• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
    • RadioThon
  • App
    • App Help
    • App – English
    • App -Spanish
    • App – French
    • App – German
    • App – Portuguese
    • App Promo Codes
  • Music
    • Acid Flashback – Streaming Internet Radio
    • Today in Rock History
    • Guest DJ’s
    • Interviews
    • Psychedelic Time Warp
    • The Jukebox Series from Eric Berman
    • Song of the Day
    • 3D RadioActivity
    • Vinyl Schminyl Radio
    • Zecom Radio – The Choice
    • Zecom Radio – GEMZ
  • Sports
    • SportsTwitter.net
    • SportsAudio.net Archives
  • Home Improvement USA Radio
  • Entertainment
    • Podcasts
  • About Us
    • Contact Information
    • Media Kit
    • My Radio Journey and the Story of InternetFM
    • Steven Leventhal
    • Radio Station Submission
    • Affiliate Station Information
    • Press Releases
    • Business Services
    • Email Sign Ups
    • Paid Content Guidelines
InternetFM

InternetFM

Hand Curated Radio

You are here: Home / Music / Today in Rock History – December 14

Today in Rock History – December 14

December 14, 2022 by Mitch Michaels

1967, Rolling Stones guitarist Brian Jones was rushed to St Georges hospital in London after collapsing. A doctor reported Jones was tired and suffering from over strain and was also recovering from having some teeth out.

1968, Deep Purple played at the Grande Ballroom in Detroit, Michigan.

1968, Marvin Gaye scored his first number one single when “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” started a five-week run at the top. It was Marvin’s 15th solo hit. The song was written by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong in 1966, the single was first recorded by Smokey Robinson & the Miracles, as well as Gladys Knight & the Pips.

1969, The Jackson Five made their first network television appearance when they appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show.

1970, Grand Funk Railroad performed at Park Center in Charlotte, North Carolina.

1971, The Grateful Dead were in Ann Arbor, Michigan where they played at Hill Auditorium.

1972, Born To Boogie,  the Ringo Starr directed movie premiered in London. The film was based around a concert at Wembley Empire Pool, London, England starring Ringo Starr, Marc Bolan and T. Rex, and was released on The Beatles’ Apple Films label.

1972, Fleetwood Mac appeared at the Mid-South Coliseum, Memphis, Tennessee.

1973, Bruce Springsteen appeared at the Pinecrest Country Club, Shelton, Connecticut. Only 200 tickets were sold for the show.

1973, Roger Daltrey of The Who performs the second of two nights as Tommy in the second all-star concert version of the orchestral Tommy at the Rainbow Theatre in London.

1974, Pink Floyd played the last show of the 1974 British Winter Tour at the Hippodrome in Bristol. These shows were notable for the concert debut of “You Gotta Be Crazy,” an early version of “Dogs” that would subsequently appear on the Animals album.

1975, The Allman Brothers Band performed at the Mid-South Coliseum, Memphis, Tennessee.

1976, AC/DC played at the Civic Centre, Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia.

1978, Rush appeared at the International Amphitheater, Chicago.

1979, ZZ Top performed at Freedom Hall Civic Center, Johnson City, Tennessee.

1980, Yoko Ono called on fans to observe ten minutes of silence in memory of John Lennon. 30,000 gathered outside St George’s Hall in Liverpool, while nearly 100,000 attend a memorial in New York’s Central Park.

1981, During their Ghost In The Machine World Tour, The Police played the first of three sold out nights at Wembley Arena, London, England.

1985, Whitney Houston scored her first UK number one single with “Saving All My Love For You.” The song, which was written by Michael Masser and Gerry Goffin, had been a minor hit for Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis Jr. in 1978, and was also a US chart topper for Houston.

1991, Michael Jackson started a four-week run at No.1 on the US album chart with his eighth studio album Dangerous. The album has sold over 32 million copies worldwide making it one of the best selling albums of all time. Nine singles were released from the album spanning two years (1991–1993).

1999, Sir Paul McCartney appeared at The Cavern Club Liverpool, where his last gig at the venue was in 1963. The show was filmed for TV and also went out live on the Internet.

