1 April

Pick a Day

1 APRIL

In Music History

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2020 Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne dies at 52 after contracting coronavirus. He's one of the first popular entertainers to die from the virus, which a week later claims the life of John Prine.

2016 Actor-turned-singer Kiefer Sutherland releases his debut single, "Not Enough Whiskey."

2015 Cynthia Lennon, John Lennon's first wife, dies of cancer at age 75 in Mallorca, Spain.

2008 Scott Weiland officially departs Velvet Revolver, effectively ending the band.

2008 The Rolling Stones release Shine A Light, the soundtrack to their concert film of the same name, directed by Martin Scorsese.

2007 The Hammersmith Palais in London, subject of The Clash song "(White Man) in Hammersmith Palais," hosts its last concert - a gig by The Fall.

2005 Jack Keller dies of leukemia at age 68 in Nashville, Tennessee. The songwriter is known for his pop collaborations with Howard Greenfield, including "Everybody's Somebody's Fool" and "Run To Him." He was also a writer and producer for The Monkees TV series.

2004 Guitarist Paul Atkinson (of The Zombies) dies at age 58 from liver and kidney disease, while also suffering from cancer.

1999 "Shake, Rattle And Roll" composer Jesse Stone, aka Charles Calhoun, dies at age 97 in Alamonte Springs, Florida.

1995 Tupac Shakur is in jail (serving time for sexual abuse), but his third album, Me Against the World, hits #1, where it stays for four weeks.

1992 Nigel Preston, drummer and founding member of The Cult, dies of a heroin overdose at age 28.

1992 MC Hammer's 2 Legit 2 Quit tour begins in Hampton, Virginia. By the end of the tour, two of his support acts have become more popular than he is: Boyz II Men and TLC.

1992 Jimmy Buffett and his wife Jane welcome their second daughter, Sarah Delaney.

1992 Billy Idol pleads no contest to charges of misdemeanor assault and battery and is fined $2,000. The incident happened in October 1991, when Idol ended up in a car with two women and allegedly punched one of them. Alcohol was involved.

1991 At his Wembley Arena concert in London, Rod Stewart calls for his wife Rachel Hunter to join him on stage for "You're In My Heart (The Final Acclaim)," but she instead sends out his buddy Elton John, dressed in women's clothes and makeup, to prank her husband. Stewart gamely plays along and sings to Elton.

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Bangles Hit #1 With "Eternal Flame," Break Up Six Months Later

1989

Bangles hit #1 in America with "Eternal Flame," but break up less than six months later.

It's their second chart-topper, following "Walk Like An Egyptian," but to some in the band, it seems like a cruel joke, as it pushes Susanna Hoffs, who takes the lead vocal, further into the front. Early on, all four members shared vocals, with Hoffs and guitarist Vicki Peterson handling most of the songwriting. But by their 1988 album Everything, the dynamic changed. Hoffs co-wrote "Eternal Flame" with the hitmakers Tom Kelly and Billy Steinberg; the song was inspired by a trip to Graceland where Hoffs saw that a flame was kept burning in honor of Elvis Presley in the Garden of Memories. It's a tender ballad that veers from the group's sound. "Whitney Houston could be doing it," says Peterson. The song brings more attention to the group and, with it, more demands. They are overwhelmed, surly with the press, and showing few signs of the camaraderie they shared earlier in the decade. Following a US tour, the band announces their split on September 21. They don't reunite until 1998.

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