October 7 in Music History: Happy Birthday, Nathaniel Rateliff
October 07, 2024
History Highlight:
Today in 1978, Nathaniel Rateliff was born in St. Louis, Missouri, making him 46 today. Rateliff grew up in a small town in central Missouri, where he first learned to play drums before taking up guitar as a teenager. When he was 18, Rateliff, along with this best friend and lifelong musical collaborator Joseph Pope III, moved to Denver, Colorado. Rateliff performed as a solo artist and in a few different bands with a modicum of success, but it was the founding of Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats — and the release of their 2015 self-titled debut album — that catapulted Rateliff’s career. Since that time, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats have released an additional three studio albums, the most recent being 2024’s South of Here. Rateliff also released the critically acclaimed solo album And It’s Still Alright in 2020.
Also, Today In:
1939 - Judy Garland, at age 16, records "Over The Rainbow" for the movie The Wizard of Oz.
1966 - Smiley Lewis, New Orleans R&B singer, died of stomach cancer. He wrote “One Night” covered by Elvis Presley and “I Hear You Knocking,” a 1955 U.S. No.2 for Gale Storm plus a U.K. No.1 and a U.S. No.2 for Dave Edmunds.
1967 - The Beatles politely declined an offer of $1 million from promoter Sid Bernstein to make a second appearance at New York's Shea Stadium. Bernstein had actually successfully contracted the Beatles to play at Shea Stadium in both 1965 and 1966.
1968 - Jose Feliciano performed a slow, bluesy version of "The Star Spangled Banner" before the fifth game of the World Series between the Detroit Tigers and the St. Louis Cardinals. Although released as a single that peaked at No. 50, it wasn't well received in all circles; some radio stations refused to play his songs (at least until he released "Feliz Navidad," two years later). In an October 2006 NPR interview, Feliciano expressed pride at opening the door for later interpretations of the national anthem.
1976 - At a hearing in New York, John Lennon was awarded his green card, granting him permanent residency status in the United States. The ruling overturned previous efforts by the U.S. government to deport him.
1978 - Billboard magazine reported that Marvin Gaye had twice filed bankruptcy papers earlier in the year, with debts of $7 million.
1982 - Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page was given a 12-month conditional release following a cocaine possession conviction.
1989 - Paula Abdul finally reached No. 1 on the U.S. album chart with Forever Your Girl. Abdul had spent 64 consecutive weeks on the Billboard 200 before hitting No. 1, making it the longest time for an album to reach the number-one spot. Forever Your Girl includes four number-one singles: the title track, plus "Straight Up," "Cold Hearted" and "Opposites Attract." The chart-topping remix of "Opposites Attract" features rapping segments in the intro and bridge — and the rapper, MC Skat Kat, is none other than The Current's Production Manager, Derrick Stevens.
1995 - Alanis Morissette went to No. 1 on the U.S. album chart with Jagged Little Pill. The album went on to become the biggest-selling album to date by a woman artist, with sales totaling more than 30 million. It also gave the Maverick label, founded by Madonna, its first No. 1.
1999 - Garth Brooks released an album as "Chris Gaines," a character he created that was intended for a movie. The ruse turned off many fans, and the album was Brooks' first since 1995 that failed to debut at No. 1, charting behind Creed's Human Clay.
2002 - Mick Jagger donated £100,000 (about $156,000 at the time) to his old grammar school to help pay for a music director and to buy musical instruments. The resulting music center is named after Jagger.
2008 - Spotify launched in Sweden. (The U.S. launch was July 14, 2011.) The most-streamed song for October was "Viva La Vida" by Coldplay; for all of 2008 it was "Human" by The Killers.
2009 - Monkees vocalist Davy Jones ruled out ever reuniting with his former bandmates after launching a scathing attack on them in The National Enquirer, saying, "It's not a case of dollars and cents. It's a case of satisfying yourself. I don't have anything to prove. The Monkees proved it for me."
2009 - Film and TV composer Vic Mizzy, who wrote the theme songs to Green Acres and The Addams Family, died in Bel Air at age 93.
2013 - Annie Lennox described the sexualized imagery of modern pop videos as "dark" and "pornographic." "I'm all for freedom of expression," she told BBC Radio 5 live, "but this is clearly one step beyond, and it's clearly into the realm of porn." The singer called for pop videos to be rated in the same way as films.
2014 - Weezer released their ninth studio album, Everything Will Be Alright in the End, the band's first album on Republic Records. It features “Back to the Shack.”
2014 - The TV series The Wonder Years, which went off the air in 1993, was finally released on DVD. What took so long? The distributor spent years clearing most of the 285 songs that were used on the show, including the theme which was Joe Cocker's version of "With A Little Help From My Friends."
2016 - The Rolling Stones played the first night of the Desert Trip festival, at the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California. The event also featured Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney, Neil Young, Roger Waters and the Who. The six-day (split over two weekends) event rakes in $160 million, making it the highest-earning music festival ever.
2017 - Jason Aldean paid tribute to Tom Petty and the victims of the Las Vegas shooting a week earlier with a performance of "I Won't Back Down" on Saturday Night Live.
2017 - Cardi B hit No. 1 in the U.S. with "Bodak Yellow," becoming the first solo female rapper without a guest artist to reach the top since Lauryn Hill's "Doo Wop (That Thing)" 1998.
Birthdays:
Chet “Dino Valenti” Powers, lead singer for Quicksilver Messenger Service (“Get Together”), was born today in 1937.
Influential folk singer-songwriter Judee Sill was born today in 1944.
Kevin Godley of 10cc is 79.
Dave Hope, bassist for Kansas, is 75.
John Mellencamp is 73.
Bon Jovi drummer Tico Torres is 71.
Yo-Yo Ma is 69.
Mike Shipley — producer who worked with Alison Krauss, the Damned, the Cars, Green Day, Def Leppard, Sex Pistols, Queen, and many more — was born today in 1956.
Michael W. Smith is 67.
Simon Cowell is 65.
Toni Braxton is 57.
Thom Yorke is 56.
Damian Joseph Kulash of OK Go is 49.
Nathaniel Rateliff is 46.
Lockett Pundt of Deerhunter and Lotus Plaza is 42.
Flying Lotus is 41.
Lauren Mayberry is 37. She is a Scottish singer, musician and songwriter best known as the vocalist and percussionist of the Scottish pop band Chvrches. Mayberry has collaborated with artists such as Marshmello, Death Cab For Cutie, Bleachers, The National, the lead singer of Paramore, Hayley Williams, and The Cure's frontman, Robert Smith. Mayberry is also a vocal feminist and is the founder of TYCI, a feminist collective in Glasgow.
Eric Burton of Black Pumas is 35.
Lewis Capaldi is 28.
Highlights for Today in Music History are gathered from This Day in Music, Song Facts and Wikipedia.