouver.

Several               dates               on               his               "Welcome               to               My               Nightmare"               tour               had               to               be               cancelled               (1975)
               June               24:               "Scream,"               the               first               single               from               Michael               Jackson's               "HIStory"               album,               entered               the               Billboard               Hot               100               at               number               five.

It               was               the               highest               debut               ever               on               the               chart               (1995)
               June               25:               Madonna               donated               the               $300               thousand               in               profits               from               the               final               North               American               concert               of               her               "Blond               Ambition"               tour               to               AIDS               research.

Twenty               thousand               people               attended               the               show               in               East               Rutherford,               New               Jersey.

Madonna               made               a               similar               donation               from               a               1987               concert               (1990)
               June               26:               Cher               divorces               Sonny               Bono               (1975)
               June               27:               the               miliant               black               rap               group               Public               Enemy               disbanded               following               anti-Jewish               remarks               made               by               member               Richard               (Professor               Grif)               Griffin.

Griffin,               the               group's               so-called               Minister               of               Information,               had               already               been               dismissed               after               he               told               a               Washington               newspaper               that               Jews               were               responsible               for               "the               majority               of               wickedness               that               goes               on               across               the               globe."               Public               Enemy's               record               company               said               the               decision               to               disband               had               nothing               to               do               with               reported               pressure               by               the               music               industry.

The               group               was               back               together               within               a               matter               of               weeks               (1989)
               June               28:               A               week               into               their               hugely-hyped               reunion               tour,               the               Sex               Pistols               stopped               a               show               in               Copenhagen               after               15               minutes               because               fans               wouldn't               stop               throwing               bottles               at               them.

One               fan               said,               "in               the               old               days,               they               would               have               returned               the               bottles."               (1996)
               June               29:               Folk               singer               Tim               Buckley               died               of               a               heroin               and               morphine               overdose               in               Santa               Monica,               California               at               the               age               of               28.

Testimony               at               the               coroner's               inquest               indicated               Buckley               had               snorted               what               he               thought               was               cocaine.

The               man               who               owned               the               house               where               Buckley               died               was               convicted               of               involuntary               manslaughter               (1975)
               June               30:               Cher               marries               Gregg               Allman               (1975)
               
               JULY
               July               1:               Sony               Walkman               introduced               (1979)
               July               2:               Elvis               Presley               recorded               "Hound               Dog"               and               "Don't               Be               Cruel."               (1956)
               July               3:               Jim               Morrison               found               dead               in               Paris               (1971)
               July               4:               Casey               Kasem               hosted               radio's               "American               Top               40"               for               the               first               time               (1970)
               July               5:               Sarah               McLachlan               stages               the               first               Lilith               Fair               Concert               (1977)
               July               6:               The               Damned               made               their               debut               performance               at               the               100               Club               in               London               (1976)
               July               7:               The               original               lineup               of               Led               Zeppelin               gave               its               final               show               (1980)
               July               8:               "Playboy"               and               "Penthouse"               magazines               went               on               sale               with               nude               pictures               of               Madonna               (1985)
               July               9:               Johnny               Cash               signed               with               Columbia               Records               (1958)
               July               10:               Eric               Clapton               announced               that               Cream               would               break               up               following               a               farewell               tour               (1968)
               July               11:               The               Supremes               hit               No.

1               with               "Where               Did               Our               Love               GO"               (1965)
               July               12:               Nusrat               Fateh               Ali               Khan               born               (1948)
               July               13:               Eric               Clapton's               "I               Shot               The               Sheriff"               was               released               (1974)
               July               14:               Steve               Miller               got               a               star               on               the               Hollywood               Walk               of               Fame               (1987)
               July               15:               Run-DMC's               "Raising               Hell"               becomes               the               first               rap               album               certified               platinum
               July               16:               In               London,               Eric               Clapton,               Jack               Bruce               and               Ginger               Baker               formed               the               band               Cream               (1966)
               July               17:               1st               Newport               Jazz               Festival               held               (1954)
               July               18:               Metallica               played               at               the               House               of               Blues               in               Los               Angeles,               CA.

