JULY 11, 2012
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
1947 - Jeff Hanna, guitarist and  lead vocalist ("Mr. Bojangles") for the United Artists and Capitol  Records group The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, is born in Detroit, Michigan
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1950  - George Gard "Buddy" DeSylva, lyricist, librettist, music publisher,  Broadway and motion picture producer, and co-founder of Capitol Records  with Johnny Mercer and Glenn Wallichs, who put up $25,000 of his own  money to start the company, dies of heart failure in Hollywood,  California at age 55
1953 - Les Baxter and His Orchestra's Capitol  Records single "April In Portugal is #4 down from #3 on Billboard's Best  Selling Retail Records chart, Les Paul and Mary Ford's Capitol Records  single "Vaya Con Dios" is #5 up from #6, Kay Starr (with orchestra  conducted by Harold Mooney)'s Capitol Records single "Half A Photograph"  is #12 up from #17, Les Baxter and His Orchestra's Capitol Records  single "Ruby" is still #15, and Kay Starr (with orchestra conducted by  Harold Mooney)'s Capitol Records single "Allez-Vous-En" (the flip side  of "Half A Photograh) is #17 up from #18
1960 - Time Magazine runs an article about Capitol Records artists The Kingston Trio and the success of their album "Sold Out"
1963  - Buck Owens records the track "Love's Gonna Live Here Again" which  Capitol Records will release as a single on August 19, 1963 with  "Getting Used To Losing You" on the flip side. The track will go to #1  on the U.S. Country singles chart.
1964 - Billboard Magazine runs an  article "Beatles' LP: 4 Days That Shake The Industry" about how the  soundtrack to "A Hard Day's Night" sold 1 million copies in 4 days,  becoming one of the fastest selling albums in recording history
1966 - The Beach Boys' Capitol Records single  "Wouldn't It Be Nice", with "God Only Knows" on the flip side, peaks at  #8 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart
40  Years Ago Today In 1972 - Merle Haggard records  the track "It's Not Love, But It's Not Bad" which Capitol Records will  release as a single with "My Woman Keeps Lovin' Her Man" on the flip  side in August 1972
25  Years Ago Today In 1987- Heart's Capitol Records single "Alone",  with "Barracuda" (live version recorded at NHK Hall, Tokyo, Japan, June  1986), on the flip side, hits #1 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart
1999  - Helen Forrest (born Helen Fogel), singer with the bands of Artie  Shaw, Benny Goodman, Harry James, and the Sam Donahue led Tommy Dorsey  Orchestra, radio performer (on "The Dick Haymes Show"), motion picture  actress (including "Bathing Beauty" and "Two Girls And A Sailor"), and  Capitol Records artist (1955 album "Voice Of The Name Bands"), dies of  congestive heart failure at the Motion Picture Country Home and Hospital  in Woodland Hills at 82 and is later laid to rest in Mount Sinai  Memorial Park in Los Angeles, California
2000 - Capitol Records  releases Everclear's album "Learning How To Smile, An American Movie,  Volume I". I designed the "frowny face", an adaption of Harvey R. Ball's  "smiley face" image, that was used as the main packaging graphic for  the album's first single "Wonderful".
2006 -  Bill Miller, long time musical director, accompanist, and friend of  Frank Sinatra, dies at Montreal General Hospital in Canada at age 91.  His daughter Meredith was with him at the hospital when he passed. He  had been working at a month long gig that started June 28 with Frank  Sinatra, Jr. at Le Cabaret du Casino, 1 Avenue du Casino, Montreal. Army Archerd's blog has an article giving the specifics and reactions from the Sinatra family.
