December 4 Born –

Eddie Heywood (1915) – Jazz pianist (“Canadian Sunset”).

Tommy Morgan (1932) – session harmonica player.

Freddy Cannon (aka Frederick Picariello, Jr., 1939) – singer (“Palisades 
Park”).

Bob Mosley (1942) – bassist for Moby Grape.

Chris Hillman (1944) – The Byrds, The Flying Burrito Brothers, The Souther 
Hillman Furay Band.

Dennis Wilson (1944) – The Beach Boys.

Anna McGarrigle (1944) – singer/songwriter.

Terry Woods (1947) – The Pogues.

Southside Johnny (aka John Lyon, 1948) – The Asbury Jukes.

Gary Rossington (1951) – guitarist for Lynyrd Skynyrd.

Bob Griffin (1959) – bassist for The Bo Deans.

Vinnie Dombroski (1962) – vocalist for Sponge.

Adamski (aka Adam Tinley, 1967) – record producer.

Jay-Z (aka Shawn Carter, 1969) – rapper/producer/record label executive.

Justin Welch (1972) – drummer for Elastica.

Kate Rusby (1973) – British folk singer/songwriter.


December 4 R.I.P. –

Tommy Bolin (1976) – heroin overdose. Age 25. Moxy, James Gang and Deep 
Purple.

Benjamin Britten (1976) – heart failure. Age 63. British classical composer.

Frank Zappa (1993) – prostate cancer. Age 52. The Mothers Of Invention.

Bernie Dwyer (2002) – lung cancer. Age 62. Drummer for Freddie and The 
Dreamers.

Hubert Sumlin (2011) – heart failure. Age 80. Blues guitarist for Howlin’ 
Wolf.


December 4 album releases –

The Beatles – Beatles For Sale (1964) UK

The Yardbirds – Five Live Yardbirds (1964) UK

The Rolling Stones – December’s Children (And Everybody’s) (1965) U.S.

Robert Wyatt – End Of An Ear (1970)

Wishbone Ash – Wishbone Ash (1970)

Stephen Stills – Stephen Stills Live (1975)

Scorpions – Taken By Force (1977) UK, Europe

Foreigner – Inside Information (1987)

Brand Nubian – One For All (1990)

Mariah Carey – Greatest Hits (2001)

Limp Bizkit – New Old Songs (2001)


December 4 events –

1927 – Duke Ellington’s newly-expanded big band begins a three-and-a-half 
year residency at Harlem’s Cotton Club.

1944 – Eddy Arnold and The Plowboys record four songs, including "Cattle 
Call," at Arnold’s first recording session at WSM Radio studios in 
Nashville.

1953 – Tony Bennett records “There’ll Be No Teardrops Tonight” at CBS 
Studios in New York City.

1954 – Billboard magazine announces that DJ Alan Freed can no longer use 
the moniker “Moondog” after Supreme Court Justice Carroll G. Walter rules 
in favor of New York street musician Louis T. Hardin, who claims ownership 
of the name.

1956 – Elvis Presley arrives at Sun Studios unannounced, interrupting a 
Carl Perkins session featuring Jerry Lee Lewis on piano. A short time 
later, Johnny Cash arrives at the studio, and the four musicians gather 
around the piano and sing songs familiar to them all. Sam Phillips records 
the “group,” who will be dubbed the “Million Dollar Quartet” the following 
day in the Memphis Press-Scimitar.

1957 – DJ Allen Brooks of radio station CKWS in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, 
plays Elvis Presley's new Christmas album in its entirety and invites 
listeners to call in their opinion, since many radio stations have banned 
the album because of the implied impropriety of “Elvis the Pelvis” singing 
religious songs. Of 800 callers, all but 56 approve of Presley's album.

1957 – Danny and The Juniors and Jimmy Dee and The Offbeats appear on 
American Bandstand.

1958 – At the request of Dick Clark, Lloyd Price re-records “Stagger Lee,” 
as well as a version of “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” and “Where Were You (On Our 
Wedding Day)?” at Bell Sound Studio in New York City.

1959 – Henry Mancini and His Orchestra begin recording the album, Music 
>From Mr. Lucky, at RCA Studios in Hollywood, after his CBS-TV theme song 
“Mr. Lucky” hit # 21 on the singles chart.

1960 – Jackie Wilson makes his debut appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, 
performing “Lonely Teardrops,” “To Be Loved” and “Alone At Last.” Other 
musical guests include Jane Morgan, violinist Joyce Flissler, and 10-year 
old Spanish singer, Joselito.

1961 – Gene Chandler releases his single, “Duke Of Earl” b/w “Kissin’ In 
The Kitchen.”

1962 – The Beatles make their London television debut on the children’s 
program Tuesday Rendezvous. Filmed in Studio 4 at Wembley Studios, the 
group lip-synchs to “Love Me Do” and “P.S. I Love You.”

1965 – Singer/songwriter Jacques Brel makes his American stage debut in 
concert at Carnegie Hall in New York City.

