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June 2 in Music History: Happy Birthday, Fabrizio Moretti

The Strokes are singer Julian Casablancas, guitarists Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jr, bassist Nikolai Fraiture and drummer Fabrizio Moretti.
The Strokes are singer Julian Casablancas, guitarists Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jr, bassist Nikolai Fraiture and drummer Fabrizio Moretti.courtesy RCA Records

June 02, 2024

History highlight:

Fabrizio Moretti, best-known as the drummer for The Strokes, is 44. Moretti was born on June 2, 1980, in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil but raised in New York City, where he attended high school and met future fellow band members Nick Vlaensi and Julian Casablancas. He dropped out of college, where he was studying sculpture to focus on the Strokes, but has continued to pursue mediums outside of music in the following decades, including sculpture and performance art. In 2007, Moretti formed the trio Little Joy, with Los Hermanos guitarist, singer, songwriter Rodrigo Amarante and Binki Shapiro. Since 2018, he has led a New York synth pop band and artist collective called machinegum.  

Also, today in: 

1962 - Ray Charles started a five-week run at No. 1 on the U.S. and U.K. singles charts with the Don Gibson-penned country ballad, "I Can't Stop Loving You." Choral backing was provided by the Randy Van Horne Singers, and the song was ranked No. 164 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. 

1973 - Paul McCartney had two No. 1 positions on the U.S. charts when Red Rose Speedway went to the top of the album chart and "My Love" started a four-week run as the No. 1 single. 

1979 - Donna Summer started a three-week run at No. 1 on the U.S. singles chart with "Hot Stuff," her second U.S. No. 1. The song was her first single release from her Bad Girls album and was a bit of a departure from the disco sound that Summer had been associated with until this point. “Hot Stuff" won her the Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance in the inaugural year the award was given out. 

1981 - Prince made his live British debut at the Lyceum Ballroom in London. He wouldn't play the U.K. again for five years. 

1987 - Whitney Houston's second album, Whitney, was released. It contained four No. 1 hits, including the enduring "I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)." 

2002 - The wedding ring that Paul McCartney had given his fiancé Heather Mills was thrown out of the window of the hotel where the couple was staying in Miami. The hotel staff used metal detectors to find the $25,000 ring the next day. Despite the quarrel, McCartney and Mills went ahead with the wedding. 

2005 - Franz Ferdinand frontman Alex Kapranos was detained by Russian police after being suspected of being a spy. Kapranos was attempting to board a plane in Moscow when the altercation took place. Traveling under his actual surname, Huntley, Alex was accused of being an MI6 agent who was previously suspected of stealing information about Russian weaponry. Unluckily for Alex, the surname Huntley was also used by an actual former MI6 agent, Richard Tomlinson, who did steal secrets in the early 1990s. The singer was freed after he pointed out that the Huntley they were so concerned about was 42 years old, 13 years Kapranos's senior. 

2006 - Jackson Browne, Dar Williams and Pete Seeger play a hayloft in Garrison, New York, to kickstart Orleans founder John Hall's congressional campaign. 

2008 - American blues guitarist and singer Bo Diddley (Ellas Otha Bates) died of heart failure at his home in Archer, Florida, aged 79. 

2016 - The limited edition vinyl pressing of the David Bowie album Changesonebowie was at No. 1 on the U.K.'s Official Vinyl Album Chart. Bowie had four other vinyl albums on the chart; Blackstar at No. 14, Hunky Dory at No. 17, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars at No. 18 and Nothing Has Changed - The Very Best of David Bowie at No. 23. Sales of vinyl records were up 32 percent to $416 million, their highest level since 1988, according to the RIAA. 

2018 - BTS became the first K-pop band to top the U.S. albums chart when Love Yourself: Tear debuted at No. 1. 

2020 - Many in the music industry recognized "Blackout Tuesday" in response to the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, using the hashtag #TheShowMustBePaused. 

Birthdays: 

Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Johnny Carter of the Flamingos and the Dells was born today in 1934.

Jimmy Jones (“Handy Man”) was born today in 1937.

Charles Miller, saxophonist for War (“Low Rider”), was born today in 1939.

Charles Robert Watts (aka Charlie Watts) was born on this day in 1941. 

Michael “Micki” Steele of the Runaways and the Bangles is 69.

Lydia Lunch, lead singer of Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, is 65.

Singer Tony Hadley of Spandau Ballet is 64.

Merril Bainbridge (“Mouth”) is 56. 

Rapper B Real (Cypress Hill) is 54. 

Keane pianist Tim Rice-Oxley is 47. 

Butterfly Boucher is 45.

Matthew Koma is 37.

Awkwafina is 36.

Highlights for Today in Music History are gathered from This Day in Music, Paul Shaffer's Day in Rock, Song Facts and Wikipedia.