15 June

Pick a Day

15 JUNE

In Music History

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2017 Shania Twain releases "Life's About To Get Good," her first single in five years.

2014 American Top 40 host (and voice of Shaggy on Scooby Doo) Casey Kasem dies at age 82.

2013 Roger LaVern (keyboardist for The Tornados) dies at age 75.

2012 The conservative radio and TV personality Glenn Beck announces plans for launching a competitor to the popular TV series Glee, which revolves around a high school glee club with many musical numbers. Beck, incensed at the show's liberal portrayal of issues such as homosexuality and bullying, tells a Faith & Freedom Coalition conference in Washington that the left "won't know what hit them" when he launches his own conservative version of the show. The show never materializes.

2008 Lionel Richie is given a TV Land Icon Award by the cable network.

2007 Ferlin Huskey undergoes leg surgery in a Springfield, Missouri, hospital to improve his circulation.

1999 Peso Pluma, whose music combines corridos and hip-hop, is born Hassan Emilio Kabande Laija in Zapopan, Mexico. His stage name means "featherweight" in English, a reference to his slight build.

1997 Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson appear on VH1's Storytellers.

1996 Ella Fitzgerald dies of complications from diabetes at age 79.

1996 Aurora is born Aurora Aksnes in Bergen, Norway.

1995 Five years after their successful debut After the Rain, Nelson release their second album, Because They Can, which tanks.More

1991 Paula Abdul hits #1 in America with the ballad "Rush, Rush," her fifth chart-topper. A young Keanu Reeves is in the video.

1991 MC Hammer kicks off his Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em world tour in Louisville, Kentucky. About 70 people, who perform various duties on stage, are in the entourage. Rolling Stone reports that Hammer is a taskmaster, fining dancers for missing steps and insisting that everyone go directly to their hotel rooms after shows.

1990 At Lake City Concert Hall, in Seattle, Washington, bassist Ben Shepherd plays his first show with Soundgarden.

1989 The Offspring's self-titled debut album is released only on vinyl. A CD and cassette reissue are eventually released in 1995.

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The Washington Post Inspires Famous March

1889

John Philip Sousa leads the Marine Corps Band in a performance of "The Washington Post" at an awards ceremony held by the eponymous newspaper. The march, written especially for the occasion, becomes a worldwide sensation and earns Sousa the title of March King.

Sousa was well into his 12-year tenure as conductor of the President's Own Marine Band when he learned The Washington Post was organizing an Amateur Authors' Association and sponsoring an essay contest open to DC-area public-school students. Sousa offered his band to play at the awards ceremony, to be held on the grounds of the Smithsonian, and agreed to write a march to champion the newspaper. "The Washington Post" not only thrills the 25,000 onlookers who crowd the museum grounds, but also sweeps the globe as dancing masters adopt the march for the emerging two-step dance craze. As a result, Sousa - who also composed the Marine anthem "Semper Fidelis" the previous year - is hailed as the March King. But the march's monetary rewards are hardly suitable for royalty - the young composer, inexperienced in financial matters, had already sold the publication rights for $35.

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