JUNE 4, 2012
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
1945 - Gordon Waller, singer,  songwriter, guitarist, and part of the Capitol Records duo Peter and  Gordon, is born Gordon Trueman Riviere Waller in Braemar, Scotland
1953  - Jimmy McCulloch, lead guitarist with the band Wings and member of  bands including Thunderclap Newman and Stone The Crows, is born in  Glasgow, Scotland. He would die in London, England on September 27, 1979  at age 26 of a heart failure due to overuse of heroin, morphine,  alcohol and marijuana. Miguel Terol has a tribute page to Jimmy on The Musicians' Olympus website.
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
70 Years Ago Today In 1942  - With it's name officially changed from Liberty Records, Capitol  Records starts business in a small 15’x50’ second floor office with no  air conditioning at 1483 Vine Street, just south of Sunset Boulevard,  above Sy Devore’s Tailor Shop and next to photographer Gene Lester's  studio. Also on this day Capitol Records will become the first record  company to give free copies of its records to D.J.s when co-founder  Glenn Wallichs personally brings disc jockey Peter Potter, creator of  “The Juke Box Jury” radio show, a copy of “Cow-Cow Boogie” (which, along  with Mercer's "Strip Polka" will become one of Capitol’s first big  sellers). After seeing Potter's reaction, Wallichs decides, for the  first time in the history of the American music industry, to give free  copies of releases to disc jockeys and reviewers to promote Capitol  Records' acts and the sound quality of its recordings. The records are  personalized with labels bearing each recipient's name (which would  often lead to Capitol's few employees having to stay up to 3 in the  morning to fill them out). This quickly makes Capitol Records a favorite  of disc jockeys across the country and forces the rest of the industry  to follow Capitol. The first female employee was Auriel MacFie who  operated the small switchboard and was also the company's receptionist  and typist who, according to Dave Dexter, Jr.'s autobiography  "Playback", was blonde, smiling, attractive and would, by 1976, become a  prominent editor for a major Californian book publisher. The site of  Capitol's first office is currently the entrance to the Bank of America  parking structure.
1946 - Stan Kenton and His  Orchestra (Buddy Childers, Ray Wetzel, Chico Alvarez, John Anderson, Ken  Hanna on trumpet; Kai Winding, Miff Sines, Milt Kabak on trombone; Bart  Varsalona on bass trombone; Al Anthony, Boots Mussulli on alto  saxophone; Vido Musso, Bob Cooper on tenor saxophone; Bob Gioga on  baritone saxophone; Stan Kenton on piano; Bob Ahern on guitar; Eddie  Safranski on bass; Shelly Manne on drums; June Christy, Gene Howard, Ray  Wetzel on vocals), record the Pete Rugolo compositions "Rika Jika Jack"  (with vocals by Christy and the band and trombone solo by Kai Winding),  "Artistry in Boogie" (with piano solos by Kenton and Pete Rugolo, bass  solo by Eddie Safranski, tenor saxophone solo by Vido Musso, trumpet  solo by Chico Alvarez, and trombone solo by Kai Winding), "Come Back To  Sorrento" (with trumpet solo by Vido Musso) and an incomplete take of  "Collaboration" (piano solo by Pete Rugolo) at Radio Recorders in  Hollywood, California
1949 - Mel Tormé (with orchestra conducted by  Pete Rugolo)'s Capitol Records single "Again" is #7 on Billboard's Best  Selling Retail Records chart, Margaret Whiting and Johnny Mercer's  Capitol Records single "Baby, It's Cold Outside" is #11, Jo Stafford and  Gordon MacRae (with Paul Weston and His Orchestra)'s Capitol Records  single "'A' You're Adorable" is #12, and Mel Tormé (with orchestra  conducted by Pete Rugolo)'s Capitol Records single "Careless Hands" is  #16
1955 - Les Baxter and His Orchestra and Chorus' Capitol Records  single "Unchained Melody" is #2 on Billboard's Best Selling Retail  Records chart, Nat "King" Cole (with Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra)'s  single "A Blossom Fell" and its flip side "If I May" which also includes  The Four Knights is #6, Frank Sinatra (with Nelson Riddle and His  Orchestra)'s Capitol Records single "Learnin' The Blues" is #10,  Tennessee Ernie Ford (with Cliffie Stone's Band)'s "The Ballad Of Davy  Crockett" is #11, and Nat "King" Cole (with Nelson Riddle and His  Orchestra)'s single "Darling, Je Vous Aime Beaucoup" is #18
1956 - Capitol Records releases Gene Vincent and The Blue  Caps' Capitol Records single "Woman Love", with "Be-Bop-A-Lula" on the  flip side and the group, with Vincent on vocals, Cliff Gallup and  William Williams on guitar, Jack Neil on bass, and Dickie Harrell on  drums, play their first-ever gig at Myrtle Beach.
