19 July

Pick a Day

19 JULY

In Music History

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2017 Performing barefoot as usual, singer-songwriter Barbara Weldens is electrocuted on stage at Gourdon, France and dies from cardiac arrest.

2014 Nine Inch Nails and Soundgarden launch a co-headlining tour at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas, Nevada.

2011 Rebecca Black, the world's most ironic celebrity, cashes in on her worldwide viral Internet fame by launching her own record label, RB Records, and her first single on the label, "My Moment." The song fails to get the same attention as her breakout hit, "Friday."

2004 James Lowe and Mark Tulin of the Electric Prunes, famous for their 1967 garage-psych hit "I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night," sue their former label and publishing company for over one million dollars in unpaid royalties.

2002 It's "Solomon Burke Day" in Philadelphia in honor of their native singer.

2002 Movin' Out, a stage musical dedicated to the songs of Billy Joel, premieres in Chicago.

2001 Mariah Carey makes a surprise appearance on MTV's Total Request Live where she comes off as rather unhinged, rambling aimlessly and doing a striptease for the host, Carson Daly.More

2001 Soul singer Judy Clay dies at age 62 from injuries sustained in a car accident.

2000 Shel Talmy, who produced the first Who album, My Generation, puts the master tapes up for auction on eBay for $500,000. As intended, it gets the attention of the band, who buy them (for significantly less) and in 2002 release the My Generation: Deluxe Edition CD using the tapes.

1999 Lou Bega releases his debut album, A Little Bit of Mambo.

1997 Performing as Nimrod (the name of their upcoming album), Green Day play a secret show at The Viper Room in Los Angeles, where they premiere their song "Hitchin' A Ride."

1997 The Fat Of The Land by The Prodigy becomes the first album by an electronic group to hit #1 in America.

1990 Singer Vicki Carr helps dedicate the Nixon Presidential Library, singing in front of all four living presidents (Nixon, Carter, Reagan, and George H.W. Bush), all of which she had performed for at the White House during their terms.

1989 After finding over $40,000 in cash and checks in his cell at the Stevenson Correctional Institute in South Carolina, officials move James Brown to a cell with tighter security.

1985 The Legend of Billie Jean, starring Helen Slater and Christian Slater as teens who become accidental outlaws, debuts in theaters, boasting the hit theme song "Invincible" by Pat Benatar. The teen flick receives mixed reviews but goes on to become a cult classic, despite Benatar calling it "one of the worst movies ever made."More

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Clueless Hits Theaters

1995

Clueless debuts in theaters, reviving the teen movie genre and boosting the film career of Alicia Silverstone, who appeared in the music video for Aerosmith's "Cryin'." The accompanying soundtrack gives retro hits a modern makeover, with the pop-punk act The Muffs covering Kim Wilde's "Kids In America."

Written by Amy Heckerling, director of the '80s cult classic Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Clueless is a modern take on Jane Austen's 1815 novel Emma. Alicia Silverstone plays the title character, renamed Cher, a spoiled Beverly Hills teen who gets into trouble trying to play matchmaker for her socially awkward friend. Heckerling worked with music supervisor Karyn Rachtman, who curated tunes for other '90s touchstones like Reality Bites and Pulp Fiction, to compile a sunny mix of pop-infused alt-rock, rap, and retro hits. David Bowie's "Fashion" is the backdrop to Cher's enviable digital closet, a pre-fame No Doubt's "Just A Girl" ushers in her questionable driving skills, and Coolio's "Rollin' With My Homies" is the party jam at a bash in the Valley. Capitol Records insisted on having newer acts cover the nostalgic tunes to make the soundtrack more relevant to younger viewers, and thus more profitable. So instead of Kim Wilde belting her 1982 hit "Kids in America" over the opening credits, we have The Muffs' pop-punk cover introducing us to Cher and her upscale crowd. Counting Crows does an acoustic take on the Psychedelic Furs' "The Ghost in You," World Party stays true to Mott the Hoople with a cover of "All The Young Dudes," and Cracker revives Flamin' Groovies 1976 piece of power pop "Shake Some Action." Original songs include Jill Sobule's upbeat "Supermodel," written specifically for the movie, Radiohead's "Fake Plastic Trees" (which Cher deems "whiny"), Luscious Jackson's "Here," and the Lightning Seeds' "Change." The Mighty Mighty Bosstones also turn up as the club act in the movie with "Where'd You Go?" Clueless is a hit with critics and moviegoers and is surprisingly influential. The movie revives the teen genre and inspires lots of catchphrases, including "As If," "Whatever" (with the 'W' hand gesture), and "Rollin' with my homies." The soundtrack isn't a huge seller at first, peaking at #49 on the albums chart, but eventually sells more than 1 million copies and warrants a 20th anniversary vinyl reissue in 2015. Iggy Azalea's video for "Fancy" re-creates scenes from the film, using many of the same locations.

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