The               crowd               was               1,000               contest               winners               of               the               "Blind               Date"               competition               organized               by               Miller               Genuine               Draft               (2000)
               July               19:               Former               Guns               N'               Roses               drummer               Steven               Adler               filed               a               lawsuit               against               the               band.

He               claimed               the               other               members               had               forced               him               to               use               heroin,               then               made               him               quit               the               band               when               he               entered               a               rehabilitation               program               (1991)
               July               20:               Billboard               Magazine               publishes               its               first               "Music               Popularity               Chart"               (1940)
               July               21:               Roger               Waters               staged               a               production               of               "The               Wall"               at               Potsdamer               Platz,               Germany.

Sinead               O'Connor,               Bryan               Adams,               Phil               Collins               and               Cyndi               Lauper               among               others               took               part               in               the               benefit               (1990)
               July               22:               Little               Richard,               known               as               Reverend               Richard               Penniman,               spoke               at               a               revival               meeting               in               North               Richmond,               CA.

He               warned               the               congregation               about               the               evils               of               rock               &               roll               music               (1979)
               July               23:               Production               began               on               the               film,               "Falling               From               Grace."               The               film               marked               John               Mellencamp's               acting               and               directing               debut               (1990)
               July               24:               Public               Enemy               postponed               its               televised               farewell               concert               in               Great               Britain               because               Flava               Flav               broke               his               arm               in               a               scooter               accident               (1995)
               July               25:               Bob               Dylan               goes               electric               at               the               Newport               Folk               Festival               (1966)
               July               26:               A               U.S.

federal               judge               issued               a               preliminary               injunction               against               Napster,               Inc.

The               injunction               had               been               requested               by               the               Recording               Industry               of               Association               of               America               (RIAA).

The               website               was               ordered               to               cease               trade               in               music               covered               by               RIAA               member               copyrights               by               midnight               July               28,               2000               (2000)
               July               27:               Lynyrd               Skynyrd's               "Sweet               Home               Alabama"               was               released               (1974)
               July               28:               Mary               J.

Blige               releases               influential               hip-hop               soul               album               "What's               the               411?"               (1992)
               July               29:               The               Byrds               left               on               their               tour               of               South               Africa               without               Gram               Parsons.

He               had               refused               to               set               foot               in               a               country               where               apartheid               was               official               policy               (1968)
               July               30:               The               Rolling               Stones               fired               Allen               Klein               as               their               manager               (1970)
               July               31:               Blue               Oyster               Cult's               "Don't               Fear               The               Reaper"               was               released               (1976)
               
               AUGUST
               August               1:               MTV               debuts               on               cable               television               (1981)
               August               2:               Robert               Zimmerman               legally               changed               his               name               to               Bob               Dylan               (1972)
               August               3:               Paul               McCartney               announced               the               formation               of               his               new               band               Wings               (1971)
               August               4:               Yahoo               Inc.

announced               that               it               was               beginning               a               test               of               a               new               search               engine               feature               that               will               search               through               millions               of               songs               offered               on               popular               Internet               music               services               (2005)
               August               5:               Stevie               Wonder               signs               $13               million,               7-year               recording               contract-               the               largest               in               the               industry               at               the               time               (1975)
               August               6:               The               last               new               episode               of               Magic               Johnson's               talk               show,               "The               Magic               Hour,"               aired.

The               musical               guests               on               the               show               were               Boys               II               Men,               Simply               Red,               Mary               J.

Blige               and               Hanson               (1998)
               August               7:               The               family               of               Jimi               Hendrix               won               a               case               at               an               international               panel               to               evict               the               holder               of               the               Internet               address               www.jimihendrix.com               (2000)
               August               8:               U.S               radio               labels               The               Kingsmen's               "Louie               Louie"               obscene
               August               9:               Muddy               Waters               performed               at               a               White               House               picnic               for               U.S.

