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1945 - Davy Jones
English singer-songwriter, musician and actor Davy Jones. With The Monkees he had the 1967 UK & US No.1 single 'I'm A Believer' plus 10 US & 8 UK Top 40 singles. His television acting debut was on the British television soap opera Coronation Street when he portrayed Colin Lomax, Ena Sharples' grandson. In addition to his career as an entertainer, Jones' other great love was horses. Having trained as a jockey in his teens in the UK, he had at first intended to pursue a career as a professional race jockey. Jones died on 29 February 2012 of a severe heart attack due to atherosclerosis.
On This Day With the Beatles Group or Individuals
1999 - George Harrison
George Harrison and his wife Olivia were attacked when an intruder broke into their home in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire. Olivia beat off the attacker with a poker and heavy lamp. Harrison who was stabbed in the chest was admitted to hospital and treated for a collapsed lung and various minor stab wounds. His wife, Olivia, was treated for cuts and bruises she had suffered in the struggle with the intruder. Police later arrested Michael Abram from Liverpool who had nursed an irrational obsession with The Beatles.
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December 27, 1983 — Walter Scott, lead singer of Bob Kuban & The In-Men, is shot to death by his second wife's lover, an eerily coincidental followup to the group's 1966 hit "The Cheater." His body is discovered four years later floating face down in cistern in a St. Louis, Missouri, suburb.
December 28, 1983 — Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson, the only surfer in the group, drowns during a dive off a boat slip into frigid water in Marina Del Rey, California, after drinking heavily earlier in the day.
December 29, 1902 — Scott Joplin's most famous song, "The Entertainer," is copyrighted. It's an early Joplin rag, and although he did not invent ragtime, a 2019 New York Times appreciation called his style "a combination of jumpy timing and sweet-sounding piano work." It said, "Joplin mixed a European classic sensibility with black folkloric music" — a blend that would lead to jazz, boogie woogie, swing, rhythm and blues, and rock 'n' roll.
December 30, 1950 — The Dominoes record their monster hit "Sixty-Minute Man," spending 14 weeks at #1 R&B in 1951 and reaching #17 pop — the first significant R&B record to crossover. The disc also marks one of the first times gospel-trained singers found success singing R&B, according to Charlie Gillett’s book The Sound of the City: The Rise of Rock and Roll. Larry Birnbaum's Before Elvis: The Prehistory of Rock ’n’ Roll cites the raunchy tune as unleashing a wave of racy material.
December 31, 1961 — The Beach Boys perform professionally for the first time under that name at a Ritchie Valens Memorial Dance in Long Beach, California.
1985 — Rick Nelson dies in an airplane crash near DeKalb, Texas.
January 1, 1953 — Country music star Hank Williams (right), a hillbilly boogie influence on many later rockers, dies of heart failure at age 29 in the back seat of a chauffeured limousine enroute to a New Year's Day concert in Canton, Ohio.
1959 — Johnny Cash performs at San Quentin prison in San Rafael, California to an audience that includes Merle Haggard, who is serving time for burglary.
1962 — The Beatles audition for Decca Records, which rejects them and instead signs The Tremeloes ("Silence Is Golden"). According to a 1964 autobiography by Fab Four manager Brian Epstein, the label explained that "Guitar groups are on their way out."
Sources:
Eight Days a Week (Ron Smith)
On This Day in Black Music History (Jay Warner)
Chronology of American Popular Music, 1900-2000 (Frank Hoffman)
calendar.songfacts.com
onthisday.com/music
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Sixty Minute Man
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A Song That Shocked 1951
Released in May 1951 on Federal Records, “Sixty Minute Man” was written by Billy Ward and Rose Marks. At a time when mainstream pop was still dominated by crooners and sanitized lyrics, this record arrived like a lightning bolt—raw, rhythmic, and boldly sexual.
The song’s narrator, “Lovin’ Dan,” brags about his stamina and prowess. That kind of lyrical content was unheard of on pop radio, but it resonated deeply in the R&B market.
Why It Was Historically Important
⭐ 1. One of the first R&B songs to cross over to the pop charts
It hit #1 on the R&B chart for 14 weeks and even reached the pop charts—an extraordinary feat for a Black vocal group in 1951.
⭐ 2. A blueprint for rock and roll
Music historians consistently cite it as one of the recordings that helped shape early rock and roll. Its driving beat, vocal swagger, and risqué lyrics pointed directly toward what rock would become.
⭐ 3. One of the earliest “double‑entendre” hits
The song’s sexual humor and innuendo were part of a long blues tradition, but this was one of the first times such content broke into mainstream awareness.
⭐ 4. A massive influence on later R&B and doo‑wop
Its success inspired a wave of “answer songs,” including:
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“Can’t Do Sixty No More” – The Du-Droppers (1952)
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“Don’t Stop, Dan” – The Checkers (1954)
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“The Hatchet Man” – The Robins (1954)
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The Dominoes: A Powerhouse Group
The Dominoes were led by the brilliant but notoriously strict bandleader Billy Ward, with a lineup that included:
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Clyde McPhatter – who later founded The Drifters
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Bill Brown – who sings lead on “Sixty Minute Man”
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Charlie White
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