1972 in music
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This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1972.
Specific locations
[edit]Specific genres
[edit]Events
[edit]- January 17 – 12 miles of U.S. Highway 51 in Memphis, Tennessee from South Parkway East to the Tennessee/Mississippi state line is renamed "Elvis Presley Boulevard."
- January 20 – The debut of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon at The Dome, Brighton, is halted by technical problems. Dark Side of the Moon would be played in its entirety the following night, but it would be a full year before the album was released.
- January 21 – Keith Richards jumps on stage to jam with Chuck Berry at the Hollywood Palladium, but is ordered off for playing too loud. Berry later claims that he did not recognize Keith and would not have booted him if he did.
- January 29–31 – The first Sunbury Music Festival is held in Sunbury, Victoria. Performers include Billy Thorpe & The Aztecs, Wendy Saddington, Chain and the La De Da's.
- January 31 – Over 40,000 mourners file past Mahalia Jackson's open casket to pay their respects in Chicago's Great Salem Baptist Church.
- February 9 – Paul McCartney's new band, Wings, make their live debut at the University of Nottingham in England. This is McCartney's first public concert since The Beatles' 1966 US tour.
- February 10 – David Bowie introduces his Ziggy Stardust persona at the second show of the 1972–73 Ziggy Stardust Tour, at The Toby Jug pub, Tolworth, Surrey (England).[1]
- February 13 – Led Zeppelin's concert in Singapore is canceled when government officials will not let them off the airplane because of their long hair.
- February 14–18 – John Lennon and Yoko Ono co-host an entire week of The Mike Douglas Show.
- February 15 – The United States gives federal copyright protection to sound recordings. Prior to this, phonograph records were only protected at state level, and not in all states.
- February 19
- Paul McCartney's single "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" (inspired by the "Bloody Sunday" massacre in Ireland on January 30, 1972) is banned by the BBC. The controversy caused by the banning only increases the song's popularity and it ends up in the Top 20 in England.
- Sammy Davis Jr. makes a guest appearance on the television show All in the Family.
- February 23 – Elvis and Priscilla Presley separate.
- February 29 – John Lennon's U.S. immigration visa expires, beginning his three-and-a-half-year fight to remain in the country.
- March 15
- At the 14th Annual Grammy Awards, hosted by Andy Williams, winners include Carole King, Kris Kristofferson, Colin Davis, Michel LeGrand, Isaac Hayes, Julian Bream, Vladimir Horowitz, the Juilliard String Quartet and Bill Withers.[2] King wins Album of the Year (for Tapestry), Record of the Year (for "It's Too Late") and Song of the Year (for "You've Got a Friend"), while Carly Simon wins Best New Artist.
- L.A. disc jockey Robert W. Morgan plays Donny Osmond's "Puppy Love" non-stop for 90 minutes. Police are called, but no arrests are made.
- March 21 – Terry Knight announces he is launching a $5 million lawsuit against Grand Funk's new manager John Eastman, one week after being fired as the band's manager himself. It triggers a series of suits and counter-suits between Knight and the band throughout the coming months.
- March 25 – The 17th Eurovision Song Contest, held in the Usher Hall, Edinburgh, Scotland, is won by German-based Greek singer Vicky Leandros, representing Luxembourg with the song "Après Toi". The song is subsequently released around Europe, having been recorded in several languages, including in English as Come What May.
- March 31 – Official Beatles fan club closes down.
- April 2 – John Lennon and Yoko Ono hold a press conference in New York. The Lennons discuss their appeal against the US Immigration Department's decision to deport John.
- April 9 – First solo concert of Valery Leontiev.
- April 16 – Electric Light Orchestra make their live debut at the Fox and Greyhound pub in Park Lane, Croydon, England.
- April 29 – New York City mayor John Lindsay announces that he is supporting John Lennon and Yoko Ono in their fight to remain in the United States.
- May 2 – Stone the Crows lead guitarist Les Harvey is electrocuted on stage during a show in Swansea, Wales, by touching a poorly connected microphone. Harvey dies in a hospital a few hours later. The band's lead singer, Maggie Bell, Harvey's longtime girlfriend, is also hospitalized, having collapsed on stage after the incident.
- May 8 – Billy Preston becomes the first rock performer to headline at New York's Radio City Music Hall
- May 27 – The Opryland USA country music theme park opens in Nashville, Tennessee.
- June – Founding member Roy Wood leaves the Electric Light Orchestra line-up just as the band scores its first hit single.
- June 3 – The Rolling Stones open their North American tour in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
- June 10 – Elvis Presley does the first of four concerts at the Madison Square Garden in New York City. He sells out all the shows in one day.
- June 14 – Simon & Garfunkel reunite briefly to perform live at Madison Square Garden at a campaign benefit for Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern. Other performers include Peter, Paul and Mary and Dionne Warwick.
- July 24 – Bobby Ramirez, drummer for Edgar Winter's White Trash, is beaten to death in a Chicago bar fight, reportedly because his hair is too long.
- August 5 – Clive Davis signs Aerosmith to Columbia Records at Max's Kansas City in New York City.
- August 30 – John Lennon and Yoko Ono headline the "One To One Concert" at Madison Square Garden to benefit mentally handicapped children. Elephant's Memory, Roberta Flack, Stevie Wonder and Sha Na Na also perform.
- September 1–7 – Karlheinz Stockhausen directs performances of his works at the Shiraz Arts Festival, including Mantra, Hymnen, an all-day performance of Aus den sieben Tagen, and world premieres of two compositions from Für kommende Zeiten
- September 21 – ABC premieres the new TV series In Concert. The first episode features Alice Cooper.
- September 29 – Miles Davis unveils his new nine-piece band at the Lincoln Center Philharmonic Hall.
- October 12 – Diana Ross makes her acting debut in the successful film Lady Sings the Blues, garnering her first Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.
- November 3 – James Taylor and Carly Simon are married in a tiny ceremony in Simon's Manhattan apartment.
- November 12 – 51,778 fans pack San Diego Stadium for a concert promoted by KGB-AM to see J. Geils Band, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Foghat and Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show.
- November 25 – The 1st OTI Song Contest, held in the Congres and Expositions Palace, Madrid, Spain, is won by singers Tobias and Claudia Regina, representing Brazil with the song Diálogo ("Dialogue").
- November 26 – Family, touring North America as the warmup act for Elton John, play their last concert on U.S. soil in St. Petersburg, Florida.