President               Jimmy               Carter               (1978)
               August               10:               Audiocassette               sales               in               the               U.S.

surpass               vinyl               record               sales               (1983)
               August               11:               Richie               Ramone               (The               Ramones)               born               (1957)
               August               12:               Thomas               Edison               invented               the               phonograph               and               made               the               first               sound               recording               (1877)
               August               13:               Jefferson               Airplane               play               their               first               gig               at               the               Matrix               in               San               Francisco               (1965)
               August               14:               The               Grateful               Dead               met               and               decided               to               cancel               their               fall               tour               in               the               wake               of               Jerry               Garcia's               death               (1995)
               August               15:               The               Woodstock               Music               &               Arts               Fair               commencs               (1969)
               August               16:               Peter               Gabriel               announced               that               he               was               leaving               the               group               Genesis.

Phil               Collins               would               be               the               new               lead               singer               after               the               group               auditioned               more               than               400               potential               musicians               (1975)
               August               17:               Mass               production               started               on               the               first               compact               disc               in               Langenhagen,               Germany               (1982)
               August               18:               Kurt               Cobain               (Nirvana)               and               Courtney               Love               (Hole)               became               parents               to               daughter               Frances               Bean(1992)
               August               19:               Kurtis               Blow's               "The               Breaks"               becomes               the               first               rap               single               certified               gold               (1980)
               August               20:               The               Rolling               Stones               release               "Satisfaction"               (1965)
               August               21:               The               classic               song               "Ain't               Misbehavin'"               was               recorded               by               Fats               Waller(1938)
               August               22:               Former               Talking               Heads               lead               singer               David               Byrne               sued               to               prevent               the               rest               of               the               group               from               touring               as               "The               Heads."               The               suit               was               settled               out               of               court(1996)
               August               23:               Marie               Ashton               finishes               playing               a               piano               for               a               female               record               133               hours               (1958)
               August               24:               The               Beatles               released               "Matchbox/Slow               Down."               (1964)
               August               25:               Emerson,               Lake               and               Palmer               made               their               world               debut               at               Plymouth               Guild               Hall               in               Plymouth,               England(1970)
               August               26:               Jimi               Hendrix               opens               Electric               Lady               Studios               (1970)
               August               27:               John               Lennon's               handwritten               lyrics               to               "A               Day               In               The               Life"               sold               for               $87,000               at               an               auction               (1992)
               August               28:               Bobby               Pickett's               "The               Monster               Mash"               certified               gold               (1973)
               August               29:               Ella               Fitzgerald               and               The               Delta               Rhythm               Boys               recorded               "It's               a               Pity               to               Say               Goodnight."               (1946)
               August               30:               Legendary               BBC               Radio               DJ               John               Peel               born               (1939)
               August               31:               Van               Morrison               born               (1945)
               SEPTEMBER
               September               1:               U2               releases               their               first               album,               U2-3,               in               Ireland               (1979)
               September               2:               Rock               and               Roll               Hall               of               Fame               and               Museum               opens               in               Cleveland,               Ohio               (1996)
               September               3:               Frank               Sinatra               started               his               solo               singing               career(1942)
               September               4:               Cat               Stevens               (Yusaf               Islam)               emerged               to               sign               copies               of               his               first               album               in               18               years               (1996)
               September               5:               In               New               York,               the               NFL               held               a               concert               to               celebrate               its               season               opener.

Eve,               Alicia               Keys,               Bon               Jovi,               Enrique               Iglesias               and               'N               Sync's               Joey               Fatone               performed.

