JUNE 14, 2012
HAPPY BIRTHDAYS!
1905 - Nappy Lamare, banjo  player, guitarist, singer, member of the group The Bob Crosby Bob Cats,  and a Capitol Records session and solo artist, is born Joseph Hilton  Lamare on Dumaine Street in New Orleans, Louisiana. Jazz Connection Magazine wrote a wonderful biographical article to celebrate Nappy's centennial birthday.
1949  - Alan White, drummer with the Apple and Capitol Records group Plastic  Ono Band, drummer on John Lennon's album and single "Imagine", George  Harrison's album "All Things Must Pass" and single "My Sweet Lord", as  well as drummer for the group Yes, is born in Pelton, County Durham,  England
1963 - Chris DeGarmo, songwriter, lead and rhythm guitarist  with the Capitol Records band Queensryche (1982-1997, 2003), is born  Christopher Lee DeGarmo in Wenatchee, Washington
1969 - MC Ren,  Capitol Records artist and vocalist with Priority Records (now a  subsidiary of Capitol Records) group NWA, is born Lorenzo Patterson in  Compton, California
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1946 - The King Cole Trio records the track "The  Christmas Song" (which Mel Tormé and Robert Wells wrote specifically for  Nat) at WMCA Studios in New York City. This is the first of four  separate recordings Cole would make of the song during his lifetime.  Cole was not happy with this version and would persuade Capitol Records  to let him re-record the track with a string section, arranged by  Charlie Grean, with producers Carl Kress and Walter Rivers on August 19,  1946
1949 - Freddie Slack's Quartet (actually a septet, with Neal  Hefti on trumpet, John Haliburton on trombone, Hank Horn on baritone  saxophone, Slack on piano, Bob Bain on guitar, Paul Moresy on bass, and  Maynard Sloate on drums) record the tracks, "Whatever Happened To Ol'  Jack?" (with Phil Gordon and Bobby Troup on vocals) and an untitled Phil  Moore instrumental (that went unissued until Mosaic Records released it  on their 2005 3 CD set "Mosaic Select: Freddie Slack") in Los Angeles,  California
60  Years Ago Today In 1952 - Al Martino (with orchestra conducted by Monty  Kelly)'s debut Capitol Records single "Here In My Heart" (with "I Cried  Myself To Sleep" on the flip side) hits #1 on Billboard's Best Selling  Retail Records charts, Kay Starr (with orchestra conducted by Harold  Mooney)'s Capitol Records single "Wheel Of Fortune" is #18, Jane Froman  (with orchestra conducted by Sid Feller)'s Capitol Records single "I'll  Walk Alone" is #16, and Ellae Mae Morse (with Nelson Riddle and His  Orchestra)'s Capitol Records single "Blacksmith Blues" is #19
1955 -  Arranger Bob Cooper, on tenor saxophone, oboe, and english horn (with  Bud Shank on flute, alto saxophone, and tenor saxophone player; 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; Ralph Pena on bass;  and Shelly Manne on drums) records the tracks "All Or Nothing At All"  (which Capitol Records released on the album "Kenton Presents Bob Cooper  - Shifting Winds"), "'Round Midnight", and "Tongue Twister" (both of  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 Hollwyood,  California
55  Years Ago Today In 1957 - Sessions begin for arranger Martin Denny's Liberty  Records album "Exotica Volume II" (with Denny on piano and celeste;  Arthur Lyman on vibes, marimba, xylophone, and percussion; Augie Colon  on bongos, congas, latin effects, and bird calls; Bernard Miller on  string bass; Jack Shoop on alto flute and baritone saxophone; Roy Harte  on drums and percussion; and Gil Baumgart on percussion and also helping  with arranging) in The Capitol Tower Studios in Hollywood, California  with recording engineers Val Valintin and Ted Keep
1964 - Buck Owens' Capitol Records single "My Heart Skips A Beat" returns to the #1 position on the U.S. Country singles charts
1965 - Capitol Records release The Beatles' album "Beatles VI"
1965 - Capitol Records releases the Buck Owens' EP "Four By Buck Owens'
1965  - The Beatles record the tracks "I've Just Seen a Face" (six takes) and  "I'm Down" (seven takes) and the rest of the group stays as Paul  McCartney records the track "Yesterday" in Studio 2 at EMI's Abbey Road  studios in London, England. "Yesterday" will be released by Capitol  Records in the U.S. as a single and on the album "'Yesterday' and Today"  as well as by United Artists on the soundtrack to the group's second  motion picture "Help!".
