JULY 3, 2012
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
1934 - Donfeld, graphic designer  (starting in 1953 at age 19 after graduating from Chouinard Art  Institute) for Capitol Records and Emmy nominated television and Academy  Award nominated motion picture costume designer, is born Donald Lee  Feld in Los Angeles, California
1943 - Judith Duram, lead singer with  the Capitol Records recording group The Seekers, is born Judith Mavis  Cock in Melbourne, Australia
ON THIS DAY IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
65 Years Ago Today In 1947  - Peggy Lee, with Dave Barbour and His Orchestra and Ray Linn on  trumpet, record the tracks "Why Should I Cry Over You" (which Capitol  Records will finally release on Lee's 2000 compilation CD "Rare Gems And  Hidden Treasures"), as well as "It Takes A Long, Long Train With A Red  Caboose" and "Just An Old Love Of Mine" (which Capitol will release  together as single #445) in Los Angeles, California with producer Lee  Gillette.
1948 - The King Cole Trio's Capitol Records single "Nature  Boy" is still #3 on Billboard's Best Selling Retail Records chart, The  Pied Pipers' Capitol Records single "My Happiness" is #7 up from #8, Pee  Wee Hunt's Capitol Records single "Twelfth Street Rag" is #11 up from  #14, and The Sportsmen's a cappella Capitol Records single "You Can't Be  True Dear" is #15 down from #11
1954 - Kay Starr (with orchestra  conducted by Harold Mooney)'s Capitol Records single "If You Love Me  (Really Love Me) is #5 up from #6 on Billboard's Best Selling Retail  Records chart, Frank Sinatra (with Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra)'s  Capitol Records single "Three Coins In A Fountain" is still #7, Kay  Starr (with orchestra conducted by Harold Mooney)'s Capitol Records  single "The Man Upstairs" is #14 down from #9, and Frank Sinatra (with  Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra)'s Capitol Records single "Young At  Heart" is #17 down from #11
1961 - Faron  Young's Capitol Records single "Hello Walls" is #27 down from #21 on  Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart
1966 - The  Beatles' Capitol Records single "Paperback Writer", with "Rain" on the  flip side, returns to #1 on Billboard's Hot 100 Singles chart
45 Years Ago Today In 1967 -  The Beatles' Capitol Records album "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club  Band" is #1 on Billboard's Top 200 albums chart where it will stay for  fifteen weeks
1970 - Buck Owens and Susan Raye record the track "The  Great White Horse" with producer Ken Nelson that will be the title track  of their Capitol Records album that is released on September 8, 1970
40 Years Ago Today In 1972  - Mississippi Fred McDowell, blues guitarist, singer, and a Capitol  Records recording artist (a one-off 1969 album, "I Do Not Play No  Rock'n' Roll"), dies of cancer at age 68 in Memphis, Tennessee. CradLemoon.net has a good overview of his life and many links to discographies.
1976 - A memorial service for Johnny Mercer,  Broadway, radio, and motion picture singer, actor and songwriter, and  co-founder of Capitol Records, is held in his hometown, Savannah,  Georgia.
1985 - John Aquilino, lead singer for the Capitol Records band (1984-1985) Icon, leaves the group and Capitol drops the band
1986 - Rudy Vallee, singer, saxophonist, bandleader  and radio, television and movie actor, and Capitol Records recording  artist (1954), dies at age 84 in North Hollywood, California and will be  interred in St. Hyacinth's Cemetery, Westbrook, Maine where his  headstone was later stolen
2000 - At  11pm EDT Turner Classic Movies shows "The Wizard Of Oz" with Pink  Floyd's "Dark Side Of The Moon" on the Second Audio Program (SAP)  channel to see if the two really do sync' up.
2001 - Roy Nichols, guitarist and 22-year member of Merle Haggard and  The Strangers, dies in a hospital in Bakersfield, CA of a heart attack  at age 68
2001 - Capitol Records and Chrysalis  Records release the Jethro Tull compilation album "The Very Best Of  Jethro Tull" which features 20 tracks that have been digitally  remastered at 24-bit at Abbey Road Studios in London, England
2001 - Capitol Records releases a digitally  remastered and enhanced version of Duran Duran's 1982 album "Rio" in a  standard jewel case and in a 7,500 unit limited edition mini-sleeve
2008  - Larry Harmon, entrepreneur, television show producer and licensor,  and owner of the rights to Bozo The Clown and Laurel and Hardy, dies of  heart disease at age 83 at his home in Los Angeles, California.
