JUNE 13, 2012
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
1949 - Dennis Locorriere, guitarist and singer with the Capitol Records group Dr. Hook, is born in Union City, New Jersey
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
65  Years Ago Today In 1947  - The King Cole Trio (Nat "King" Cole on piano, Oscar Moore on guitar,  and Johnny Miller on bass) records the tracks "Naughty Angeline" and  "That's What" in Los Angeles, California. Capitol Records will release  the tracks together on a single (Capitol 437)
1953 - Les Baxter and  His Orchestra's Capitol Records single "April in Portugal" is #3 on  Billboard's Best Selling Retail Records chart and its flip side "Ruby"  is 9, Nat "King" Cole (with Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra)'s Capitol  Records single "Pretend" is #10, Jane Froman (with Sid Feller and His  Orchestra)'s Capitol Records single "I Believe" is #11, Les Paul and  Mary Ford's Capitol Records single "Vaya Con Dios (May God Be With You)"  (with "Johnny (Is The Boy For Me)" on the flip side) enters the top 20  at #14 and will go on to top the chart and stay there for 11 weeks, and  Kay Starr (with orchestra conducted by Harold Mooney)'s Capitol Records  single "Half A Photograph" (with "Allez-Vous-En" from the musical "Can  Can" on the flip side) is #19
1955 - Arranger Bob Cooper, on tenor  saxophone, oboe, and english horn, (with Bud Shank on flute alto  saxophone and tenor saxophone; Jimmy Giuffre on clarinet, tenor  saxophone, and baritone saxophone; Bob Enevoldsen on tenor saxophone,  bass clarinet, and valve trombone; John Graas on french horn; Claude  Williamson on piano; Joe Mondragon on bass; and Shelly Manne on drums)  records the tracks "Hallelujah" (which will be released by Capitol  Records on the album "Kenton Presents Bob Cooper - Shifting Winds"),  "Deep In A Dream", "It's De-lovely", and "Drawing Lines" (which will  finally be released by Mosaic Records as part of its 1999 box set  "Kenton Presents Cooper, Holman & Rosolino") with producer Stan  Kenton at Capitol Records' Melrose Avenue studios in Hollywood,  California
1964 - The Beatles' United Artists soundtrack album "A  Hard Day's Night" is released. Capitol Records will eventually buy the  United Artists Records catalog and has since re-released the album on  the Capitol label.
1968 - Vocalist Letta Mbulu records the tracks  "Olu Ati Ayo" and "Welele", with producer David Axlerod, for her Capitol  Records album "Free Soul". She also records a version of "Gumba Gumba"  that will be re-recorded the next day that will be issued on a single  (Capitol 4-2152) with the song "Ade" on the flip side. Arranger H.B.  Barnum conducts Tony Terran and Freddie Hill on trumpet and flugelhorn;  Lew McCreary on trombone and tenor trombone; Jackie Kelso on tenor  saxophone, clarinet and flute; Dick Houlgate on saxophone and clarinet;  Jim Horn on saxophone, clarinet, flute and recorder; Don Randi on piano,  electric piano and harpsichord; Mike Melvoin on organ; Les Buie, Louis  Morell, and Carol Kaye on guitar; Bob West on bass; Earl Palmer on  drums, tympani, and bells; John Guerin on drums, vibraphone and tympani;  Joe Clayton on congas; Gene Estes and Ken Watson on percussion at The  Capitol Tower Studios. Copyists for the arrangements were Allen  DeRienzo, Leonard Gordon, and Kenneth Mitchell.
1970 - The Beatles'  Apple Records single "The Long And Winding Road", distributed by Capitol  Records in the United States, hits #1 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles  chart and The Beatles' Apple Records album "Let It Be" is #1 on  Billboard's Top 200 albums chart
1970 - Glyn Johns completes a mix of  The Band's Capitol Records album "Stage Fright". Many of the tracks  will be remixed by Todd Rundgren for the final album release. Dave Hopkins has written reviews of all The Band's 2000 CD reissues.