The               event               preceded               the               rare               Thursday-night               opener               between               the               New               York               Giants               and               the               San               Francisco               49ers               (2002)
               September               6:               Georgia               Gibbs               sang               "The               Hula-Hoop               Song"               on               "The               Ed               Sullivan               Show."               (1958)
               September               7:               Tupac               Shakur               fatally               wounded               in               a               drive-by               shooting               (1996)
               September               8:               The               Knack               hit               No.1               with               "My               Sharona"               (1979)
               September               9:               Otis               Redding               was               born.

His               hit               "(Sitting               on)               The               Dock               of               the               Bay"               was               recorded               three               days               before               he               was               killed               in               a               plane               crash               in               1967               (1941)
               September               10:               Howard               Stern               appeared               as               Fartman               on               the               MTV               Video               Music               Awards               (1992)
               September               11:               John               Lee               Hooker               received               a               star               on               the               Hollywood               Walk               of               Fame               (1997)
               September               12:               Elvis               Presley,               age               13,               moved               with               his               parents               to               Memphis,               TN               (1948)
               September               13:               Judy               Garland               was               on               the               cover               of               "Life"               magazine               (1954)
               September               14:               Gene               Austin               recorded               "My               Blue               Heaven."               (1927)
               September               15:               Johnny               Ramone               dies               at               age               55               (2004)
               September               16:               B.B.

King               born               (1925)
               September               17:               Frank               Sinatra               completed               his               final               session               with               Mitch               Miller               and               Columbia               Records               (1952)
               September               18:               Ernest               Tubb               and               Roy               Acuff               performed               at               Carnegie               Hall               in               New               York               City,               NY.

It               was               the               first               country               show               at               the               venue               (1947)
               September               19:               Chubby               Checker's               "The               Twist"               hits               No.

1               (1961)
               September               20:               Jim               Morrison               was               found               guilty,               in               Miami,               FL,               of               indecent               exposure               and               profanity.

He               was               acquitted               on               charges               of               "lewd               and               lascivious"               behavior.

The               charges               were               related               to               a               performance               by               the               Doors               (1970)
               September               21:               Dire               Straits               achieve               a               No.

1               hit               with               "Money               for               Nothing"               (1986)
               September               22:               The               Supremes               made               the               studio               recording               of               "I               Hear               a               Symphony."               (1965)
               September               23:               "People               Are               Strange"               was               released               by               the               Doors               (1967)
               September               24:               Nirvana               release               "Nevermind"               (1991)
               September               25:               Liberace               made               his               debut               at               Carnegie               Hall               for               a               sellout               crowd               (1953)
               September               26:               George               Gershwin               was               born               in               Brooklyn,               NY.

His               works               include               "Swanee"               and               "Rhapsody               in               Blue."               (1898)
               September               27:               The               song               "Thanks               for               the               Memories"               is               heard               for               the               first               time               on               radio's               "The               Bob               Hope               Show"
               September               28:               "She               Loves               You"               by               the               Beatles               was               played               on               the               radio               by               Murry               The               K               in               New               York.

It               is               believed               that               this               was               the               first               time               a               Beatles               song               was               played               in               the               U.S.

(1963)
               September               29:               The               opera               Pescatori               di               Perle               is               produced               (Paris,               1863)
               September               30:               Jonny               Lang,               Slash               (Guns               'n'               Roses),               Joey               Ramone               (Ramones)               and               Rick               Nelson               (Cheap               Trick)               and               others               appeared               on               "The               Drew               Carey               Show".

All               the               musicians               were               trying               out               for               lead               guitarist               of               Carey's               band               (1998)
               OCTOBER
               October               1:               John               Philip               Sousa               was               named               the               director               of               the               United               States               Marine               Corps               Band.

