Happy New Year January 13 2026
This Month Sunrise Radio Spotlights the Philly Sound Record Label Cameo/Parkway
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1963 - The Beatles
The Beatles recorded a TV appearance on the ABC Television program "Thank Your Lucky Stars" in Birmingham playing their new single, 'Please Please Me' The show was broadcast on January 19.
2010 - The Beatles
A plaque of The Beatles iconic yellow submarine, which was stolen six months ago from Liverpool's Albert Dock, was set to be replaced by a new creation. The 5ft (1.5m) design featured the faces of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison peering through its portholes. The new submarine would hang outside the museum dedicated to the band, The Beatles Story.
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Music News For The Week
January 10, 1956 — Elvis Presley's first RCA Victor recording session is held in Nashville, Tennessee, two days after his 21st birthday and includes his initial #1 hit, "Heartbreak Hotel."
1980 — Little Richard sings at the funeral of Larry Williams (right) ("Short Fat Fannie," "Bony Maronie," "Dizzy Miss Lizzy"), who had replaced him at Specialty Records in 1957 when he entered the ministry. Williams, a cousin of R&B star Lloyd Price, had died four days earlier of a gunshot wound to the head, deemed a suicide.
January 11, 1963 — The Whiskey-a-Go-Go nightclub, where Johnny Rivers records several of his hits, opens in West Hollywood, California.
January 12, 1959 — Berry Gordy, who had a hit as a songwriter in 1958 with "Lonely Teardrops" by Jackie Wilson, launches the Tamla Record Company with $800 he borrowed from his family. The first record he issues is "Come To Me" by Marv Johnson (Billboard #6 R&B, #30 Hot 100). A year later, he changes the label's name to Motown.
January 13, 1962 — "The Twist" by Chubby Checker returns to #1 in the U.S. sixteen months after holding that position for one week in September, 1960. It is the only rock record by a single artist to achieve that status. This time, it stays at the top for two weeks.
January 14, 1955 — Alan Freed holds his first New York City rock 'n' roll concert at a boxing arena after local ballrooms turned him down because of previous events where youth audiences had rioted. The program includes the Clovers, Drifters, Harp tones, Moonglows, Fats Domino, and others who perform to a swaying, but well-behaved sellout crowd estimated at 12,000, nearly split evenly between black and white teens.
January 15, 1928 — Blues great and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Howlin' Wolf (left, ca. 1951) plays his first gig at age 17 around Ruleville, Mississippi before moving to West Memphis, Tennessee in 1948 and Chicago in 1952, where his electric guitar blues helped shape rock.
1961 — A Detroit teen girl group called the Primettes signs with Motown Records after agreeing to change their name to the Supremes at the insistence of label owner Berry Gordy. He had turned them down before, but with persistence and a record on another local label behind them, they had worked their way into Motown's Hitsville U.S.A. studios as background performers, eventually recording demos with Smokey Robinson until Gordy relented and offered them a contract.
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
Spinning Those Records
Vault Vinyl and Stories behind the songs
Chubby Checker’s breakout hit “The Twist” didn’t just launch a dance craze—it reshaped pop culture. Born Ernest Evans, he got his stage name from a playful riff on Fats Domino, and his 1960 cover of Hank Ballard’s song became the first single to hit No. 1 twice, sparking a nationwide movement.
🕺 The Twist: A Cultural Earthquake
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Originally written by Hank Ballard, “The Twist” was re-recorded by Chubby Checker in 1960 at the urging of Dick Clark, who saw its potential for TV-friendly appeal.
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Checker’s version hit No. 1 twice—first in 1960, then again in 1962—making it the only song to top the Billboard Hot 100 in two separate runs.
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The dance was simple, accessible, and wildly popular, leading to a wave of Twist-themed songs and dances like the Pony, Limbo, and Fly.
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Checker’s success helped democratize dance music, making it less about couples and more about individual expression.
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How He Got the Name “Chubby Checker”
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Born Ernest Evans in Spring Gully, South Carolina, and raised in Philadelphia.
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While working at a poultry shop, Evans did impressions of Fats Domino for customers.
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When he recorded a novelty record for Dick Clark, Clark’s wife jokingly dubbed him “Chubby Checker”—a pun on Fats Domino (fat → chubby, domino → checker).
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The name stuck, and so did the persona: Checker became synonymous with danceable rock and roll.
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Chubby's first recording The Class
How He Got the Name “Chubby Checker”
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Born Ernest Evans in Spring Gully, South Carolina, and raised in Philadelphia.
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While working at a poultry shop, Evans did impressions of Fats Domino for customers.
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When he recorded a novelty record for Dick Clark, Clark’s wife jokingly dubbed him “Chubby Checker”—a pun on Fats Domino (fat → chubby, domino → checker).
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The name stuck, and so did the persona: Checker became synonymous with danceable rock and roll.
Why it matters historically
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“The Class” charted nationally in early 1959, giving Chubby his first exposure.
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Its success convinced Cameo‑Parkway to keep working with him — which directly led to “The Twist” a year later.
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Without this novelty single, the Twist phenomenon might never have happened.
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