2001 – Renato Carosone, a key figure in Italian music in the post-war era, dies in Rome at the age of 81. Carosone, a Neapolitan, was most famous for his 1956 hit “Tu Vuo’Fa’L’Americano” (“You Want to Play the American”), which was considered the Italian anthem of that era.
1999 – An autopsy performed on the exhumed body of Tammy Wynette at the behest of her husband George Richey, shows that she died of heart failure caused by damage from repeated blood clots. The role drugs may have played in the country star’s death is impossible to determine since the autopsy took place a year after she died.
1999 – More than 20 veteran acts, including Jan & Dean, Pat Boone, Freddy Fender, and the Grass Roots sue K-tel International Inc. for breach of contract and non-payment of royalties in connection with 27 compilation albums.
1998 – Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee is sentenced to six months in jail and three years’ probation for kicking his soon-to-be ex-wife, onetime “Baywatch” star Pamela Anderson, as she holds their infant son. The verdict also specifies that Lee complete 200 hours of community service and donate $5,000 to a battered women’s shelter.
1998 – Black Sabbath drummer Bill Ward takes ill and is hospitalized in London. Ward was to join the band for its first European tour since 1978.
1992 – Hard rock group Aerosmith donates $10,000 to support “Corporal Politics,” a controversial art exhibition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Funding for the exhibit was denied the previous week by the National Endowment for the Arts because of its graphic images.
1979 – Elton John plays Leningrad and becomes the first Western solo pop star to tour the Soviet Union.
1977 – The stage show “Beatlemania” opens at the Winter Garden Theater, New York.
1970 – The last Beatles film, “Let It Be,” premieres in London. Three songs from the album of the same name reach No. 1: “Get Back,” “The Long and Winding Road” and the title song.
1962 – No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit: “Stranger on the Shore,” Mr. Acker Bilk. It is the first British hit to make the top of the U.S. charts.
1946 – Cher (Cherilyn Sarkisian La Pier) is born in El Centro, Calif. She records with husband Sonny Bono in the duo Sonny & Cher. She has three solo No. 1 songs in the 1970s: “Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves,” “Half-Breed” and “Dark Lady.” Cher launches an acting career in the 1980s and wins a Best Actress Oscar in 1987 for “Moonstruck.”
1946 – No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit: “The Gypsy,” Ink Spots.
1944 – Joe Cocker (John Cocker) is born in Sheffield, England. His biggest hit is “Up Where We Belong,” a duo with Jennifer Warnes. The song, the love theme from the film “An Officer and a Gentleman,” tops Billboard’s Hot 100 for three weeks.
This Day in Music
1998 - Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee is sentenced to six months in jail and three years' probation for kicking his soon-to-be ex-wife, onetime "Baywatch" star Pamela Anderson, as she holds their…