ON THIS DAY in 1912
at 11.40 pm, two young wireless radio operators at Cape Race, Newfoundland, Robert Hunston and James Goodwin heard the first distress call from the luxury liner RMS Titanic, en route to New York south of the Grand Banks. An iceberg had grazed the ship’s side, popping iron rivets and shearing off a fatal number of hull plates below the waterline. The great ship, on its maiden voyage, sank just under three hours later. 1,517 passengers were lost at sea.
In 1922, Jeanette Vreeland sang the first radio concert from an airplane as she flew over New York City.
In 1925, the Chicago Cubs broadcast a regular season baseball game for the first time on radio station WGN Chicago. The Cubs beat Pittsburgh 8-2.
In 1930, Robert Ripley overcame his shyness and a stutter to host the first of his Believe It Or Not radio programs on NBC, about strange and freakish facts. The show would intrigue listeners on various networks for the next 18 years, and continues even today on TV.
In 1941, the elegant cabaret singer Hildegarde recorded the standard “Darling Je Vous Aime Beaucoup” on Decca Records. It took another 14 years, but Nat ‘King’ Cole turned the song into an even bigger hit, landing at number 7 on the pop music charts.
In 1942, the wildly popular Detroit radio priest, Father Charles E. Coughlin was censured for a pattern of anti-Semitism.
In 1951, radio station CHWK Chilliwack moved from 1340 khz to 1230, the frequency vacated by CKNW two years earlier. By 1953, CHWK had arrived at its longtime home at 1270 khz.
In 1955, Fats Domino‘s “Ain’t It A Shame” was released on Imperial Records.
While this was the first single to crossover from R&B to the pop charts, it was Pat Boone‘s cover version (Ain’t THAT a Shame) that made it to number one.
In 1956, Ampex Corporation of Redwood City, Calif. demonstrated the first commercial magnetic tape recorder for sound and picture. The videotape machine had a price tag of $75,000. These early Ampex units were too large to fit in a small room. That’s back when bigger was better.
Also in 1956, in a Nashville studio Elvis Presley recorded his second single for RCA Victor, “I Want You, I Need You, I Love You.”
Still in 1956, singer Bobby Helms auditioned for Decca Records and was signed on the spot. His first recording session was in Nashville 11 days later.
In 1958, piano virtuoso Van Cliburn appeared on US national TV for the first time. He was a guest on NBC’s “The Tonight Show” with host Jack Paar.
Also in 1958, little Laurie London reached the top spot on the music charts with “He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands”. The same day “Catch A Falling Star” by Perry Como became the first single certified as gold by the Recording Industry Association of America.
In 1959, the No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit was “Come Softly to Me,” by The Fleetwoods.
In 1960, Lloyd Price recorded his future R&B Top Ten hit “Question.”
In 1961, Sam Cooke recorded his next Top 10 single “Cupid” in RCA Victor’s Hollywood Studio 1.
In 1962, Bob Dylan recorded seven songs, including “Blowin’ In The Wind,” at the Columbia Records studios in New York.
In 1963, the Beatles met the Rolling Stones after a Stones concert in Richmond, England.
In 1964, Motown released a duet record featuring Mary Wells and Marvin Gaye. Both sides — “What’s the Matter With You Baby” and “Once Upon a Time” — became hits. Wells later said Motown used her name to bolster Gaye’s standing with the pop audience.
In 1965, Millie Small appeared on ABC-TV’s “Shindig!” and performed her ska hit “My Boy Lollipop.”
In 1967, Herman’s Hermits, featuring lead singer Peter Noone, went gold with the single, “There’s a Kind of Hush.” It was a two-sided hit, with the flip-side, “No Milk Today,” also receiving considerable play.
Also in 1967, Atco Records released The Bee Gees‘ first single, “New York Mining Disaster 1941,” with a promotional slogan heralding them as “The most significant talent since the Beatles.” In fact rumours abounded that they were indeed the Beatles, and that “Bee Gees” stood for “Beatles Group.”
In 1969, the musical “Oliver!” was named Best Picture at the Academy Awards, with the only-ever tie for Best Actress shared by Katherine Hepburn and Barbra Streisand.
Also in 1969, The Beatles‘ song “The Ballad Of John and Yoko” was recorded by Paul McCartney and John Lennon. With the other two Beatles unavailable Paul played bass, drums and piano; John played guitars and sang the lead vocal.
Still in 1969, The Monkees‘ TV special, “33 and one-third Revolutions per Monkee,” aired on NBC. The plot featured rock musicians Brian Auger and Julie Driscoll as mad scientists looking for something to rot the minds of young people.
