28 February

Pick a Day

28 FEBRUARY

In Music History

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2019 The composer André Previn dies at 89.

2014 Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale have their third child: Apollo Bowie Flynn.

2012 The Malaysian Government cancels a concert by Erykah Badu scheduled for the following day due to her tattoos, including one with the word "Allah" in Arabic.

2008 Mike Smith (lead vocalist, keyboardist for The Dave Clark Five) dies of pneumonia at age 64.

2006 Ne-Yo's first album, In My Own Words, debuts at #1 in America.

2006 Bruce Springsteen releases Hammersmith Odeon London 1975.

2004 Usher's club anthem "Yeah!," featuring Ludacris and Lil Jon, hits #1 in America. It stays at the top for 12 weeks to become the biggest hit of 2004.

2004 Gigli sweeps the 24th Golden Raspberry Awards with nine nominations and six wins, including Worst Actress for star Jennifer Lopez and Worst Actor for Ben Affleck (whose award also includes his roles in Daredevil and Paycheck). Despite having a highly publicized off-screen romance, the pair also lands Worst Screen Couple.

1999 Hole and Marilyn Manson kick off their joint Beautiful Monsters tour with a show in Spokane, Washington, but cancel it after nine dates when Hole pulls out and Manson injures his ankle on stage.

1998 Columbia Records releases Train's self-titled debut album, which the band issued independently in 1996 after the label passed on it. It includes their first hit, "Meet Virginia."

1998 Garth Brooks hosts Saturday Night Live. As the musical guest, he performs his hit "Two Piña Coladas."

1996 22-year-old Alanis Morissette becomes the youngest artist to win the Grammy for Album of the Year when Jagged Little Pill takes the prize. She holds the record until 2010, when 20-year-old Taylor Swift nabs the title with Fearless.

1996 Alison Krauss and Shenandoah's "Somewhere In The Vicinity Of The Heart" wins the Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals. The single, a #7 hit, was Krauss's first Top 10 entry on the country chart.

1995 Mike Watt of Minutemen and Firehose releases his first solo album, Ball-Hog or Tugboat?, with an all-star team of guest musicians including Eddie Vedder, Dave Grohl, Flea, Henry Rollins and Frank Black. Vedder and Grohl join his band for the subsequent tour.

1995 Billie Joe Armstrong (of Green Day) and wife Adrienne welcome their first child, son Joseph "Joey" Marciano Armstrong, named for Ramones singer Joey Ramone.

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Gaga Sings For Survivors But Loses To Sam Smith

2016

At the Oscars, Lady Gaga is introduced by Vice President Joe Biden and performs "Til It Happens To You" joined by a group of sexual assault survivors. A few minutes later, it loses the Best Song award to Sam Smith's "Writing's On The Wall."


Smith's win is somewhat anti-climatic following Gaga's performance and the importance of her song's subject matter. Lady Gaga wrote the song with Diane Warren for the film The Hunting Ground, a documentary about rapes on college campuses. After the song was released (but apparently not with enough time to reach Oscar voters), Gaga spoke out about the time she was raped when she was 19; she kept quiet about it for seven years and channeled her experience into the song. When Smith is announced as the winner, the crowd is hushed, as they have been primed for a Gaga victory. Smith, whose song appeared in the James Bond film Spectre, delivered an off-pitch performance earlier in the ceremony that he later says was "the worst moment of my life." Accepting the award, he dedicates the win to the LGBT community all around the world, and says, "I read an article a few months ago by Sir Ian McKellen, and he said that no openly gay man had ever won an Oscar." In fact, many openly gay men had won Oscars (McKellen was referring to the Best Actor category), including Elton John, Stephen Sondheim and director Pedro Almodóvar.

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