December 10 Born –

Harold Adamson (1906) – lyricist/songwriter (I Love Lucy).

Morton Gould (1913) – pianist/composer/conductor.

Dorothy Lamour (aka Mary Slaton, 1914) – actress, singer for NBC radio.

Alexander Courage (1919) – film/television composer (Star Trek, Daniel 
Boone).

Ken Albers (1924) – The Four Freshmen.

Eddie "Guitar Slim" Jones (1926) – Blues guitarist (“The Things That I Used 
To Do”).

Ralph Tavares (1941) – Tavares.

Chad Stuart (1941) – Chad and Jeremy.

Christopher “Ace” Kefford (1946) – bassist for The Move.

Walter “Clyde” Orange (1946) – The Commodores.

Jessica Cleaves (1948) – vocalist for The Friends Of Distinction.

Johnny Rodriguez (aka Juan Rodriguez, 1951) – Country music singer.

Susan Dey (1952) – actress, The Partridge Family.

Geoff Deane (1954) – Modern Romance.

Paul Hardcastle (1957) – synthesizer player, songwriter.

*Helen “Pepsi” DeMacque (1958) – back-up singer for Wham!, Pepsi & Shirlie.*

J Mascis (aka Joseph Mascis, 1965) – Dinosaur Jr.

Timothy Christian Riley (1966) – drummer for Tony! Toni! Tone!

Brian Molko (1972) – vocalist/guitarist for Placebo.

Scott Alexander (1972) – bassist for Dishwalla.

Meg White (1974) – drummer for The White Stripes.


December 10 R.I.P. –

Otis Redding (1967) – plane crash. Age 26.

Jimmy King (1967) – plane crash. Age 18? Guitarist for The Bar-Kays.

Ronnie Caldwell (1967) – plane crash. Age 18. Keyboardist for The Bar-Kays.

Phalon Jones (1967) – plane crash. Age 18? Saxophonist for The Bar-Kays.

Carl Cunningham (1967) – plane crash. Age 19? Drummer for The Bar-Kays.

Jascha Heifetz (1987) – Age 86. Violinist.

Bill Harris (1988) – pancreatic cancer. Age 63. The Clovers.

Darren Robinson (1995) – heart attack due to obesity. Age 28. Rapper for 
The Fat Boys.

Faron Young (1996) – suicide. Age 64. Country music star.

Jake Carey (1997) – Age 71. The Flamingos.

Buddy Feyne (1998) – Age 86. Songwriter (“Tuxedo Junction”).

Rick Danko (1999) – drug-related heart failure. Age 56. Bassist/vocalist 
for The Band.

Bill Deal (2003) – Age 59. Bill Deal and The Rhondels (“What Kind Of Fool 
Do You Think I Am”).

Kenny Dino (2009) – heart attack. Age 70. Singer (“Your Ma Said You Cried 
In Your Sleep Last Night”).


December 10 album releases –

The Rolling Stones – Got LIVE If You Want It! (1966)

Deep Purple – Stormbringer (1974)

Queen – A Day At The Races (1976)

Wings – Wings Over America (1976)

Journey – Dream, After Dream (1980)

The Jam – Dig The New Breed (1982)

Ozzy Osbourne – Bark At The Moon (1983)

Fine Young Cannibals – Fine Young Cannibals (1985)

Jethro Tull – Live At Hammersmith ’84 (1990)

Enigma – MCMXC a.D. (1990)

Ghost – Lama Rabi Rabi (1996)

Phish – Round Room (2002) U.S.


December 10 events –

1930 – Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra records “Mood Indigo” 
in New York City.

1949 – Fats Domino records “The Fat Man” at J&M Studio in New Orleans.

1953 – Singer Harry Belafonte makes his Broadway stage debut at the 
Imperial Theatre in the musical revue, John Murray Anderson’s Almanac. The 
show runs for six months and 229 performances.

1955 – Johnny Cash and His Tennessee Two appear on the Louisiana Hayride. 
Following his performance, Johnny meets June Carter backstage.

1959 – The four male members of The Platters are acquitted in a Cincinnati 
courtroom of the charges of “aiding and abetting prostitution, lewdness, 
and assignation" stemming from their August 10 arrest at the Sheraton 
Gibson Hotel when police raided their hotel room and found the men 
entertaining four scantily-clad 19-year old girls, three of them white.

1959 – CBS-TV airs the Harry Belafonte special, The Revlon Revue Presents 
Tonight With Belafonte.

1960 – Floyd Cramer records “On The Rebound” at RCA Studios in Nashville.

1961 – James Brown and The Famous Flames, Sugar Pie DeSanto, and The 
Brownies all perform at the Evergreen Ballroom in Lacey, Washington.

1961 – The Beatles spend the day on the road returning to Liverpool from 
southern England to appear at Hambleton Hall in Huyton. They are so late in 
arriving that they only play for 15 minutes. The promoters grudgingly pay 
the group’s new manager Brian Epstein - who is furious with the band’s 
lackadaisical attitude - their £15 fee.

1963 – 6-year old Donny Osmond makes his singing debut with his brothers on 
The Andy Williams Show.