Again in 1969, RCA Victor released the single that would spur Elvis Presley‘s comeback, “In the Ghetto.” Peaking at #3, it became his first Top 10 hit in over five years. In 1970, Stephen Stills broke his wrist in a car accident, resulting in the cancellation of a U-S tour by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. Stills smashed into a parked vehicle while looking at a police cruiser in his rear-view mirror..
In 1971, the Illinois Crime Commission issued a list of records it considered to be “drug-oriented” including “White Rabbit” by Jefferson Airplane, “A Whiter Shade Of Pale” by Procol Harum, and The Beatles’ “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds.”
In 1974, the No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit was “TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia),” by MFSB featuring the Three Degrees. The song is the theme to the TV program “Soul Train.”
In 1975, after a long audition process during the recording of their album “Black and Blue,” and after many rumors about who would fill the position, The Rolling Stones announced that former Faces member Ron Wood would be their new guitarist, replacing the departed Mick Taylor.
In 1976, Motown Records announced a 13 million-dollar contract renewal for Stevie Wonder. At the time, it was the largest contract ever negotiated.
In 1978, CBS-TV aired the Johnny Cash special “Spring Fever” in prime time, with guests Waylon Jennings, June Carter Cash, Rosanne Cash, Jessi Colter and Ray Charles.
In 1980, the No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit was “Call Me” by Blondie. Billboard ranked the song as the No. 1 single of the year.
Again in 1980, Bruce Springsteen‘s “Born to Run” was named New Jersey’s official song.
Also on this date in 1980, the first rock videocassette, a concert by Gary Numan, was released.
In 1980, Olivia Newton John‘s TV special “Olivia’s Hollywood Nights” aired on ABC, just before the annual Oscars telecast. Guests included Elton John, Gene Kelly, the Carpenters, Ted Knight and Andy Gibb.
In 1983, Pete Farndon, bass guitarist with the rock group, the Pretenders, drowned in his bathtub at his home in England, after overdosing on heroin. He was aged 30.
In 1984, Michael Jackson made a six-figure contribution to establish a 19-bed cancer research unit at a New York hospital.
In 1989, former Byrds Roger McGuinn, David Crosby and Chris Hillman filed suit in Tampa to prevent Michael Clarke from using the band’s name. Clarke was the Byrds’ original drummer. But the suit claimed Clarke did not contribute to the group’s distinctive sound, and accused him of false advertising and deceptive trade practices.
Also on this date in 1989, Nova Scotia singer Rita MacNeil made her U-S concert debut in Boston. The show, at the 12-hundred-seat Berklee Performance Centre, was a near sell-out, with the audience giving her three standing ovations.
Still on this date in 1989, the second World Music Video Awards were telecast live via satellite from Toronto, New York, London, Munich, Moscow, Hong Kong and Australia. The show reached an estimated 750 million viewers in more than 50 countries. For the first time, the broadcast was seen throughout the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries.
In 1990, rhythm-and-blues singer Thurston Harris suffered a fatal heart attack in Pomona, California at age 58. His only major hit, and still a favourite oldie, was “Little Bitty Pretty One,” which reached #6 in 1957.
In 1992, pianist Sammy Price, known as the “King of Boogie Woogie,” died at his Harlem home at age 83. During his seven-decade career, Price played with such jazz and rhythm-and-blues giants as Sidney Bechet, Lester Young and King Curtis.
In 1993, Joan Baez performed for 700 people in the war-torn Bosnian capital of Sarajevo. Many fans wept as Baez sang “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” and John Lennon’s anti-war song, “Imagine.” The applause helped drown out the gunfire and sporadic shelling that continued throughout the concert.
In 1994, Ted Turner launched “Turner Classic Movies” as a cable TV channel on the exact centennial anniversary of the first public movie showing in New York City.
Also in 1994, drummer Paul Hester abruptly quit Crowded House following an Atlanta concert by the Australian group. Hester cited the grind of touring, and said he felt himself drifting away from fellow band members Neil Finn and Nick Seymour. He also complained that his song “Skin Feeling” was only grudgingly included on Crowded House’s album “Together Alone.” Hester committed suicide on March 26th, 2005 in Australia.
In 1995, Burl Ives, whom poet Carl Sandburg once called “the mightiest ballad singer of this or any other century,” succumbed to oral cancer at his home in Anacortes, Washington. He was 85. Ives’ folk hits in the ’50s and ’60s included “The Blue Tail Fly,” “Little Bitty Tear,” “Funny Way of Laughin’” and “Holly, Jolly Christmas.” He also gained fame as an actor, winning an Oscar in 1958 for his supporting role in “The Big Country.” But he was best known for his stage and screen portrayals of “Big Daddy” in Tennessee Williams’ “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.”