- December 23 – Grand Funk Railroad, completing its 1972 Tour, with a sold-out concert at NYC's Madison Square Garden, with the proceeds from the concert benefiting the Phoenix House Drug Rehabilitation Program, and with the show being filmed for ABC-TV's "In Concert" Series, the band is met by a lawsuit taken out by their former manager, Terry Knight, who attempts to block the show from going on, attempting to seize their equipment. A court injunction is given later in the day, allowing the concert to take place.
- December 31 – The first New Year's Rockin' Eve, with host Dick Clark, airs on NBC (before moving to ABC) with Three Dog Night as the featured act. Blood, Sweat & Tears, Helen Reddy and Al Green also perform.
- unknown date
- Herbert Howells becomes a Companion of Honour.
- Billy Ray Hearn founds Myrrh Records.
- Joseph Hoo Kim founds Channel One Studios in Kingston, Jamaica.
- Numa Labinsky (bass singer) and the brothers Michael and Gerald Reynolds found Nimbus Records, a specialist classical music recording company at Wyastone Leys in Herefordshire, England.
- Heisei College of Music is established in Mifune, Kumamoto, Japan.
Bands formed
[edit]Bands disbanded
[edit]- Creedence Clearwater Revival
- Jefferson Airplane
- Martha and the Vandellas
- MC5
- Them
- The Velvet Underground
Albums released
[edit]January
[edit]February
[edit]March
[edit]April
[edit]May
[edit]June
[edit]Day | Album | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Amazing Grace | Aretha Franklin | Live |
Eagles | Eagles | - | |
2 | Obscured by Clouds | Pink Floyd | - |
5 | The Osmonds Live | The Osmonds | Live |
6 | Looking Glass | Looking Glass | - |
9 | Earthbound | King Crimson | Live |
There It Is | James Brown | - | |
10 | Moon Shadow | LaBelle | - |
12 | Some Time in New York City | John Lennon and Yoko Ono | - |
13 | School's Out | Alice Cooper | - |
A Song for You | Carpenters | - | |
14 | Simon and Garfunkel's Greatest Hits | Simon & Garfunkel | Compilation |
16 | Roxy Music | Roxy Music | - |
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars | David Bowie | - | |
Together | Golden Earring | - | |
20 | Syreeta | Syreeta | - |
23 | Trilogy | Emerson, Lake & Palmer | - |
Living in the Past | Jethro Tull | Compilation | |
26 | Carney | Leon Russell | - |
- | As Recorded at Madison Square Garden | Elvis Presley | Live |
666 | Aphrodite's Child | - | |
Bless Your Heart | Freddie Hart | - | |
Blues Roots | Ike Turner | - | |
Free at Last | Free | - | |
If an Angel Came to See You, Would You Make Her Feel at Home? | Black Oak Arkansas | - | |
Let Me Tell You About a Song | Merle Haggard | - |
July
[edit]Day | Album | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
4 | American Gothic | David Ackles | - |
5 | Waka/Jawaka | Frank Zappa | - |
7 | The Harder They Come | Jimmy Cliff | Soundtrack |
10 | Chicago V | Chicago | - |
Son of Schmilsson | Harry Nilsson | - | |
11 | Super Fly | Curtis Mayfield | Soundtrack |
17 | Full Circle | The Doors | - |
20 | Long John Silver | Jefferson Airplane | - |
Straight Shooter | James Gang | - | |
21 | I Can See Clearly Now | Johnny Nash | - |
Never a Dull Moment | Rod Stewart | - | |
The Slider | T. Rex | - | |
27 | All Directions | The Temptations | - |
Flying High Together | Smokey Robinson & The Miracles | - | |
– | Seven Separate Fools | Three Dog Night | - |
Toulouse Street | The Doobie Brothers | - | |
The Academy in Peril | John Cale | - | |
Captain Beyond | Captain Beyond | - | |
Feel Good | Ike & Tina Turner | - | |
Exercises | Nazareth | - | |
Foghat | Foghat | - | |
Music Is the Message | Kool & the Gang | - | |
Saint Dominic's Preview | Van Morrison | - | |
Moods | Neil Diamond | - | |
White Witch | White Witch | - | |
Someplace Else Now | Lesley Gore | - | |
Sparks | Sparks | Debut under final name |
August
[edit]Day | Album | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Back Stabbers | The O'Jays | - |
Elf | Elf | - | |
2 | Jazz at Santa Monica Civic '72 | Ella Fitzgerald | Live |
4 | Ben | Michael Jackson | - |
7 | America: A 200-Year Salute in Story and Song | Johnny Cash | - |
14 | Play the Blues | Buddy Guy and Junior Wells | - |
15 | Rock of Ages | The Band | Live |
25 | Everybody's in Show-Biz | The Kinks | Double LP; one studio, one live |
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes | Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes | - | |
28 | 'Ot 'n' Sweaty | Cactus | - |
31 | Styx | Styx | - |
- | And the Hits Just Keep on Comin' | Michael Nesmith | - |
Free Will | Gil Scott-Heron | - | |
Irrlicht | Klaus Schulze | - | |
Live at the Paramount | The Guess Who | Live | |
Roy Buchanan | Roy Buchanan | - | |
Smokin' O.P.'s | Bob Seger | - |
September
[edit]Day | Album | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
8 | Close to the Edge | Yes | [4] |
All the Young Dudes | Mott the Hoople | - | |
9 | Summer Breeze | Seals and Crofts | - |
15 | Foxtrot | Genesis | - |
Below the Salt | Steeleye Span | - | |
Phoenix | Grand Funk Railroad | - | |
Rocky Mountain High | John Denver | - | |
26 | Live Full House | The J. Geils Band | Live |
27 | Catch Bull at Four | Cat Stevens | - |
29 | Glorified Magnified | Manfred Mann's Earth Band | - |
- | Vol. 4 | Black Sabbath | - |
At Home with Their Greatest Hits | The Partridge Family | Compilation | |
Bandstand | Family | - | |
Bright Phoebus | Lal and Mike Waterson | - | |
Give It Up | Bonnie Raitt | - | |
Hot Butter | Hot Butter | - | |
Ladies Love Outlaws | Waylon Jennings | - | |
My Time | Boz Scaggs | - | |
Nervous on the Road | Brinsley Schwarz | - | |
Rolling Thunder | Mickey Hart | - | |
Sandy | Sandy Denny | - | |
Solomon's Seal | Pentangle | - | |
Squawk | Budgie | - | |
Tequila Sunrise | David Clayton-Thomas | - |
October
[edit]November
[edit]December
[edit]Day | Album | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Octopus | Gentle Giant | UK |
8 | Trouble Man | Marvin Gaye | Soundtrack |
9 | Hot August Night | Neil Diamond | Live |
11 | More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies) | The Rolling Stones | Compilation |
15 | Piledriver | Status Quo | - |
22 | Made in Japan | Deep Purple | Live |
- | Across 110th Street | Bobby Womack and J.J. Johnson | Soundtrack |
The Best of Top of the Pops '72 | Top of the Poppers | Compilation | |
The Grand Wazoo | Frank Zappa | - | |
Gypsy Cowboy | New Riders of the Purple Sage | - | |
It's Not Love (But It's Not Bad) | Merle Haggard | - | |
Pleasure | Ohio Players | - | |
R.E.O./T.W.O. | REO Speedwagon | - | |
The Sweet's Biggest Hits | Sweet | Compilation | |
Who's Gonna Play This Old Piano? | Jerry Lee Lewis | - | |
World Woven | The Ides of March | - |
Release date unknown
[edit]Biggest hit singles
[edit]The following songs achieved the highest chart positions in the charts of 1972.
# | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart Entries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Don McLean | "American Pie" | 1972 | US Billboard 1 for 19 weeks, Canada RPM 1 for 5 weeks, New Zealand 1 for 3 weeks, Australia 1 for 5 weeks, UK 2 for 16 weeks | |
2 | Harry Nilsson | "Without You" | 1972 | UK 1 for 20 weeks, Australia 1 for 5 weeks, US Billboard 1 for 19 weeks, New Zealand 1 for 2 weeks | |
3 | Hot Butter | "Popcorn" | 1972 | Holland 1 for 15 weeks, France 1 for 5 weeks, Switzerland 1 for 17 weeks, Norway 1 for 20 weeks, Germany 1 for 5 months, UK 5 for 19 weeks, US Billboard 9 for 18 weeks | |
4 | Neil Young | "Heart of Gold" | 1972 | US Billboard 1 for 14 weeks, Canada 1 for 12 weeks, France 2 for 8 weeks, Norway 4 for 11 weeks, Germany 4 for 4 months, | |
5 | The Moody Blues | "Nights in White Satin" | 1972 | US Billboard 2 for 18 weeks, Canada 2 for 12 weeks, France 1 for 9 weeks, Holland 2 for 14 weeks, |
Top 40 Chart hit singles
[edit]Song title | Artist(s) | Release date(s) | US | UK | Highest chart position | Other Chart Performance(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"10538 Overture" | Electric Light Orchestra | June 1972 | n/a | 9 | 9 (United Kingdom) | 24 (Netherlands [Dutch Top 40]) |
"A Cowboy's Work Is Never Done" | Sonny & Cher | February 1972 | 8 | n/a | 3 (Canada) | See chart entry performance |
"A Horse with No Name" | America | January 1972 | 1 | 3 | 1 (Canada, Finland, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Ain't Understanding Mellow" | Jerry Butler and Brenda Lee Eager | January 1970 | 21 | n/a | 21 (United States | 3 (U.S. Billboard Best Selling Soul Singles) |
"All the Young Dudes" | Mott the Hoople | July 1972 | 37 | 3 | 3 (United Kingdom | 4 (Ireland) - 13 (New Zealand) - 31 (Canada) - 32 (U.S. Record World) - 34 (U.S. Cash Box Top 100) |
"Alone Again (Naturally)" | Gilbert O'Sullivan | February 1972 | 1 | 3 | 1 (Canada, France, United States) | See chart performance entry |
"Amazing Grace" | Pipes and Drums and Military Band of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards | April 1972 | n/a | 1 | 1 (Australia, Canada, Ireland, South Africa, United Kingdom) | n/a |
"America" | Simon & Garfunkel | July 1972 | 97 | 25 | 25 (United Kingdom) | n/a |
"American Pie" | Don McLean | January 1972 | 1 | 2 | 1 (Australia, Canada, New Zealand) | See chart performance entry [1971 single release overlapped into 1972] |
"Anticipation" | Carly Simon | January 1972 | 13 | n/a | 9 (Canada) | 3 (U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary) - 10 (U.S. Cash Box Top 100) - 64 (Australia) |
"Baby Blue" | Badfinger | March 1972 | 14 | n/a | 3 (Malaysia) | 7 (Canada) - 9 (New Zealand, U.S. Cash Box Top 100) - 12 (U.S. Record World Top 100) - 14 (Sweden) - 16 (Australia) - 18 (South Africa) - 30 (West Germany) |
Other Chart hit singles
[edit]- "Apache" – The Shadows (reissue)
- "Baby, Don't Get Hooked on Me" – Mac Davis
- "Baby Let Me Take You (In My Arms)" – The Detroit Emeralds
- "Back Off Boogaloo" – Ringo Starr
- "Back Stabbers" – The O'Jays
- "Bang a Gong (Get It On)" – T. Rex
- "Beautiful Sunday" – Daniel Boone
- "Been to Canaan" – Carole King
- "Beg, Steal or Borrow" – The New Seekers
- "Ben" – Michael Jackson
- "Best Thing" – Styx
- "Betcha by Golly, Wow" – The Stylistics
- "Black and White" – Three Dog Night
- "Black Dog"- Led Zeppelin
- "Blockbuster!"- Sweet
- "A Brand New Song" – Cliff Richard
- "Brand New Key" – Melanie
- "Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)" – Looking Glass
- "Burning Love" – Elvis Presley
- "California Man" – The Move
- "The Candy Man" – Sammy Davis Jr.
