This Day In Music Search
On this day in music
|
26
Sep
2025
Ticketmaster were told to give music fans more advanced information about ticket prices, after complaints about the system used for Oasis's reunion tour last year. The Competition and Markets Authority said the company had agreed to tell fans 24 hours in advance if a tiered pricing system is being used, as it was for Oasis tickets, and give more information about ticket prices during online queues. The change came after Platinum tickets sold for almost two-and-a-half times the standard price, but Ticketmaster did not explain to consumers that they came without extra benefits.
|
|
26
Sep
2021
English musician Alan Lancaster died age 72 due to complications from multiple sclerosis. He is best known as a founding member and bassist of Status Quo, playing with the band from 1967 to 1985.
|
|
26
Sep
2016
Universal, Warner Brothers, Sony and several other record labels filed a law suit against the operators of YouTube-mp3.org, a service that allowed its users to remove audio from videos streamed on YouTube. The court action, launched against a German company, alleged that "tens, or even hundreds, of millions of tracks are illegally copied and distributed by stream ripping services each month."
|
|
26
Sep
2014
Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke released his second solo album, Tomorrow's Modern Boxes, for just $6 on the peer-to-peer file-sharing platform BitTorrent. Yorke and producer Godrich criticised the streaming service Spotify, saying it did not fairly compensate new artists and expressed their wish to give "control of internet commerce back to people who are creating the work". The album was downloaded over a million times within six days and became the most downloaded legal torrent of 2014. By February 2015, it had been downloaded more than 4.5 million times.
|
|
26
Sep
2009
Jay-Z started a two-week run at No.1 on the US album charts with 'The Blueprint 3', the rappers eleventh studio album.
|
|
26
Sep
2008
Matthew Bellamy, Christopher Wolstenholme and Dominic Howard from Muse was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from the University of Plymouth, England.
|
|
26
Sep
2007
A charitable foundation set up by Shakira donated $40 million (£19.6 million) to help victims of natural disasters. The money would go towards repairing damage caused by an earthquake in Peru and a hurricane in Nicaragua. A further $5 million (£2.46 million) would be spent on health and education in four Latin American countries.
|
|
26
Sep
2004
Green Day scored their first UK No.1 album with American Idiot the band's seventh release. A concept album dubbed a "punk rock opera" by the band members, American Idiot follows the story of Jesus of Suburbia, a lower-middle-class American adolescent anti-hero.
|
|
26
Sep
2003
A report published on requests by artists to venues of their backstage requirements revealed; Limp Bizkit insisted that all the lamps in their rooms be dimmable while Mariah Carey would only have 'bendy' straws as she will not use straight ones. Van Halen insisted that back-stage celery is trimmed and not peeled. The Red Hot Chili Peppers asked for a meditation room and a selection of aromatherapy candles. Barry Manilow requested that the air temperature in the auditorium be kept at a regular 65 degrees.
|
|
26
Sep
2003
English singer, songwriter Robert Palmer died of a heart attack aged 54 in Paris France. He was a member of Vinegar Joe and Power Station (with Duran Duran members Andy Taylor and John Taylor with drummer and former Chic member Tony Thompson). As a solo artist had the 1986 US No.1 & UK No.5 single 'Addicted To Love' and the 1988 hit 'Simply Irresistible'.
|
|
26
Sep
1996
Police found drugs hidden in a Smarties tube when they raided the London home of Paula Yates and INXS singer Michael Hutchence. The couple were away in Australia at the time of the raid.
|
|
26
Sep
1995
AC/DC released Ballbreaker their 12th international studio album. The album which was produced by Rick Rubin, featured the return of former drummer Phil Rudd, who had been fired from the band in 1983 as a result of drinking and drug problems and a fight with founding rhythm guitarist Malcolm Young.
|
|
26
Sep
1989
Paul McCartney started his world tour at The Drammenshallen, in Drammen, Norway. It was McCartney's first major tour outing in ten years, since Wings UK Tour 1979, and his first appearances in North America in thirteen years.
|
|
26
Sep
1987
Michael Jackson started a six-week run at No.1 on the US album chart with 'Bad'. Released nearly five years after Jackson's previous studio album, Thriller, Bad, went on to become the world's best-selling album having sold between 30 to 45 million copies worldwide. The album produced five US No.1's, the first album to do so.
|
|
26
Sep
1987
Whitney Houston started a two week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with 'Didn't We Almost Have It All'.
|
|
26
Sep
1981
Bruce Dickinson joined UK rock band Iron Maiden, (Dickinson had been the vocalist with Samson).
|
|
26
Sep
1979
U2 released their very first record, an EP titled 'U2-3.' With an initial run of 1,000 individually numbered copies the tracks were produced by the band with Chas de Whalley and was available only in Ireland.
|
|
26
Sep
1975
The Rocky Horror Picture Show opened in Westwood, California. Featuring a young Meat Loaf along with Tim Curry and Susan Sarandon, the movie tanks but later becomes a cult classic, with audience members shouting back at the screen and bringing toast, toilet paper, and other assorted items to enhance the viewing experience.
|
|
26
Sep
1969
The Beatles released Abbey Road in the UK. The final studio recordings from the group featured two George Harrison songs ’Something’ (Harrison's first A-side single), and 'Here Comes The Sun'. In their interviews for The Beatles Anthology, the surviving band members stated that, although none of them ever made the distinction of calling it the "last album", they all felt at the time this would very likely be the final Beatles product and therefore agreed to set aside their differences and "go out on a high note".
|
|
26
Sep
1968
Rolling Stone Brian Jones was fined £50 with 100 guineas cost after being found guilty of possession of cannabis.
