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This Day in #CoSoMusic
Cont.
2015 - John Fogerty
John Fogerty filed a countersuit alleging that his former bandmates in Creedence Clearwater Revival had breached their contract in which he allowed them to use the name Creedence Clearwater Revisited while touring and playing the music they recorded together four decades ago.
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Fogertyβs action, claimed that Creedence bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford had not paid him in more than three years under terms of the agreement they set up more than a decade ago.
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2008 - The Beatles
The drum skin used on the cover of The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper album sold for Β£541,250 ($1m) at Christie's Memorabilia auction in London. Other items sold included John Lennon's lyrics for 'Give Peace a Chance' which sold for Β£421,250 ($832,257) and a pair of tinted prescription sunglasses belonging to Lennon, which he wore for the cover of the single 'Mind Games', sold for Β£39,650 ($79,000).
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It was after he was arrested that he was properly diagnosed with schizophrenia and, although at the trial the court accepted that Gordon had acute schizophrenia, he was not allowed to use an insanity defense because of changes to California law.
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1979 - Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry was sentenced to five months in jail after being found guilty of tax evasion.
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1978 - Bill Wyman
Rolling Stone Bill Wyman was knocked unconscious after falling from the stage during a Stones concert at the Coliseum, St Paul, Minnesota.
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1969 - Brian Jones
The funeral of Rolling Stone Brian Jones took place in his home town at Hatherley Road Parish Church, Cheltenham. Canon Hugh Evan Hopkins read Jones' own epitaph, 'Please don't judge me too harshly'. Bill Wyman, Keith Richards and Charlie Watts from The Stones attended the funeral.
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1965 - The Rolling Stones
The Rolling Stones started a four week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with '(I Canβt Get No) Satisfaction' the group's first chart-topper there. In the UK, the song was initially played only on pirate radio stations because its lyrics were considered too sexually suggestive.
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1964 - The Beatles
200,000 Liverpudlians took to the streets to celebrate The Beatles return to Liverpool for the northern premiere of the group's first film 'A Hard Day's Night.' The group were honored in a public ceremony in front of Liverpool Town Hall and as The Beatles stood on a balcony looking at the large crowd gathered below, John Lennon gave a few Nazi "Sieg Heil" salutes. Not everyone appreciated his sense of humor.
@TheNewsOwl The part about JOHN LENNON doing the nazi salute and not be understood by everyone made me belly laughing π
Cont.
A rare 1/4 inch reel to-reel master tape recording of the Jimi Hendrix Experience performing at the Woburn Music Festival in 1968 went for Β£48,050 ($95,000), a Marshall amplifier used by Hendrix in concert fetched Β£25,000 ($50,000).
https://youtu.be/EsDVUvS5d_I