In 1997, Ringo Starr debuted as the host of the VH1 program “Classic Albums.”
In 1999, British entertainer Anthony Newley, best known for his 1960s stage hit “Stop the World — I Want to Get Off,” lost his battle with renal cancer at his home in Florida. He was 67. Newley’s showcase song in “Stop the World” was “What Kind of Fool Am I?” He also co-wrote the show’s score, as well as “The Candy Man” for Sammy Davis Junior and the James Bond movie theme “Goldfinger” for Shirley Bassey.
Also in 1999, actress Ellen Corby, who played Grandma on CBS-TV’s The Waltons, died following multiple strokes at age 87.
Again in 1999, TV announcer/host Bill Wendell (The Late Show with David Latterman, To Tell The Truth, Sale of the Century, Tic Tac Dough) died of cancer at age 75.
Still in 1999, the body of Tammy Wynette was exhumed and an autopsy performed in Nashville at the request of Wynette’s husband George Richey.
Once more in 1999, it was reported that Prince intended to re-record the entire catalog of his music and re-release it.
In 2002, B-C-based artists won three trophies each at the Juno Awards in St. John’s, Newfoundland. Nanaimo’s Diana Krall won for best artist, and best album and vocal jazz album for “The Look of Love.” Vancouver rock group Nickelback won best group, best single for “How You Remind Me,” and top rock album for “Silver Side Up.”
In 2003, former “American Bandstand” host and media mogul Dick Clark revealed that since 1994 he had been suffering with Type 2 diabetes, but he’d revealed it only to close friends and family.
In 2004, Dolly Parton received the Living Legend award from the U.S. Library Of Congress.
In 2005, singer/songwriter/guitarist Steve Jablecki of Wadsworth Mansion (Sweet Mary) died at the age of 59.
In 2007, crooner Don Ho died of heart failure in Hawaii at age 76. Don Ho had entertained tourists for decades wearing raspberry-tinted sunglasses and singing his signature song Tiny Bubbles.
In 2009, former Beatle George Harrison was honored with a posthumous star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame outside the Capitol Records building.
In 2010, the Ozzy Osbourne song “Let Me Hear You Scream” was heard on the soundtrack of the CBS TV procedural CSI: New York. The song was played in a scene depicting a prison riot.
In 2011, a UK actor who became known in North America with his roles in the popular TV ‘Britcoms,’ “Last of the Summer Wine” and “Are You Being Served?”, Trevor Bannister suffered a fatal heart attack at age 76.
In 2012, Guns N’ Roses, Red Hot Chili Peppers and the Small Faces/Faces were inducted into the Rock N’ Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland.
In 2013, former actress Christine White, who co-starred in the 1960’s TV series “Ichabod and Me,” and played William Shatner’s wife in the famed “Twilight Zone” story “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet,” died in a D.C. nursing home at age 86.
Also in 2013, Justin Bieber caused outrage after writing a message in a guestbook at the Anne Frank Museum, which stated he hoped the Holocaust victim would have been a fan. The 19-year-old wrote: “Truly inspiring to be able to come here. Anne was a great girl. Hopefully she would have been a belieber.” It provoked fierce online criticism of the Canadian singer, who was in Amsterdam as part of a tour.
In 2015, soul singer Percy Sledge, the rock & roll Hall of Famer who belted out “When a Man Loves a Woman,” lost his battle with liver cancer at age 74.
In 2016, Prince played what turned out to be his last show. It was at Atlanta’s Fox Theatre. He passed away a week later (4/21).
In 2017, Bruce Langhorne, a folk musician and prolific session guitarist who Bob Dylan said inspired him to write “Mr. Tambourine Man,” died of kidney failure at age 78. He played or recorded with some of the most admired musicians of the 1960s — Dylan, Joan Baez, Odetta, Tom Rush, Richie Havens, etc.
In 2018, guitarist Richie Sambora rejoined Bon Jovi on stage at the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame induction ceremony in Cleveland, Sambora’s first appearance with the band in five years.
In 2019, acclaimed Swedish actress Bibi Andersson, who split her extensive career between the big and small screens, died at age 83.
Today’s Birthdays
Country singer Loretta Lynn is 91.
Actress Julie Christie (Separate Tables ’83) is 81.
Guitarist Ritchie Blackmore is 77.
