29 March

Pick a Day

29 MARCH

In Music History

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2022 Eric Church cancels an upcoming concert in San Antonio so he can watch his beloved North Carolina Tar Heels take on Duke in the Final Four.

2020 Alan Merrill of The Arrows, who co-wrote "I Love Rock And Roll," dies at 69, one of the first high-profile musicians to succumb to coronavirus.

2020 With most of the world homebound as the coronavirus pandemic takes hold, Elton John hosts the "Living Room Concert For America" from his home, featuring virtual performances by Mariah Carey, H.E.R., Backstreet Boys, and Tim McGraw. The concert raises money to help local food banks and support first responders during the crisis.More

2019 Seventeen-year-old Billie Eilish releases her debut album, When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?, which debuts at #1 in America.

2010 Ricky Martin comes out as gay, posting on his website, "Writing this is a solid step towards my inner peace and vital part of my evolution. I am proud to say that I am a fortunate homosexual man."

2009 Nickelback rule the Juno Awards, winning Album of the Year, Group of the Year and the Fan Choice Award.

2006 Tom Jones is knighted by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace.

2005 Neil Young has brain surgery to remove an aneurysm. His vision became blurry at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremonies, and a subsequent checkup discovered the aneurysm.

2005 Weezer release "Beverly Hills," the lead single from their Make Believe album.

2001 A tribute to Brian Wilson is held at Radio City Music Hall, with Paul Simon, Elton John and Billy Joel all performing Beach Boys songs.

2001 John Lewis of The Modern Jazz Quartet dies of prostate cancer at age 80.

1999 Jazz singer Joe Williams dies at age 80.

1996 Phil Spector's former bandmates in The Teddy Bears, Carol Connors and Marshall Lieb, sue the producer to collect royalties they claim are still owed from the group's 1958 smash "To Know Him Is To Love Him."

1994 K-pop singer and actress Sulli is born at Seongnam, South Korea.

1994 The Crow soundtrack is released. Featuring "Burn" by The Cure, it reaches number one on the charts.

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Dr. Hook Really Do Make The Cover Of Rolling Stone

1973

Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show, who have a hit with "The Cover Of 'Rolling Stone'," appear on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine.

The song is about an inept band that dreams of hitting it big and landing the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. The lyric is by the acclaimed author Shel Silverstein, written as a send-up of rock bands who lose all self awareness when they reach a certain level of success. Silverstein also wrote their previous hit, "Sylvia's Mother." When "The Cover of 'Rolling Stone'" peaks at #6 in the US, the real Rolling Stone can't resist putting them on the cover. "They made us cultural legend," the magazine's co-founder Jann Wenner says. Contrary to the song, the group is actually quite competent, but they do have a wild side that they play up in cover story and on stage. Adding to the mystique is the eye patch worn by lead singer Ray Sawyer, who was not actually a pirate - he lost the eye in a car accident.

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