He               composed               the               hymn               "Semper               Fidelis."               (1880)
               October               2:               Bruce               Springsteen's               "Born               in               the               U.S.A."               tour               ended               in               Los               Angeles,               CA               (1985)
               October               3:               Sinead               O'Connor               rips               up               picture               of               Pope               John               Paul               II               on               SNL               (1992)
               October               4:               Thin               Lizzy               performed               for               the               first               time               with               Scott               Gorham               and               Brian               Robertson               both               in               the               lineup               (1974)
               October               5:               The               New               York               Philharmonic               Orchestra               was               heard               on               the               air               over               CBS               radio               from               Carnegie               Hall               for               the               first               time               (1930)
               October               6:               The               word               "jazz"               is               coined               (1917)
               October               7:               Cats               opens               on               Broadway               (1982)
               October               8:               John               Lennon               releases               "Imagine"               (1971)
               October               9:               John               Lennon               met               Yoko               Ono               for               the               first               time               at               an               Indica               Gallery               in               London's               West               End               (1966)
               October               10:               The               BBC               banned               the               song               "Monster               Mash"               by               Bobby               "Boris"               Pickett               (1962)
               October               11:               The               album               "Hot               in               the               Shade"               was               released               by               KISS               (1989)
               October               12:               "Jesus               Christ               Superstar"               premiers               on               Broadway               (1971)
               October               13:               Pat               Boone,               the               owner               of               the               Oakland               Oaks,               sang               the               national               anthem               at               the               first               game               of               the               new               American               Basketball               Association               (1967)
               October               14:               Pearl               Jam               release               five               albums               in               one               week               (2001)
               October               15:               Fela               Kuti               born               (1938)
               October               16:               Joan               Baez               and               123               other               anti-draft               demonstrators               were               arrested               for               blocking               the               entrance               to               the               Armed               Forces               Induction               Center               in               Oakland,               CA               (1966)
               October               17:               "She's               Not               There,"               by               the               Zombies,               was               released               (1964)
               October               18:               Kirk               Hammett               (Metallica)               born               (1962)
               October               19:               The               Bob               Crosby               Orchestra               recorded               "I'm               Free."               (1938)
               October               20:               Rockabilly               queen               Wanda               Jackson               born               (1937)
               October               21:               Buddy               Holly               recorded               his               last               studio               session.

Holly               and               the               Crickets               recorded               "True               Love               Ways,"               "Moondreams,"               "It               Doesn't               Matter               Anymore,"               and               "Raining               in               my               Heart."               (1958)
               October               22:               Composer               Franz               Liszt               was               born               (1811)
               October               23:               In               Houston,               TX,               a               jury               convicted               Yolanda               Saldivar               of               the               murder               of               Selena               (1995)
               October               24:               In               New               York               City,               the               lights               of               Broadway               are               turned               off               and               traffic               halted,               in               memory               of               Al               Jolson               (1950)
               October               25:               The               Madonna               album               "Bedtime               Stories"               was               released               (1994)
               October               26:               Judy               Garland,               at               the               age               of               12,               sang               on               Wallace               Berry's               radio               show               on               NBC               (1935)
               October               27:               Bruce               Springsteen               appears               on               the               covers               of               both               "Time"               and               "Newsweek"               (1975)
               October               28:               The               studio               recording               of               "My               World               Is               Empty               Without               You"               was               made               by               the               Supremes               (1965)
               October               29:               The               musical               "Hair"               opened               off               Broadway               (1967)
               October               30:               John               Lennon               released               the               album               "Mind               Games."               (1973)
               October               31:               Debbie               Gibson               held               a               séance               at               her               Halloween               party               to               contact               the               spirits               of               Liberace               and               Sid               Vicious               (1988)
               
               NOVEMBER
               
               November               1:               Elvis               Presley               hit               number               one               for               the               last               time               with               "Suspicious               Minds"               (1969)
               November               2:               The               Beach               Boys'               "Be               True               To               Your               School"               was               released               (1963)
               November               3:               The               U2               concert               movie               "Rattle               And               Hum"               opened               (1988)
               November               4:               Bobby               Darin's               "Mack               the               Knife"               is               No.1               (1959)
               November               5:               Ozzy               Osbourne               quit               Black               Sabbath               only               to               rejoin               a               few               weeks               later.

