9 December

Pick a Day

9 DECEMBER

In Music History

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2023 Thanks to a new music video, "Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree" by Brenda Lee, originally released in 1958, goes to #1 in America, making Lee, 78, the oldest artist ever to top the chart. And at 65 years, it's the longest a song has ever taken to reach the top spot.

2022 SZA releases her second album, SOS, which debuts at #1 in America. Many of the songs find her navigating a toxic relationship, including the big hit "Kill Bill," where she considers offing her ex.

2022 The British rock band Slaves change their name to Soft Play. Meant to reference "the grind of day-to-day life," they say the name "doesn't represent who we are as people or what our music stands for any longer."

2021 Kanye West and Drake end their long-running feud when they perform together at the Free Larry Hoover concert.

2019 Marie Fredriksson of Roxette dies of a brain tumor at 61.

2014 Sting joins the Broadway cast of his musical The Last Ship, which is based on the shipbuilding community where he grew up.

2014 Winfred "Blue" Lovett, an original member of The Manhattans, dies of cancer at age 74.

2011 Yeah Yeah Yeahs singer Karen O marries her longtime boyfriend, director Barnaby Clay.

2005 Mike Botts (drummer for Bread) dies of colon cancer the day after his 61st birthday in Burbank, California.

2003 Ozzy Osbourne crashes his quad bike, breaking several bones, including his collarbone, and fracturing vertebrae. The injuries are considerable, but not life-threatening.

2003 The Offspring release their seventh studio album, Splinter.

2003 After the runaway success of the bluegrass soundtrack for O Brother Where Art Thou?, producer T Bone Burnett helms another Appalachian-inspired album for the Civil War movie Cold Mountain. Alison Krauss sings the Sting-written "You Will Be My Ain True Love" and "The Scarlet Tide," both of which are nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.

2002 Australian band The Vines are booted from The Tonight Show with Jay Leno when lead singer Craig Nichols trashes equipment during sound check.

1991 A long legal battle over Bob Marley's estate ends when the nearly $12 million estate is awarded to his widow, Rita, and her children. In honor of the verdict, son Ziggy names his daughter, who was born that day, Justice Marley.

1989 Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start The Fire" hits #1 in America.

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A Charlie Brown Christmas Makes Its Debut

1965

A Charlie Brown Christmas makes its debut, airing on CBS in place of The Munsters. The famous score, which becomes synonymous with the Peanuts, is written by the jazz musician Vince Guaraldi and performed by his trio.


The full song that includes the score is called "Linus and Lucy," named after two characters from the comic; Guaraldi wrote it for a 1963 documentary on the Peanuts and its creator Charles Schulz called A Boy Named Charlie Brown, which never aired. Using a sophisticated jazz tune in a documentary is not unheard of, but making it the basis of an animated children's special was unorthodox. However, there is nothing typical about A Charlie Brown Christmas: The characters are voiced by actual children, not adult voice actors (there are no adults seen in the Peanuts universe); the special makes a statement about the commercialization of Christmas - not good for business when your sponsors are trying to peddle their wares; there is no laugh track, so we have to figure out for ourselves what's funny; a passage from the Bible is quoted (Linus reads some of the Gospel of Luke). The jazz theme bucks convention but makes perfect sense, as the bouncy tune fits the animation perfectly. It also gives the special cross-generational appeal, since adults are also watching. Thanks in large part to "Linus and Lucy" and another song from the Vince Guaraldi Trio that is used in the special - "Christmas Time Is Here" - A Charlie Brown Christmas becomes a holiday classic, eventually moving to ABC, where it is usually aired a few weeks before Christmas and again on Christmas Eve.

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