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Today in Music History: Rick Astley rick rolls us all

Today in 1988, Rick Astley started a two-week run at No. 1 on the U.S. singles chart with "Never Gonna Give You Up."
Today in 1988, Rick Astley started a two-week run at No. 1 on the U.S. singles chart with "Never Gonna Give You Up."Courtesy of the artist, via NPR

March 12, 2018

History Highlight:

Today in 1988, Rick Astley started a two-week run at No. 1 on the U.S. singles chart with "Never Gonna Give You Up." The song was released as the first single from his debut album, Whenever You Need Somebody, and it actually received a fair amount of grief as Nick Lowe in 1990 quoted from the song and called it "ghastly" in the lyrics to "All Men Are Liars", and in 2004, it was voted number 28 in "50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs... Ever by VH1". But the song has enjoyed a fond resurgence over the last few years as its music video has become the basis for the "Rickrolling" internet meme.

Also, Today In:

1955 - In New York City, legendary jazz saxophonist Charlie "Bird" Parker, only 34, died of heart failure. Parker, along with Dizzy Gillespie and a few others, had more or less invented the then-radical form of bebop jazz music in the mid-'40s. He remains a tremendous influence.

1968 - The Rolling Stones started recording their single, "Jumpin' Jack Flash," with new producer Jimmy Miller at Olympic Studios in London. Keith Richards said that he and Jagger wrote the lyrics while staying at Richards' country house, where they were awakened one morning by the sound of gardener Jack Dyer. When Jagger asked what the noise was, Richards responded, "Oh, that's Jack — that's jumpin' Jack."

1969 - Paul McCartney married Linda Eastman in London.

1974 - John Lennon, during his famous "lost weekend," was involved in a scuffle with a photographer outside the Troubadour club in Los Angeles. Lennon and Harry Nilsson had been drinking and were heckling comedian Tommy Smothers before being forcibly ejected from the club.

1977 - The Sex Pistols were involved in a fight at London's Speakeasy Club with Bob Harris, the host of BBC television's music program, The Old Grey Whistle Test. The altercation resulted in one of the show's engineers needing 14 stitches in his head. Two days later, Harris's lawyers contacted Derek Green at A&M Records, the label with whom the Sex Pistols had signed a contract just a few days earlier. Green discussed the matter with A&M's two founders, Jerry Moss and Herb Alpert, and they decided to cancel the Pistols' contract and to halt production of the band's first single, "God Save The Queen."

1981 - Bow Wow Wow were forced to cancel the first dates of a U.K. tour after the Greater London Council warned that singer Annabella Lwin, aged 15, would be guilty of truancy.

1994 - Swedish group Ace Of Base started a six-week run at No.1 on the U.S. singles chart with "The Sign."

2001 - Judy Garland's "Over The Rainbow" was voted Song Of The Century in a poll conducted by the Recording Industry Association of America, the National Endowment for the Arts, and Scholastic Inc.

2013 - Bob Dylan was voted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters, marking the first time a rock musician had been chosen for the elite honor society. '

2013 - Clive Burr, drummer with Iron Maiden died in his sleep in London, four days after his 56th birthday, due to complications related to MS.

2016 - Iron Maiden's personal Boeing 747 was badly damaged after colliding with a tow truck while grounded at Santiago, Chile. The band's crew and their twenty tons of equipment were not onboard at the time of the crash, but two ground crew workers were injured.

Birthdays:

James Taylor is 70.

Graham Coxon, guitarist for Blur, is 49.

Pete Doherty of The Libertines 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.