December 31 Born –

Jule Styne (aka Julius Stein, 1905) – songwriter (“Three Coins In The 
Fountain”).

Cyril Stapleton (1914) – British violinist, jazz bandleader.

Evelyn Knight (1917) – singer (“A Little Bird Told Me”).

Rex Allen (1920) – actor/singer/songwriter (“Don’t Go Near The Indians”).

Johnnie Mae Matthews (1922) – singer/songwriter/producer, “The Godmother of 
Detroit Soul.”

Ross Barbour (1928) – The Four Freshmen.

Odetta (aka Odetta Holmes, 1930) – singer/songwriter, civil rights activist.

Gil Mellé (1931) – Jazz saxophonist, album cover artist.

Andy Summers (1942) – guitarist for The Police.

Pete Quaife (1943) – bassist for The Kinks.

John Denver (1943) – singer/songwriter.

Burton Cummings (1947) – singer for The Guess Who.

Donna Summer (aka LaDonna Gaines, 1948) – Disco singer.

Fermin Goytisolo (1951) – percussionist for KC & The Sunshine Band.

Tom Hamilton (1951) – bassist for Aerosmith.

Michael Hedges (1953) – acoustic guitarist.

Paul Westerberg (1959) – The Replacements.

Scott Taylor (1961) – guitarist for Then Jericho.

Scott Ian Rosenfeld (1963) – guitarist for Anthrax.

Danny McNamara (1970) – vocalist for Embrace.

Joey McIntyre (1972) – New Kids On The Block.

Bob Bryar (1979) – drummer for My Chemical Romance.


December 31 R.I.P. –

Ray Henderson (1970) – Age 74. Songwriter (“I’m Sitting On Top Of The 
World”).

Richard Rodgers (1979) – jaw cancer. Age 77. Composer.

Rick Nelson (1985) – airplane fire/crash. Age 45. Singer/songwriter/actor.

Patrick Woodward (1985) – airplane fire/crash. Guitarist for Rick Nelson’s 
tour band.

Rick Intveld (1985) – airplane fire/crash. Drummer for Rick Nelson’s tour 
band.

Andy Chapin (1985) – airplane fire/crash. Keyboardist for Rick Nelson’s 
tour band.

Bobby Neal (1985) – airplane fire/crash. Guitarist for Rick Nelson’s tour 
band.

Don Russell (1985) – airplane fire/crash. Manager/soundman for Rick 
Nelson’s tour.

Floyd Cramer (1997) – lung cancer. Age 64. Pianist.

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

Kevin MacMichael (2002) – lung cancer. Age 51. Guitarist for Cutting Crew.

Jim McReynolds (2002) – cancer. Age 75. Bluegrass 
musician/singer/songwriter.


December 31 album releases –

Steve Winwood – Arc Of A Diver (1980)

Live – Mental Jewelry (1991)

Wet Wet Wet – The Memphis Sessions (1993) U.S.


December 31 events –

1912 – 12-year old Louis Armstrong decides to celebrate New Year’s Eve by 
“borrowing” a .38 pistol from one of his many “stepfathers,” and shoot it 
into the air. He is instantly arrested by a nearby policeman for illegally 
discharging a firearm. Armstrong will be sent to the New Orleans Home for 
Colored Waifs, where he will learn to read and write music, as well as play 
cornet and bugle with the school band.

1929 – Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians perform “Auld Lang Syne” for 
the first time at the Hotel Roosevelt Grill in New York City. The show is 
broadcast on CBS radio and is such a hit that Lombardo and CBS continue 
their New Year’s show for the next 24 years.

1940 – The contract between American radio stations and ASCAP - the 
American Society of Publishers and Composers – expires amid legal 
wranglings, causing radio stations across the U.S. to ban all ASCAP 
affiliated songs for the next 10 months. The ban allows the new and smaller 
rival company BMI - Broadcast Music Inc. - to gain a foothold.

1947 – Roy Rogers and Dale Evans are married in Davis, Oklahoma. They 
remain married for 51 years, until Roy’s death in 1998.

