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    Music Notes

    Free Press news services 2005-05-05 02:52:55


    IT HAPPENED TODAY . . .

    1891 The world-famous Carnegie Hall opened in New York. Among the
    opening night attractions was Tchaikovsky conducting his Marche
    Solennelle. On this date in 1991, the hall's 100th birthday celebration
    featured violinist Isaac Stern, tenor Placido Domingo, soprano Jessye
    Norman, cellist Mstislav Rostropovich and conductor Zubin Mehta.

    1908 The first Alberta Music Festival was held in Edmonton. It was
    the earliest musical competition of its kind in Canada.

    1942 Country superstar Tammy Wynette, whose real name was Virginia
    Wynette Pugh, was born in Mississippi. Stand by Your Man, which topped
    the country charts in 1968, was the biggest-selling single by a woman
    in country music history. Her other No. 1 hits included The Ways to
    Love a Man, He Loves Me All the Way and We're Gonna Hold On -- a 1973
    duet with George Jones. Wynette and Jones were married from 1969 to
    '75. Wynette died from a blood clot in her lungs at her Nashville
    home on April 6, 1998.

    1968 Buffalo Springfield played its final show in Long Beach, Calif.
    The band made just three albums in two years, but its 1967 hit, For
    What It's Worth, became an anthem for the hippie generation. Two group
    members, Stephen Stills and Canada's Neil Young, became part of Crosby,
    Stills, Nash and Young.

    1972 Blues and folk singer Rev. Gary Davis died of a heart attack in
    Hammonton, N.J., at 76. He'd been singing on street corners and small
    clubs for more than 25 years. Davis's composition, Samson and Delilah,
    was recorded by Peter, Paul and Mary. His finger-picked guitar style
    influenced such rock-era artists as Ry Cooder, Taj Mahal and Jorma
    Kaukonen.

    1982 Jazz vibraphonist Cal Tjader, who may well have been the
    greatest non-Latino leader of Latin jazz groups, died in Manila at
    56. Tjader played with pianists Dave Brubeck and George Shearing
    before going out on his own in the mid-'50s. Over the next three
    decades, he recorded dozens of albums, most of them in a Latin vein.
    Tjader even had a minor pop hit in 1965 with Soul Sauce, a reworking
    of a Dizzy Gillespie tune.

    1984 It was a marriage of rock singers as Jim Kerr of Simple Minds
    wed Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders. They broke up five years later.

    1990 Artists B. B. King, Joe Cocker, Roberta Flack, the Moody Blues
    and Randy Travis gathered in Liverpool for a hometown tribute to the
    late John Lennon.

    1992 The CBC announced that The Tommy Hunter Show had been
    cancelled after 27 years as a weekly series. It was North America's
    longest-running network music show.

    1993 Cher went to the capital of the former Soviet republic of
    Armenia aboard a chartered cargo jet carrying about $3 million worth
    of privately donated humanitarian aid. Cher, who's half Armenian,
    called on Western nations to aid the people of Armenia, which was
    fighting an undeclared war with neighbouring Azerbaijan.

    1996 Members of the Rankin Family received honorary doctor of music
    degrees from Acadia University in Wolfville, N.S.

    1997 Crosby, Stills and Nash helped mark the 27th anniversary of
    the Kent State University shootings with a concert at the Kent, Ohio
    campus. The group performed their hit, Ohio, written by Neil Young
    after the killing of four students by National Guardsmen during an
    anti-war demonstration on May 4, 1970.

    1997 Bruce Springsteen received the Polar Music Prize -- and $133,000
    -- from King Carl Gustav of Sweden. Springsteen was cited for being an
    "uncompromising steward of the essential qualities of rock."

    1998 A stage version of the 1977 movie Saturday Night Fever opened in
    London. Starring Australian actor Adam Garcia, the stage version had
    most of the movie's disco music plus two new songs by the Bee Gees.
    Young fans clash

    1987 Six people were arrested and about 20 were injured after
    riot police in Milan, Italy, fired tear gas during clashes with
    rock-throwing fans locked out of a Neil Young concert.

    The London Free Press
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