1966 - Ron Tepper,  manager of Capitol Records' press and information services, sends out a  letter to reviewers requesting they disregard and, "if possible", send  back (yeah, right) their promotional copy of the "Butcher Cover" version  of The Beatles' album "'Yesterday' and Today" album. His assistant,  Mickey Diage, handled the distribution of the letter and coordinated the  return of the album and promotional posters that used the same artwork.45 Years Ago Today In 45 Years Ago Today In 1967  - The Beach Boys (Alan Jardine, Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson, and Dennis  Wilson with session musician Diane Rovell) record the track "Heroes And  Villains" at The Beach Boys Studio at 10452 Bellagio Road, Bel Air,  California from 3PM to 6PM
1968 - Ken Errier, Capitol Records solo  artist (1957), member of Capitol Records recording act The Four Freshmen  (1953-1955), and second husband to actress Jane Withers, dies in a  small plane crash in California
1969 - Vocalist Letta Mbulu is back  in The Capitol Tower Studios with arranger H.B. Barnum who conducts the  studio orchestra (Tony Terran and Freddie Hill on trumpet and  flugelhorn; Charles Loper on trombone; Dick Leith on trombone and bass  trombone; Jackie Kelso on tenor saxophone and flute; Jim Horn on tenor  saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute, oboe, and recorder; Dick Houlgate  on bass saxophone and flute; Don Randi on piano, electric piano and  harpsichord; Mike Melvoin on organ; Al Casey, John Gray, and Les Buie on  guitar; Bob West on bass and electric bass; Earl Palmer on drums,  tympani and bells; Joe Clayton on congas; King Errison on bongos; Gary  Coleman boo bams and tamborine; John Guerin on bells, tympani, and  mallets; Ken Watson on mallets, traps, and Latin percussion) to record  the tracks "Gumba Gumba", "Kukuchi", "What More Could Be Right", and  "Only When You're Mine Again" for her Capitol Records album "Free Soul"
1976 - The Beatles' Capitol Records compilation  album "Rock 'N' Roll Music" is certified Gold by the R.I.A.A.
1998 - Capitol Records releases The Beastie Boys album "Hello Nasty"
2000 - Merrill Moore,  Capitol Records artist and contract session player (1955-1958), country  swing and boogie woogie pianist, dies in San Diego, California of  cancer
2003 - On the stage of the Grand Ole Opry, Capitol Records  Nashville artist, Trace Adkins is invited by Little Jimmy Dickens to  become a member with a formal induction to be held on August 23, 2003
2005  - A scheduled performance by Capitol Records recording artists Saosin  is cancelled due to police reaction to a shooting that occured at the  venue a few days earlier
2009 - Bob Bogle, original lead guitarist  and founding member of the Dolphin/Doltin Records label group "The  Ventures" died of complications from non-Hodgkin's lymphoma at age 75 in  a local Southern California hospital according to fellow co-founder Don  Wilson
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1929 -  Cy Coleman, child prodigy pianist, composer (best known for  "Witchcraft" and "The Best Is Yet To Come" both recorded by Capitol  Records artist Frank Sinatra, as well as "Hey Look Me Over" for The  musical "Wildcat" as well as the musical "Sweet Charity" with lyricist  Dorothy Fields), is born Seymour Kaufman in New York City, New York
1941  - Future Capitol Records artist Tex Ritter weds actress Dorothy Fay.  Their marriage that will last until his death on January 2, 1974
1950  - Harold Perry, radio actor and Capitol Records artist, plays his best  known role, The Great Gildersleeve, for the last time after 13 years.  Perry is changing networks but he can't take Gildersleeve with him so he  will be replaced by Willard Waterman, who will play Gildersleeve for  the next 8 years on radio and then for several years on television but,  as a mark of respect for Perry, will never imitate Perry's signature  laugh.
1961 - Boy George, singer, Broadway  musical performer and Virgin Records artist with group The Culture Club  and as a solo artist, is born George Alan O'Dowd in Eltham, Kent,  England. Virgin Records is a subsidiary of Capitol Music Group.
1963 -  Sarah Vaughan, with arranger Benny Carter conducting the studio  orchestra (Ed Kusby, Tom Shepard, Dick Nash, and Bob Knight on trombone;  Jimmy Rowles on piano; Bobby Gibbons on guitar; Red Callender on bass;  Earl Palmer on drums, and unknown string section), records the tracks  "These Foolish Things", "Look For Me, I'll Be Around", "Friendless", and  "The Man I Love" at United Recorders' studios in Los Angeles,  California during her last session for her Roulette Records album  "Lonely Hours"
1964 - Ringo Starr rejoins Parlophone and Capitol  Records group The Beatles on tour when he arrives in Melbourne,  Australia after missing part of the tour due to illness
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1895  - Cliff Edwards (aka "Ukulele Ike"), singer, ukulele player, Broadway  (introduced the song "Toot, Toot, Tootsie"), radio ("The Rudy Vallee  Show") and motion picture actor (introduced the song "Singing In The  Rain"), and the voice of Jiminy Cricket in Walt Disney's animated  feature "Pinochio", is born in Hannibal, Missouri
1909 - Burl Ives,  singer, author, actor, and voice of the world's second best known  snowman, is born Burl Icle Ivanhoe Ives in Jasper County, Illinois
70 Years Ago Today In 1942 - Walt Disney releases the animated movie "Bambi"
1961 - Liberty Records releaes Johnny Burnette's  sixth single for the label "I've Got A Lot Of Things To Do" with "Girls"  on the flip side
35 Years Ago Today In 1977 - Alan Reed, motion picture, radio and  television actor, and voice of Fred Flintstone, dies of a heart attack  at age 69 in West Los Angeles, California
1986 -  Alan Jay Lerner, Broadway and motion picture lyricist and librettist  (including "Brigadoon", "Paint Your Wagon", "Royal Wedding", "My Fair  Lady", "Gigi", "Camelot" and others), and screenwriter ("An American In  Paris") dies of lung cancer in New York City at age 67
1994 - Henry  Mancini (born Enric Nicoloa Mancini), composer (co-wrote "Moon River"  with Capitol Records' co-founder "Johnny Mercer"), arranger, and  television ("Peter Gunn") and film scorer ("The Pink Panther" series and  many others) dies at age 70 of cancer of the pancreas and liver in  Beverly Hills, California
2000 - Bob Rolontz, record executive and originator of the Platinum record certification, dies at age 79
No comments:
Post a Comment