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Today In Music History

December 16 in Music History: Happy Birthday, Benny Andersson -

Happy Birthday, Benny Andersson

ABBA in 1974 in Stockholm (L-R) Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Agnetha Faltskog and Bjorn Ulvaeus, posing after winning the Swedish branch of the Eurovision Song Contest with their song "Waterloo".
ABBA in 1974 in Stockholm (L-R) Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Agnetha Faltskog and Bjorn Ulvaeus, posing after winning the Swedish branch of the Eurovision Song Contest with their song "Waterloo". OLLE LINDEBORG/AFP/Getty Images

December 16, 2022

History Highlight:

Göran Bror Benny Andersson (Benny Andersson) of ABBA was born on this day in 1946, making him 76 today. Andersson was a founding member of ABBA - one of the most popular music groups of all time - formed in Stockholm in 1972. The band had 48 hit singles from 1974 to 1983, and again in 2021. In 1999, ABBA's music was adapted into Mamma Mia!, a successful musical that toured worldwide. Andersson was co-composer of Mamma Mia!, and for the 2008 film version and its 2018 sequel, Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, he worked as an executive producer. On 5 November 2021, ABBA released their first studio album in 40 years, Voyage.

Also, in:

1960 - 17-year-old George Harrison was deported from Germany for being too young to perform with The Beatles.

1965 - The Beatles released a two-hit single with "Day Tripper" on one side and "We Can Work It Out" on the other.

1966 - The Jimi Hendrix Experience released their first single, "Hey Joe".

1974 - Mick Taylor revealed in a press release that he was departing The Rolling Stones after a five-year run, stating that he "felt it was the time to move on and do something new."

1974 - Mott The Hoople (Ian Hunter, Mick Ralphs and company) announced that they were over as a band.

1981 - Ray Charles received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

1983 - Hoping to jumpstart her flagging acting career after the box-office bomb Xanadu, Olivia Newton-John reunited with Grease co-star John Travolta in the fantasy film Two of a Kind. It flopped, but yielded the Top 10 hit "Twist Of Fate."

1983 - The Who issued a statement making their breakup official, a formality considering they called their last shows in 1982 their "Farewell Tour." Though it was far from the end, as they reunited for a seemingly unending series of "reunions," starting with Live-Aid in 1985.

1988 - American soul and disco singer Sylvester James died of complications from AIDS in San Francisco at age 41. James scored the 1978 U.S. No. 36 single "You Make Me Feel, Mighty Real" and sang backup vocals for Aretha Franklin on her 1985 Who's Zoomin' Who Album.

1989 - Billy Joel went No. 1 on the U.S. album chart with his 11th studio release Storm Front. The album featured "We Didn't Start the Fire" and "Leningrad", Joel's take on the end of the Cold War.

1991 - Chubby Checker filed a lawsuit against McDonald's in Canada seeking $14 million for the unauthorized use of a simulation of his voice in a commercial.

1993 - MTV aired Nirvana's "Unplugged" session for the first time. The album featured an acoustic performance taped at Sony Music Studios in New York City on November 18, 1993. Unlike many artists who appeared on the show, Nirvana filmed its entire performance in a single take with the band's fourteen-song set list including six cover versions.

2000 - Eminem lands his second UK #1 when "Stan" tops the chart. The song, which tells the story of a deranged, obsessive fan. The song becomes so ingrained in the culture that in 2017 the word "stan" is entered into the Oxford American Dictionary as a term for an obsessive fan.

2007 - Singer/songwriter Dan Fogelberg died at his home in Maine at the age of 56. Emerging out of the '70s soft rock scene, he made his mark with sensitive records like "Leader Of The Band" and "Same Old Lang Syne."

2013 - Miley Cyrus insured her tongue for $1 million.

2018 - With some radio stations pulling "Baby It's Cold Outside" from their holiday playlists in response to the #MeToo movement, WAKY in Louisville, Kentucky plays the song continuously for two hours. Response from listeners is overwhelmingly positive.

2020 - After nearly 178 days, Twenty One Pilots pull the plug on the livestream for their "Level Of Concern" video, which refreshed every 3:40 with new footage uploaded by fans. Guinness declares it the longest music video ever made.

Birthdays:

Ludwig van Beethoven was born today in 1770.

The Hollies guitar player Tony Hicks is 77.

Billy Gibbons, guitarist and lead singer of ZZ Top, is 73.

Christopher Thorn of Blind Melon is 54.

Michael McCary of Boyz II Men is 51.

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