29 November

Pick a Day

29 NOVEMBER

In Music History

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2013 Dick Dodd (of The Standells) dies of cancer in Fountain Valley, California, at age 68.

2004 Green Day release "Boulevard of Broken Dreams." The title comes from a painting by Gottfried Helnwein depicting James Dean, Marilyn Monroe, Humphrey Bogart, and Elvis Presley at a corner bar.

2003 In front of a crowd of 40,000+ at Greenpoint Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa, The Corrs make their first concert appearance as part of Nelson Mandela's 46664 campaign to raise AIDS awareness in Africa. Alongside artists like Bono, Beyonce, and Peter Gabriel, they help raise money for the Nelson Mandela Foundation for AIDS.

2000 Chuck Berry's longtime piano player, Johnnie Johnson, sues the rock legend, alleging that he wrote the music for 52 of Berry's classics. The suit is thrown out by a judge who rules that the statute of limitations has run out on any claims.

1994 Mary J. Blige releases her breakthrough second album, My Life. Many of the songs deal with her tempestuous relationship with Cedric "K-Ci" Hailey of Jodeci.

1987 Burl Ives and Mac Davis join Dolly Parton for a "Down Home Country Christmas" on her TV series, Dolly, singing numerous holiday favorites with children and puppets.

1979 Paul Simon hits his record label, CBS, with two lawsuits in an attempt to break his contract.

1979 Michael Jackson's "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough" is certified Gold.

1979 The original four members of Kiss play for the last time together before their first "breakup."

1979 Rockabilly singer Ray Smith commits suicide at age 45. Known for the 1960 hit "Rockin' Little Angel."

1978 Neil Young's Comes a Time album is certified Gold.

1977 Kansas' Point of Know Return album is certified Platinum.

1975 Silver Convention's "Fly, Robin, Fly" hits #1 in America for the first of three weeks. The disco tune has very few lyrics because the German group can't speak English.

1972 In Philadelphia, David Bowie joins Mott The Hoople on stage to sing on "All The Young Dudes," a song he wrote and produced for the band.

1969 The Beatles' "Come Together" hits #1 on the Hot 100.

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"Consent" Version Of "Baby It's Cold Outside" Released

2016

Minneapolis-based musicians Lydia Liza and Josiah Lemanski flame a cultural debate about gender roles when they post a reinterpreted version of the Christmas song "Baby It's Cold Outside" with new lyrics: Instead of pressuring her to spend the night, the guy respects her decision to leave and helps her get home safely.

This "with consent" version of the 1949 holiday seduction song removes any trace of threat or aggression. When the girl sings, "I ought to say no, no, no," the guy replies, "You reserve the right to say no" (in the original, the reply is, "Mind if I move in closer?"). They post it to SoundCloud, and the next day the Minneapolis NPR station The Current plays it. The song goes viral, and the duo appear on CNN, leading many other newsish outlets to pick up the story. To Lemanski and Liza, this modern update makes the song less "creepy" by adapting a scenario where the man puts the woman's safety and well-being ahead of his prurient desires. This holds water with feminists, but many with more traditional values object, seeing it as another attack on traditional gender roles, a hot topic in the wake of Donald Trump's victory in the presidential election.

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