4 October

Pick a Day

4 OCTOBER

In Music History

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2019 The blockbuster film Joker becomes the first film to use "Rock And Roll Part 2" since Gary Glitter's 2015 conviction for pedophilia. Many in the UK, where Glitter's crimes are well-known, are outraged because it earns the disgraced glam rocker substantial royalties.

2019 After being reissued for its 50th anniversary, The Beatles' Abbey Road album returns to #1 in the UK, where it spent 17 weeks in the top spot in 1969 and 1970.

2017 In San Francisco, T-Pain kicks off an acoustic tour, performing his hits without his famous Auto-Tune.

2014 Paul Revere of Paul Revere & the Raiders dies at age 76.

2012 Loudon Wainwright III guest stars as a Texas sheriff on the "Bad Code" episode of the CBS crime drama Person of Interest.

2007 Pitchfork gives Bon Iver's debut album, For Emma, Forever Ago, a positive review (8.1) leading to huge record label interest.

2006 Barbra Streisand's tour-opening performance at Philadelphia's Wachovia Center is the highest single event gross in the 10-year history of the arena. Streisand grosses $5,265,600 from 16,510 attendants.

2005 Exodus releases their seventh studio album, Shovel Headed Kill Machine.

2005 Michael Gibbins (drummer for Badfinger) dies in his sleep in Florida, at age 56.

2005 Nickelback release their fifth album, All The Right Reasons, with the hits "Photograph," "Far Away" and "Rockstar." It goes to #1 in their native Canada and also in the US, where it sells over 10 million copies.

2000 Teenage UK R&B vocalist Craig David wins a record three MasterCard Music of Black Origin (MOBO) Awards at London's Alexandra Palace. He is named Best UK Newcomer and wins awards for Best R&B Act and Best UK Single for "Fill Me In."

1999 Jazz trumpeter Art Farmer dies of a heart attack in Manhattan, New York, at age 71.

1999 15-year-old country music singer Jessica Andrews is honored in her native Carroll County, Tennessee, where she receives the first-ever Youth Achievement Award.

1999 Jimi Hendrix's half-sister Janie announces her plans to exhume the body of her famous brother and move it to a mausoleum where curious onlookers can view it for a price. The public outcry forces her to shelve the idea.

1997 Farm Aid returns to Illinois for the first time since it started in 1985, selling out the New World Music Theater in Tinley Park. Performers include The Dave Matthews Band and Beck.

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Jimmy Buffett Makes Cover Of Rolling Stone

1979

Jimmy Buffett appears on the cover of Rolling Stone ahead of his forthcoming Volcano album. The article details his experience recording the Caribbean-flavored tracks near a dormant volcano at George Martin's AIR Studios in Montserrat.


Montserrat is an island in the British West Indies that is home to the Soufrière Hills volcano. It's the near-perfect locale for Buffett, who's a bit apprehensive about a possible eruption, to get into his trademark Caribbean groove away from the growing commercialism of his beloved Key West. He borrows a "woop-wop" band from a local bar to give the title track some island atmosphere. Similar to a reggae band, right? Wrong. "Down in Montserrat they don't particularly like Rastafarians," Buffett tells the magazine. "It's a misconception that all Caribbean music is reggae. Most of the down-island stuff is more calypso, happy, good-time music. This band was more like a calypso kind of maranga. It had a guy who played a long blow pipe and a banjo-uke player. The next day, I had about four working titles for the album, but none of them really grabbed me, and I was wondering, 'What the f--k can I call this record?' Then I looked out the window at the volcano and I went ding! I'm gonna call the album Volcano. So I said, 'Now we got to write a song called 'Volcano.'" "Volcano" is only a minor hit, peaking at #66 on the Hot 100, but it remains a fan favorite with Buffett performing it at nearly all of his concerts.

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