November 6th in Rock & Roll History
The late Ray Conniff (‘Somewhere My Love’) was born in 1916
The late Joseph Pope (The Tams – ‘What Kind Of Fool’) was born in 1933
The late Doug Sahm (guitarist/lead singer with The Sir Douglas Quintet – ‘She’s About A Mover’ and later The Texas Tornados – ‘A Man Can Cry’) was born in 1941
Corey Glover (lead singer with Living Colour – ‘Cult Of Personality’) is 50
Glenn Frey (singer/guitarist with The Eagles – ‘Already Gone’ and ‘The Heat Is On’ as a solo artist) is 66
John Wilson (drummer with Them – ‘Hey Girl’) is 67
George Young (rhythm guitarist with The Easybeats – ‘Friday On My Mind’) is 66
Rock Factoid: After his playing days were over, Young teamed up with fellow Easybeat Harry Vanda to become producers for AC/DC, a band which included Young’s brothers Angus and Malcolm.
Jim Pike (The Lettermen – ‘When I Fall In Love’) is 76
P.J. Proby (born James Marcus Smith – ‘Niki Hoeky’) is 76
Eugene Pitt (singer with The Genies – ‘Who’s That Knocking’ and later the co-founder of The Jive Five – ‘I’m A Happy Man’) is 77
Stonewall Jackson (‘Waterloo’) is 82
Rock Factoid: Stonewall is not his nickname. He was named after Confederate General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson.
Frankie Laine’s ‘Answer Me’ was banned by the BBC, who claimed the lyrics “Answer me, Lord above” mocked Christian prayer—1953
Elvis Presley did his only commercial (for Southern-Made Doughnuts) on the ‘Louisiana Hayride’ radio program—1954
The Dave Clark Five released ‘Any Way You Want It’ / ‘Crying Over You’ in the U.S.—1964
Bill Graham produced his first show (Benefit For San Francisco Mime Troupe – Appeal Party) at the Calliope Ballroom in San Francisco. Jefferson Airplane, The Mothers and The Family Dog were among the featured acts—1965
Bob Dylan recorded ‘All Along The Watchtower’, ‘I Pity The Poor Immigrant’, ‘I Am A Lonesome Hobo’ and ‘John Wesley Harding’—1967
The Monkees film Head premiered in New York City—1968
Rock Factoid: It was a commercial disaster. This was in part because Head, being an antithesis of The Monkees TV show, comprehensively demolished the group’s carefully-groomed public image, while the older, hipper audience they’d been reaching for rejected the Monkees’ efforts as a lame joke.
Aerosmith performed their first ever gig when they played at Nipmuc Regional High School in Mendon, MA—1970
Badfinger released ‘No Matter What’—1970
Billy Murcia (drummer with The New York Dolls – ‘Bad Girl’) died (suffocation after he passed out from mixing drugs and alcohol)—1972
The Sex Pistols made their live debut at St. Martin’s School of Art in London. The plug was pulled on their equipment after two songs—1975
Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin met with their manager Peter Grant on the Isle of Jersey to discuss their future in the wake of drummer John Bonham’s death. The group made the decision to disband but didn’t announce it until a month later—1980
Dickie Goodman (Buchanan & Goodman – ‘The Flying Saucer’) died (self-inflicted gunshot)—1989
Queen released the ‘Made In Heaven’ album, four years after lead singer Freddie Mercury’s death—1995
Singer Rod Lauren (‘If I Had a Girl’) was accused of stabbing his actress wife Nida Blanca to death in their native Philippines, but fled the country (ultimately committing suicide six years later) before he could stand trial—2001
The Four Seasons musical Jersey Boys opened on Broadway—2005
Hank Thompson (‘The Wild Side Of Life’) died (cancer)—2007
Lee Crystal (drummer with Joan Jett & The Blackhearts from 1981-1986 – ‘I Love Rock ‘N’ Roll’, ‘Crimson And Clover’, ‘I Love You Love Me Love’) died (multiple sclerosis)—2013
Compiled by Ray Lemire ©2014 RayLemire.com. All Rights Reserved.
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