1986 - Benny Goodman, clarinetist, singer,  bandleader, motion picture actor, and Capitol Records artist, dies of  cardiac arrest in his Manhattan apartment at age 77 and is later buried  in Long Ridge Union Cemetery, Stamford Connecticut
1986 - Dean Reed,  Capitol Records and Imperial Records artist (1958), best known for his  recordings of "Our Summer Romance" and "Whirly Twirly", singer,  songwriter, director, actor and socialist activist, dies after  disappearing the day before and will be found in two days in a lake near  is home in East Berlin, Germany. Tom Hanks is said to be working on a  project about Reed's life. The University of Colorado sponsors the Dean  Reed Peace Prize, an annual essay contest held in Reed's memory, as part  of its Conference on World Affairs.
15 Years Ago Today In 1997 - Capitol Records band  Megadeth starts their "Cryptic Writings" tour with a concert in Mesa,  Arizona that is broadcast live on the internet
2003 - The film contest for a video for Capitol Records artist Fischerspooner, sponsored by iFilm and Capitol, ends and the winner's entry is placed on iFilm.com
2004  - Capitol Records Nashville artists The Jenkins perform on the  Riverfront stage of the CMA Music Festival in Nashville, Tennessee
2005  - Zane Williams, guitarist, singer and songwriter, auditions for Larry  Willoughby, Vice President of A&R for Capitol Records Nashville at  the label's top floor offices in Nashville, Tennessee. Zane has a good description of the event in the June 13, 2005 entry on his blog "The Music Row Diaries".
2006 - Capitol Records band Radiohead perform live  in concert at The Theatre at Madison Square Garden in New York City. According to a Capitol Records press release,  the set list "will draw heavily on the newer material the band has been  working on over the past months", and "will feature appropriately  scaled down staging and lighting design, creating a suitably intimate  environment for the first ever airings of several new songs".
2006 - The surviving original members of The Beach Boys  reunite in public after 10 years apart when Brian Wilson, Mike Love and  Al Jardine gather on the roof of The Capitol Tower in Hollywood,  California to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the album "Pet Sounds"  and their 2003 Capitol Records album "Sounds Of Summer: The Very Best Of  The Beach Boys" being certified Platinum by the R.I.A.A.
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
95 Years  Ago Today In 1917  - Sy Zenter, trombonist, bandleader, session musician and Liberty  Records artist, is born Simon H. Zentner in New York City, New York
1960 - Rick Nelson's Imperial Records single "Young Emotions" is #14 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart
1963  - Sarah Vaughn, with arranger Benny Carter conducting the studio  orchestra (Shorty Sherock, Carmell Jones, Conrad Gozzo, and Bobby Bryant  on trumpet; Ed Kusby and Dick Nash on trombone; Buddy Coillete, Bill  Green, Plas Johnson, Wilbur Schwartz, and Bill Hood on reeds; Jimmy  Rowles on piano; Barney Kessel and Tommy Tedesco on guitar; Red  Callender on bass; and Alvin Stoller on drums), records the tracks  "Solitude", "I'll Never Be The Same", "So Long, My Love", and "Lonely  Hours" at United Recorders' studios in Los Angeles, California for her  Roulette Records album "The Lonely Hours"
40 Years Ago Today In 1972 - CBS-TV broadcasts  the final episode of Capitol Records artist Glen Campbell's variety show  "The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour"
1981 -  Dottie West and Kenny Roger's Liberty Records single "What Are We Doin'  In Love", with "Choosin' Means Losin'" on the flip side is #1 on the  U.S. Country singles chart. EMI Music Group, Capitol Music Group's  parent company, currently owns the Liberty Records catalog
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1946 - Edward J. "Major" Bowes, producer and host of  radio's "Major Bowes' Original Amateur Hour", dies on his 72nd birthday  at his home in Rumson, New Jersey. Cardinal Spellman will perform the  last rites at Bowes' home. Those amongst the show's most famous winners  were Frank Sinatra and Bob Hope. A year after Bowes' death, Ted Mack  would revive the Amateur Hour and bring it to television.
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
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