12 September

Pick a Day

12 SEPTEMBER

In Music History

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2025 Spinal Tap II: The End Continues hits theaters, documenting the group's one-off reunion concert in New Orleans, where they're joined by Elton John on "Stonehenge." Unfortunately, Elton is hospitalized after the stone monument lowered onto the stage falls and crushes him.

2022 The Jennifer Hudson Show debuts in syndication. The first guest on the daytime talk show is Simon Cowell, a judge when Hudson competed on American Idol.

2017 Stevie Wonder, Demi Lovato and Dave Matthews are among the performers at the "Hand in Hand" telethon, which benefits victims of hurricanes Harvey and Irma.More

2016 The #HotInHerreStreamingParty hashtag takes off as Nelly fans try to help him out of a $2.4 million tax debt by repeatedly streaming his hit "Hot In Herre." Based on an estimated Spotify royalty of $0.007 per stream, it will take about 342,857,142 listens to play off the debt.

2014 Joe Sample (pianist of The Jazz Crusaders) dies of mesothelioma at age 75.

2013 Ray Dolby (sound engineer who invented the noise-reduction system which bears his name) dies of leukemia in San Francisco, California, at age 80.

2012 After years of mainstream popularity, considerable airplay, and being nominated for numerous awards, Matchbox Twenty finally get their due on the charts with a #1 debut on the Billboard albums chart. North is their first top-charting album and their fifth studio album in the 16 years the band has been together.

2011 Suffering from Alzheimer's disease, Glen Campbell performs "It's Your Amazing Grace" on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Campbell's memory is shot, but on stage he's able to perform, reading the lyrics from a teleprompter. He had just started his Goodbye Tour, which continues for more than a year, until his condition deteriorates to the point where he can no longer perform.

2011 Ed Sheeran's debut album, +, is released in the UK, where it tops the albums chart.

2010 Lady Gaga wears a dress made of raw meat to the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards, where she wins Video Of The Year for "Bad Romance."More

2009 The Christian rock band Skillet charts on the Hot 100 for the first time when their single "Awake and Alive" ekes in at #100. The track is from their hit crossover album Awake, which debuts at #2 in the US.

2008 Metallica release Death Magnetic, produced by Rick Rubin.

2007 Bobby Byrd, a singer known for his work with James Brown (he does the "get on up!" retort in "Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine") dies of cancer near Atlanta, Georgia, at age 73.

2006 Toby Keith makes his first appearance on Stephen Colbert's talk show. Despite their political differences, they become good friends, and in 2015 Colbert inducts Keith into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

2006 Marianne Faithfull announces she has breast cancer (seven weeks later she says she has made a "full recovery").

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Film Composer Hans Zimmer Is Born

1957

Hans Zimmer is born in Frankfurt, Germany. Known for his innovative style of combining electronic and traditional instrumentation, he becomes one of the most sought-after film composers in Hollywood. He lands his breakthrough gig with the 1988 movie Rain Man, starring Tom Cruise and Dustin Hoffman, and writes the music on a Fairlight digital synthesizer. He goes on to score hit movies like Gladiator (2000), The Dark Knight (2008), The Lion King (1994), and Dune (2021), with the latter two earning him his first Academy Award wins for Best Original Score.


Before trying his luck in Hollywood, Zimmer moves to the UK and teams up with the new wave band the Buggles on their hit "Video Killed The Radio Star" (whose video helps launch MTV in 1981). Buggles frontman Trevor Horn describes Zimmer as "a 23-year-old budding keyboard genius who came with his very own Prophet-5." But Zimmer doesn't officially join the band. Instead, he partners with prolific film composer Stanley Myers on a string of films, including Moonlighting (1982) and My Beautiful Laundrette (1985). He also composes the title theme song to the BBC game show Going For Gold. When he finally makes it big with Rain Man, it's not with the typical jangly guitars that usually soundtrack road movies, but with steel drums and synthesizers. Zimmer's love of music and technology comes from being the son of an engineer father and a pianist mother. He didn't quite know how to put the two together until he had his first encounter with a Sergio Leone film score after sneaking into the movie theater to see Once Upon A Time In The West in 1968. Leone's use of the electric guitar in an Old West setting fascinated 12-year-old Zimmer and set him on the path of pursuing a career that let him combine his two passions, which were not so far apart after all. Instruments are pieces of technology that can be manipulated to make new sounds. Just as an electric guitar or a violin was once a new invention, he reasons, so are the computers that became his favorite musical tools. "There's an adventure in new technology," he tells The Hollywood Reporter in 2014. "I keep making it adapt to things it wasn't designed to do." Photo: Lee Kirby

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