JUNE 26, 2012
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
1969 - Colin Greenwood, bass  player and keyboardist for the Capitol Records band Radiohead, is born  Colin Charles Greenwood in Oxford, England
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1948  - Nat "King" Cole's Capitol Records single "Nature Boy" is #3 down from  #1 on Billboard's Best Selling Retail Records chart, The Pied Piper's  Capitol Records single "My Happiness" is still #8, and The Sportsmen's a  capella Capitol Records single "You Can't Be True, Dear" is still #11,  Pee Wee Hunt and His Orchestra's Capitol Records single "Twelfth Street  Rag" enters the top 20 at #14, and The Sportsmen's Capitol Records  single "Toolie Oolie Doolie (The Yodel Polka)" (the flip side of "You  Can't Be True, Dear") re-enters the top 20 at #20
1954 - Kay Starr  (with orchestra conducted by Harold Mooney)'s Capitol Records single "If  You Love Me (Really Love Me)" is still at #6 on Billboard's Best  Selling Retail Records chart, Frank Sinatra (with Nelson Riddle and His  Orchestra)'s Capitol Records single "Three Coins In The Fontain" is  still #7, Nat "King" Cole (with Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra)'s  Capitol Records single "Answer Me, My Love" is still #11, Frank Sinatra  (with Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra)'s Capitol Records single "Young  At Heart" is #11 up from #13 down from #7, Kay Starr (with orchestra  conducted by Harold Mooney)'s Capitol Records single "The Man Upstairs"  is #14 down from #8, and Stan Freberg's Capitol Records single "Point Of Order" is #15 up from #20
1958  - Frank Sinatra, with arranger Nelson Riddle conducting the studio  orchestra (which includes Bill Miller on piano), records the tracks  "Goodbye" "It's A Lonesome Old Town", and "One For My Baby" for his  Capitol Records album "Only The Lonely" at The Capitol Tower Studios in  Hollywood, California
1961 - Faron Young's  Capitol Records single "Hello Walls" is #21 down from #19 on Billboard's  Hot 100 singles chart
1964 - Peggy Lee records the tracks "After  You've Gone", "C'est Magnifique", "My Sin', and "In The Name Of Love" at  The Capitol Tower Studios in Hollywood, California for her Capitol  Records album "In The Name Of Love" with producer Dave Cavanaugh and  Robert Bain, John Pisano, and Howard Roberts on guitars; Chuck Berghofer  on bass; Lou Levy on piano; Stan Levey on drums; and Francisco  Aguabella on bongos and conga drum
1966- Buck  Owens' Capitol Records single "Think Of Me", with "Heart Of Glass" on  the flip side, is #1 on the U.S. Country singles charts
45 Years Ago Today In 1967 - Capitol Records releases Buck Owens' single  "Your Tender Loving Care" with "What A Liar I Am" on the flip side
1968 - Ziggy  Elman (born Harry Finkelman), trumpet player, bandleader, songwriter  (co-wrote "And The Angels Sing" with future Capitol Records co-founder  Johnny Mercer), and a Capitol Records session musician (with Paul Weston  and His Orchestra, Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra and others) and solo  artist, dies in Van Nuys, California at age 54
1988  - Tanya Tucker's Capitol Records single "If It Don't Come Easy", with  "I'll Tennessee You In My Dreams" on the flip side, is #1 on the U.S.  Country singles charts
1996 - Capitol Records  Nashville artist Garth Brooks set an all time record at Fan Fair, in  Nashville, Tennessee, when he signs autographs for twenty-three  consecutive hours
2000 - Edmund E. Nielsen, manager for Capitol Records and record distributor in Hawai‘i, dies in San Antonio, Texas, at age 80
2006 - Gloria Jean Bernard, (born Gloria Jean  Swanson) Capitol Records employee in Los Angeles, California before  moving to Deluth, Minnesota where she worked for St. Luke Hospital,  University of Minnesota, and the Bureau of Mines, dies at age 72 in  Edinburg, Virginia
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1933  - The Kraft Music Hall debuts on radio with future Capitol Records  artist Paul Whiteman as its first host. Whiteman's radio orchestra would  give first national exposure to many future Capitol Records artists  including co-founder Johnny Mercer, who replaced future Capitol Records  artist Bing Crosby (who was part of The Delta Rhythm Boys), and  trombonist and singer Jack Teagarden who would sing with Mercer on the  show. The show would go on to have many hosts including Al Jolson and  Bing Crosby, and transtition to televison in 1949 with hosts including  Milton Berle, David King, and Perry Como.
1953 - Future Capitol  Records artist Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe, who at one time was  signed to Capitol Records but never recorded for the label, leave their  footprints in cement at Graumann's Chineses Theatre in Hollywood,  California at ceremony #104
1961 - Ricky  Nelson's Imperial Records single "Travelin' Man" is #5 down from #2 on  Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart and it's flip side "Hello Mary Lou" is  #16 up from #17, Fats Domino's Imperial Records single "It Keeps  Rainin'" is #28 up from #40, and The Fleetwood's Dolton Records single  "Tragedy" is #31 down from #20
1964 - The Beatles' soundtrack of "A  Hard Day's Night", as well as the single "And I Love Her", with "Ringo's  Theme" on the flip side, are released by United Artists Records.  Capitol Records eventually buys the UA catalog and re-releases the album  on Capitol.
5 Years Ago Today In 2007 - Infinity Entertainment releases a DVD set containing 30 episodes of Larry Harmon's Bozo The Clown
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1956 - Clifford Brown, trumpet player and Blue Note  Records solo artist, dies in an auto accident at age 25. Also killed in  the accident is pianist Richard Powell (brother of Bud Powell), and  Richard's wife.
2003 - The R.I.A.A. starts to identify individual  computer users who are, "illegally offering to 'share' substantial  amounts of copyrighted music over peer-to-peer networks" to bring suit  against them
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