LISTEN TO BOOMTOWN RADIO! “ALL the Music That Matters for the Generation That Created Rock 'n' Roll”

Wednesday, 29 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 29th

1983: Stevie Nicks marries Kim Anderson, the former husband of a close friend who has passed away,  at her home in L.A. The marriage would last less than one year.

Commenting on the marriage, Nicks has said: “What was I thinking?”

Tuesday, 28 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 28th

1997: That paragon of 1950’s wholesomeness, Pat Boone releases an album of heavy metal music (!), No More Mr. Nice Guy. While most rock fans get the joke, the religious broadcaster Trinity Broadcasting Network does not. It fires Boone.

A little later, TBN would have an epiphany and Boone would be reinstated.

 

Monday, 27 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 27th

1968: Otis Redding’s “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay” is released six weeks after he died in a plane crash in Madison, Wisconsin. It would go on to become the first posthumous #1 record in American pop history.

Little known fact: Redding had intended to return to the studio and record lyrics in place of the whistling that closes the song.

Sunday, 26 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 26th

1963: A folk trio called the Rooftop Singers hits the top of the Billboard charts with their recording of “Walk Right In.” Turns out the song was written in 1930 and the composer, Gus Cannon, had been living in poverty until the royalty checks from this new recording starting rolling in.

Saturday, 25 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 25th

2013: Without offering any explanation, Tina Turner gives up her U.S. citizenship and becomes a citizen of Switzerland. It couldn’t be for tax reasons as Switzerland has a higher tax rate than the U.S.

Friday, 24 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 24th

1962: The Beatles sign a contract making Brian Epstein their manager. Epstein’s cut is a full 25% (meaning no one individual Beatle would be paid more than Epstein). Interestingly, Epstein himself never signed the contract.

Thursday, 23 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 23rd

1956: In an attempt to curtail the scourge known as rock ‘n’ roll, police in Cleveland, Ohio begin enforcing a 1931 law that prohibits kids under 18 from dancing in public unless accompanies by a parent or guardian.

Wednesday, 22 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 22nd

1959: Buddy Holly was in the studio for the last time. He recorded the vocals for "Slippin' and Slidin'", "Wait 'Til the Sun Shines Nellie", "Love Is Strange", "Dearest" and "Smokey Joe's Café."

Tuesday, 21 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 21st

A great day to be in the studio! Here are the rock classics recorded on this day:

1961: “Runaway” – Del Shannon

1964: “A World Without Love” – Peter & Gordon

1965: “Mr. Tambourine Man” – The Byrds

Monday, 20 January 2025 04:20

This Day in Rock History - Jan. 20th

1958: St. Louis radio station KWK decides rock & roll is finished. They give every rock record a “farewell spin” and then smash it live on the air. Station manager, Robert T. Convey calls the action "a simple weeding out of undesirable music."

No word on how long Mr. Convey remained employed at the station.

Page 100 of 153

Pop Up Player

Latest Posts–Movies & TV

  • The TV That Time Forgot: Annie Oakley
    There was a time when Westerns dominated television programming so thoroughly that it was tough (with no home video, no streaming, and just 3 networks if you lived in a city big enough to have…
  • The TV That Time Forgot: My Living Doll (1964-65)
    For a show that lasted only a single season, a surprising number of Baby Boomers remember the situation comedy My Living Doll. Perhaps that’s because once seen, Julie Newmar cannot easily be forgotten. The situation…
  • Alfred Hitchcock Presents
    While often lumped together with “The Twilight Zone” and “Boris Karloff’s Thriller,” “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” is the true original, debuting 4 years before TZ and 5 before “Thriller.” Alfred Hitchcock’s show was also different than…
  • The TV That Time Forgot: The Donna Reed Show
    For 8 seasons, The Donna Reed Show provided Baby Boomers with a sort of Mother Knows Best amid a ton of family sitcoms focused on the father. Cast as Donna Stone, Donna presided over a…
  • Friday Night at the Drive-In: Lover Come Back (1961)
    Sequels & remakes? Nothing new here – Hollywood’s been recycling stuff ever since the first “magic lantern shows.” Want proof? Let’s settle in to watch one of those terribly puritanical “sex comedies” from the Sixties…
  • The TV That Time Forgot: The Millionaire
    Boy! Could we use a show like this in real life! From 1955 to 1960, for 5 seasons an eccentric millionaire would give away $1 million to somebody he never even met. We were allowed…