- "Can't You Hear the Song?" – Wayne Newton
- "Children of the Revolution" – T.Rex
- "Circles" – The New Seekers
- "The Cisco Kid" – War
- "City of New Orleans" – Arlo Guthrie
- "Clair" – Gilbert O'Sullivan
- "Clean Up Woman" – Betty Wright
- "Coconut" – Harry Nilsson
- "Changes" – David Bowie
- "Come What May (Après Toi)" – Vicky Leandros
- "Conquistador" – Procol Harum
- "Cotton Jenny" – Anne Murray
- "The Cover of the Rolling Stone" – Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show
- "Crazy Horses" – The Osmonds
- "Crocodile Rock" – Elton John
- "Daddy Don't You Walk So Fast" – Wayne Newton
- "Danny's Song" – Anne Murray
- "Day After Day" – Badfinger
- "Day by Day" – Godspell
- "The Day I Found Myself" – Honey Cone
- "Day Dreaming" – Aretha Franklin
- "Diary" – Bread
- "Do It Again" – Steely Dan
- "Doctor My Eyes" – Jackson Browne
- "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight" – James Taylor
- "Don't Say You Don't Remember" – Beverly Bremers
- "Drowning in the Sea of Love" – Joe Simon
- "Down by the Lazy River" – The Osmonds
- "Easy Livin'" – Uriah Heep
- "Elected" – Alice Cooper
- "Everybody Plays the Fool" – The Main Ingredient
- "Ev'ry Day of My Life" – Bobby Vinton
- "Everything I Own" – Bread
- "Eye Level" – Simon Park Orchestra
- "Family Affair" – Sly & the Family Stone
- "The Family of Man" – Three Dog Night
- "Feel the Need in Me" – The Detroit Emeralds
- "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" – Roberta Flack
- "Floy Joy" – Supremes
- "Footstompin' Music" – Grand Funk Railroad
- "Forever Autumn" – Vigrass & Osborne
- "Freddie's Dead (Theme From Superfly)" – Curtis Mayfield
- "Garden Party" – Rick Nelson
- "Geronimo's Cadillac" – Michael Martin Murphey
- "Get on the Good Foot pt.1" – James Brown
- "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" – Wings
- "Go All the Way" – Raspberries
- "Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues" – Danny O'Keefe
- "Goodbye to Love" – The Carpenters
- "Got to Be There" – Michael Jackson
- "Gudbuy T'Jane" – Slade
- "The Guitar Man" – Bread
- "The Happiest Girl in the Whole USA" – Donna Fargo
- "Happy" – The Rolling Stones
- "Happy the Man" – Genesis
- "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" – John Lennon & Yoko Ono, the Plastic Ono Band with the Harlem Community Choir
- "He Is Your Brother" – ABBA
- "Heart of Gold" – Neil Young
- "Hi, Hi, Hi"/"C Moon" – Wings
- "Highway Star" – Deep Purple
- "Hold Her Tight" – The Osmonds
- "Hold Your Head Up" – Argent
- "Honky Cat" – Elton John
- "Hot Rod Lincoln" – Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen
- "How Do You Do" – Mouth & MacNeal
- "Hurting Each Other" – The Carpenters
- "I Am Woman" – Helen Reddy
- "I Believe in Music" – Gallery
- "I Can See Clearly Now" – Johnny Nash
- "I Get the Sweetest Feeling" – Jackie Wilson
- "I Gotcha" – Joe Tex
- "I Need You" – America
- "I Saw The Light" – Todd Rundgren
- "I Wanna Be Where You Are" – Michael Jackson
- "I Wanna Be With You" – Raspberries
- "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" – The New Seekers
- "I'd Love You to Want Me" – Lobo
- "I'll Be Around" – The Spinners
- "I'll Take You There" – The Staple Singers
- "I'm Still in Love with You" – Al Green
- "I'm Stone in Love with You" – The Stylistics
- "I've Been Lonely for So Long" – Frederick Knight
- "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want To Be Right" – Luther Ingram
- "If You Don't Know Me by Now" – Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes
- "I'll Make You Music" – Beverly Bremers
- "Immigration Man" – Crosby & Nash
- "In the Rain" – The Dramatics
- "Isn't Life Strange" – The Moody Blues
- "It Never Rains in Southern California" – Albert Hammond
- "It's Going to Take Some Time" – The Carpenters
- "Jesus" – Cliff Richard
- "Jesus Is Just Alright" – The Doobie Brothers
- "John, I'm Only Dancing" – David Bowie
- "Join Together" – The Who
- "Joy" – Apollo 100
- "Jump into the Fire" – Harry Nilsson
- "Jungle Fever" – The Chakachas (Roland Kluger under an assumed group name)
- "(Last Night) I Didn't Get to Sleep at All" – The 5th Dimension
- "Layla" – Derek and the Dominos
- "Lean on Me" – Bill Withers
- "Legend in Your Own Time" – Carly Simon
- "Let's Stay Together" – Al Green
- "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" – Robert John
- "Listen to the Music" – The Doobie Brothers
- "Living in Harmony" – Cliff Richard
- "Long Cool Woman (In a Black Dress)" – The Hollies
- "Look What You Done for Me" – Al Green
- "Looking Through the Eyes of Love" – The Partridge Family
- "Loop di Love" – Shag [Jonathan King under a pseudonym]
- "Speak Softly Love (Love Theme from The Godfather)" – Andy Williams
- "Mama Weer All Crazee Now" – Slade
- "Mary Had a Little Lamb" – Wings
- "Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard" – Paul Simon
- "Me and Mrs. Jones" – Billy Paul
- "Metal Guru" – T.Rex
- "Mother and Child Reunion" – Paul Simon
- "Motorcycle Mama" – Sailcat
- "Mouldy Old Dough" – Stavely Makepeace Enterprises dba "Lieutenant Pigeon" (classic Dortmund Breakbeat track)
- "My Ding-a-Ling" – Chuck Berry
- "Never Been to Spain" – Three Dog Night
- "Nice to Be With You" – Gallery
- "Nights in White Satin" – The Moody Blues
- "No One to Depend On" – Santana
- "Oh Girl" – The Chi-Lites
- "Old Man" – Neil Young
- "One Monkey Don't Stop No Show" – Honey Cone
- "Operator" – Jim Croce
- "Outa-Space" – Billy Preston
- "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" – The Temptations
- "Paper Plane" – Status Quo
- "People Need Love" – ABBA
- "Pieces of April" – Three Dog Night
- "Precious and Few" – Climax
- "Puppy Love" – Donny Osmond
- "Reelin' In the Years" – Steely Dan
- "Respect Yourself" – The Staple Singers
- "Roadrunner"- Jonathan Richman
- "Rock and Roll Part 1 + 2" – Gary Glitter
- "Rock Me Baby" – Sacha Distel (dubbed)
- "Rocket Man" – Elton John
- "Rockin' Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu" – Johnny Rivers
- "Rockin' Robin" – Michael Jackson
- "Rock & Roll Soul" – Grand Funk Railroad
- "Rolling Stone" - Suzi Quatro
- "Roundabout" – Yes
- "Run Run Run" – Jo Jo Gunne
- "Run to Me" – Bee Gees
