SEPTEMBER 9, 2012
HAPPY BIRTHDAYS!
1929 - Stu
Phillips, television and motion picture score composer, record producer,
and creator, producer and conductor of the Capitol Records group The
Hollyridge Strings, is born. Thanks to Stu for the corrections and he
has a great website at http://www.stuwho.com/ with accurate information,
unlike many of the reference sites' listings for him.
70 Years Ago Today In 1942 -
Artie Kornfield, songwriter ("Dead Man's Curve"), co-organizer and
co-producer of the 1969 Woodstock Art Fair and Music Festival, and who,
at age 21, became Capitol Records youngest Vice President, is born
Arthur Lawerence Kornfeld in Brooklyn, New York
1949 - Billy
Preston, singer, pianist, keyboards player, motion picture actor (as a
child in "S. Louis Blues" as the young W.C. Handy which was played as an
adult by Nat "King" Cole, who had young Billy on his television show to
perform a duet, and later he was in the 1978 motion picture "Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"), and Apple and Capitol Records solo
artist and session player with The Beatles as a group and as solo
performers, is born William Everett Preston in Houston, Texas
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1959
- The Four Freshmen begin three straight days of sessions for their
Capitol Records album "Voices And Brass" at The Capitol Tower Studios in
Hollywood, California
1964 - Arranger Johnny Richards (with
musicians Bob McCoy, Jerry Kail, and Ray Copeland on trumpets; Burt
Collins on trumpet and flugelhorn; Jiggs Whigham, Bill Watrous, and Tom
McIntosh on trombones; Ray Starling on mellophonium; Jay McAllister on
tuba; Jerry Dodgion on alto saxophone; Frank Perowsky on tenor
saxophone; Joel Kaye on baritone saxophone and piccolo; Shelly Russell
on bass saxophone; Johnny Knapp on piano; Chet Amsterdam on bass; Ronnie
Bedford on drums; and Warren Smith on percussion), records the tracks
"Get Me To The Church On Time", "On The Street Where You Live", "I Could
Have Danced All Night", "Wouldn't It Be Loverly", "Show Me", "The Rain
In Spain", "I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face", and "With A Little Bit
Of Luck" for his Roulette Records album "My Fair Lady - My Way" with
producers Hugo & Luigi, and recording engineer Bob Arnold, at
Capitol Records' New York City studios. Capitol Records currently owns
the Roulette catalog.
1968 - Capitol Records, in a press release
on this day, states that The Beatles' single "I Want To Hold Your Hand"
has sold nearly 5 million copies in the United States, making it the
best selling single of the 1960s. This was before the R.I.A.A. created
the Platinum Single award.
1968 - Capitol Records artists Buck Owens and The Buckaroos play at The White House for President Johnson
1971 - Apple Records, with distribution by Capitol
Records in the United States, releases John Lennon's album "Imagine"
1973
- Helen Reddy's Capitol Records single "Delta Dawn", with "If We Could
Still Be Friends" on the flip side, is #1 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles
chart
1978 - A Taste of Honey's Capitol Records single "Boogie
Oogie Oogie", with "World Spin" on the flip side, hits #1 on Billboard's
Hot 100 Singles chart and will eventually sell more than 2 million
copies, becoming Capitol's first Platinum single
1979 - Norrie
Paramor, pianist, record producer (26 number #1 hits on the U.K. singles
charts), composer, arranger, orchestral conductor, recording director
for EMI's Columbia Records (where he produced hit singles for Cliff
Richards, The Shadows, and Frank Ifield among others), and recorded one
of the biggest selling albums in Capitol Records' "Capitol of the World"
import series - "In London in Love" (which featured soprano Patricia
Clark), dies of cancer at age 65.
1988 - Garth Brooks' debut
Capitol Records Nashville single "If Tomorrow Never Comes", with "The
Dance" on the flip side, debuts on Billboard's Country Singles chart
1990
- Wilson Phillips' SBK Records single (distributed by Capitol Records)
"Release Me", with "Eyes Like Twins" on the flip side, is #1 on
Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart
1993 - Helen O'Connell, singer
(with Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra), dancer, actress, wife of Capitol
Records artist and arranger Frank DeVol, and a Capitol Records solo
artist, dies at age 73 in San Diego, California
2001 - VH1 premieres the documentary "Behind The Music: Blind Melon" about the Capitol Records group
2003
- Capitol Records group Coldplay's frontman Chris Martin delivers the
"Big Noise" petition calling for fairer trade policies to the World
Trade Organization (WTO) at it's meeting in Cancun, Mexico
2004 -
Capitol Records Nashville artists The Jenkins perform at a special
gathering of Capitol Hill VIPs and members of Congress in Washington
D.C. put together by the MUSIC Coalition (Music United for Stong
Internet Copyright) to celebrate digital music done legally.
2009 -
The remastered stereo and mono versions of The Beatles' studio albums
and "Past Masters" album are released as well as The Beatles' Rock Band
game.
