JUNE 29, 2012
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
70 Years Ago Today In 1942 - Capitol Records releases it first six singles:
101. PAUL WHITEMAN and his Orchestra - "I've Found A New Baby" and "The General Jumped At Dawn"
102. FREDDIE SLACK and his Orchestra - "Here You Are" and, with Ella Mae Morse, "Cow Cow Boogie"
103. JOHNNY MERCER - "Strip Polka" and, with Freddie Slack and his Orchestra, "The Air Minded Executive"
104. DENNIS DAY - "Johnny Doughboy Found A Rose In Ireland" and "Phil The Fluter's Ball"
105. MARTHA TILTON - "The Angels Cried" and GORDON JENKINS and his Orchestra - "I'll Remember April"
106. CONNIE HAINES with Gordon Jenkins and his Orchestra - "He Wears A Pair Of Silver Wings" and "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows"
1950 -  Mel Blanc records the tracks "Yosemite Sam" and "I Taut I Taw A Puddy  Tat" for the double disc Capitol Records children's record "Bugs Bunny  Sings". The two tracks will also be released as a single with a picture  sleeve in 1951 and "I Taut I Taw A Puddy Tat" would peak at #9 on  Billboard's singles chart and be one of the top 20 songs of the year.  The song was produced by Alan Livingston. Livingston, with Billy May and  Warren Foster, would also write the lyrics and May would write, arrange  and conduct the music.
1951 - The Four  Freshmen (Bob Flanigan on vocal, trombone, and bass; Don Barbour on  vocal and guitar; Ross Barbour on vocal and drums; and Hal Kratzsch on  vocal, tumpet, mellophone, and bass) record the tracks "It's A Blue  World" and "Tuxedo Junction" (which will be released by Capitol Records  as Capitol single #2152) as well as "Intermission Riff" (which will  finally be released when it appears on 2000 Mosaic Records box set "The  Complete Capitol Four Freshmen Sessions April, 1950-July, 1960") with  producer Voyle Gilmour at Capitol's Melrose Avenue studios in Hollywood,  California
1959 - Franck Pourcell and His French Fiddlers' Capitol  Records single "Only You (Loin De Vous)" is #23 down from #12 on  Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart and The Kingston Trio's Capitol  Records single "M.T.A." enters the top 40 at #28 up from #49
1960 -  Arranger and tenor saxophonist Bill Holman (with Al Porcino, Conte  Candoli, Lee Katzman, and Ray Triscari on trumpet; Bill Perkins and  Richie Kamuca on tenor saxophone; Charlie Kennedy, Joe Maini, and Richie  Kamuca on alto saxophone; Frank Rosolino, Lew McGreery, and Vern Friley  on trombone; Jack Nimitz on baritone saxophone; Jimmy Rowles on piano;  Joe Mondragon on bass; Kenny Shroyer on bass trombone; and Mel Lewis on  drums) record the tracks "Quickstep", "The Moon Is Blue", and "June Is  Busting Out All Over" for his Capitol Records album "Bill Holman's Great  Big Band" at The Capitol Tower Studios in Hollywood, California
1963  - Kyu Sakamoto's Capitol Records single "Sukiyaki" (with "Anoko No  Namaewa Nantenkana" on the flip side) is still #1 on Billboard's Hot 100  singles chart, Nat "King" Cole's single "Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days Of  Summer" is #6 up from #7, Bobby Darin's Capitol Records single "Yellow  Roses" is #16 down from #11, The Beach Boys' Capitol Records single  "Surfin' U.S.A." is #17 down from #16, Al Martino's Capitol Records  single "I Love You Because" is #19 down from #9, and The Beach Boys'  single "Shut Down" (the flip side of "Surfin' U.S.A." is #29 down from  #23
1964 - Capitol Records releases Nat "King" Cole's single "Marnie"  based on music from the soundtrack of the Alfred Hitchcock movie, with  "More And More Of Your Amour" on the flip side
45 Years Ago Today In 1967 - Wanda Jackson  records the track "No Place To Go But Home" with producers Ken Nelson  and Kelso Herston for her Capitol Records album "Cream Of The Crop" and  "You Created Me" with Nelson, Herston and George Richy producing for her  Capitol Records album "Wanda Jackson Country!" at Columbia Studios in  Nashville, Tennessee
1968 - Capitol Records subsidiary Tower Records releases Pink Floyd's second album "A Saucerful Of Secrets"
1989 - Capitol Records releases Paul McCartney's "Flowers In The Dirt" album
1999 - Capitol Records releases Grand Funk Railroad's anthology album "Thirty Years Of Funk"
10 Years Ago Today In 2002  - Rosemary Clooney, singer, motion picture and television actress, wife  of Capitol Records artist (original Broadway cast album for "Cyrano de  Bergerac") Jose Ferrer, lover of arranger and Capitol Records artist  Nelson Riddle, and a Capitol Records artist (on a duet album with Bing  Crosby), dies at age 74 of lung cancer at her home in Beverly Hills,  California. Her home, formerly the home of lyricist Ira Gershwin, has  been demolished by a new owner.