50 Years  Ago Today In 1962 - The Beatles' sign their first contract with Parlophone Records
50 Years  Ago Today In 1962  - Capitol Records, as part of Capitol Single Release 841, releases  singles by Dinah Shore ("Just A Brief Encounter" with orchestra  conducted by Van Alexander), Tex Williams ("You Gotta Have A License"  and "Ghost Of A Honky Tonk Slave" with orchestra conducted by Billy  Liebert), The Beach Boys ("Surfin' Safari" and "409"), and Art and  Dottie Todd ("Sweet Someone" and "Ring-A-Ding")
1969 - The Beatles'  single "The Ballad Of John and Yoko", with "Old Brown Shoe" on the flip  side, is released by Capitol Records in the U.S.
1973 - Murry Gage  Wilson, father of Brian, Carl and Dennis Wilson (and uncle to Mike Love)  of The Beach Boys, dies of a heart attack at his home in Hawthorne,  California at age 56. Murry was at one time co-producer of The Beach  Boys, ran the band's publishing company Sea of Tunes, had his own album  on Capitol ("The Many Moods Of Murry Wilson), and was manager and  producer of the Tower Records band The Sunrays, and their website has a photos of them with Murry.
1973 - Capitol Records Canada releases Edward Bear's album "Close Your Eyes" and Rolf Harris' album "You Name It"
1990  - Members of the International Sawyer Brown Fan Club hold their first  meeting at a breakfast with the Capitol Nashville band the day before  the Fan Fair 1990 opens in Nashville, Tennessee. Members of the band go  to each table to chat and give autographs, and that afternoon there's an  auction of Sawyer Brown memorabilia.  There's a write up on the fan club's website about the breakfast and the fan fair.
1998  at 9:00 AM eastern - A news item appears announcing that Gary Gersh,  president & CEO, Capitol Records, and Glen Ballard, president, Java  Records, have signed Lisa Marie Presley to an exclusive recording  agreement with Java Records. Java Records was the joint venture between  Capitol Records and writer/producer Ballard.
2001 - Diana Krall finished recording her album "The Look Of Love" in The Capitol Tower Studios
2001 - John Hartford, banjo player, triple Grammy  Award winner, and composer (best remembered for Glen Campbell's Capitol  Records single "Gentle On My Mind") dies at age 63 in a Nashville  hospital after a lengthy battle with non-Hodgkins lymphoma
2003 - Lisa Marie Presley performs during half-time of the first game of the 2001 NBA finals
2005  - Capitol Records artists hold the top 3 spots on Billboard's Country  charts with Keith Urban's "Making Memories of Us" at #1, Trace Adkins'  "Songs About Me" at #2, and Dierks Bentley's "Lot of Leavin' Left to Do"  coming in at #3
2006 -The Rice Brothers (Wayne,  Jim and Joe) with guitarist Dale Cooper, bassist Steve Lawrence, and  fiddler Tom Cunningham perform during the evening service at Shadow  Mountain Community Church (2100 Greenfield Drive, El Cajon, California)  at 6:00 p.m. These former members of the band Brush Arbor will be  playing and singing together for the first time since their Capitol  Records days thirty years ago [1972-1974]. Wayne Rice has put up a homepage for Brush Arbor with a great discography and history.
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1944  - Michelle Phillips, motion picture and television actress, singer with  the group The Mamas And The Papas, and mother of SBK Records artist (as  part of the group Wilson Phillips) Chynna Phillips, is born vocals  Holly Michelle Gilliam in Long Beach, California
1960 - Pianist Randy  Weston (with Cecil Payne on baritone saxophone, Ron Carter on bass, and  Roy Haynes on drums) records the tracks "Portrait Of Patsy J", "Uncle  Nemo", "Cry Me Not", "Honk Honk", "Saucer Eyes", "204", and "C.B. Blues"  (all written by Weston), with producer Teddy Reig in New York City, New  York for Roulette Records who will only release the track "Saucer Eyes"  as part of "The Roulette Jazz CD Sampler" and will all finally be  released in 2003 by Mosaic Records on the CD compilation "Mosaic Select:  Randy Weston"
1964 - Chris Kavanagh, drummer with the EMI America  Records group Sigue Sigue Sputnik as well as Big Audio Dynamite II, is  born in England
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1965  - The Rolling Stones' single "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction", with "The  Under-Assistant West Coast Promotion Man" on the filp side, enters  Billboard's singles chart where it will peak at #1, the band's first in  the U.S.
1984 - Frank  Sinatra begins a 13 night stand at Carnegie Hall with a black tie  benefit for the hall which is reviewed by Jon Pareles for The New York  Times
20 Years Ago Today In 1992 - Harrison Ford leaves his hand and footprints during ceremony #155 at Mann's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, California
Monday, June 04, 2012
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