2015 The Eagles play their last concert with Glenn Frey. The show takes place in Bossier City, Louisiana, the final date of their History of the Eagles tour. The set features 27 songs and two encores, closing with "Desperado." Founding member Frey dies six months later. The band continues on with his son, Deacon, in his stead.
2011 Chuck Berry throws out the first pitch at the St. Louis Cardinals baseball game on the same day his statue is unveiled on Delmar Boulevard in the city.
1990 Elton John can't find a facility in Los Angeles that will treat both his bulimia and drug and alcohol addictions, so he checks into the Parkside Lutheran Hospital in Chicago for rehab. He stays for six weeks, then takes a year off from touring and recording.
1979 Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers conclude their "Lawsuit Tour" with a show at the Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles. Petty embarked on the tour to raise money for his legal battles with MCA Records.More
1978 The Grease soundtrack hits #1 in the US, thanks to the hits "You're the One That I Want" and "Summer Nights."More
1974 Cass Elliot (of The Mamas & The Papas) dies of a heart attack (not from choking on a ham sandwich) in London, England at age 32.
1966 A US magazine targeted to teenagers called Datebook causes an uproar when they reprint some of John Lennon's interview from four months earlier in the London Evening Standard where Lennon said, "We're more popular than Jesus now." The American media jump on the quote and turns it into a major story.
2022 Beyoncé releases her seventh solo album, Renaissance, with the hit "Break My Soul." Like her previous six albums, it goes to #1 in America.
2019 In a unanimous verdict, a jury rules that Katy Perry's "Dark Horse" copied the electronic melody from the 2008 song "Joyful Noise" by the Christian hip-hop artist Flame. Three days later, the jury awards $2.78 million in damages, but in March 2020, a federal judge overturns the verdict on appeal.More
2016 Nearly six months after all four members of the British group Viola Beach were killed in a car accident, their self-titled debut album is released. It debuts at #1 in the UK.
2014 Jazz drummer Idris Muhammad, born Leo Morris, dies at age 74.
2014 After 36 years of marriage, Neil Young files for divorce from his second wife, Pegi.
2011 Gene McDaniels, known for singing the 1961 hit "A Hundred Pounds Of Clay" and writing Roberta Flack's 1974 hit "Feel Like Makin' Love," dies at age 76 at his home in Maine.
2011 At a Dallas concert, Kings Of Leon frontman Caleb Followill leaves the stage after complaining about the heat. He never returns, and the band cancels the rest of their tour. The incident is officially blamed on "dehydration," but Caleb's brother (and bass player) Jared later Tweets: "There are problems in our band bigger than not drinking enough Gatorade."
2005 An anonymous bidder pays one million dollars for the original handwritten lyrics to The Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" at the Hippodrome nightclub in London.
2004 Cincinnati-born singer, songwriter, and musician Huby Heard dies of a heart attack at age 53. As a keyboardist, he played with Billy Preston's group The God Squad, Leon Russell's Gap Band, and toured with The Rolling Stones.
1999 Anita Carter (of The Carter Family) dies at age 66 after years of drug treatment for rheumatoid arthritis irreparably damages her liver, kidneys, and pancreas.
1995 Les Elgart, swing jazz bandleader and trumpeter who performed the American Bandstand theme "Bandstand Boogie," dies of heart failure shortly before his 78th birthday.
1993 Eddie Guzman (drummer for Rare Earth) dies from complications of diabetes at age 49.
1988 Pete Drake, Nashville record producer and session guitarist who played with the likes of Bob Dylan, Don Gibson, and Marty Robbins, dies of emphysema at age 55. Known for the 1964 hit "Forever" with his groundbreaking use of a talk box for the pedal steel guitar.
1987 Michigan governor James Blanchard declares today "Four Tops Day" in honor of the Motown legends.
After postponing the previous year's festival due to the coronavirus outbreak, Lollapalooza returns in full force for a four-day music event in Chicago's Grant Park. But there's a catch: Festivalgoers must provide proof of vaccinations or negative COVID tests to gain entry. Those who have tested negative but are unvaccinated also have to wear a mask.
Lollapalooza 2021's lineup features Foo Fighters, Post Malone, Tyler the Creator, and Miley Cyrus as the headlining acts. Fans are eager to see their favorite bands again after the coronavirus put a chokehold on live music in 2020, but event organizers are still wary of the pandemic, which is made more complicated with the virus' surging delta variant. With around 100,000 attendees flocking to the venue per day, some fear Lollapalooza will turn into a super-spreader event despite its precautions to prevent the virus from running rampant. But the data proves otherwise. Two weeks after the start of the festival - plenty of time to allow COVID symptoms to develop and determine if cases are linked to the event - around 200 attendees test positive for the virus. That's about 0.05% of the crowd. According to Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady, the cases boil down to 0.0004% of vaccinated attendees testing positive, and 0.0016% of unvaccinated attendees testing positive. Around 90% of folks who showed up to the event were vaccinated, which worked in Lollapalooza's favor and encourages other summer shows to enact similar guidelines, including Bonnaroo, Coachella, Firefly, and Stagecoach. Even Burning Man, the annual counter-culture concert that welcomes people of all stripes to the Nevada desert, considers a vax rule. But these are all open-air events, which are inherently less risky than the indoor shows that are coming in fall and winter, a fact that makes Arwady less certain of the existing regulations' efficacy. Regardless, Live Nation, the entertainment company that created the vaccine model for Lollapalooza, states the same rules will apply to all of its other festivals and concerts starting in October. "Vaccines are going to be your ticket back to shows," Live Nation CEO/President Michael Rapino tells Rolling Stone.
©2024 Songfacts®, LLC
Comments
send your comment