2003, Ozzy & Kelly Osbourne went to number one on the UK singles chart with “Changes,” a remake of a track first sung by Ozzy on the Black Sabbath album Volume IV in 1972. It was the first father and daughter chart topper since Frank & Nancy Sinatra in 1967.

2004, The funeral took place in Arlington, Texas for Damageplan and Pantera guitarist Dimebag Darrell, Eddie Van Halen, placed Darrell’s original black and yellow stripes guitar into the Kiss Kasket he was buried in. Several thousand fans and friends gathered at the Arlington Convention Center in Arlington, to mourn the guitarist’s death. Darrell was shot five times in the back of the head during a gig at the Alrosa Villa Club in Columbus on 8th Dec 04 by a mentally ill former US Marine. Damageplan’s drum technician, John Brooks, and tour manager, Chris Paluska, were both injured in the incident.

Born on this day:  Charlie Rich (1932); Frank Allen, The Searchers (1943); Jackie McAuley, Them (1946);  Mike Scott, singer, songwriter, The Waterboys (1958); Tim Skold, bass, Marilyn Manson (1966)

Link to the Today in Rock History archive

Filed Under: British Invasion, BritPop, Classic Rock, Film Soundtrack, Hard Rock, Music, New Wave, Psychedelic, R'n'B/Soul, Today in Rock History, TV Shows Tagged With: AC/DC, Brian Jones, Bruce Springsteen, Grand Funk Railroad, Marvin Gaye, Pink Floyd, RingoStarr, Rush, The Allman Brothers Band, The Grateful Dead, The Jackson Five, The Police, Yoko Ono, ZZ Top

Primary Sidebar

Follow Us

RSS
Follow by Email
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
LinkedIn
Instagram
Reddit

Search

Get new InternetFM posts by email:
Powered by follow.it

Footer

Menu

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Information
  • Media Kit
  • Press Releases
  • Official InternetFM Merchandise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Our Core Values
  • Internships
  • Take Down Policy
  • Site Map
  • Business Services
  • Terms & conditions

this site is owned and maintained by:

InternetFM, Inc.
Lake Bluff, IL

224.662.1240

Contact us

For Content Submissions:

PLEASE, PLEASE go to our content guidelines page BEFORE sending unsolicited requests for paid or guest posts. We are unlikely to respond to direct inquiries.

What you don’t see on this site:

Obnoxious ads, click bait, annoying popups.

That’s because we respect your right to get information, hear good music, and enjoy your time surfing without being bombarded, or forced to close the popups.

All we ask is to tell more people about InternetFM, and if you feel generous, please drop something in the tip jar.

Contributions can be used towards any subscription service we may offer in the future.

More to See

HIDDEN RADIOACTIVE DOUBTS

HIDDEN RADIOACTIVE DOUBTS

March 20, 2023 By Marty Masters

Psychedelic Time Warp – School Days

March 17, 2023 By Steve Leventhal

Tags

Aerosmith Black Sabbath Blues Bob Dylan Bruce Springsteen Chicago Chicago Bears Classic Rock Country David Bowie Elvis Presley Eric Clapton Folk Genesis Green Bay Packers Jazz Jimi Hendrix John Lennon King Crimson Led Zeppelin Links - Rock and Roll Music NFL Paul McCartney Pink Floyd Pop Queen R&B Rock Rockabilly Roxy Music Rush Song Of The Day by Eric Berman Soul The Allman Brothers Band The Beatles The Doors The Grateful Dead The Jukebox Series The Rolling Stones The Who U2 Van Halen Yes ZZ Top

How to Contact Us In Studio

When we are live on the air to request a song or leave a comment:

email: use our contacts page

phone: Google Voice- +1 224-662-1240

Discord: https://discord.gg/TPm7yPy4Sg
#live-show-feedback

Search

Recent

  • Today in Rock History – March 29
  • To Seek Nothing But The 3D Truth
  • Today in Rock History – March 28
  • Today in Rock History – March 27
  • Today in Rock History – March 26

Copyright © 2023 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress ·