2003Britney Spears' girl-power flick Crossroads earns eight nominations at the 23rd Golden Raspberry Awards, and two wins: Worst Original Song for "I'm Not A Girl, Not Yet A Woman" and Worst Actress for Spears, an honor she shares with Razzie darling Madonnafor Swept Away (named Worst Picture). The Material Girl, who has been a regular contender - and five-time Worst Actress winner - since her 1986 win for Shanghai Surprise, earns two more awards. She shares Worst Screen Couple with Adriano Giannini for Swept Away and garners Worst Supporting Actress as Verity in Die Another Day.
1987Anthrax release their third album, Among the Living. The cover shows an image of Henry Kane, a character in the film Poltergeist II: The Other Side, which the band finds terrifying.More
1986Heart's "These Dreams" hits #1 in the US. The lyric is written by Elton John's songwriting partner, Bernie Taupin.
2017Original Boston drummer Sib Hashian, who played on their first two albums, dies at age 67 after collapsing during the Legends of Rock Cruise.
2016After years of health problems and a battle with diabetes, Phife Dawg of A Tribe Called Quest dies at age 45.
2013My Chemical Romance announces their breakup after 12 years as a band.
2009Folk music historian Archie Green dies at age 91.
2006Cuban singer Pío Leyva (of Buena Vista Social Club) dies of a heart attack at age 88.
2006Aerosmith cancels the rest of their Rockin' The Joint tour so lead singer Steven Tyler can have throat surgery to treat strained vocal chords.
2005Rod Price (guitarist for Foghat) dies after suffering a heart attack and falling down a flight of stairs at his home.
2001Earl Beal of The Silhouettes dies at age 71.
1996Don Murray (drummer for The Turtles) dies of complications from ulcer surgery at age 50.
1994Dan Hartman dies of an AIDS-related brain tumor at age 43.
1994Ted Nugent, always a straight arrow, makes a PSA warning kids of the dangers of abusing inhalants.
1991Dave Guard of The Kingston Trio dies of lymphoma at age 56.
Pink Floyd Has A Hit Single
1980Pink Floyd tops the Hot 100 with "Another Brick In The Wall (part II)," which stays a total of four weeks. It's a rare hit single for the band, whose only other Top 40 appearance is "Money," which hit #13 in 1973.
The band are not known for their single releases, focusing most of their post-1960s output on increasingly elaborate concept albums. Following the chart success of the track in the UK over Christmas 1979, the disco-tinged cut is released as a 7-inch in the US, in support of their epic new double album The Wall.
Producer Bob Ezrin has transformed the band's original minute-and-a-half demo recording into a multi-tracked masterpiece, using cutting-edge studio technology to physically copy and paste the tape to increase the length of the song. His inspired decision to add a choir of London school children to pad out the second verse (following his use of a similar format on Alice Cooper's hit "School's Out") leads to the band's biggest ever commercial single success.
Recording of the record has been fraught. Sessions took place in London, Paris and New York as Britain's punitive tax laws drove the band into a year's exile. The titular "wall" is both a metaphor for the separation between band and audience, and also a literal barrier. The band's lavish stage shows feature a huge polystyrene wall being erected in front of the musicians.
Band leader Roger Waters has grown increasingly frustrated by his bandmates' reluctance to share his creative vision, and founding member Richard Wright finds himself unceremoniously fired - and then rehired as a session musician for the supporting world tour. Ironically, due to their huge production costs, Wright is the only member of Pink Floyd to make any money from the shows.
The single stays at the top spot for a month. Follow up, "Run Like Hell," fails to make the same impact on the charts, and the band's next album, The Final Cut (1983), is their last with Waters at the helm.
Producer Bob Ezrin has transformed the band's original minute-and-a-half demo recording into a multi-tracked masterpiece, using cutting-edge studio technology to physically copy and paste the tape to increase the length of the song. His inspired decision to add a choir of London school children to pad out the second verse (following his use of a similar format on Alice Cooper's hit "School's Out") leads to the band's biggest ever commercial single success.
Recording of the record has been fraught. Sessions took place in London, Paris and New York as Britain's punitive tax laws drove the band into a year's exile. The titular "wall" is both a metaphor for the separation between band and audience, and also a literal barrier. The band's lavish stage shows feature a huge polystyrene wall being erected in front of the musicians.
Band leader Roger Waters has grown increasingly frustrated by his bandmates' reluctance to share his creative vision, and founding member Richard Wright finds himself unceremoniously fired - and then rehired as a session musician for the supporting world tour. Ironically, due to their huge production costs, Wright is the only member of Pink Floyd to make any money from the shows.
The single stays at the top spot for a month. Follow up, "Run Like Hell," fails to make the same impact on the charts, and the band's next album, The Final Cut (1983), is their last with Waters at the helm.