December 15th in Rock & Roll History
The late John Hammond (producer) was born in 1910
Rock Factoid: In 1961, Hammond signed Bob Dylan to Columbia Records despite the protests of executives, who referred to Dylan as “Hammond’s folly.” He produced Dylan’s recordings of ‘Blowin’ In The Wind’ and ‘A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall’.
Rock Factoid #2: In 1972, Hammond again went against label wishes and signed a young kid from New Jersey to Columbia. The kid’s name was Bruce Springsteen.
The late Max Yasgur (owned the dairy farm in Bethel, NY which became the site of the Woodstock concert in 1969) was born in 1919
The late Alan Freed (DJ who coined the term ‘rock & roll’) was born in 1921
The late Jerry Wallace (‘Primrose Lane’) was born in 1928
The late Jesse Belvin (‘Goodnight My Love’) was born in 1932
The late Harry Ray (lead singer with The Moments – ‘Love On A Two-Way Street’) was born in 1946
Paul Simonon (bass guitar with The Clash – ‘Rock The Casbah’) is 59
Carmine Appice (drummer with Vanilla Fudge – ‘You Keep Me Hangin’ On’) is 68
Dave Clark (drummer with The Dave Clark Five – ‘Glad All Over’) is 72
Cindy Birdsong (The Supremes – ‘Floy Joy’) is 75
Lena Horne recorded the classic ‘Stormy Weather’—1941
Fats Waller (‘Ain’t Misbehavin’) died (pneumonia)—1943
Bandleader Glenn Miller’s plane disappeared over the English Channel en route to Paris—1944
Johnny Cash released the ‘Folsom Prison Blues’ single—1955
Sammy Davis, Jr. and Columbia Records executive Mitch Miller claimed rock and roll was nothing more than “the comic books of music.”—1957
The Everly Brothers recorded ‘Let It Be Me’—1959
At the first Mersey Beat poll awards show, The Beatles (poll winners) closed the show—1962
Rock Factoid: The poll runner-up, Lee Curtis & The All-Stars, performed immediately before them, so The Beatles had an uncomfortable encounter with Pete Best, drummer for The All-Stars – and the drummer The Beatles had fired months earlier—1962
Bill Wyman performed his first gig with The Rolling Stones, at the Ricky Tick Club in Windsor, Berkshire, UK—1962
Rock Factoid: “I wasn’t quite the same sort of person as the rest of the Stones. I was a straight working-class type. I thought they were a bunch of layabouts but very dedicated to their music. That I could appreciate, but I couldn’t appreciate the way they lived. When the Stones talked music, I knew Chuck Berry, but I’d never heard of Jimmy Reed, Howlin’ Wolf or Muddy Waters. The music seemed to be very simple but later you learned that it was quite hard to be simple.” … Bill Wyman
The Beatles released ‘Beatles 65’ in the U.S.—1964
Glenn Yarbrough recorded ‘Baby The Rain Must Fall’—1964
Elvis Presley released ‘Tell Me Why’ / ‘Blue River’—1965
Posters and billboards were displayed in 12 major cities around the world by John Lennon and Yoko Ono—1969
The Byrds released ‘Jesus Is Just Alright’ / ‘It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue’. Although ‘Jesus Is Just Alright’ would later appear on countless ‘Greatest Hits’ compilations by the group, it peaked at #97 on the Billboard charts and never charted at all in the UK—1969
The ‘Peace For Christmas’ charity concert for UNICEF at the Lyceum Ballroom in London featured the Plastic Ono Supergroup—1969
Rock Factoid: John Lennon performed with George Harrison, Eric Clapton, Keith Moon, Billy Preston, The Delaney and Bonnie Band, Alan White, Bobby Keys, Keith Moon, Klaus Voormann, Jim Gordon, Billy Preston and Yoko Ono.
Rock Factoid #2: It was John Lennon’s final stage performance in England.
Elvis Presley recorded ‘There’s A Honky Tonk Angel (Who Will Take Me In)’‘—1973
The Rolling Stones released ‘Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)’ / ‘Dancing With Mr. D’—1973
The Sex Pistols were denied visas to enter the U.S. only two days before they were to appear on NBC’s Saturday Night Live—1977
Jackie Brenston (lead vocal on ‘Rocket 88’ – considered by many as the real first rock and roll song) died (heart attack)—1979
Pink Floyd reached the top of the U.K. singles chart for the only time in their career with ‘Another Brick In The Wall Part II’—1979
James Brown was sentenced to six years in prison after an interstate car chase with police (he would serve two years)—1988
Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora married actress Heather Locklear. The wedded bliss lasted 12 years—1994
An intruder who broke into George Harrison’s home and stabbed the ex-Beatle was found not guilty by reason of insanity—2000
Rufus Thomas (‘Walkin’ The Dog’) died (heart attack)—2001
Davy Graham (one of the most influential guitarists of the 1960s British folk revival – ‘Anji’) died (lung cancer)—2008
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