- "Saturday in the Park" – Chicago
- "School's Out" – Alice Cooper
- "Scorpio" – Dennis Coffey & The Detroit Guitar Band
- "Sealed With A Kiss" – Bobby Vinton
- "Seaside Shuffle" – Terry Dactyl & the Dinosaurs
- "She is Just Kind of a Girl" – Byorn&Benny
- "Signs" – The Drifters
- "Silver Machine" – Hawkwind
- "Simone" – England Dan & John Ford Coley
- "Slippin' into Darkness" – War
- "Small Beginnings" – Flash
- "Solid Gold Easy Action" – T.Rex
- "Someday Never Comes" – Creedence Clearwater Revival
- "Something's Wrong with Me" – Austin Roberts
- "Song Sung Blue" – Neil Diamond
- "Spaceman" – Harry Nilsson
- "Speak to the Sky" – Rick Springfield
- "Starman" – David Bowie
- "Starting All Over Again" – Mel & Tim
- "Stay with Me" – Faces
- "Suavecito" – Malo
- "Sugar Daddy" – The Jackson 5
- "Summer Breeze" – Seals and Crofts
- "Sunshine" – Jonathan Edwards
- "Superstition" – Stevie Wonder
- "Sweet Seasons" – Carole King
- "Sweet Surrender" – Bread
- "Sylvia's Mother" – Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show
- "Take It Easy" – Eagles
- "Take Me Bak 'Ome" – Slade
- "Taxi" – Harry Chapin
- "Telegram Sam" – T.Rex
- "That's When the Music Takes Me – Neil Sedaka
- "Thunder and Lightning" – Chi Coltrane
- "Tight Rope" – Leon Russell
- "Tiny Dancer" – Elton John
- "Together Let's Find Love" – The 5th Dimension
- "Too Late to Turn Back Now" – Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose
- "Top of the World" – The Carpenters (in Japan; it became a hit in the U.S. and the UK the following year)
- "Traveling in the Dark" – Mountain
- "The Jean Genie" – David Bowie
- "Troglodyte (Cave Man)" – Jimmy Castor Bunch
- "Trouble Man" – Marvin Gaye
- "Tumbling Dice" – The Rolling Stones
- "Two Divided by Love" – The Grass Roots
- "Use Me" – Bill Withers
- "Ventura Highway" – America
- "Vincent" – Don McLean
- "Virginia Plain" – Roxy Music
- "Walkin' in the Rain With the One I Love" – Love Unlimited
- "The Way of Love" – Cher
- "We Can Make it Together" – Steve and Eydie featuring The Osmonds
- "We're Free" – Beverly Bremers
- "Where Is the Love?" – Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway
- "Without You" – Harry Nilsson
- "Witchy Woman" – Eagles
- "Woman Is the Nigger of the World" – John Lennon
- "You Are Everything" – The Stylistics
- "You Don't Mess Around with Jim" – Jim Croce
- "You Ought to be With Me" – Al Green
- "You Turn Me On I'm a Radio" – Joni Mitchell
- "You Want It, You Got It" – The Detroit Emeralds
- "You Wear It Well" – Rod Stewart
- "You're So Vain" – Carly Simon
- "Your Mama Don't Dance" – Loggins and Messina
Notable singles
[edit]Song title | Artist(s) | Release date(s) | Other Chart Performance(s) |
---|---|---|---|
"Starman" | David Bowie | April 1972 | See chart performance entry |
Other Notable singles
[edit]- "Hoochie Koochie Lady" b/w "First Avenue" - Elf
- "When You Say Love" - Sonny & Cher
Published popular music
[edit]- "Alone Again (Naturally)" w.m. Raymond O'Sullivan
- "Alone at a Drive-In Movie" w.m. Jim Jacobs & Warren Casey
- "American Pie" w.m. Don McLean
- "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown" w.m. Jim Croce
- "Beautiful Through and Through" w. Bob Merrill m. Jule Styne from the musical Sugar
- "Beauty School Dropout" w.m. Warren Casey & Jim Jacobs from the musical Grease
- "The Beauty That Drives Men Mad" w. Bob Merrill m. Jule Styne from the musical Sugar
- "Bein' Green" w.m. Joe Raposo from the television series Sesame Street.
- "Blues for Newport" m. Dave Brubeck
- "Born to Hand Jive" w.m. Warren Casey & Jim Jacobs from the musical Grease
- "Burning Love" w.m. Dennis Linde
- "C is for Cookie" w.m. Joe Raposo
- "Clair" w.m. Raymond O'Sullivan
- "Come Dream With Me" w. Sammy Cahn m. Jimmy Van Heusen
- "Corner of the Sky" w.m. Stephen Schwartz from the musical Pippin
- "For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her" – Simon & Garfunkel
- "Greased Lightning" w.m. Warren Casey & Jim Jacobs from the musical Grease
- "I Can See Clearly Now" w.m. Johnny Nash
- "Killing Me Softly with His Song" w. Norman Gimbel m. Charles Fox
- "Liza with a Z" w. Fred Ebb m. John Kander from the television production Liza with a Z
- "Magic To Do" w.m. Stephen Schwartz. Introduced by Ben Vereen in the musical Pippin
- "Maybe This Time" w. Fred Ebb m. John Kander from the musical film Cabaret
- "Mooning" w.m. Warren Casey & Jim Jacobs from the musical Grease
- "The Morning After" w.m. Joel Hirschhorn & Al Kasha from the film The Poseidon Adventure
- "No Time at All" w.m. Stephen Schwartz from the musical Pippin
- "The Old Fashioned Way" w. Charles Aznavour, Joel Hirschhorn & Al Kasha m. George Garvarentz
- "Ring Them Bells" w. Fred Ebb m. John Kander from the television production Liza with a Z
- "Rock and Roll" – Led Zeppelin
- "Shakin' at the High School Hop" w.m. Jim Jacobs & Warren Casey
- "Sing" w.m. Joe Raposo. Introduced by Bob McGrath on Sesame Street
- "Speak Softly, Love" w. Larry Kusik m. Nino Rota from the film The Godfather
- "Summer Nights" w.m. Warren Casey & Jim Jacobs from the musical Grease
- "Taxi (song)" — Harry Chapin
- "There Are Worse Things I Could Do" w.m. Warren Casey & Jim Jacobs from the musical Grease
- "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree" w.m. L. Russell Brown & Irwin Levine
- "Vincent" w.m. Don McLean
- "You Are the Sunshine of My Life" w.m. Stevie Wonder
Other notable songs (world)
[edit]- "Caro Mozart" – Sylvie Vartan (France)
- "Holidays" – Michel Polnareff (France)
Classical music
[edit]- Arthur Bliss – Metamorphic Variations
- Friedrich Cerha – Spiegel
- George Crumb – Makrokosmos, Volume I for amplified piano
- Mario Davidovsky – Transientes for orchestra
- Paul Le Flem – Symphony No. 4
- Karel Goeyvaerts
- Bélise dans un jardin
- Nachklänge aus dem Theater I–II, for tape
- Piano Quartet
- Hans Werner Henze – Heliogabalus imperator
- Klaus Huber
- ...Ausgespannt..., sacred music for baritone, five instrumental groups, loudspeakers, two two-track tapes, and organ
- Ein Hauch von Unzeit I: Plainte sur la perte de la réflexion musicale – quelques madrigaux pour flûte seule ou flûte avec quelques instruments quelquonques...