ON THIS DAY NOT QUITE IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1919  - Fred Maddox, singer, guitarist, member of the band The Maddox  Brothers and Rose, and brother of Capitol Records artist Rose Maddox, is  born Fred Roscoe Maddox
1935 - Webley Edwards' radio show  spotlighting authentic island performances, "Hawaii Calls", begins  broadcasting from Waikiki's Moana Hotel, and will run for 37 years.  Webley would compile and produce a series of albums of Hawaiian music  for Capitol Records
1961 - Ricky Nelson's  Imperial Records single "Travelin' Man" is #7 down from #5 on  Billboard's Hot 100 single chart, its flip side "Hello Mary Lou" is #15  up from #16, and Fats Domino's Imperial Records single "It Keeps  Rainin'" is #24 up from #28. Imperial Records' catalog is currently  owned by EMI Music Group, Capitol Music Group's parent company.
50 Years Ago Today In 1962 -  Dinah Washington, with arranger Don Costa conducting an unknown studio  orchestra, records the tracks "Someone Else Is Taking My Place" and  "He's Gone Again" (which will both appear on the Roulette Records album  "Dinah Washington"), as well as "I Didn't Know About You" (released on  the Roulette Records album "Three Of Us", which also featured tracks by  Sarah Vaughan and Joe Williams), "There I Go" (finally released on  Mosaic Records' 2004 box set "The Complete Roulette Dinah Washington  Recordings"), "You're A Sweetheart", and "I'll Close My Eyes" (both also  released on the Roulette Records album "Three Of Us") with producer  Henry Glover and recording engineer Eddie Smith at Bell Sound in New  York City, New York. Roulette Records' catalog is currently owned by EMI  Music Group, Capitol Music Group's parent company.
1963 - Tenor  saxophonist Harold Land, with Carmell Jones on trumpet, John Houston on  piano, Jimmy Bond on bass and Mel Lee on drums, records the tracks "Tom  Dooley", "Scarlet Ribbons" and "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine" for his  Imperial Recors album "Jazz Impressions Of Folk Music" with engineer  Bones Howe at Radio Recorders, in Los Angeles, California. Imperial  Records' catalog is currently owned by EMI Music Group, Capitol Music  Group's parent company.
1968 - John Maddox, guitarist with the group  The Maddox Brothers & Rose and brother of Capitol Records artist  Rose Maddox, dies at age 52
1969 - Capitol Records artist Gordon MacRae performs "America The Beautiful" live on "The Ed Sullivan Show"
1976 - Brian Wilson performs onstage as a member of  The Beach Boys, for the first time in twelve years, at concert given  before 74,000 fans at Angels Stadium in Anaheim, California
ON THIS DAY NOT IN CAPITOL RECORDS HISTORY
1878  - George M. Cohan, vaudeville and Broadway performer, singer, dancer,  songwriter, playwright, director and producer, and a motion picture  actor, is born George Michael Cohan in Providence, Rhode Island. The  motion picture "Yankee Doodle Dandy" is loosely based on events from  Cohan's life.
1965 - Trigger, motion picture actor and Capitol  Records artist Roy Rogers' horse, dies at age 33 and is latter stuffed  and put on display at the Roy Rogers and Dale Evans museum in  Victorville, California
1971 - Jim Morrison,  poet, songwriter and lead singer of the band The Doors, is found dead  (really) at age 27 by his girlfriend, Pamela Susan Courson, at 5:00 AM  in a bathtub in Paris, France from a heart attack and was buried at at  Pere-Lachaise cemetery, also in Paris
1989 - Jim Backus, writer as  well as a motion picture, television, radio and cartoon voice actor,  dies at age 76 at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, California from  complications of pneumonia after suffering from Parkinson's disease for  many years and is later buried in Westwood Memorial Park, Westwood,  California
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