He               later               quit               again               to               pursue               a               solo               career               (1977)
               November               6:               Britney               Spears'               album               "Britney"               was               released               (2001)
               November               7:               John               Fogerty               won               his               self-plagiarism               court               battle               with               Fantasy               Records.

The               label               claimed               Fogerty               copied               his               own               song,               "Run               Through               The               Jungle"               when               he               wrote               "The               Old               Man               Down               The               Road"               (1988)
               November               8:               John               Lennon's               "How               I               Won               the               War"               opened               in               the               U.S.

It               was               the               first               solo               movie               by               a               Beatle               (1967)
               November               9:               The               first               issue               of               "Rolling               Stone"               published               (1967)
               November               10:               The               Clash's               second               album               "Give               'Em               Enough               Rope,"               was               released               in               England.

The               album               would               be               their               first               U.S.

release               (1978)
               November               11:               Berry               Oakley,               of               the               Allman               Brothers,               was               killed               in               a               motorcycle               accident.

He               was               24               years               old               (1972)
               November               12:               The               album               "Evita:               The               Complete               Motion               Picture               Music               Soundtrack"               was               released               (1996)
               November               13:               The               Beatles               "Yellow               Submarine"               premiers               in               U.S.

theaters               (1968)
               November               14:               Composer               Johann               Georg               Leopold               Mozart               was               born               (1719)
               November               15:               The               Jackson               5,               Partridge               Family,               and               Carpenters               top               the               charts               (1970)
               
               November               16:               The               musical               "The               Sound               of               Music"               opened               (1959)
               November               17:               Davey               Jones               of               the               Monkees               opened               a               boutique,               Zilch               I,               in               Greenwich               Village,               NY               (1967)
               November               18:               "Goldeneye"               the               James               Bond               movie,               opened,               featuring               a               title               song               by               Tina               Turner               (1995)
               November               19:               First               jazz               concert               at               the               White               House               (1962)
               November               20:               The               Four               Seasons'               "Big               Girls               Don't               Cry"               was               released               (1962)
               November               21:               Olivia               Newton-John's               "Physical"               single               hits               No.1               &               stays               for               10               weeks               (1981)
               November               22:               The               Miles               Davis               Quintet               debuted               with               a               jazz               concert               at               Carnegie               Hall               in               New               York               City               (1957)
               November               23:               Donald               Bohana,               61,               was               sentenced               to               15               years               to               life               in               prison               for               the               drowning               death               of               Delores               "DeeDee"               Jackson,               the               ex-wife               of               Tito               Jackson               (Jackson               5)               (1998)
               November               24:               Scott               Joplin               born               (1868)
               November               25:               Saxophonist               Albert               Ayler               was               found               drowned               in               New               York's               Hudson               River.

He               was               34               years               old               (1968)
               November               26:               Sex               Pistols               release               "Anarchy               in               the               UK"               (1977)
               November               27:               Jimi               Hendrix               born               (1942)
               November               28:               Elton               John               and               John               Lennon               sang               a               duet               of               "I               Saw               Her               Standing               There"               at               Madison               Square               Garden               in               New               York.

The               show               was               John               Lennon's               last               stage               appearance               (1974)
               November               29:               The               Who               released               their               first               concert               record,               "The               Who               Sell               Out."               (1968)
               November               30:               The               Save               Rave               '69               benefit               concert,               to               aid               the               youth               culture               magazine               Rave,               took               place               in               London               (1969)
               DECEMBER
               December               1:               The               Leonard               Bernstein               musical               "Candide"               opened               on               Broadway.