- Ein Hauch von Unzeit II: Plainte sur la perte de la réflexion musicale pour piano à une main et demie... , for piano
- Ein Hauch von Unzeit III, for 2–7 players (variable instrumentation)
- Dmitri Kabalevsky – A Letter to the 30th Century (oratorio)
- Wojciech Kilar – Prelude and Carol for 4 oboes and strings
- György Ligeti – Double Concerto for flute, oboe and orchestra
- Theo Loevendie – Horn Concerto, "Orbits"
- Yves Prin – Actions-Simultanées II, for orchestra
- Einojuhani Rautavaara
- Cantus Arcticus, for orchestra
- Canto III – A Portrait of the Artist at a Certain Moment, for string orchestra
- Credo, for mixed chorus
- Book of Life (Elämän kirja), choral suite
- Steve Reich – Clapping Music
- George Rochberg – Recordanza (Soliloquy for Cello and Piano)
- Peter Ruzicka – Bewegung
- Karlheinz Stockhausen –
- Alphabet für Liège, for soloists and duos, Nr. 36
- Ylem, for variable ensemble of 19 or more players, Nr. 37
- Toru Takemitsu – Distance
- Veljo Tormis – Curse Upon Iron (Raua needmine)
Opera
[edit]- Peter Maxwell Davies – Taverner (12 July, Covent Garden, London)
- Kiyoshige Koyama – Sansho Dayu
- Per Nørgård – Gilgamesh
- Thomas Pasatieri
- Charles Wilson – Héloise and Abelard
Jazz
[edit]Musical theater
[edit]- Berlin to Broadway with Kurt Weill – Off-Broadway revue opened at the Theatre de Lys on October 1 and ran for 152 performances
- Company (Stephen Sondheim) – London production opened at Her Majesty's Theatre on January 18 and ran for 344 performances
- Cowardy Custard – London production opened at the Mermaid Theatre on July 10 and ran for 405 performances
- Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope – London production opened at the Playhouse Theatre on April 19 and ran for 914 performances
- Don't Play Us Cheap – Broadway production opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on May 16 and ran for 164 performances
- A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (Stephen Sondheim) – Broadway revival
- The Good Old, Bad Old Days (Music, Lyrics & Book: Anthony Newley & Leslie Bricusse) London production opened at the Prince of Wales Theatre on December 20 and ran for 309 performances
- Jesus Christ Superstar (Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice) – London production opened at the Palace Theatre on August 9 and ran for 3358 performances
- Grease – Broadway production ran for 3388 performances, the longest run ever at that time
- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (Lloyd Webber & Rice) – London production opened at The Roundhouse on November 8 and ran for 43 performances
- Man of La Mancha Broadway revival
- Pippin – Broadway production opened at the Imperial Theatre on October 23 and ran for 1944 performances
- Sugar – Broadway production opened at the Kajestic Theatre and ran for 505 performances
Musical films
[edit]- Baharo Phool Barsao
- Cabaret
- Fillmore (musical documentary)
- Jawani Diwani
- Lady Sings the Blues
- Man of La Mancha
- Propala Hramota
- Elvis on Tour starring Elvis Presley
- Journey Back to Oz, with music by Walter Scharf, and songs by Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn[5]
- Seeta Aur Geeta (music by R. D. Burman)[6]
Musical television productions
[edit]Births
[edit]- January 1 - Yoon Chan, South Korean actor
- January 3 – Nichole Nordeman, American singer
- January 5 - Jang Seo-hee, South Korean actress
- January 15 - Chung Il-mi, South Korean goffer
- Yang Yong-eun, South Korean goffer
- January 17 – Aqualung, English songwriter, musician and record producer
- January 19 – Angham, Egyptian singer, record producer and actress
- January 21
- Cat Power, American singer-songwriter and musician
- Jesse van Ruller, Dutch jazz guitarist and composer
- January 24 - Beth Hart, American singer, songwriter and musician
- January 26 – Christopher Boykin, American rapper
- January 27
- Wynne Evans, Welsh tenor
- Mark Owen, British singer (Take That)
- Bibi Gaytán, Mexican singer
- January 29 – Coumba Gawlo, Senegalese singer
- February 1 – Tego Calderón, Puerto Rican rapper and singer
- February 2 - Zoë Keating, Canadian-American cellist and composer
- February 11 – Craig Jones, American heavy metal sampler/keyboardist (Slipknot)
- February 14 – Rob Thomas, American singer-songwriter, musician, multi instrumentalist and advocate (Matchbox Twenty)
- February 16 – Taylor Hawkins, American rock drummer (Foo Fighters) (d. 2022)
- February 17
- Billie Joe Armstrong, American rock musician, playwright, activist, advocate, actor and singer-songwriter (Green Day)
- Yuki Isoya, Japanese singer
- February 20 – K-os, Canadian alternative rapper, singer-songwriter and record producer
- February 21 - Seo Taiji, South Korean singer (Seo Taiji and Boys)
- February 24
- Teodor Currentzis, Greek orchestral conductor
- March 4
- Alison Wheeler, British singer (The Beautiful South)
- Ivy Queen, Puerto Rican singer, rapper and songwriter
- March 6 – Jaret Reddick, American musician (Bowling for Soup)
- March 7 - Jang Dong-gun, South Korean actor
- March 8 – Angie Hart, Australian pop singer
- March 9 – AZ, American rapper
- March 10 – Timbaland, American record producer, rapper, singer-songwriter and DJ (Ginuwine, Aaliyah, Justin Timberlake)
- March 11 – UA, Japanese singer-songwriter
- March 13 – Common, American rapper and actor
- March 15 – Mark Hoppus, American rock musician (blink-182)
- March 17 – Melissa Auf der Maur (Hole)
- March 20 – Alexander Kapranos, British rock singer and guitarist (Franz Ferdinand)
- April 1 – Sukshinder Shinda, British bhangra singer-songwriter and record producer
- April 4
- Vladimir Jurowski, Russian conductor
- Jill Scott, American soul singer and songwriter
- April 8 – Paul Gray, American heavy metal bass guitarist (Slipknot)
- April 10 – Sami Yli-Sirniö, Finnish rock and metal guitarist
- April 12 – Şebnem Ferah, Turkish singer-songwriter
- April 13 – Aaron Lewis, American nu metal musician (Staind)
- April 20
- Željko Joksimović, Serbian singer, composer songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer
- Marko Kon, Serbian composer, producer and singer
- Stephen Marley, Jamaican-American musician
- April 21 – Severina (singer), Croatian singer
- April 23 – Amira Medunjanin, singer from Bosnia and Herzegovina
- April 24 – Corey Cerovsek, Canadian violinist and pianist
- April 28 – Violent J, American rapper
- April 29 – Fredrik Kempe, Swedish songwriter and opera and pop singer
- May 3 – Mark Morrison, British R&B singer
- May 4
- Mike Dirnt American musician, songwriter and composer. (Green Day)
- Chris Tomlin, American contemporary Christian musician (CCM)
- May 7 – Felix da Housecat, American house music DJ and record producer
- May 8
- Dino Bardot, British guitarist band (Franz Ferdinand, The Yummy Fur)
- Darren Hayes, Australian singer (Savage Garden)
- May 14 – Salaam Remi, American record producer
- May 16 – Hideki Naganuma, Japanese DJ and video game composer[7]
- May 19 – Jenny Berggren, Swedish singer (Ace of Base)
- May 20 – Busta Rhymes, American hip hop recording artist, actor, record producer and record executive
- May 21
- The Notorious B.I.G., American rapper (d. 1997)
- Mitch Allan, American record producer, songwriter and musician.
