portrait of this blog's author - by Stephen Blackman 2008

Sunday, June 30, 2019

ON THIS DAY IN MUSIC

June 30th

1966 - The Beatles
The Beatles played the first of three concerts at the Nippon Budokan Hall, Japan. The concert was filmed with The Beatles wearing black suits. The following day's first performance was also filmed; with The Beatles wearing white suits. There was a strict police presence with 3,000 police observing each concert played in front of 10,000 fans.

1973 - George Harrison
George Harrison knocked Paul McCartney from the top of the US singles chart with 'Give Me Love, Give Me Peace On Earth'. His second US No.1, a No.8 hit in the UK was the opening track on his 1973 album Living in the Material World.

1976 - Neil Diamond
Police raided the home of Neil Diamond searching for drugs, they found less than one ounce of marijuana.

1976 - Adam Ant
Stuart Goddard, (Adam Ant), placed the following ad in the classified section of the Melody Maker, 'Beat on a bass, with the B-Sides.' Andy Warren answered the ad and the pair went on to form Adam and The Ants.


1979 - Tubeway Army
Tubeway Army started a four-week run at No.1 on the UK singles chart with 'Are 'Friends' Electric'. The song by Gary Numan was the first electronic/synthesizer-based record to become a hit in the post-punk era.
 Bought this when it came out and still like it's atmosphere . . . 

1984 - Bruce Springsteen
Bruce Springsteen's 'Dancing In The Dark' peaked at No.2 on the US chart, the first of six singles from his seventh studio album Born In The U.S.A. which all hit the US Top 10. The video was shot at the Saint Paul Civic Center in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and shows Springsteen pulling a young Courteney Cox from the audience to dance along with him on the stage.


1995 - Phyllis Hyman
American soul singer Phyllis Hyman committed suicide by overdosing on pentobarbital and secobarbital in her New York City apartment aged 45. She was found hours before she was scheduled to perform at the Apollo Theatre, in New York.
Phyllis' note read "I'm tired. I'm tired. Those of you that I love know who you are. May God bless you"

2001 - Lady Marmalade
Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim, Mya and Pink were at No.1 on the UK singles chart with 'Lady Marmalade.' A hit for LaBelle in 1975; then it was at No 1 in 1998 for All Saints. This version was from the Baz Luhrmann film Moulin Rouge.

2001 - Al Jardine
Beach Boys member Al Jardine went to court in a bid to sue his former band mates, claiming he had been frozen out of the Beach Boys. The $4 million (£2.35 million) suit was filed against Mike Love, Brian Wilson, the Carl Wilson Trust and Brother Records Incorporated in a New York Superior Court. In 1998 a US judge temporarily barred Jardine from performing under the name Beach Boys Family And Friends after representations from Mike Love and Brother Records. Jardine lost the case in 2003. Not so much 'fun, fun. fun,' now eh? 'Not since Daddy took the T-Bird away' . . . . . . . 


2001 - Chet Atkins
American guitarist and producer Chet Atkins died in Nashville aged 77. Recorded over 100 albums during his career, produced records for Perry Como, Elvis Presley, Don Gibson, Jim Reeves and Waylon Jennings. He was a major influence on  George Harrison and Mark Knopler.


2004 - Dave Davies
Kinks founder member Dave Davies was left paralysed on the right-hand side of his body after suffering a stroke. The 57-year-old guitarist and brother of fellow Kinks star Ray Davies had been promoting his solo material when he collapsed.






2007 - R.E.M.
R.E.M. played a five-night series of shows at Dublin's Olympia Theatre. Dubbed ‘working rehearsals’ by the band, many songs from their forthcoming album ‘Accelerate’ were debuted, with many of them still as works in progress.

2014 - Ed Sheeran
Ed Sheeran's second album X became the fastest-selling UK album of the year so far after selling 182,000 copies in its first week, 14,000 more than Coldplay managed with Ghost Stories which was released in May.
Play someone's music to death and boy can we be fickle! I still like him!

BIRTHDAYS
1967 - Peter Camell


The La's in 1990 - Camell second from the left
Peter James Camell, guitarist with Liverpool group The La's, who scored the 1990 UK No.13 single 'There She Goes'. Camell was part of the band at it's most stable and played guitar on the ubiquitous hit (The La's at one time or anther having featured 26 seperate individuals! sic)  Largely thought to be originally a love song to a woman the story quickly spread it was a song about heroin. Awright La!? Except that later Lee Mayers the writer and singer admits to trying heroin in 1990. The song therefore predated his experience as it was originally released in 1988. As Rolling Stone commented 
"Whether about heroin or just unrequited love, the La's single "There She Goes" off their self-titled debut has endured as a founding piece of Britpop's foundation."

1936 - Dave Van Ronk
Born on this day, American folk singer Dave Van Ronk who was a central figure in the American folk music revival and New York City's Greenwich Village scene in the Sixties, he was nicknamed the "Mayor of MacDougal Street". Bob Dylan recorded Van Ronk's arrangement of the traditional song ‘House of the Rising Sun’ on his first album, which The Animals turned into a No.1 UK single in 1964, helping inaugurate the folk-rock movement. The biography of Van Ronk 'THe Mayor of MacDougall Street' is used largely as the direct inspiration for the film Inside Llewyn Davis 
Van Tonk died on 10 February 2002 aged 65.

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