Today in Music History
May 30
May 30, 1917:
The first jazz record,
Darktown Strutters' Ball, was released.
May 30, 1956
Time magazine prints an article entitled
Teener's Hero, which tries to explain
Elvis Presley's mystique. After a drawn-out description of his singing style, the writer says of Presley's appeal: "his movements suggest, in a word, sex."
May 30, 1963:
Lesley Gore makes her first TV appearance, performing
It's My Party on
American Bandstand. The song topped the Billboard Hot 100, the Cashbox Best Sellers list, and the UK Official Chart.
May 30, 1964:
Love Me Do became
The Beatles fourth US #1 hit, a song
John Lennon and
Paul McCartney wrote as teenagers. The version released in America is one that had session drummer Andy White playing drums while
Ringo Starr played the tambourine. The British single was a take on which Ringo played the drums. An easy way to distinguish between the two versions is the British one with Ringo on drums does not include a tambourine.
May 30, 1966:
Anne Murray signed a contract with the CBC-TV show Singalong Jubilee. She would be paid $71.50 for each appearance on the show, and $99 if she soloed.
May 30, 1966:
Dolly Parton marries Carl Thomas Dean, the owner of a Nashville asphalt road-paving business. The pair celebrated their 50th anniversary in 2016. Dolly has been quoted as saying, "We're really very proud of our marriage. It's the first for both of us. And the last." She has also stated that her passport read "Dolly Parton Dean", and she sometimes uses Dean when signing contracts.
May 30, 1966:
The Beatles Paperback Writer is released in the US, where it will go on to become the band's twelfth Billboard #1 hit. The disc will eventually sell over a million copies and earn a Gold Record in America for that accomplishment. The song also topped the charts in the United Kingdom, West Germany, Australia, New Zealand and Norway.
May 30, 1968:
The Beatles began recording what became known as the
White Album at EMI Recording Studios in London, a two disc set whose official title was actually
The Beatles. The first track they lay down is
Revolution. Released in November, in America it racked up 215 weeks on the Billboard Top LPs & Tape chart, selling over 12 million copies. The album has since been certified 24X platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The studio was later renamed Abbey Road Studios.
May 30, 1970:
Ray Stevens achieved the first of his two Billboard number one hits when
Everything Is Beautiful reached the top for the first of a two-week stay. His second came almost exactly four years later with the novelty song
The Streak.
May 30, 1972:
John Ryanes, second bass singer for
The Monotones, passed away at the age of 31. The group had one big hit,
Book Of Love, which reached number 5 in the US in 1958.
May 30, 1973:
As the follow-up to 1970's critically acclaimed
All Things Must Pass,
George Harrison releases his fourth studio album,
Living in the Material World. It will become his second US number one LP, and was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America two days after it was issued. The main single,
Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth), would top the Billboard Hot 100, pushing
Paul McCartney and Wings'
My Love to second spot.
May 30, 1975:
Alice Cooper's first solo album
Welcome to My Nightmare was certified Gold by the RIAA for sales of 500,000 copies. It was later awarded a Platinum disc for selling one million units. Three tracks were released as singles:
Department of Youth (US #67),
Only Women Bleed (US #12) and
Welcome to My Nightmare (US #45).
May 30, 1980:
Carl Radle, bass guitarist for
Derek And The Dominos, died of drug-and-alcohol-related kidney infection at the age of 37. After The Dominos split he continued to work with other artists such as George Harrison, Joe ****er, Dave Mason, J.J. Cale, and Delaney and Bonnie. His first taste of success was as the bassist for Gary Lewis & the Playboys from 1965 to 1967.
May 30, 1988:
Columbia Records releases
Bob Dylan's twenty-fifth studio album,
Down in the Groove. Following the poorly received
Knocked Out Loaded (1986),
Down in the Groove received similarly negative reviews and disappointing sales. The album peaked at #61 in the US and #32 in the UK, while its only single,
Silvio failed to chart in either country.
May 30, 1990:
Midnight Oil closed down 6th Avenue in New York City as they played a protest concert in front of Exxon's offices. The protest was in reaction to the Exxon Valdez disaster that devastated Prince William Sound in Alaska the year before. Vocalist Peter Garrett says: "We can't treat the world like a garbage dump, and there's more to life than profit and loss."
The environmentally friendly Australian rock veterans played a memorable show on Sunday, June 19th at Manhattan’s Hammerstein Ballroom as part of their farewell tour.
www.goldminemag.com
May 30, 1992:
Paul Simon married
Edie Brickell of the alt-rock band
The New Bohemians. They would have three children, Adrian, Lulu, and Gabriel. Simon, who is 26 years older than Brickell, was previously married to Peggy Harper from 1970 to 1975 and actress
Carrie Fisher (
Princess Leia in Star Wars) from 1983 to 1984.
