Rock History (MAY 11-17)

Rock History (MAY 11-17)

Historic events this week from George Harrison, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Soundgarden, Fleetwood Mac and Dire Straits

• • •

MAY 11, 1981: HARRISON RELEASES “ALL THOSE YEARS AGO”

Although George Harrison’s “All Those Years Ago” was written for and recorded by Ringo Starr, he wrote new lyrics and re-recorded the song after John Lennon’s murder.

Harrison retained Ringo’s original drum track and brought in Paul McCartney for backing vocals.

“All Those Years Ago” was the first post-Beatles song to feature 3 ex-Beatles, and went to #1 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary charts.


MAY 12, 1972: ROLLING STONES RELEASE EXILE ON MAIN ST.

One of the best rock and blues-based albums of the 70s was panned by critics upon its release.

…IT DIDN’T SELL PARTICULARLY WELL AT THE BEGINNING, AND IT WAS ALSO PRETTY MUCH UNIVERSALLY PANNED. BUT WITHIN A FEW YEARS THE PEOPLE WHO HAD WRITTEN THE REVIEWS SAYING IT WAS A PIECE OF CRAP WERE EXTOLLING IT AS THE BEST FRIGGING ALBUM IN THE WORLD.

KEITH RICHARDS FROM THE BOOK ACCORDING TO THE ROLLING STONES

Featuring “Tumbling Dice”, the album sold 500,000 copies in its first 18 days.


MAY 12, 1973: HOUSES OF THE HOLY IS #1

Led Zeppelin’s fifth album wasted no time going Gold, having sold 500,000 copies in less than two weeks.

A month later, it would begin a two week reign at #1 on the charts, before being unseated by a Beatles compilation (1967-1970, “The Blue Album”).

Houses of the Holy contains the classic rock radio staples, “Dancing Days”, “Over the Hills and Far Away” and “D’Yer Mak’er.”


MAY 13, 1994: SOUNDGARDEN RELEASE “BLACK HOLE SUN”

Soundgarden scored their first of six #1 singles with the release of “Black Hole Sun.”

“Black Hole Sun” would spend 7 total weeks at #1 and earn the band a Grammy for Best Hard Rock Performance.

After Chris Cornell’s passing, the song’s lyrics “No one sings like you anymore”, have become a lasting tribute to the vocalist.


MAY 15, 1975: FLEETWOOD MAC’S FIRST SHOW WITH LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM & STEVIE NICKS

Sixteen months after releasing their Buckingham Nicks album, Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks officially joined Fleetwood Mac.

They made their live debut in El Paso, TX to kick off the 1975-76 Fleetwood Mac Tour.

The 18-song set included most of the then-upcoming Fleetwood Mac (“white album”) and three songs from the Buckingham Nicks album.


MAY 17, 1985: DIRE STRAITS’ BROTHERS IN ARMS

Dire Straits’ penultimate album, Brothers in Arms, was a huge one.

Containing the singles “So Far Away”, “Walk of Life” and “Money for Nothing”, the album went to #1 all over the world on its way to selling 30 million copies worldwide.

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Rock History (MAY 11-17)

Rock History (MAY 11-17)

Historic events this week from George Harrison, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Soundgarden, Fleetwood Mac and Dire Straits

Gorman in the Morning Setlist 027

Gorman in the Morning Setlist 027

Steve Gets To Leave a Angry Note (That Was Pretty Damn Clever). What really grinds your gears in the parking lot? Steve left the most appropriate note on a Prius, plus we learned about the Minnesota Pull Thru from Paulie in Prior Lake. Deb hit a double in Double or Nothing and scored Wallflowers tickets,…

Gorman in the Morning Setlist 026

Gorman in the Morning Setlist 026

Steve Gets to Share a Contact High: We encountered either the coolest or the dumbest police force on the planet, plus Best TV Moms in Rank You Very Much and network anchors throwing out some really raunchy ways to think about The Conclave.

Gorman in the Morning Setlist 025

Gorman in the Morning Setlist 025

Steve Gets to “Kiss His Sister” and He Doesn’t Mind. FINALLY not a loss during Beat the Jock, Steve gets a TIE (Fletcher is currently 0-1), plus the bands with great 3 album runs and hear what happens when your pet raccoon gets you hooked on meth and gets an officer infected with uncontrollable laughter.