1955 – Billboard magazine announces that Les Baxter's "Unchained Melody" is 
voted the top-selling single of the year, with four hit versions making the 
chart.

1956 – Elvis Presley appears on a KLAC-TV in Memphis, Tennessee, on a New 
Year's Eve TV special hosted by Wink Martindale.

1956 – Johnny Mathis releases his single, "Wonderful! Wonderful!" b/w "When 
Sunny Gets Blue."

1957 – The Fontane Sisters appear on American Bandstand.

1961 – The Beach Boys make one of their earliest stage performances at the 
Ritchie Valens Memorial Dance in Long Beach, California, opening for Ike 
and Tina Turner.

1961 – 18-year old Janis Joplin makes her stage debut at the Halfway House 
in Beaumont, Texas.

1962 – John Phillips and Michelle Gilliam are married. They stay married 
for eight years.

1963 – Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir meet and play together for the first time.

1963 – The Kinks make their stage debut at the Lotus House Restaurant in 
London.

1965 – John Lennon’s father, Alfred “Freddie” Lennon releases his single, 
“That’s My Life (My Love And My Home)” b/w “The Next Time You Feel 
Important” on Pye Records. The record is an attempt to capitalize on his 
son’s success, and to compete with John’s new song “In My Life,” prompting 
the younger Lennon to instruct manager Brian Epstein to have the song 
blackballed in the UK. The song is not a hit and does not chart.

1966 – The Monkees appear at the Cincinnati Gardens in Ohio.

1966 – Ray Charles performs at the City Center Arena in Seattle, Washington.

1967 – Sonny and Cher are suddenly disinvited to appear at tomorrow's 
Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena after publicly supporting the 
teenaged Sunset Strip rioters protesting the city's new curfew.

1967 – Jay and The Techniques, Vikki Carr, Miriam Makeba and Buddy Rich and 
his orchestra all appear on The Ed Sullivan Show.

1968 – Billboard magazine reports that for the first time ever, U.S. music 
sales have topped $1 billion.

1968 – Joe Cocker, Amen Corner, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, The Small 
Faces, Free and The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band all appear at Alexandra Palace 
in London. The Small Faces’ set proves to be the last with their original 
line-up, as this is singer/guitarist Steve Marriott’s final show with the 
group before heading off to form Humble Pie.

1969 – John Lennon appears on an ATV television special which declares him 
Man of the Decade, while in the U.S., Rolling Stone magazine names him Man 
of the Year.

1969 – Jimi Hendrix’s new band, Band Of Gypsys, featuring Billy Cox on bass 
and Buddy Miles on drums, plays the first of two nights at Fillmore East in 
New York City, and record both shows for a live album release.

1970 – Paul McCartney sues John, George and Ringo to dissolve The Beatles.

1971 – Elvis Presley throws this year’s New Year's Eve celebration at 
Graceland rather than a local club as has been the norm, and announces to 
his entourage that his wife Priscilla will be divorcing him, saying simply, 
"She says she doesn't love me anymore."

1971 – David Clayton Thomas makes his final appearance with Blood, Sweat & 
Tears at the Anaheim Convention Center in California.

1972 – Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve premieres on NBC, with guests 
Three Dog Night and Al Green.

1972 – The MC5 play their final concert together at the Grande Ballroom in 
Detroit.

1973 – AC/DC makes their stage debut at Chequers in Sydney, Australia.

1973 – Journey makes their stage debut at the Winterland Ballroom in San 
Francisco, consisting of former Santana members Gregg Rollie and Neil 
Schon, Ross Vallory and George Tickner from Frumious Bandersnatch, and 
Tubes drummer Prairie Prince.

1974 – Ex-Faces guitarist Ron Wood denies reports that he’s joining The 
Rolling Stones by replacing recently-departed guitarist Mick Taylor.

1974 – Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks join Fleetwood Mac.

1975 – On the singer’s 23rd birthday, Casablanca Records throws a single 
release party for Donna Summer's debut single, "Love To Love You Baby," 
which includes a life-size cake in the shape of the singer, flown in to New 
York from L.A.