May 30, 1992:
The Black Crowes debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 chart with their second album,
The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion. Four singles from the album were #1 hits, which helped the album reach the top spot.
May 30, 1999:
Three thousand people had to be evacuated from Royal Albert Hall in London where
Kenny Rogers was about to perform, after a bomb threat was made. No bomb was found and no injuries were reported.
May 30, 2000:
Eminem's second major-label album,
The Marshall Mathers LP, becomes the fastest-selling rap album ever when it sells 1.76 million copies in its debut week.
Having his life on public display gives him plenty of material for his machine gun mouth. In
Stan he takes on the voice of a fan who goes off the rails worshiping him; in
The Way I Am he shuns his celebrity: "I'm so sick of bein' admired that I wish I would just die or get fired."
Slim Shady also shows up, going berserk on
Christina Aguilera,
Tom Green, and anyone else in his lyrical line of fire in
The Real Slim Shady. There's even a song named after his wife called
Kim, but it's not a love song: he raps about getting into an argument and killing her.
For every person offended, there are many more who connect with the album, or at least find it amusing enough to buy it. First week sales are staggering, and after a month over 6 million copies are sold in the US. It goes on to become the best-selling rap album of all time in America.
May 30, 2002:
Diva
Diana Ross voluntarily entered a Malibu drug and alcohol rehabilitation center called Promises to "clear up some personal issues" before embarking on a summer concert tour.
May 30, 2003:
British record producer
Mickie Most, who is credited with producing more number one hits world-wide than any other producer, died of peritoneal mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer. He was 64. During a long career he recorded with
The Animals,
Herman's Hermits,
Donovan,
Lulu,
The Yardbirds,
Jeff Beck,
The Nashville Teens,
Hot Chocolate,
Kim Wilde and many others.
May 30, 2009:
81-year-old music legend
Fats Domino made a rare appearance at a charity event in New Orleans that raises funds to rebuild schools and playgrounds damaged by
Hurricane Katrina. Although he did not perform, The Fat Man watched his old friends
Little Richard,
B.B. King and
Chuck Berry hit the stage and waved at the 3,000-strong crowd.
May 30, 2010:
Anita Humes, lead singer for
The Essex on their 1963 hits
Easier Said Than Done (#1) and
A Walkin' Miracle (#12), passed away at the age of 69. After the band split in 1967 she released several solo singles for Roulette, but had no chart success.
May 30, 2010:
Ali-Ollie Woodson, who fronted
The Temptations during the 1980s and 1990s and helped return the group to chart success with songs such as
Treat Her Like a Lady,
Sail Away and
Lady Soul, died of cancer at the age of 58.
May 30, 2012:
According to Nielsen SoundScan, sales of
Bee Gees albums jumped 339% during the week following
Robin Gibb's death. Their best selling album,
The Ultimate Bee Gees, re-entered the Billboard 200 chart at #49.
May 30, 2015:
Julie Harris, an Academy Award-winning costume designer who outfitted
The Beatles for their films
A Hard Day's Night and
Help!, passed away at the age of 94. She was once quoted as saying, "
I must be one of the few people who can claim they have seen John, Paul, George and Ringo naked."
May 30, 2017:
Olivia Newton-John postponed her North American tour to fight a recurrence of breast cancer, which had spread to her back. The 68-year-old singer had been in remission since 1992, but would succumb to the disease on August 8, 2022.
May 30, 2017:
Bob Seger's
Greatest Hits album, released in 1994, is certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America for sales of ten million copies. His music was kept off streaming services until 2017, which helped boost sales, at least half of which came after 2002.
May 30, 2020:
The remix of
Megan Thee Stallion's
Savage featuring
Beyoncé goes to #1 in America, giving Megan her first chart-topper. The song got a huge boost on TikTok, where it soundtracked a viral dance challenge during the pandemic.
May 30, 2022:
Songwriter
Paul Vance, who co-wrote some of rock 'n' roll's most memorable hits songs, passed away at the age of 92. Among his more successful tunes were
Perry Como's
Catch a Falling Star (#3 in 1958),
Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini by
Brian Hyland, (#1 in 1960),
What Will My Mary Say by
Johnny Mathis (#9 in 1963),
Tracy by
The Cuff Links (#9 in 1969),
Playground In My Mind by
Clint Holmes (#2 in 1972), and
Run Joey Run by
David Geddes (#4 in 1975).
May 30, 2025:
Taylor Swift buys the master recordings to her first six albums from the private equity firm that bought them in 2020. Swift's former label, along with her masters, was sold to her nemesis Scooter Braun in 2019, grinding her gears so badly that she started re-recording those albums, releasing four
Taylor's Versions that all went to #1 and far out-streamed the originals.