In  private life, Bill was a kind, quiet, and patient man whose  unquestioning loyalty to friends, and love of his family, was  remarkable. Professionally, it was all about the music and the craft,  modestly giving every session an extra something that even he couldn't  put into words but you could always hear. He had an amazing ear for the  well done, and would only become annoyed or, on a rare occasion, angered  when faced with the uncaring or sloppy. I was fortunate to be able to  talk to Mr. Miller at his home on June 4, 2006. Bill was inside watching  the ball games, which he said he only really took interest in during  the playoffs. After introductions, and him finding out about my interest  in Capitol, he turned down the TV and we talked for a little while. His  memory was very much intact, but after being caught in a mudslide in  the '60s that also killed his wife, he had some hearing problems. I told  him about meeting Vernise Pelzel and Louise Yocum, the daughter and  wife, respectively, of Sinatra's music coordinator and copiest Vern  Yocum, the previous weekend and he said that he remembered Vern very  well and how much Vern would do anything to help Nelson Riddle meet his  deadlines. I told him about meeting the curator of the Nelson Riddle  collection at the University of Arizona, Tucson, and how he was able to  tell how much Vern had done by looking at the handwriting on the charts.  Bill said that he remembered how prouc Vern was proud of his body  building son and would show him photos of Ray Yokum all the time. I  asked Bill if he could help identify some of the players at Sinatra's  "Tone Poems Of Colors" sessions. He suggested looking at listings of the  session players before and after the "Tone Poem" sessions to get an  idea on who was working on those session, as it was normal to get the  same people together. We talked about some of the producers who worked  with Sinatra, he remembered how Voyle Gilmore was the serious one of the  crowd that included Dave Cavanaugh and Lee Gillette. He talked about  Sinatra starting out at the Capitol Studios on Melrose and how the first  singles with Axel didn't go well. He felt the first real recordings for  Capitol started when Nelson Riddle started arranging for Frank for  "I've Got The World On A String". He said he had been back in Studio B  in the Tower last year working with Frank Jr. on tracks. I told him  about the live recording of Sinatra that Capitol released last year as  part of the Las Vegas Centennial tribute and Bill said that Capitol  recorded a lot of the shows be he didn't know what they had done with  the tapes. He hadn't heard about the release of the Las Vegas CD (a few  weeks later, after he had left for Montreal, I dropped off a copy of the  disc I had bought for him). We talked about people who were still  around like Jo Stafford and Martha Tilton and I told him how Stafford  and Weston's papers were joining those of Nelson and Vern's at The  University of Arizona Tucson's School Of Music. I told him that Nellie  Lutcher was still alive in L.A. though no longer performing. He was  surprised at that, saying that she must be at least as old as he is, if  not more. We talked about Freddie Slack. Bill said he wasn't a big fan  of but that was probably because he was jealous that he couldn't play  the piano like Freddie. A call from his daughter Meredith in Berkeley  ended the conversation. Later, I would thank him for his time and I was  invited back after he came back from Montreal. I'm just glad for the  time I had.
2006 - The 30th anniversary release  of The Steve Miller Band's album is rescheduled to Tuesday, July 18th,  2006
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1931 - Thurston Harris, singer with the groups The  Lamplighters, The Tenderfoots, and The Sharps, and a solo Aladdin  Records artist (best known for the track "Little Bitty Pretty One"), is  born in Indianapolis, Indiana. I designed the album packaging for  Harris' EMI America's 1986 greatest hits compliation with art director  Henry Marquez.
75 Years  Ago Today In 1937 - George Gershwin, composer (who worked with  future Capitol Records co-founder Buddy DeSylva on songs such as  "Stairway To Heaven" as well as with his brother Ira Gershwin), dies in  Beverly Hills, California at age 38 from an inoperable brain tumor. Many  Capitol Records artists have covered songs written by Gershwin and his  compositions were featured as part of the "Capitol Sings" series on the  CD "Fascinatin' Rhythm: Capitol Sings George Gershwin".
1946 - At his first recording session, Dean Martin records the  tracks “Which Way Did My Heart Go?”, “All of Me”, “I Got the Sun in the  Morning” and “The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi” for Diamond Records whose  offices were located in The Brill Building in New York City
1960 -  Fats Domino's Imperial Records single "Walking To New Orleans" is #21 up  from #31 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart, The Fleetwoods' Dolton  Records single "Runaround" is #23 up from #25, and Don Costa and His  Orchestra's United Artists Records single "Theme From 'The Unforgiven'"  is still #27. Imperial, Dolton and United Artists Records' catalogs are  currently owned by EMI Music Group, Capitol Music Group's parent  company.
1968 - The Jazz Crusaders (Wayne Henderson on trombone,  Wilton Felder on tenor saxophone, Joe Sample on piano, Buster Williams  on bass, and Stix Hooper on drums) record the tracks "Fancy Dance",  "Upstairs", and "Sting Ray" at the Pacific Jazz Studios in Los Angeles,  California with producer Richard Bock and recording engineer Thorne  Nogar for their Pacific Jazz album "Powerhouse". Capitol Records now  owns the Pacific Jazz catalog
1976 - Frank Sinatra marries Barbara Marx in Palm Springs, California
2006 - Nelson Riddle's Capitol Records album "Sing a  Song With Riddle" is re-released on CD with the never released "Hey  Diddle Riddle" album as a 2 disc set by DRG Records thanks to DRG's  president Hugh Fordin being able to convince Capitol to license him the  material. Unfortunately, according to someone who was involved with  another record company that was trying to release the album itself last  year, DRG's incomplete research has led to them leaving off 1 track from  the album and an additional 2 tracks that were supposed to be released  as a 45 single to coincide with the album's original release are also  not on DRG's release.
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1989  - Sir Laurence Olivier dies in Steyning, West Sussex, England, from  complications of a neuromuscular disorder and cancer at the age of 82,  and is interred in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey, London.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
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