1975 – Elvis Presley performs a special New Year's Eve concert in Pontiac, 
Michigan, and sets a single performance attendance record of 62,500, 
bringing in over $800,000.

1976 – The Cars make their live stage debut at Pease Air Force Base in 
Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

1978 – Bill Graham's Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco holds its last 
concert before closing the doors for good with a show by The Grateful Dead, 
and opening act The Blues Brothers.

1979 – Blondie appears at the Apollo Theatre in Glasgow, Scotland, and the 
show is broadcast live on the BBC music show The Old Grey Whistle Test.

1979 – David Bowie performs an acoustic version of “Space Oddity” on the 
Kenny Everett New Year's Show.

1982 – New York club Max’s Kansas City closes its doors for good.

1982 – E Street Band guitarist "Miami” Steve Van Zandt marries actress 
Maureen Santora at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Little 
Richard officiates the ceremony, and Bruce Springsteen is the best man. 
Percy Sledge sings "When A Man Loves A Woman" at the reception. They are 
still married.

1984 – Def Leppard drummer Rick Allen crashes his Corvette while street 
racing someone in an Alfa Romeo on the A57 outside of Sheffield. Failing to 
navigate a sharp turn, the Corvette launches over a stone wall and Allen is 
thrown from the car, severing his left arm at the shoulder. In the 
hospital, his arm is re-attached, but is removed permanently after a couple 
of days when infection sets in.

1985 – While on a short, three-stop tour of the southern U.S., Rick Nelson 
and his entire band and manager are killed when the airplane they’re on 
crashes two miles from an airstrip in De Kalb, Texas. Nelson and his band 
were on their way to a New Year’s Eve show in Dallas when the plane 
experienced an electrical fire caused by a heater. The plane’s two pilots 
suffered severe burns, but survived the crash.

1991 – After 62 years of broadcasting, Radio Luxembourg, Europe's oldest 
commercial radio station, goes off the air.

1991 – Ted Nugent donates 200 pounds of venison to a Salvation Army soup 
kitchen in Detroit with the message, "I kill it, you grill it."

1991 – Pearl Jam, Nirvana and The Red Hot Chili Peppers all appear at the 
Cow Palace in San Francisco.

1993 – Barbra Streisand begins her first tour in 22 years, playing the 
first of two nights at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

1996 – Paul McCartney is knighted by Queen Elizabeth II.

1999 – While on their This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours Tour, the Manic Street 
Preachers open the new Millennium Stadium in Cardiff with a concert in 
front of 57,000 - featuring opening acts Super Furry Animals, Feeder, 
Shack, and Patrick Jones - and set a Guinness Book world record for the 
largest indoor concert crowd ever in Europe.

2000 – Janet Jackson's estranged husband René Elizondo files a lawsuit 
against the singer claiming that Jackson, who’s sold more than 40 million 
records, promised to share equally any assets acquired after their 
relationship began in 1987.

2000 – Black Crowes singer Chris Robinson marries actress Kate Hudson in 
Aspen, Colorado. They stay married seven years.

2000 – Country music husband-and-wife team Kitty Wells and Johnny Wright 
perform their final concert together at the Nashville Nightlife Theater.

2003 – Australian singer/songwriter Natalie Imbruglia marries long-time 
boyfriend, Silverchair singer Daniel Johns. They stay married five years.

2004 – The Who's Roger Daltrey and songwriter/producer Pete Waterman are 
knighted 
by Queen Elizabeth II.

2005 – Welsh singer Tom Jones is knighted by Queen Elizabeth II at 
Buckingham Palace.

2006 – George Michael is paid a reported £1.5 million for an hour's concert 
at a Russian billionaire's New Year’s Eve party. The unnamed businessman 
paid for Michael to entertain his 300 guests on his private estate 20 miles 
outside of Moscow.

2009 – Status Quo’s Francis Rossi and Rick Parfitt are awarded OBEs.

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