- May 26 – Ahmad Dhani, Indonesian rock musician, songwriter, arranger, producer and politician
- May 27 – Ivete Sangalo, Brazilian female singer
- May 29 – Stanislas, French singer
- May 31 - Christian McBride, American jazz bassist, composer, artistic director
- June 4 – Stoja, Serbian pop-folk singer
- June 5
- Paweł Kotla, Polish conductor
- Toni Pearen, Australian singer-songwriter, TV host, dancer and actor
- June 6 – Cristina Scabbia, Italian singer
- June 12 – Bounty Killer, reggae/dancehall singer
- June 13 - Natalie MacMaster, Canadian fiddler
- June 16 - John Cho, South Korean actor
- June 17 – Rik Rok, Jamaican singer
- June 23 – Fredwreck, Palestinian American music artist and record producer
- June 25 – Mike Kroeger, Canadian rock bass guitarist (Nickelback)
- June 26 – Garou, French Canadian singer
- June 29 – DJ Shadow, American DJ and record producer
- July 1
- Sunshine Becker, American backing singer (Furthur)
- Alex Machacek, Austrian guitarist (BPM and CAB)
- July 4 – Rogue, American dark wave lead singer (The Crüxshadows)
- July 10 – Tilo Wolff, German musician
- July 12 – Brett Reed, drummer (Rancid)
- July 17
- Elizabeth Cook, American singer and guitarist
- Jason Rullo, American drummer (Symphony X and Redemption)
- July 20 – Vitamin C, American singer-songwriter, dancer and actress (Eve's Plum)
- July 26 – Wayne Wonder, reggae singer
- July 28 - Yum Jung-ah, South Korean actress
- July 29 – Anssi Kela, Finnish rock musician
- August 4 - John Paul White, is an American singer-songwriter, and was a member of the Grammy Award-winning duo The Civil Wars.
- August 6 – Geri Halliwell, British singer, clothes designer, author and actress (Spice Girls)
- August 8 – Lüpüs Thünder (Bloodhound Gang)
- August 9 – A-mei, Taiwanese Puyuma singer-songwriter
- August 12
- Del tha Funky Homosapien, American hip-hop artist
- Demir Demirkan, Turkish rock musician and songwriter
- August 15 - Yoo Jae-suk, South Korean comedian and television personality
- August 15 – Mikey Graham, Irish singer (Boyzone)
- August 16 – Emily Robison, American country music performer (Dixie Chicks)
- August 18
- Leo Ku, Hong Kong actor and singer
- Keiko Yamada, Japanese singer (Globe)
- August 19 – Sammi Cheng, Hong Kong singer and actress
- August 27 – Jimmy Pop, American musician (Bloodhound Gang)
- August 29 - Amanda Marshall, Canadian singer-songwriter
- Bae Yong-joon, South Korean actor and businessman
- September 4 – Carlos Ponce, Puerto Rican actor, singer, composer
- September 6 – Idris Elba, English actor, producer, musician and DJ
- Oh Yong-ran, South Korean handball player
- September 13 – Kelly Chen, Hong Kong singer and actress
- September 21 – Liam Gallagher, British singer (Oasis)
- September 23 – Sam Bettens, Belgian musician (K's Choice)
- September 23 – Jermaine Dupri, American rapper, record producer, musician
- September 27 – Lhasa de Sela, American-Canadian singer-songwriter (d. 2010)
- September 26 – Shawn Stockman, American singer (Boyz II Men)
- September 28
- Dita Von Teese, American vedette, burlesque dancer, model, businesswoman and singer (worked with Sebastien Tellier)
- Kevin MacLeod, American composer and music producer
- September 30 – Shaan, Indian singer
- October 3 - G. Love, American musician (G. Love and Special Sauce)
- October 6 - Ko So-young, South Korean actress and model
- October 8 - Kim Myung-min, South Korean actor
- October 10 – Tor Erik Hermansen, American record producer and songwriter of the team Stargate (music producers)
- October 14 - Nick Fyffe, English bassist (Jamiroquai)
- October 17
- October 6 – Anders Iwers, Swedish heavy metal guitarist
- October 19 – Pras (Michél), American rapper, hip hop musician, record producer, songwriter and actor (Fugees)
- October 20 – Stephan Moccio, Canadian pianist, composer, producer, arranger and conductor
- October 21 - Matthew Friedberger, American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist (The Fiery Furnaces)
- October 27 – Elissa, Lebanese singer
- October 28 – Brad Paisley, American country music performer
- October 29 - Tracee Ellis Ross, American actress
- November 9 - Christian Scharnweber, German trance Disc Jockey
- November 10 – Justin Trosper, American musician, songwriter, and record producer (Unwound)
- November 17 – Kimya Dawson, American singer/songwriter
- November 25 – Mark Morton, American heavy metal guitarist (Lamb of God)
- November 28 – Jesper Strömblad, Swedish death metal guitarist
- December 1 – Greg Upchurch, American rock drummer (Puddle of Mudd, 3 Doors Down)
- December 9 – Tré Cool, German-born American musician, drummer and composer (Green Day)
- December 10
- Scot Alexander, American alternative rock bass guitarist (Dishwalla)
- Brian Molko, British rock singer (Placebo)
- Mikkel Storleer Eriksen, American songwriter and producer of the team Stargate (music producers)
- December 11 – Easther Bennett, British singer (Eternal)
- December 12 – Kevin Parent, Canadian singer-songwriter and actor
- December 13 – Niki Evans, English actress and singer
- December 15, Jason Nevins, American songwriter, record producer and remixer
- December 16 – Ben Kowalewicz, Canadian rock lead singer (Billy Talent)