The               work               was               based               on               the               book               by               Voltaire               (1956)
               December               2:               The               Temptations               earn               a               No.1               hit               with               "Papa               Was               A               Rollin'               Stone"               (1972)
               December               3:               The               first               Monkees               concert               was               held,               in               Honolulu,               HI               (1966)
               December               4:               John               Cale               born               (1940)
               December               5:               Little               Richard               born               (1932)
               December               6:               Elvis               Presley               received               one               of               66,000               letters               that               U.S.

President               Nixon               sent               out               to               potential               administrative               office               holders               (1968)
               December               7:               Jerry               Lewis'               white               and               red               pinstriped               devil               suit               was               stolen               from               his               dressing               room               at               Shea's               Performing               Arts               Center               in               Buffalo.

Lewis               needed               the               costume,               valued               at               $9,000,               to               play               the               role               of               Satan               in               the               musical               Damn               Yankees               (1996)
               December               8:               Jazz               trumpeter               Buck               Clayton               died               of               natural               causes               at               the               age               of               80               (1991)
               December               9:               Richie               Havens               received               a               role               in               the               orchestral               stage               version               of               "Tommy."               (1971)
               December               10:The               Beach               boys               score               a               No.1               hit               with               "Good               Vibrations"               (1966)
               December               11:               Brenda               Lee               born               (1944)
               December               12:               22-year               Ludwig               Von               Beethoven               has               first               lesson               in               music               composition               from               Franz               Joseph               Haydn               (1792)
               December               13:               Phil               Collins               made               his               U.S.

TV               acting               debut               on               "Miami               Vice"               playing               a               drug               dealer               (1985)
               December               14:               Chad               &               Jeremy               and               Don               Ho               guest               on               ABC-TV's               "Batman."               (1966)
               December               15:               The               Beach               Boys               met               Maharishi               Yogi               in               Paris               and               learned               transcendental               meditation               (1967)
               December               16:               George               Harrison               was               deported               from               Germany               for               being               too               young               to               perform               there               with               the               Beatles               (1960)
               December               17:               Tiny               Tim               marries               Miss               Vickie               on               "The               Tonight               Show"               (1969)
               
               December               18:               Funeral               services               were               held               in               Chicago               for               Sam               Cooke               (1964)
               December               19:               Paul               Simon               the               musician,               and               Paul               Simon,               the               presidential               candidate,               both               host               "Saturday               Night               Live."               (1987)
               December               20:               Jethro               Tull               was               formed               (1967)
               December               21:               Liz               Phair               releases               "Exile               in               Guyville"               (1999)
               December               22:               The               Chipmunks               hit               No.1               (1958)
               December               23:               Elton               John               and               Bernie               Taupin               began               writing               songs               together               (1969)
               December               24:               Gian               Carlo               Menotti's               "Amahl               and               the               Night               Visitors,"               was               first               broadcast               by               NBC.

It               was               the               first               opera               written               specifically               for               television               (1951)
               December               25:               Harlem's               Apollo               Theater               re-opened               (1977)
               December               26:               Run               D.M.C.'s               Jason               Mizell               was               hospitalized               when               his               Jeep               was               hit               head-on               by               a               driver               going               the               wrong-way               (1987)
               December               27:               Hello,               Dolly!"               closed               on               Broadway               after               a               run               of               2,844               performances               (1970)
               December               28:               The               Beatles               (The               White               Album)               hits               No.1               in               the               U.S.

(1968)
               December               29:               Jamaica               issued               a               Bob               Marley               commemorative               stamp               (1982)
               December               30:               Krist               Novoselic               (Nirvana)               and               Shelli               Dilley               were               married               (1989)
               December               31:               The               Beatles               broke               up               (1971)
               **Event               dates               and               information               derived               from               the               following               sources:               
               This               Date               In               Musical               History               Section               of               the               Canoe               Network,               www.canoe.ca               
               Music               Trivia-               All               Our               Yesterdays               Section               at               Phil               Brodie's               Band               Page,               www.philbrodieband.com               
               On               This               Day,               www.on-this-day.com               
               SonyMediaSoftware               Promotional               Mailing






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