9/1/65 - James Brown, The Kinks and Booker T. and the MG's
appear on ABC’s prime time rock series “Shindig!”
The Godfather of Soul performed “Papa's Got A Brand New Bag”
and the house band, which included Billy Preston and Glen Campbell, perform
versions “Hard Headed Woman” and “Hallelujah, I Love You So.”
Also on 9/1, Roger Miller receives a gold album for his
latest LP, “The Return Of Roger Miller.”
It was on this day, August 31, 1897, that
Thomas Edison received his patent for his Kinescope Camera!
Using celluloid film, invented by George
Eastman just eight years earlier, a film made using Edison’s new Camera was
projected for viewing by being threaded on rollers.
Viewers
would watch a very short film by looking through a small lens on top of Edison’s
Kinetoscope.
And Hollywood was born!
Well, maybe not quite at that moment.
To ensure the success of his films, Edison formed an alliance
with other industry patent holders to quash competition. Called the Motion
Picture Patents Company, the group inundated independent filmmakers with
copyright infringement lawsuits to ensure Edison’s iron grip over the industry.
Because Edison’s operations were based on the East Coast, his
sphere of influence was weaker in Western states such as California. This led
independent filmmakers to seek refuge out West, and many settled in a newly incorporated neighborhood of Los Angeles
called . . . Hollywood.
Edison’s legal team, however, continued to hound West Coast
producers until the 1915 Supreme Court ruled that Edison could no longer use
his patents to impede or disable rival moviemakers. With Edison’s monopoly
finally busted, the film industry began to thrive in its new Hollywood home.
It
didn’t take long for a young, handsome, dark-haired troubadour with an
forelock of hair dangling over his forehead and a snarling lip sneer by
the name of Ellis Wesley turn to acting and releasing a score of early
Hit Films including ~~~
>>>Also on 8/27, The Beatles attended a recording session for
The Byrds prior to heading out to visit Elvis Presley at his mansion in Beverly
Hills. Also on 8/27, charismatic Forgotten Hits founder Kent Kotal
turns 12.
I wish you had said you attended a Byrds concert before heading to meet Elvis, but.....
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, BUDDY!
Clark Besch
Now THAT would have been something ...
But probably would have been past my bedtime!!!
Thanks, Clark. (kk)
How can somebody as nice as you piss off a Giant Bunny?!
You must have been a real Joy at the Chicago Playboy Club! Or were you even old enough to get it then?!
When was that photo taken?
CB
{:~} !
Ha! Frannie asked me the same thing (regarding the date of the photo, not about any Playboy Bunny connection) ...
I figure my oldest daughter wouldn't have been any younger than 7 or 8, as this was taken at Great America ...
So I'm guessing right around 1993 (???) ... wow! 32 years ago! ... which would have made me 40 then (?!?!?)
OMG, where does the time go!!!
Actually, I think me and Wile E. BOTH look pretty good for our ages!!! (And all kidding aside ... has he got a boner?!?!?) kk
In more CURRENT Beatles news ... yep, 60 years later the whole world still anxiously awaits every new project ...
Noise 11 is reporting that there has been a real sense of
mixed reaction to the announcement of the new Beatles Anthology releases, much
of this feeling echoing what I voiced in my first commentary about this new
announcement the other day.
Sentiment ranges from:
“This is history completing
itself. To have all four Anthologies together finally feels like the circle
closing.”
“If anyone can make these tapes
shine, it’s Giles Martin. Hearing John’s voice in high-definition clarity is
spine-tingling.”
Excitement is also high for the
new 2025 remix of “Free as a Bird.” Fans say Lennon’s vocals sound warmer and
more intimate than ever before. “It’s like John is right there in the room with
us,” one listener said.
to:
Anthology 4 offers little
genuinely new material. With many of the “unreleased” tracks already available
in previous deluxe reissues of Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, The White Album, and
Abbey Road, some argue the release repackages content hardcore collectors already
own.
“Why would I pay hundreds for
music I already bought on the last five box sets?”They’re just reshuffling rarities and
slapping a new label on it.”
Others are annoyed at
exclusivity. As of now, Anthology 4 does not appear to be available separately,
meaning fans have to buy the full box to access the new material. That has left
some feeling priced out. “It’s unfair that the new songs are locked inside an
expensive set. Why not release it standalone like Anthology 1-3?” complained
one long-time fan.
