This Day in Music History: Bruce Springsteen gets his first #1 album, Nirvana: MTV Unplugged in New York is released - WXPN | Vinyl At Heart
WXPN
Search
Donate
Menu

1894 – Billboard Advertising begins publication. Within a few years, it starts focusing on billboards for entertainment shows and drops “Advertising” from its name, and by the 1930s, it is covering radio and sales of a new medium: jukebox records.

1955 – R&B group The Famous Flames, led by James Brown, cut their first demo (of “Please, Please, Please”) at a radio station in Macon, Georgia. It leads to their contract deal with King Records.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09qbhwcpA6A

1959 – Ray Charles leaves his old label, Atlantic, for a better deal at ABC-Paramount Records.

1968 – George Harrison releases Wonderwall Music, thereby becoming the first member of The Beatles to release a solo album. The songs are mostly Harrison instrumentals featuring Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, and an unaccredited banjo contribution by Peter Tork of The Monkees.

1969 – Faces join Warner Brothers records.

1970 – ABBA, then known as the Festfolk Quartet, play their first-ever concert at a restaurant in Gothenburg, Sweden.

1980 – Bruce Springsteen scores his first US #1 album with The River.

1985 – The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) agrees to demands made by the Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC). As a result, any album deemed to contain offensive lyrics must be issued with a warning label, or the lyrics must be printed on the sleeve. Most record companies go with the labels, which don’t seem to hurt sales.

1994 – Nirvana releases MTV Unplugged in New York with two extra tracks that did not air on the television broadcast.

1996 – U2 sets up a video link to an internet site from their recording studio in Dublin so fans can watch them record their new album.

2000 – Ben Folds Five announces their breakup. Folds continues as a solo artist.

Information for this post was gathered from This Day in Music, The Music History Calendar, On This Day, and Wikipedia.

Related Content
View All Related Content

No news added recently