February 21 in Music History: Best Coast released 'Always Tomorrow'

February 21, 2025
History Highlight:
Today in 2020, Best Coast released their fourth studio album, Always Tomorrow. The album features “For the First Time,” “Everything Has Changed,” and “Different Light.” Best Coast frontperson Bethany Cosentino told The Current in 2020, “I write from a personal place. … [Music] is just me being a very personal lyricist and using this platform to talk about issues that I think everybody deals with." Since the release of their preceding album, 2015’s California Nights, Cosentino had fallen into a depression. She later got sober and pushed herself to write songs. "I think part of what I've learned through my music and my lyrics is that, yeah, I've struggled with a lot of things,” Cosentino said, “but I needed to go through all that stuff to come out on the other side." Unfortunately, given its release date, Best Coast’s tour in support of Always Tomorrow was cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic. In an unexpected way, the album track “Everything Has Changed” became a sort of anthem for life in the year 2020.
More from The Current
- Album of the Week: Best Coast, 'Always Tomorrow' (Feb. 24, 2020)
- Session: Best Coast play songs from 'Always Tomorrow' live in The Current studio (March 9, 2020)
Also, Today In:
1961 - The Beatles played three gigs in one day. The first was a lunchtime show at The Cavern Club, then at night they appeared at the Casanova Club in Liverpool and at Litherland Town Hall.
1964 - The Rolling Stones' third single, "Not Fade Away," a remake of the old Buddy Holly tune, was released in the U.K. on Decca Records. It struck pay dirt, becoming the group's first British Top 10 single.
1970 - Simon and Garfunkel went to No. 1 on the U.K. chart with Bridge Over Troubled Water. The album went on to stay on the chart for over 300 weeks, returning to the top of the charts on eight separate occasions and spending a total of 41 weeks at No. 1.
1972 - Led Zeppelin released "Rock And Roll / Four Sticks" as a 7 inch single in the U.S., peaking at No. 47 on the chart. The song was written as a spontaneous jam session while the band was trying to finish "Four Sticks".
1975 - David Bowie released "Young Americans" as a single, which became a breakthrough hit for Bowie in the United States. The backing vocal arrangement came at the suggestion of soul singer Luther Vandross.
1976 - The Four Seasons were at No. 1 on the U.K. singles chart with "December '63 (Oh What A Night)", the group's only U.K. No. 1.
1976 - Florence Ballard of The Supremes died of cardiac arrest at age 32.
1981 - REO Speedwagon's ninth album, Hi Infidelity, goes to No. 1 in America, displacing John Lennon's Double Fantasy.
1981 - Dolly Parton started a two-week run at No. 1 on the U.S. charts with "9 to 5", the singer's first No. 1, a No. 47 hit in the U.K.
1982 - American DJ Murray The K died. Murray is thought to be the first person to play a Beatles record on radio in America.
1987 - Twenty-six years after becoming a hit in America, Ben E. King's "Stand By Me" goes to No. 1 in the U.K. following its release in the movie of the same name.
1998 - Celine Dion went to No. 1 on the U.K. singles chart with "My Heart Will Go On". The song was the theme from the movie Titanic and was the world's best selling single of 1998.
2002 - Elton John accused the music industry of exploiting young singers and dumping talented artists for manufactured groups. He said "There are too many average and mediocre acts; it damages real talent getting airplay. It's just fodder."
2005 - Doves released their third studio album, Some Cities. It features “Black and White Town,” “Snowden,” and “Sky Starts Falling.”
2008 - A computer expert was jailed for two years for electronically stalking Linkin Park singer Chester Bennington. She worked at a U.S. national security laboratory in New Mexico, where she used a computer to track Bennington. She admitted to obtaining family photos, accessing email and voicemail and threatening his wife Talinda.
2009 - Rihanna issued a statement thanking fans for their support after an alleged assault by her R&B singer boyfriend Chris Brown
2012 - Five members of the Pussy Riot staged a performance at Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Savior where their actions were stopped by church security officials. By that evening, they had turned the performance into a music video entitled "Punk Prayer - Mother of God, Chase Putin Away!" The women said their protest was directed at the Orthodox Church leader's support for Putin during his election campaign. The following month, three of the group members were arrested and charged with "hooliganism" and were were held in custody until their trial began in late July when the three members were convicted of "hooliganism motivated by religious hatred", and each was sentenced to two years in prison.
2013 - Cleotha Staples of The Staple Singers dies at age 78.
2014 - A statue of a weeping Kurt Cobain was unveiled in Aberdeen, Washington - the hometown of the Nirvana frontman.
2014 - Beck released his 12th album, Morning Phase, which won three Grammy Awards. It features “Waking Light” and “Heart Is a Drum.”
2019 - Peter Tork, keyboardist and bass guitarist from The Monkees, died at age 77.
2020 - Katie Pruitt released her debut album, Expectations.
2020 - Grimes released her fifth studio album, Miss Anthropocene. It features “Violence,” “My Name Is Dark,” and “Delete Forever.”
2020 - Greg Dulli of the Afghan Whigs released his solo debut, Random Desire. It features “Pantomima,” “It Falls Apart,” and “A Ghost.”
Birthdays:
Eunice Kathleen Waymon (also known as Nina Simone) was born on this day in 1933. Simone was a singer, songwriter, pianist, arranger and civil rights activist who worked in a broad range of musical styles. Simone's music fused gospel and pop with classical music — in particular Johann Sebastian Bach — and accompanied expressive, jazz-like singing in her contralto voice. Throughout her career, Simone assembled a collection of songs that would later become standards in her repertoire. Some were songs that she wrote herself, while others were new arrangements of other standards, and others had been written especially for her. Simone's first hit came in 1958, with her rendition of George Gershwin's "I Loves You, Porgy," from the musical Porgy & Bess. In all, Simone would record more than 40 albums between 1958 and 1993. Simone spent her final decade in France, her adopted home. She passed away in April of 2003 from breast cancer.
Bobby Charles, who wrote “See You Later, Alligator,” was born today in 1938.
David Geffen is 82.
Johnny Echols, cofounder and guitarist for Love, is 78.
Jerry Harrison, of Talking Heads, is 76.
Vince Welnick, keyboardist for the Tubes and the Grateful Dead, was born today in 1951.
Jake Burns, frontman of Stiff Little Fingers, is 67.
Mary Chapin Carpenter is 67.
Ranking Roger of The Beat was born today in 1963.
James Dean Bradfield, frontman for Manic Street Preachers, is 66.
Mark Arm of Mudhoney is 63.
Michael Ward, guitarist with The Wallflowers, was born in 1967. Ward died April 1, 2024, at the age of 57 due to complications from diabetes.
Rhiannon Giddens is 48.
Charlotte Church is 39.
Highlights for Today in Music History are gathered from This Day in Music, Paul Shaffer's Day in Rock, Song Facts and Wikipedia.