Even the new mixes have drawn
criticism. A handful of fans prefer the ghostly, rough quality of the original
1995 Free as a Bird, describing the cleaned-up vocals as “too sterile.”
Finally, some argue that the
Beatles’ vaults have already been mined enough. “Let it rest,” one detractor
posted. “We don’t need a fourth Anthology.
The trilogy was perfect. This is
squeezing blood from a stone.”
Personally, I can remember a time when The Beatles
themselves promised the vaults would never be raided.They said that they released what they wanted the public to hear and that everything else remained unissued for a reason.Now it’s like open season on their outtakes.
Don’t get me wrong … I love hearing some of this stuff … and
have purchased numerous bootlegs over the years in order to do so.But I don’ think I should have to buy the
video series for a THIRD TIME (VHS, DVD and now a NEW DVD with the added hour) … nor
should I have to buy Anthology 1, 2 and 3 again just to get Anthology 4.(I’d be even MORE pissed if, in fact, I did
so, shelled out another $120, and then found out three months later they were
releasing Anthology 4 as a stand-alone piece after all!)
(As for me, I think I’m holding off till next year before purchasing
ANYTHING … I’ll watch the Disney+ Thanksgiving Special just to see what they’ve
come up with … but then hold off on buying Anthology 4 until I know for sure
that I can’t buy it alone.As mentioned
above, I have already spent the money for these deluxe box sets … do I really
want to buy all of this material again, just to get another half dozen “new”
surprises???)kk
A new promo clip DOES help to boost the excitement level ...
It was terrific to see you track
down Jay Siegel for an interview. I learned something about Jay’s album
career I wasn’t aware of!
Tom Cuddy
I have to agree with Glen
Fisher ...
I totally enjoyed the interview with Jay Siegel. Without Bowzer, I am
looking for other venues to see The Tokens and other doo-wop 60s groups.
Shelley
(pssst ... A Portrait of My Love
is still my favorite)
I would love to see Ron Onesti bring The Tokens back to The
Arcada Theatre … they went over very well here … and play in Chicago so rarely
that the fans would really appreciate the chance to see them.Some kind of package deal again would be
perfect.(Maybe we could even coax
Freddy Cannon into performing again … with Chubby Checker!!!)Man, what a show this could be!(kk)
And, speaking of The Tokens …
kk …
Just posted, one hour ago … CHAZZ
PALMINTERI ("BRONX TALE") SHOW.
LOTS of good stuff in this interview as well … The Tokens
never really stopped working … even if they weren’t making their own records
(or the records they WERE making weren’t becoming hits), they were producing
and writing music for other artists, as well as constantly doing studio work.(Jay Siegel, the harmony voice on Keith’s hit
“98.6?!?!?”That’s a new one on
me!!!)Definitely worth a listen.(And you even get to hear him sing a little
bit!) kk
A report stemming from an article published in London’s “Daily
Mail” states that Sting is reportedly being sued by his former The Police
bandmatesAndy Summers and Stewart Copeland over what “The Daily Mail”
describes as “millions of pounds in missing royalties.”
According to “The Daily Mail,” asource told “The Sun”
that “This has been coming for quite some time. Lawyers tried repeatedly to
reach an out-of-court settlement but hit a stalemate.Andy and Stewart decided there was no
alternative than court so pressed the button. They say they are owed millions
in lost royalties.”
The report goes on to say that Sting earns close to three
quarters of a million dollars every year just for the royalties to The Police’s
biggest hit, “Every Breath You Take.” However, these are songwriting royalties, and
the other two members of the band are not listed as songwriters on this
particular tune.(kk)
Just announced ... Little Anthony and the Imperials, December 14th, at The Des Plaines Theatre. Tickets are on sale now at oshows.com (kk)
And Dion, another guy who NEVER slows down, has a new album coming out in October ... it'll tie in with his new book, both titled "The Rock 'n' Roll Philosopher,"
We featured his video for "New York Minute" about a month ago ... and now he's released a new one for the track "I'm Your Gangster of Love," too. (You can check it out here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7YQvRfqMOo) Soundin' good, Dion! (kk)
We told you the other day that Beaver Brown / Eddie and the
Cruisers Sax Player “Tunes” Antunes had died.Here is the official announcement …
JOHN CAFFERTY AND THE
BEAVER BROWN BAND’S MICHAEL ANTUNES PASSES AT 85
Michael “Tunes” Antunes, the New
Bedford, Rhode Island native who went on to international success as
saxophonist with John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band, and whose music was
prominently featured in both of the Eddie and the Cruisers films,
has passed away.
