MARCH 31, 2011
HAPPY BIRTHDAYS!
1908 - "Red" Norvo, bandleader,  xylophone and vibraphone player, session player and Capitol Records  artist, is born Kenneth Norville in Beardstown, Illinois
1934 -  Shirley Jones, singer, motion picture and television actress and Capitol  Records artist (soundtracks to the motion pictures "Oklahoma!",  "Carousel", and "The Music Man") is born Shirley Mae Jones in Charleroi,  Pennsylvania
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1945 - Johnny Mercer and Jo Stafford's Capitol Records  single "Candy", the flip side of Mercer's "I'm Gonna See My Baby", is  still #1 on the U.S. Pop singles charts
1957 - Ferlin Husky's Capitol  Records single "Gone", with "Missing Persons" on the flip side, is #1  on the U.S. Country singles chart
1964 - The Beatles become the first  musical act to hold the top 5 positions (March 31, 1964 - The Beatles  hold the top five slots on Billboard's chart: ("Can't Buy Me Love" at  #1, "Twist and Shout" at #2, "She Loves You" at #3, "I Want To Hold Your  Hand" at #4, and "Please Please Me" at #5) on Billboard's Hot 100  Singles chart
1968 - Skeets McDonald (born Enos William McDonald),  singer, songwriter, guitarist, and Capitol Records artist, dies in  California at age 52 after suffering a massive heart attack
1968 -  Buck Owens' Capitol Records single "How Long Will My Baby Be Gone", with  "Everybody Needs Somebody" on the flip side, is #1 on the U.S. Country  singles charts
1974 - Blue Swede's Capitol Records single "Hooked On A  Feeling", with "Gotta Have Your Love" on the flip side, is #1 on  Billboard's Hot 100 Singles chart
20 Years  Ago Today In 1991 - Garth Brooks' Liberty  Records (later renamed Capitol Records Nashville) single "Two Of A Kind  Workin' On A Full House", with "Unanswered Prayers" on the flip side, is  #1 on the U.S. Country singles charts
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1943  - "Oklahoma!" (originally titled "Away We Go") opens on Broadway at the  St. James Theatre in New York City, New York with stars Alfred Drake,  Joan Roberts and Howard DeSilva. Later made into a motion picture,  Capitol Records will release it's soundtrack which will become the first  album to be certified Gold by the R.I.A.A.
1962 - EMI withdraws all 78rpm records in their catalogue
1980 - EMI Records, Capitol Records parent company, reports a twelve months trading loss of £2,800,000
1995  - Selena (born Selena Quintanilla Perez), singer and EMI Latin artist,  is shot by the president of her fan club and dies at age 24.
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1949  - To compete with Columbia's new 33rpm LP, RCA Victor debuts it 45rpm  (78-33=45) system when it releases 76 albums (3 or 4 discs in a boxed  set) and 104 singles on 7-inch large-hole 45-rpm records. The first 45  rpm disc,"Texarkana Baby" by Eddy Arnold, was issued by RCA in the US on  March 31, 1949. It was made of green vinyl, as part of an early attempt  to color-code singles according to the genre of music they featured.  Others included red for classical music and yellow for children's songs.  Capitol Records will be the first label to release its product in all  three formats.
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