- December 18 – DJ Lethal, Latvian-born rock musician (Limp Bizkit, House of Pain)
- December 19 – Alyssa Milano, American activist, advocate, producer, singer and actress
- December 22 – Vanessa Paradis, French singer and actress
- December 23 - Morgan (singer), Italian musician and singer
- December 25 - Josh Freese, American rock drummer
- December 27 – Matt Slocum, American pop guitarist-composer and multi-instrumentalist (Sixpence None the Richer)
- December 31 – Joey McIntyre, American singer (New Kids on the Block)
Deaths
[edit]- January 1 – Maurice Chevalier, 83, French singer and actor
- January 16 – David Seville, 52, voice of the Chipmunks
- January 19 – Michael Rabin, 35, violinist (fell downstairs)
- January 20 – Jean Casadesus, 44, French pianist (car accident)
- January 23 – Big Maybelle, 47, singer and pianist
- January 24 – Gene Austin, 69, singer-songwriter
- January 27 – Mahalia Jackson, 61, gospel singer
- January 29 – Margherita Grandi, 77, operatic soprano
- February 8 – Markos Vamvakaris, 66, Greek composer
- February 11 – Rudi Gfaller, Austrian operetta singer and composer (b. 1882)
- February 19 – Lee Morgan, 33, hard bop trumpeter
- February 21 – Marie Dubas, 77, French music-hall singer
- March 2 – Erna Sack, 74, coloratura soprano (cancer)
- March 17 – Linda Jones, 27, soul singer (diabetic coma)
- March 27 – Sharkey Bonano, 67, jazz musician and bandleader
- April 3 – Ferde Grofé, 80, composer, arranger, and pianist
- April 4 – Stefan Wolpe, 69, composer
- May 2 – Les Harvey, 27, guitarist (Stone the Crows) (electrocuted on stage)
- May 5 – Reverend Gary Davis, 76, blues and gospel singer and guitarist
- May 12 – David Hughes, 43, operatic tenor (heart failure)
- June 8 – Jimmy Rushing, 70, blues and jazz singer
- June 13 – Clyde McPhatter, 39, R&B singer
- July 3 – "Mississippi" Fred McDowell, 68, blues musician
- July 9 – Robert Weede, 69, operatic baritone
- July 10 – Lovie Austin, 84, American pianist, composer, and bandleader
- July 15 –Francisco González Gamarra, 82, composer and painter[8]
- July 24 – Bobby Ramirez, drummer (Edgar Winter's White Trash)
- July 28 – Helen Traubel, 73, operatic soprano
- August 2
- Brian Cole, 29, bass player in The Association (drug overdose)
- Rudolph Ganz, 95, Swiss pianist, conductor and composer
- August 14 – Oscar Levant, 65, pianist and composer
- August 21 – Yvonne Gall, 87, operatic soprano
- August 29 – Lale Andersen, 67, Danish singer
- August 31 – Dalva de Oliveira, 55, Brazilian singer (internal bleeding)
- September 19 – Robert Casadesus, French pianist and composer, 73
- September 24 – Alfred Kalmus, music publisher, 93
- September 28 – Rory Storm, 33, English singer (appendicitis)
- September 30 – Grigore Cugler, 69, Romanian riter, artist, composer and violinist
- October 3 – Kari Marie Aarvold Glaser, 71, Norwegian pianist and music teacher
- October 24 – Thelma Votipka, 67, operatic mezzo-soprano
- November 3
- Harry Richman, 77, US singer, actor and composer
- Lucile Crews, 84, American composer
- November 6 – Billy Murcia, 21, drummer of New York Dolls (suffocation)
- November 11 – Berry Oakley, 24, bass player (The Allman Brothers Band) (motorcycle accident)
- November 12 – Rudolf Friml, 92, Rose-Marie composer
- November 18 – Danny Whitten, 29, guitarist (Crazy Horse) (drug overdose)
- November 28 – Havergal Brian, 96, English classical composer
- December 3 – Bill Johnson, 100, African American Dixieland jazz double-bassist
Awards
[edit]Grammy Awards
[edit]- Grammy Awards of 1972
- Grammy Album of the Year: The Concert for Bangladesh
- Grammy Best New Artist: America
- Grammy Best Album Design: "School's Out" – Alice Cooper
- Grammy Best Pop Duo or Group: "Where Is the Love" – Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway
- Grammy Best Pop Female Vocal: "I Am Woman" – Helen Reddy
- Grammy Best Pop Male Vocal: "Without You" – Harry Nilsson
- Grammy Best R&B Duo or Group: "Papa Was A Rollin' Stone" – The Temptations
- Grammy Best R&B Female Vocal: "Young, Gifted And Black" – Aretha Franklin
- Grammy Best R&B Male Vocal: "Me And Mrs. Jones" – Billy Paul
- Grammy Record of the Year: "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" – Roberta Flack
- Grammy Song of the Year: "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" – Roberta Flack
Country Music Association Awards
[edit]This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (December 2012) |
Eurovision Song Contest
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Woodmansey, Mick (2016). Spider from Mars: My Life with Bowie. London: Pan Macmillan. p. 300. ISBN 978-0-283-07274-1.
- ^ "1971 Grammy Award Winners". Grammy.com. Retrieved May 1, 2011.
- ^ "Gallagher official site".
- ^ "Yes Discography".
- ^ Osborne, Jerry (2003). Movie/TV soundtracks & original cast recordings price & reference guide. Port Townsend, WA: Osborne Enterprises. p. 1982. ISBN 9780932117373.
- ^ Jha, Subhash (2006). The essential guide to Bollywood. New Delhi: Lustre Press Roli Books. p. 51. ISBN 9788174363787.
- ^ "長沼英樹 (Hideki Naganuma)". Genius. Retrieved September 5, 2024.
- ^ Enrique Iturriaga (2001). "González Gamarra, Francisco". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.45211.
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