Actor John Shea (Agent X, Gossip Girl, Lois and Clark, Mutant X) is 73.
Actor Chris Ellis (Sequestered) is 66.
Montreal-born actor Lothaire Bluteau (Vikings, The Tudors, 24) is 66.
Actor Peter Capaldi (Doctor Who, The Musketeers) is 64.
Actor John D’Aquino (Cory in the House, JAG, Seaquest 2032) is 64.
Actor Brad Garrett (Single Parents, How to Live With Your Parents, Everybody Loves Raymond, Till Death) is 62.
Actor Robert Carlyle (Once Upon a Time, SGU Stargate Universe) is 61.
Singer-guitarist John Bell of Widespread Panic is 60.
Actor Bob Glendenin (Cougar Town, Scrubs, 10 Items or Less) is 58.
Actress Gina McKee (The Borgias) is 58.
Actress Catherine Dent (The Shield) is 57.
Actor Lloyd Owen (You, Me & the Apocalpyse) is 56.
Hamilton-born actor Jaimz Woolvett (Deadly Betrayal: the Bruce Curtis Story, Joan of Arc) is 55.
Drummer Barrett Martin (Screaming Trees) is 55.
Actor Anthony Michael Hall (Dead Zone, Awkward) is 54.
Reality television personality Heather Thomson (The Real Housewives of New York City) is 52.
Actor Adrien Brody (Houdini, Bullet Hearts, Sat. Night Live) is 49.
Actor Langley Kirkwood (The Catch, Dominion, Banshee) is 49.
Singer David Miller of Il Divo is 49.
Rapper Da Brat is 48.
Actor Antwon Tanner (One Tree Hill) is 47.
Pro wrestler/actress Amy Dumas (WWE Raw, WWE Smackdown) is 47.
N.Y. Knicks sportscaster/”Today Show” fashion reporter Jill Martin is 46.
Actress Simone McAullay (Broadchurch) is 46.
Television judge Georgina Chapman (Project Runway All Stars) is 46.
Actress Sarah Michelle Gellar (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) is 45.
Actor/writer Rob McElhenney (It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia) is 45.
Actress Claire Coffee {Grimm, General Hospital) is 42.
Actress Natalie Knepp (Z: The Beginning of Everything, Old Friends) is 39.
Actor Chris Wood (Supergirl, The Vampire Diaries, Containment) is 34.
Ontario-born actor Adam DiMarco (The Magicians, Arctic Air) is 32.
Actor Nick Krause (Parenthood, Hollywood Heights) is 30.
Actress Vivien Cardone (Everwood, One Life to Live) is 29.
Model Josephine Skriver (The Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show) is 29.
Actor Graham Phillips (The Good Wife) is 29.
Ontario-born actor Adam DiMarco (Arctic Air) is 28.
Actress Skylar Samuels (Scream Queens, The Nine Lives of Chloe King, The Gates is 28.
Actress Abigail Breslin (Grey’s Anatomy, Ghost Whisperer) is 26.
Chart Toppers – April 14
1944
It’s Love, Love, Love – The Guy Lombardo Orchestra (vocal: Skip Nelson)
I Love You – Bing Crosby
Besame Mucho – The Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra (vocal: Bob Eberly & Kitty Kallen
Too Late to Worry, Too Blue to Cry – Al Dexter
1953
I Believe – Frankie Laine
Doggie in the Window – Patti Page
Till I Waltz Again with You – Teresa Brewer
Your Cheatin’ Heart – Hank Williams
1962
Johnny Angel – Shelley Fabares
Good Luck Charm – Elvis Presley
Slow Twistin’ – Chubby Checker
She’s Got You – Patsy Cline
1971
Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me) – The Temptations
What’s Going On – Marvin Gaye
Joy to the World – Three Dog Night
Empty Arms – Sonny James
1980
Another Brick in the Wall – Pink Floyd
Call Me – Blondie
Ride like the Wind – Christopher Cross
Honky Tonk Blues – Charley Pride
1989
The Look – Roxette
She Drives Me Crazy – Fine Young Cannibals
Like a Prayer – Madonna
I’m No Stranger to the Rain – Keith Whitley
1998
Frozen – Madonna
All My Life – K-Ci & JoJo
Kiss the Rain – Billie Myers
Perfect Love – Trisha Yearwood
2007
The Sweet Escape – Gwen Stefani featuring Akon
Cupid’s Chokehold – Gym Class Heroes
Don’t Matter – Akon
Last Dollar (Fly Away) – Tim McGraw
Today in Broadcast History compiled by Ron Robinson