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1916 - Porky Freeman, guitarist and Western Swing  bandleader who gave future Capitol Records artist Merle Travis his first  job after Travis moved to California, is born Quilla Hugh Freeman, in  Vera Cruz, Missouri
1943 - Little Eva, singer (best known for "The  Loco-Motion", which was later covered by Capitol Records group Grand  Funk Railroad and future Capitol Records artist Kyle Minogue), is born  Eva Narcissus Boyd in Belhaven, North Carolina
1959 - Martin Denny's  Liberty Records single "Quiet Village" is #8 down from #6 on Billboard's  Hot 100 Singles chart, Dion and The Belmonts' Dolton Records single "A  Teenager In Love" is #10 down from #8, Fats Domino's Imperial Records  single "I'm Ready" is #29 down from #18. EMI Music Group, Capitol  Records' parent company, currently owns the Liberty, Dolton, and  Imperial Records catalogues.
1963 - The Essex's Roulette Records  single "Easier Said Than Done" is #5 up from #15 on Billboard's Hot 100  singles chart, The Chiffon's Laurie Records single "One Fine Day" is #7  up from #10, Jan And Dean's Liberty Records single "Surf City is #10 up  from #20, and Lou Christie's Roulette Records single "Two Faces Have I"  is #26 down from #14. Roulette, Laurie, and Liberty Records' catalogs  are currently owned by Capitol Music Group's parent company, EMI Music  Group.
1963 - Del Shannon's cover of The Beatles' tune "From Me To  You" enters Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart, becoming the first  Lennon/McCartney song to appear on the U.S. charts
1986 - Dan Seal's EMI America Records single "Everything That  Glitters (Is Not Gold)", with "So Easy To Need" on the flip side, is #1  on the U.S. Country singles charts. EMI America's Country catalog is  currently being distributed by Capitol Records Nashville.
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1919  - Slim Pickens, motion picture actor ("Blazing Saddles", "Dr.  Strangelove...", "1941", etc.), is born Louis Bert Lindley Jr., in  Kingsburg, California. Let the whoopin' and a hollerin' commence! :)
1940  - Victor Records releases Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra's single "I'll  Never Smile Again", It will be the band's first big hit with future  Capitol Records artists Frank Sinatra and The Pied Pipers as vocalists.  The track had been recorded on May 23, 1940 in New York City and will  become the first #1 on Billboard's first top 10 selling chart on July  20, 1940, and would be both Sinatra and The Pied Piper's first #1 on any  charts. The instrumental "Marcheta" is on the flip side.
1963 - Jack  Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine, at ceremony #123, leave their footprints  in cement at Graumann's Chinese Theater in Hollywood, California
45 Years Ago Today  In 1967 - Jayne Mansfield,  singer and actress on Broadway and in motion pictures, is killed at age  34 in an auto accident on U.S. Highway 90 on her way from an engagement  at a supper club in Biloxi, Misssissippi to a TV interview in New  Orleans, Louisiana. Also killed is Mansfield's driver and her divorce  lawyer, and suffering minor injuries are three of Manfield's children  including future "Law & Order S.V.U." actress Mariska Hargitay.
1983  - Sylvester Stallone, at ceremony #148, leaves his footprints in cement  at Graumann's Chinese Theater in Hollywood, California
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