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Today in Music

March, 12

  • 2000 In London, Multi-platinum R&B quartet Destiny’s Child plays its first live date since the Feb. 18 naming of Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams as the group’s new members.
  • 2000 Canadian music newcomer Chantal Kreviazuk dominates Canada’s Juno Awards, which honor the best in Canadian music. She captures the trophy in the best female artist juried category and the best pop/adult album award for “Colour Moving and Still.”
  • 1999 Infuriated by a scathing review of a concert he gave in Moscow in December, Mstislav Rostropovich declares he will never play in Russia again. “I will give concerts only where people want to hear me and find pleasure in this, not where they say that I am a ‘has been’.”
  • 1999 A private funeral for Dusty Springfield, who died earlier in the week of breast cancer, is held at St. Mary’s Church in Henley-on-Thames, England. Complying with the singer’s wishes, there are no memorials in London, New York, or Los Angeles.
  • 1999 Violinist and conductor Lord Yehudi Menuhin dies. He is 83. Menuhin began his recording career in 1928 with Victor in the U.S. A year later, he moves to Europe and signs with HMV, then with EMI, where he made more than 300 recordings and where his nearly 70-year deal is the longest in music history.
  • 1998 Rock act Korn serves a cease-and-desist demand to the Michigan assistant principal who suspended a student for wearing a T-shirt carrying the band’s name. Attorneys for the Immortal/Epic rock act serve Assistant Principal Gretchen Plewes, Zeeland High School, and the Zeeland, Mich., public school district with the papers, demanding that the three entities stop “[making] defamatory comments about Korn and its products” as well as “[claiming] to have personal knowledge that Korn intends to be insulting to the listeners of its music.”
  • 1998 Cathay Pacific Airways announces that it has banned Liam Gallagher, singer of British rock band Oasis, after a fracas on a flight from Hong Kong to Australia. Passengers and crews aboard the flight to Perth claim Gallagher and members of his band yelled obscenities and smoked in the cabin.
  • 1974 Nilsson and John Lennon are ejected from the Troubador Club in Los Angeles for heckling Tom Smothers’ comedy act.
  • 1971 The Allman Brothers Band begins recording the classic double LP “Live at the Fillmore East.”
  • 1969 Paul McCartney marries Linda Eastman at Marylebone Registry Office in London.
  • 1969 Graham Coxon of Blur is born.
  • 1969 Jose Feliciano wins a Grammy as Best New Artist. Aretha Franklin wins a Grammy for Best Female R&B Performance for “Chain of Fools.”
  • 1948 James Taylor is born in Boston. His biggest hit is the million-selling No. 1 song “You’ve Got a Friend” in 1971.
  • 1942 Paul Kantner of Jefferson Airplane/Starship is born in San Francisco.