17 May

Pick a Day

17 MAY

In Music History

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2022 The Greek composer Vangelis, known for "Chariots Of Fire," dies at 79 from heart failure.

2019 Tyler, The Creator releases his fifth album, Igor, also the name of his blond-haired alter-ego. It becomes his first #1 album and earns Tyler his first Grammy win when it takes the trophy for Best Rap Album.

2016 Ne-Yo begins a two-episode stint as Mindy's new love interest on Hulu's comedy series The Mindy Project.

2016 Alanis Morissette sues her former business manager, Jonathan Schwartz, claiming he stole $4.7 million from her from 2009-2016. The following year, Schwartz admits to that theft and also to stealing another $2 million from other clients. Morissette is compensated in a settlement.

2016 Moby releases his memoir Porcelain, named because he threw up into a lot of porcelain toilets. It's also the title of a hit single from his landmark album, Play.

2015 Twenty One Pilots release their fourth studio album, Blurryface, their first record to land at #1 on the Billboard 200 chart.

2013 Singer-songwriter Alan O'Day dies of brain cancer at age 72.

2011 Rapper Wiz Khalifa and his girlfriend Amber Rose narrowly escape danger at a London nightclub. Khalifa is performing in the packed club when a bystander breaks a bottle over another patron's head. A fight ensues and Khalifa and Rose dodge bottles as they promptly exit the club with their entourage. Club promoters are upset that Khalifa ended his show early, as they reportedly paid the rapper 14,000 euros to do the show.

2008 Madonna's Hard Candy album hits #1 in America, her seventh to hit the top spot.

2008 The Brothers Four's Bob Flick marries his third wife, actress Loni Anderson.

2005 The reality series Britney and Kevin: Chaotic debuts on the UPN network, chronicling the adventures of the newly married Britney Spears and Kevin Federline. It proves unwatchable, and lasts just five episodes. The couple divorce two years later.

2005 System Of A Down release Mezmerize, with the war protest "B.Y.O.B." It debuts at #1 in America, as does their next album, Hypnotize, released six months later (a tactic cribbed from Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill movies).

2003 June Carter Cash's funeral is held in her hometown of Hendersonville, Tennessee. Among the 2000 mourners are Kris Kristofferson, Emmylou Harris, The Oak Ridge Boys, Sheryl Crow - and her husband, Johnny Cash.

2002 Blues singer Little Johnny Taylor, known for '60s hits like "Part Time Love," dies in Conway, Arkansas, at age 59.

1996 Blues musician Johnny "Guitar" Watson dies of a myocardial infarction at age 61 after collapsing on stage during a tour in Yokohama, Japan.

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Monterey Folk Festival Features Early Appearances by Dylan, Joplin and Jerry Garcia

1963

The very first Monterey Folk Festival begins at the Monterey Fairgrounds in California. Over the weekend, Bob Dylan makes his first West Coast performance, Jerry Garcia's band wins an amateur competition, and Janis Joplin draws a crowd on the second stage.


Four years before Jimi Hendrix sets his guitar on fire at the Monterey International Pop Festival, there's a much more subdued festival on the grounds, this one celebrating folk music, an emerging movement. The headliners include Peter, Paul and Mary, The Rooftop Singers and The Weavers, but also on the bill is Bob Dylan, the New York-based folkie whose second album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, is released 10 days later. He's hyped in the program as playing "jazzy blues piano, guitar and harmonica (often both at once)." Dylan plays three protest songs, including "Masters Of War," but the crowd seems indifferent. Joan Baez, a more popular singer also on the bill, comes to his rescue, duetting with him on his song "With God on Our Side." That summer they get romantically involved. Performing in an amateur showcase are The Hart Valley Drifters, whose members include Robert Hunter on string bass and Jerry Garcia on banjo. They later become the primary songwriters in Garcia's band the Grateful Dead. And a young singer named Janis Joplin belts out a few tunes at a hootenanny on the second stage. The festival returns in 1964 and morphs into the Big Sur Folk Festival in 1965. By this time, folk music is on the wane, ceding ground to rock and roll.

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