19 February

Pick a Day

19 FEBRUARY

In Music History

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2022 Gary Brooker, the lead singer, piano player, and songwriter for Procol Harum, dies of cancer at 76.

2020 The rapper Pop Smoke is shot and killed at age 20. Five months later, his debut album, Shoot For The Stars, Aim For The Moon, is released and goes to #1 in the US.

2020 In a promotion for Buffalo Wild Wings, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony announce they have changed their name to Boneless Thugs-N-Harmony because they love the restaurant's boneless wings.

2017 Jazz guitarist Larry Coryell dies at age 73.

2009 Kelly Groucutt of Electric Light Orchestra dies of a heart attack at age 63.

2008 Jagjaguwar Records officially release Bon Iver's debut album, For Emma, Forever Ago in the US.

2008 Jazz musician Teo Macero dies at age 82.

2005 Good Charlotte's "I Just Wanna Live" peaks at #51 on the Billboard Hot 100.

2003 Johnny Paycheck dies of respiratory failure at age 64. His most famous song: "Take This Job and Shove It."

2002 A Los Angeles Superior Court jury finds James Brown not guilty of sexually harassing a former employee, rejecting four of the five counts brought against the singer.

2002 Ten months after his death, Joey Ramone's only solo album, Don't Worry About Me, is released. He worked on it at the end of his life while battling lymphoma.

2001 French singer Charles Trenet dies at age 87.

1998 With Brian Setzer leading the swing revival at the helm of The Brian Setzer Orchestra, he reunites Stray Cats for a show at the House of Blues in Los Angeles, with proceeds going to the Carl Perkins Center For The Prevention Of Child Abuse.

1998 Country singer Lorrie Morgan denies a Star magazine report that she had "a wild ride in the back seat of a limousine with President Bill Clinton." Her statement reads: "The only accurate information in the article with regard to my relationship with President Clinton was that I joined him onstage for the Christmas tree lighting in Washington - I have never met with him in a private situation."

1998 Grandpa Jones, famous for his banjo performances and appearances on Hee Haw, dies at age 84.

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John Fogerty Plays "Proud Mary" For First Time In 15 Years

1987

At the Palomino Club in Hollywood, John Fogerty, Bob Dylan and George Harrison are in the audience for a Taj Mahal concert. When Taj calls them onstage, Dylan goads Fogerty into playing "Proud Mary" by saying that if he doesn't, everyone will think it's a Tina Turner song.

Outside of a couple informal dance-hall shows at his "soul getaway" of Troy, Oregon, it's the first time Fogerty performs a Creedence Clearwater Revival song since 1972, the year that his bitterness and spite towards his old label and bandmates made him vow to never again perform any of the songs he recorded with his old band. To his surprise, Fogerty has a great time performing the song and finishes by laughingly saying, "Tina, eat your heart out." It's not enough to make Fogerty permanently rescind his no-CCR vow, but he does perform "Proud Mary" again, along with other CCR songs, five months later during a Welcome Home show put on for Vietnam veterans.

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