16 December

Pick a Day

16 DECEMBER

In Music History

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2020 After disguising herself as Sun all season, LeAnn Rimes is unmasked as the winner on the season 4 finale of The Masked Singer. She ended her run with an a cappella rendition of Billie Eilish's "When The Party's Over."

2020 After nearly 178 days, Twenty One Pilots pull the plug on the livestream for their "Level Of Concern" video, which refreshed every 3:40 with new footage uploaded by fans. Guinness declares it the longest music video ever made.

2018 With some radio stations pulling "Baby It's Cold Outside" from their holiday playlists in response to the #MeToo movement, WAKY in Louisville, Kentucky plays the song continuously for two hours. Response from listeners is overwhelmingly positive.

2013 Brantley Gilbert releases his country chart-topper "Bottoms Up."

2013 Country singer Ray Price dies of pancreatic cancer at age 87.

2012 Billy Idol fans weep as Miley Cyrus performs "Rebel Yell" on the VH1 Divas special.

2011 The Swedish House Mafia play the first ever electronic dance music show in New York's Madison Square Garden.

2011 Yeah Yeah Yeahs host a special benefit concert for New York DJ and good friend Jonathan Toubin, who a week earlier was seriously injured in a car accident in Portland, Oregon.

2007 Beyoncé hits #1 in America with the Ne-Yo-penned single "Irreplaceable," which spends an astonishing 10 weeks at the top spot.

2001 Big Country lead singer Stuart Adamson commits suicide by hanging himself in his Honolulu hotel room. He was 43.

1997 Nicolette Larson dies of cerebral edema and liver failure at age 45.

1988 Disco sensation Sylvester (Sylvester James Jr.) dies of AIDS at 41.

1984 Dusty Hill of ZZ Top is shot in the stomach when his girlfriend pulls off his boot and his .38-caliber derringer falls out and discharges. The bullet is designed not to exit, but to do internal damage, which is bad news; he makes it to the hospital where doctors remove most of it, but fragments remain in his back.

1984 Just six weeks after first meeting, Bette Midler marries Martin von Haselberg of the UK performance duo The Kipper Kids. Unlike many showbiz unions, this one lasts.

1983 Hoping to jumpstart her flagging acting career after the box-office bomb Xanadu, Olivia Newton-John reunites with Grease co-star John Travolta in the fantasy film Two of a Kind. It flops, but yields the Top 10 hit "Twist Of Fate."

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"Hey Joe" Released As First Hendrix Single

1966

The first Jimi Hendrix single is released: "Hey Joe." The song is about a guy shoots his "old lady" after catching her cheating.

Hendrix is fronting the band Jimmy James and the Blue Flames in 1966 when he leaves for the fertile musical fields of England at the urging of his manager, Chas Chandler of The Animals. Chandler sets him up with a new band: The Jimi Hendrix Experience, a power trio of Hendrix, drummer Mitch Mitchell, and bass player Noel Redding. They record "Hey Joe" and a Hendrix original called "Stone Free," and peddle it to Decca Records, where it is rejected by the same guy who turned down The Beatles. Polydor takes it in a one-single deal and issues the song in the UK, where it lands at #6 in February 1967. Reprise Records issues it in America a few months later, but it goes unnoticed. England is enthralled by Hendrix, whose next two singles, "Purple Haze" and "The Wind Cries Mary," reach the Top 10 in the UK. It takes a while for Americans to discover Hendrix, whose debut album Are You Experienced gradually earns him a following, but not before he suffers the indignity of opening for The Monkees. By 1969, his native country is all-in, and Hendrix is the headliner at Woodstock, where he suffers another (although well-paid) indignity: going on the morning after the festival was scheduled to end, since it ran long. The last song in his set is "Hey Joe." A scorching blues number, "Hey Joe" was written by a singer named Billy Roberts, who played it in and around New York City in the early '60s. In 1966, The Byrds, The Leaves, and Love released uptempo renditions, and a folk singer named Tim Rose did a slower version, which is what Hendrix used as a template, adding a more appropriate backing to the murder ballad. The Hendrix cover becomes the standard, but many other artists record it as well, covering an array of styles. Among the most popular by genre: Pop: Cher, 1967 Hard Rock: Deep Purple, 1968 Avant-garde: The Mothers Of Invention, 1968 Soul: Wilson Pickett, 1969 Punk: Patti Smith, 1974 Jazz: Brad Mehldau, 2012

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