Antunes died Tuesday, August 19,
just nine days after his 85th birthday and 10 days after his final performance
at the Narrows Center in Fall River. The band sung “Happy Birthday” to Antunes
during that final show.
Tunes was the only member of the
BBB to actually appear in the Eddie and the Cruisers movie.
Antunes continued to perform
with Cafferty and the BBB; most recently on Cafferty’s latest album The
Sound of Waves.
Cafferty posted on
Facebook: Our hearts are filled with so many emotions today. Love,
gratitude, respect, joy for our precious time together and sadness for our
gentle fond farewell. It will always be one of life’s true gifts to
have travelled the world over these many years within Tunes’ inner circle of
love and magic on this amazing musical journey we’ve been blessed
with.
Love Always & Forever
John Cafferty, Gary
Gramolini, Kenny Jo Silva, Jackie Santos, Dean Cassell, Steve Burke, Don Culp,
Mike Lebeau, Rich McMahon, Klem Klemik, Andrew Clark
Born in New Bedford, Antunes
began his performing career at age 13 while still attending Dartmouth High. He
came from a musical family, as his father Peter played upright bass, guitar and
Hammond organ throughout New England, and his grandfather Joaquim, an immigrant
from Cape Verde, played guitar and violin here once he came to America.
Antunes joined the Narragansett,
Rhode Island-based Beaver Brown Band in the 1970s, after more than a decade of
playing throughout the New England music scene.
The band went on to release two
singles in 1980, “Wild Summer Nights” and “Tender Years,” which got them the
job of providing music for the 1983 film Eddie and the Cruisers about a
legendary bar band whose lead singer is presumed dead after his car goes into a
river in the 1960s.
Both “Wild Summer Nights” and
“Tender Years” also appeared on the Eddie and the Cruisers soundtrack,
which went quadruple platinum thanks to repeated showings of the film on HBO.
Another song, “On the Dark Side,” peaked at No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100.
He played the Cruisers’ sax player, Wendell Newton. Even though his character
died of a drug overdose in the original film, Antunes reprised the role in the
1989 sequel, Eddie and the Cruisers II: Eddie Lives!
He also showed his Dartmouth
Indian pride to a national audience in 1985, when he wore a Dartmouth football
hat in the video for the Beaver Brown Band’s hit song “C-I-T-Y.”
Two of his sons are also
involved in the music industry; Kevin is the musical director and keyboardist
for Madonna, as well as the musical designer for the Michael Jackson ONE show
by Cirque du Soleil, and Matthew worked as the musical director for Tavares.
Another son Derek Antunes was
the original drummer for New Kids On the Block during their peak success years.
Forgotten Hits Readers have known for several years now that
LJ Cool has been trying to get the case of Buddy Holly’s fatal plane crash
reopened for nearly twenty years now … but just can’t get anyone to commit to
any further investigating.
His newest angle is that Buddy himself was the one flying
the plane!LJ has tons and tons of
documents that indicate that this very well may have been the case … and has
also incorporated this theory into his screenplay about these events.
He sent us this to share as a “teaser” for what he’s been
working on …
Be sure to check out the video at the end.(kk)
Kent -
I found this and thought it was pretty COOL!
{Though
NOT Historically correct nor accurate as to the weather ... there was
actually only a trace of snow by early morning 9:30 am. There was 6-miles visibility / ceiling 3,000 feet which is 10-Statue of Liberties stacked high}
on the early morning of February 3, 1959. The Pilot certification
requirements were VFR Only {This was a VFR 90 minute flight}. The
aircraft passenger seating arrangements were instructed by the owner, Jerry Dwyer. The FAA certification for the Dwyer Flying Service was VFR
Only.
What actually took place with the original passengers {Waylon
Jennings and Tommy Allsup, who switched back at their Surf Ballroom
performance} remains unclear. However, The FAA did not decertify The
Dwyer Flying Service following this accident and The Dwyer's Insurance
Company did not cancel them, as this was a VFR Flight February 3, 1959.