1963 – The CBS Evening New with Walter Cronkite runs a piece about a new 
phenomenon in England called The Beatles.

1965 – The Grateful Dead plays San Francisco's Fillmore Auditorium for the 
first time, in what is their second gig under their new name.

1967 – An unknown San Francisco group called The Steve Miller Blues Band 
signs with Capitol Records for an unprecedented $750,000, and drops the 
"Blues" from their name in the process.

1967 – Otis Redding and four members of his band, The Bar-Kays, are killed 
when their tour plane crashes into frozen Lake Monona near Madison, 
Wisconsin. Trumpeter Ben Cauley is the only person to survive the crash. 
Bar-Kays bassist James Alexander was not on the plane due to seating 
limitations, and took another flight. Cauley and Alexander will later 
re-form The Bar-Kays.

1967 – The Byrds play the first night of an eight-night stay at the Whiskey 
A Go-Go in Los Angeles.

1968 – Led Zeppelin appears at the Marquee Club for the first time under 
their new name.

1971 – During the first of two shows scheduled at the Rainbow Theatre in 
London, Frank Zappa is thrown into the orchestra pit by a fan’s jealous 
boyfriend, breaking his leg and ankle, fracturing his skull and crushing 
his larynx. Zappa will spend the better part of the next year recovering in 
a wheelchair.

1972 – Roberta Flack and two members of her backup band are injured when 
her bass player crashes the car they’re in near Manhattan.

1973 – Hilly Kristal opens the CBGB Club (Country, Bluegrass and Blues) at 
315 Bowery Street in Manhattan.

1980 – The body of John Lennon is cremated at the Ferncliff Cemetery in 
Hartsdale, New York, and the ashes are given to Yoko.

1985 – Chuck Negron is fired from Three Dog Night because of his drug use 
and missing too many shows.

1988 – Metallica plays the first of two nights at the Cow Palace in San 
Francisco, with opening act Queensrÿche.

1991 – Disc jockey and early rock ‘n’ roll promoter Alan Freed posthumously 
receives a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

1991 – Architect Ieoh Ming Pei receives $5 million for his design for the 
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

1998 – In London’s High Court, Bruce Springsteen wins his two year £2 
million court battle to ban an album of his early songs, which revolves 
around copyright ownership disputes between Bruce and his former manager 
Mike Appel.

1998 – Christie’s auction house in London sells a 10-song concert recording 
of The Beatles, recorded by the chief technician at the Gaumont Theatre in 
Bournemouth, England, for £25,300. Also sold is a set of five autographs by 
The Beatles – John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Pete Best, and 
Stuart Sutcliffe - obtained by a fan in Liverpool in 1961, for £5,195.

1998 – The 50th anniversary Amnesty International concert takes place at 
the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris, France, featuring Jimmy Page 
and Robert Plant, Radiohead, Peter Gabriel, Alanis Morissette, Shania Twain 
and Tracy Chapman.

1999 – In a radio interview, George Michael slams Cliff Richard’s new 
Christmas song, “Millennium Prayer,” calling it “vile” and a “heinous piece 
of music,” because of a Christian-led campaign to make the song a #1 hit.

2002 – NBC airs the music special, An Evening With The Dixie Chicks.

2003 – Bobby Brown is arrested and charged with battery after beating his 
wife Whitney Houston and leaving her with facial injuries.

2004 – One of three RCA microphones used by radio station KWKH for the 
Louisiana Hayride is sold for $37,500. The microphone was one of three used 
during the 50 performances by Elvis Presley and many, many others on the 
radio show in Shreveport from 1954 to 1956.

2004 – James Brown reveals he’s been diagnosed with prostate cancer.

2005 – Country music singers Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood are married 
in Oklahoma. They are still married.

2007 – Led Zeppelin - featuring Jason Bonham on drums - appears at the O2 
Arena in London as part of the series of Ahmet Ertegun tribute concerts. More 
than a million people took part in a ballot for the 20,000 tickets 
available for the show, with all proceeds going to Ahmet's own charity.

2008 – Rapper DMX is arrested and jailed in Miami after a warrant is issued 
by a Phoenix, Arizona, judge when the rapper fails to show for his court 
date on charges of drug possession, identity theft and animal cruelty.

2008 – Audioslave guitarist Tom Morello, members of Massive Attack, and 
other musicians band together to protest the U.S. military’s use of their 
music to get confessions from the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay by blasting 
metal, rap, and children’s music 24 hours a day. 

2009 – In an interview with Q magazine, Paul McCartney is asked if his 
marriage to Heather Mills was the worst mistake of his life. He replies 
"OK, yeah. I suppose that has to be the prime contender."

2009 – Billy Joel and ex-wife Christie Brinkley issue statements regarding 
their daughter Alexa’s recent overdose, denying that a fight between the 
two caused the incident.

2010 – The original hand-written lyrics to Bob Dylan's “The Times They Are 
A-Changin'” sell at a New York auction for $422,500, bought by hedge fund 
manager and art collector, Adam Sender.

2011 – A 1962 demonstration record copy of The Beatles’ “Love Me Do” sells 
for $17,339.31 during a 10-day eBay auction.

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