This Day in Rock History - Jan. 16th
1957: The Cavern Club, a dingy little basement venue, opens its doors for the first time in Liverpool. It opens as a jazz club, but within just a few months it shifts to rock & roll. Within 7 months, a young band named The Quarrymen will play their first gig at the club.
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 15th
1976: The Eagles announce that they will be replacing Bernie Leadon, who left the group, with a singer/songwriter/guitarist from the James Gang, Joe Walsh.
Most “experts” predict the move will end in disaster.
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 14th
1966: Young British singer, David Jones legally changes his name to David Bowie because his real name has already gotten famous thanks to Davy Jones of the Monkees.
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 13th
1968: Columbia Records urged him not to do it, but Johnny Cash went ahead anyway. On this day, the man in black played a live show for the inmates at Folsom State Prison. He also recorded the event.
Live at Folsom Prison went on to become a triple platinum success while “Folsom Prison Blues” from that album went to #1 on the Country charts and #13 on the pop charts.
Rolling Stone magazine named it #88 on its list of “The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.”
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 12th
1959: Barry Gordy borrows $500 from his relatives and on this day rents an 8-room house on 2648 W. Grand Boulevard in Detroit. His intention is to use the house as the home base for a new business he’s starting – a record company called Motown.
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 11th
1964: That peon to garage rock, the song every local band in America knew & played in the middle 60’s, “Louie Louie” by the Kingsmen reaches #1 on the charts. Some local stations had banned the song because it was supposed to have dirty lyrics. That only made the record more popular. (And no, the lyrics may be mumbled, but they aren’t dirty.)
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 10th
1956: Elvis Presley holds his first recording session for his new label, RCA Victor. Drummer D.J. Fontana, guitarist Chet Atkins and keyboard player Floyd Cramer provide the backing. One of the songs recorded that day, “Heartbreak Hotel,” will become the song that catapults Elvis to national prominence.
The TV That Time Forgot: Bachelor Father
Shows come and go so fast. For every I Love Lucy or Andy Griffith Show, there are hundreds that have vanished from the pop culture landscape. How many of these do you remember?
Bachelor Father
In TV-land, millionaires came in two flavors: the crusty old guy with a bushy white mustache (think Mr. Moneybags from the Monopoly game) and handsome, dashing playboys.
Bachelor Father featured this second flavor and served as the launching pad for one of TV’s most durable actors, John Forsythe.
Before Dynasty and Charlie’s Angels, Forsythe was best known for playing Bentley Gregg, a wealthy L.A. attorney who somehow was raising his orphaned teenage niece, Kelly (played by the far less famous Noreen Corcoran).
What was very weird (besides child services not at all concerned with the endless parade of one night stands through the Gregg household) was that, according to the premise of the show, Kelly lost both her parents in a tragic accident just months before the show's first season. Yet, she never showed the slightest signs of grief and, on more than one occasion, showed some sexual designs on her uncle/guardian (yeah, ultra-creepy).
Typical shows revolved around one of two plots. Either Kelly had gotten herself into some kind of wholesome trouble that she didn’t want her uncle to find out about. Or Kelly was screening many of the women Bentley was dating to see if they would be suitable marriage material (although Forsythe’s character never showed the slightest interest in matrimony).
Whitney Blake (who co-starred in Hazel and created the very successful sit-com One Day at a Time) and Barbara Eden (who went on to a long, successful career in movies & TV, best remembered for playing the title role in I Dream of Jeannie) appeared as women who were dating Bentley.
Linda Evans (who would play Forsythe’s wife on Dynasty) appeared as one of Kelly’s teen-age friends!
The show also featured another staple of the era: the domestic aide, played by a member of a minority group. On Bachelor Father, that would be Bentley’s cook and valet, Peter, played by Sammy Tong. Tong had been a successful stand-up and had great comic timing. His interactions with Forsythe created some of the show’s best laughs.
Bachelor Father lasted 5 seasons beginning in 1957, but was unique in that it aired on all three major networks. The first two seasons were broadcast on CBS, seasons 3 and 4 appeared on NBC and the fifth and final season was on ABC.It was successful in syndication, but as it was produced in black & white, disappeared from TV when color took over.
Noreen Corcoran’s career fell off rapidly once Bachelor Father left the air. In 1966, she gave up acting and instead focused on working behind the scenes in dance and theater arts. Currently retired, Noreen never married but did maintain a lifelong friendship with Forsythe, whom she considered her professional mentor. So he was sort of a bachelor stage father to her.
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 9th
1979: An all-star concert benefiting UNICEF takes place in New York City’s Madison Square Garden. Headlining the venue are the Bee Gees, ABBA, Rod Stewart, Donna Summer, Olivia Newton-John, and Earth, Wind & Fire.
This Day in Rock History - Jan. 8th
Happy Birthday to the King and the Thin White Duke
1935: Elvis Presley
1947: David Bowie
Also born today:
1946: Robby Krieger (The Doors)
1947: Terry Sylvester (The Hollies)
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