We know that there was no way that Buddy Holly's Texas pals and band mates {Waylon Jennings and Tommy Allsup} wanted to
get in another airplane with Buddy Holly, especially when Buddy always
demanded to fly the airplane. Buddy once offered that he could land an
airplane on the roof of a home.
{At
The Mason City, Iowa Airport on the early morning of February 3, 1959 , Buddy Holly manipulated his way into the front seating of the airplane
after being instructed by the owner, Jerry Dwyer, that he was to sit in the rear seating of the airplane.
There was no
further communication from the pilot, Roger Peterson, as required, as
they taxied, as they departed, as they leveled off at 800 feet, northwest
bound. This VFR Flight continued for 4.5 miles and became a 'Forced Landing' with the aircraft's Magneto Switch turned 3-steps to the OFF position and its landing gear retracted with landing light on.
Check it out ... As the video progress bar gets closer to 4:20 plus
Remembering Jack Nitzsche, who passed away on August 25, 2000.
Seen here walking on Sunset Strip with Tower Records bag with the Whisky A Go Go across the street. I stopped to thank him for signing my Hal Blaine book. 😎
Jim Roup
John Fogerty's Legacy Tour kicks off tonight in Niagara Falls ...
Then resumes again in three weeks in Lals Vegas at The iHeartRadio Music Festival.
Here's the complete tour list as of now ...
August 30th – Niagara Falls, ON – OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino
September 20th – Las Vegas, NV – iHeartRadio Music Festival
September 29th – Ciudad de Mexico, MX – Auditorio Nacional
October 1st – Highland, CA – Yaamava Casino
October 31st – Atlantic City, NJ – Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena
November 1st – Salem, VA – Salem Civic Center
November 3rd – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium
November 4th – Atlanta, GA – The Fox Theatre
November 5th – Durham, NC – Durham PAC
November 7th – Virginia Beach, VA – The Dome
November 8th – Bethlehem, PA – Wind Creek Bethlehemth
November 9th – Oxon Hill, MD – The Theater at MGM National Harbor
November 12th – Newark, NJ – New Jersey PAC
November 13th – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun
November 14th – Boston, MA – MGM Music Hall at Fenway
No Chicago date as of now ... but we'll see! (kk)
Actually, I think we did a great job here determining The Yardbirds' early US tour history ... and knocked Heritage Auctions off their
pedestal. This whole thing resembles a horse race with conflicting data
fighting for the lead and confirmed data relaxing and running neck and
neck. The only thing we don't have is a clear winner of facts. And that
is fine with me. The story flows and makes sense and does not always
need specific dates. It is filled with action!
Shelley
On 12/11/65 The Yardbirds did a Two-Fer .... a Saturday
afternoon show at the Arie Crown and then they drove to Rockford in a snow storm
for an evening show at the Rock River Roller Palace, with free bus
rides from downtown to the show. Jeff Beck was there.
And Chicago wasn't the only double-header they played. I found this relatively new
book, "The Yardbirds" by Peter Stanfield and, per the book, the Yardbirds
played a double header in Welsh just prior to departing for America and then, two nights later, played another
double header in America at the Arie Crown Theater in Chicago and then Rockford on
the same night, which would be December 11th 1965, the first night of
that tour.
Robert Campbell
Photos: Jeff Beck ... Keith Relf
I want to give a quick shout out to David Kent, who publishes the Australian Chart Books, which show the peak of every record to chart in Australia between 1940 and 1992. (albums and singles)
These books come in two separate volumes and are priced separately. They're very Whitburn-ish in nature, showing every artist and title for each charted single and album between these 50+ years ... VERY useful for the project I'm currently working on.
(There's actually a third volume available that'll take you thru 2009) kk
While researching these books, I discovered that The Ides Of March's 1966 single "You Wouldn't Listen" charted for one week at #99. Couldn't believe it ... or that distribution would have even taken it that far.
When I asked Jim Peterik "DIDJAKNOW?" he said:
Wow. Who new? The kangaroo! lol! 😂
Yup!! Cap’n rules. But Mr Green Jeans was my fave. Followed by Bunny Rabbit!
Rock on!!
Jimbo
Hey, I still maintain that Ray Rayner invented Post-It Notes!!! (kk)
Are any of you going to the New Colony Six show at The Arcada Theatre tomorrow evening???