1965 – The Animals, The Moody Blues and The Brian Auger Trinity, featuring 
Long John Baldry, Rod Stewart and Julie Driscoll, all appear on Part 1 of 
Shindig Goes To London.

1966 – Diana Ross and The Supremes and Gary Lewis and The Playboys appear 
on The Ed Sullivan Show. Also on the show is singer Lainie Kazan.

1967 – The 16-date UK package tour, featuring The Jimi Hendrix Experience, 
The Move, The Nice, Pink Floyd, The Eire Apparent, The Outer Limits and 
Amen Corner, comes to a close, playing their final two shows at City Hall 
in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne.

1969 – President Richard Nixon, Vice-President Agnew and 40 U.S. governors 
view "simulated acid trip" films and listen to rock music in an attempt to 
comprehend the generation gap.

1969 – The Rolling Stones wrap up three days of recording sessions at 
Muscle Shoals in Alabama, completing the tracks “Brown Sugar,” “Wild 
Horses” and “You Gotta Move” for their next album.

1971 – The Montreux Casino in Switzerland burns down during a concert by 
Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention, after a fan sets the venue on fire
 with a flare gun. The fire becomes the subject of the Deep Purple song 
“Smoke On The Water.”

1971 – Don McLean’s “American Pie” enters Billboard’s Hot 100.

1976 – EMI record plant packers go on strike, refusing to package The Sex 
Pistols’ single “Anarchy In The UK.”

1977 – Queen braves blizzard conditions to appear at the University Arena 
in Dayton, Ohio.

1979 – U2 appears at the Hope and Anchor in Islington, London. Mistakenly 
called “The U2s,” they play to only nine people and the show ends abruptly 
when The Edge breaks a guitar string.

1980 – Prince plays the first night of his 30-date Dirty Mind Tour at 
Shea’s in Buffalo, New York. The tour is the first to feature Lisa Coleman 
on keyboards.

1980 – Led Zeppelin officially calls it quits in a press release, which 
reads: "We wish it to be known that the loss of our dear friend, and the 
deep respect we have for his family, together with the deep sense of 
undivided harmony felt by ourselves and our manager, have led us to decide 
that we could not continue as we were. – Led Zeppelin”

1985 – Singer Connie Francis is arrested aboard a Delta airliner for 
smoking four cigarettes while the No Smoking sign is on during a re-fueling 
stop in Atlanta. As she is escorted off the plane, she kicks the police 
officer, incurring another charge of battery. She is booked and released on 
$1,100 bail.

1987 – Madonna files for divorce from actor Sean Penn. She changes her mind 
the following week, and then changes it again - this time for good - in 
January 1988.

1988 – Roy Orbison makes his last concert appearance at the Front Row 
Theater in Highland Heights, Ohio.

1991 – Country music act The Judds play their final concert together at the 
Murphy Center in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. The concert is filmed for a 
television special.

1991 – Paula Abdul receives a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

1995 – Michael Jackson and French pantomime artist Marcel Marceau begin 
rehearsals for the upcoming HBO special, Michael Jackson: One Night Only, 
at the Beacon Theatre in New York City.

1999 – Rapper Jay-Z is released from jail on $50,000 bail after a stabbing 
incident at a party in New York City the previous night.

2001 – KISS’ Gene Simmons releases his book, KISS And Make-Up. In the 
evening, the group is one of the honorees at the National Academy of 
Recording Arts and Sciences Heroes Award ceremony in New York City.

2001 – England’s Q magazine publishes their Greatest Female Rock and Pop 
Artist of All Time fan poll, with P.J. Harvey taking the top spot, followed 
by Madonna, Kate Bush, Tori Amos, and Björk.

2002 – In an interview with Diane Sawyer on the ABC news program Primetime, 
Whitney 
Houston admits that drink and drugs nearly killed her, and that she is 
addicted to sex. Houston also tells Sawyer that her business is sex, drugs 
and rock 'n' roll, and that she got into the lifestyle after missing out on 
partying when her career took off when she was 18.

2004 – Michael Jackson provides his DNA to the Santa Barbara Sheriff’s 
Department following a second raid on his Neverland Ranch.

2006 – Christie’s in New York holds another rock ‘n’ roll auction, selling 
Paul McCartney’s handwritten lyrics to “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” for 
$192,000 to a Texas bookstore owner. Also auctioned off is a guitar owned 
by Jimi Hendrix, a notebook of lyrics written by Bob Marley, and a poem 
written by Jim Morrison.

2010 – A-ha plays their last concert together at the Spektrum in Oslo, 
Norway: the final date of their Ending On A High Note Tour.

2012 – Vocalist for the U.S. metal band Lamb of God, Randy Blythe, is 
charged with manslaughter in the death of a fan at a concert in Prague in 
the Czech Republic in 2010. The singer is accused of pushing the fan off 
the stage during a show, after which the fan hit his head on the concrete 
floor when he fell, and died of his injuries 14 days later. The 41-year-old 
singer, who faces five to ten years in a Czech prison if convicted, will be 
acquitted in March 2013.

>

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