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
70 Years Ago Today In 1942
- Inez Foxx, singer and member of the United Artists Records duo
Charlie (her brother) and Inez Foxx (best remembered for the single
"Mockingbird" with "Hurt By Love" on the flip side), is born in
Greensboro, North Carolina
1956 - The Rock
And Roll Trio (Johnny Burnett on vocals and acoustic guitar, Dorsey
Burnette on bass guitar, Paul Burlison on lead guitar and newly added
drumer and cousin of Carl Perkins, Tony Austin) appear as finalists on
the Ted Mack Original Amateur Hour at Madison Square Garden.
1956 - The Goons' (Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan, and
Harry Secombe) Decca U.K. (distributed by Capitol's parent company EMI
in the U.K.) single "Ying Tong Song", with "Bloodnok's Rock n' Roll
Call" on the flip side, enters the UK singles chart at #9
1959 - Capitol Records co-founder Johnny Mercer appears on NBC-TV's "Kraft Music Hall"
1964
- Arranger and conductor Johnny Richards (with Bob McCoy, Jerry Kail,
and Ray Copeland on trumpets; Burt Collins on trumpet and flugelhorn;
Jiggs Whigham, Bill Watrous, and Tom McIntosh on trombones; Ray Starling
on mellophonium; Jay McAllister on tuba; Jerry Dodgion on alto
saxophone; Frank Perowsky on tenor saxophone; Joel Kaye on baritone
saxophone and piccolo; Shelly Russell on bass saxophone; Johnny Knapp on
piano; Chet Amsterdam on bass; Ronnie Bedford on drums; and Warren
Smith on percussion) record the tracks "Get Me To The Church On Time",
"On The Street Where You Live", "I Could Have Danced All Night",
"Wouldn't It Be Loverly", "Show Me", "The Rain In Spain", "I've Grown
Accustomed To Her Face", and "With A Little Bit Of Luck" at Capitol
Records' New York City recording studio with producers Hugo and Luigi
and recording engineer Bob Arnold. Roulette Records will release the
tracks on Richards' album "My Fair Lady - My Way"
1966 - Greg Kane, keyboardist with the Circa Records (a
division of Virgin Records) group Hue And Cry, is born in Coatbridge,
Scotland. While a designer at Virgin Records America, I adapted the
group's UK packaging for U.S. release on Virgin Records America, as well
as designing promo items and advertising.
40 Years Ago
Today In 1972 - Over three sets,
drummer Elvin Jones (with David Liebman on flute, soprano saxophone and
tenor saxophone; Steve Grossman on saxophone and tenor saxophone; and
Gene Perla on bass) records the tracks (Set No. 1) "Brite Piece", "New
Breed", "Sambra", "My Ship", "Taurus People", (Set No. 2) "Fancy Free",
"I'm A Fool To Want You", "Sweet Mama", "The Children, Save The
Children", (Set No.3), "The Children's Merry-Go-Round March", "Small
One", "P.P. Phoneix", and "For All The Other Times" live at The
Lighthouse in Hermosa Beach, California with producer George Butler and
recording engineer Dino Lapas. The tracks will appear on the Blue Note
Records albums "Live At The Lighthouse, Volume One" and "Live At The
Lightouse, Volume Two". Blue Note's catalog is currently owned by
Capitol Records.
1995 - Chynna Phillips, member of the former SBK
Records group Wilson Phillips, marries actor William Baldwin. Phillips'
former Wilson Phillips partners, Carnie and Wendy Wilson, are also
present at the ceremony.
10 Years Ago
Today In 2002 - Former Capitol Records artist Anne
Murray is inducted into the Canadian Country Music Artists Hall Of Fame
at the 2002 Canadian Country Music Artists Awards ceremony held in
Calgary, Canada
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1839
- Astronomer John Herschel takes the first glass plate photograph and
would go on to coin the terms "photography", "negative", and "positive",
and discover sodium thiosulphite as a fixer of silver halides
1894
- Arthur Freed, vaudevillian, Broadway and motion picture composer
(best known for "Singing In The Rain"), associate motion picture
producer ("The Wizard Of Oz"), and motion picture producer (had his own
"unit" at M-G-M which created "Singing In The Rain", "An American In
Paris", "Gigi", and many more), is born in Charleston, South Carolina.
1956 - Elvis Presley appears on CBS-TV's "Toast of
the Town" (with actor and future Capitol Records artist Charles Laughton
filling in for the show's normal host, the ailing Ed Sullivan), for the
first time and 54,000,000 viewers (82.6 percent of the U.S. television
audience) tune in to watch Presley sing "Don’t Be Cruel" and "Ready
Teddy"
1958 - The first stereo two-channel records are issued, by
Audio Fidelity in the United States and Pye in Britain, using the
Westrex "45/45" single-groove system
Sunday, September 09, 2012
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