|
|
26
Sep
1967
Pink Floyd played the first of three nights at the Fillmore in San Francisco, the groups first ever live dates in the US.
|
|
26
Sep
1965
At the end of a European tour Roger Daltry knocked out Keith Moon resulting in the singer being sacked from The Who. The band were playing two shows in one night in Denmark, when an argument broke about between all four band members. Daltrey was reinstated the following day.
|
|
26
Sep
1964
Roy Orbison started a three week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with 'Oh Pretty Woman'. The title was inspired by Orbison's wife Claudette interrupting a conversation to announce she was going out; when Orbison asked if she was okay for cash, his co-writer Bill Dees interjected "A pretty woman never needs any money."
|
|
26
Sep
1961
The Greenbriar Boys started a two-week residency at Gerde's Folk Club in New York. The opening act was Bob Dylan.
|
|
26
Sep
1956
Elvis Presley returned to his hometown of Tupelo, Mississippi, to play the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show. One of the many obsessed teenage girls in the audience is Wynette Pugh, who goes on to stardom as Tammy Wynette. Security issues soon made small-time appearances like this impossible for Elvis.
|
|
26
Sep
1937
American blues singer Bessie Smith died aged 43 after being involved in a car accident while traveling along Route 61 outside Memphis, Tennessee. Her 1923 song ‘Downhearted Blues’ was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2006.
|
Born on this day in music
|
26
Sep
1988
English singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist James Blake. Blake has been credited on releases for Jay-Z, Kanye West, Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar, Travis Scott and others. He has won a Mercury Prize from two nominations, two Grammy Awards from nine nominations and three Brit Award nominations. His third album, The Colour in Anything (2016), was followed by his 2018 single 'King's Dead' (with Jay Rock, Kendrick Lamar and Future), which peaked at No.21 on the Billboard Hot 100.
|
|
26
Sep
1981
American singer, songwriter, and actress Christina Milian, who had the 2002 UK No. 3 single 'AM To PM' and the US No.5 hit 'Dip It Low'.
|
|
26
Sep
1973
American musician, songwriter, and record producer Dr. Luke. He began his professional music career as the Saturday Night Live band's lead guitarist in 1996. He became prominent in 2004 for producing Kelly Clarkson's single 'Since U Been Gone' with Swedish record producer Max Martin. He has co-written and produced songs such as 'Who Knew' (2006) for Pink, 'Girlfriend' (2007) for Avril Lavigne, and 'I Kissed a Girl' (2008) for Katy Perry.
|
|
26
Sep
1972
Shawn Stockman, from American R&B vocal group Boyz II Men, who had the 1992 US & UK No.1 single 'End Of The Road' which set a new record for longevity, staying at No.1 on the Billboard Hot 100 for thirteen weeks, breaking the decades-old record held by Elvis Presley.
|
|
26
Sep
1967
American singer-songwriter and musician Shannon Hoon. He was the lead singer of the band Blind Melon from 1990 until his death from a cocaine overdose on October 21, 1995. Blind Melon is best known for their 1993 hit 'No Rain'.
|
|
26
Sep
1965
American singer and actress Cindy Herron, who, with En Vogue, had the 1992 US No.2 and UK No.4 single 'My Lovin' (You're Never Gonna Get It)'. In 1996, 'Don't Let Go (Love)' became the group's third, and most successful single, to reach No. 2 in the US, and became their sixth No. 1 on the US R&B chart. Scoring more No. 1 singles on the US R&B chart than any other female group other than the The Supremes.
|
|
26
Sep
1962
English singer, songwriter, and author Tracey Thorn. She was in the band Marine Girls from 1980 to 1983 and then the duo Everything But The Girl. Their cover of 'I Don't Want to Talk About It' reached No. 3 on the UK Singles Chart in 1988, a feat later matched by 'Missing', which charted high in several countries and reached No. 2 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in 1995.
|
|
26
Sep
1962
American guitarist Al Pitrelli, best known for his work with the Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Megadeth, Alice Cooper and Savatage. He has performed with various acts as a band member, session musician and touring member, including Michael Bolton, Celine Dion, Asia, Taylor Dayne, Blue Öyster Cult and Exposé.
|
|
26
Sep
1955
American country music singer and songwriter Carlene Carter. She is the daughter of June Carter Cash and her first husband, Carl Smith. She has released more than 20 singles, including three No.3 peaking hits on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts.
|
|
26
Sep
1954
American guitarist and songwriter Craig Chaquico. From 1974 to 1990, he was lead guitarist for the rock bands Jefferson Starship and Starship, who had the 1987 UK & US No.1 single 'Nothing's Gonna Stop Us'.
|
|
26
Sep
1954
Cesar Rosas guitarist from Los Lobos (Spanish for "the Wolves"), who had the 1987 UK & US No.1 single with their cover version of 'La Bamba', which was a 1958 hit for Ritchie Valens and one of early rock and roll's best-known songs.
|
|
26
Sep
1951
American rock musician Tony Fox Sales. Primarily a bass player, Sales has worked with Todd Rundgren, Iggy Pop, and in Tin Machine with David Bowie, often alongside his brother Hunt Sales, a drummer.
|
|
26
Sep
1951
Stuart Tosh, Scottish drummer with Pilot who had the 1975 UK No.1 single 'January'. Tosh has also worked with The Alan Parsons Project, 10cc, Camel, and Roger Daltrey.
|
|
26
Sep
1948
American bassist, guitarist and singer Tiran Porter best known as a member of The Doobie Brothers from 1972 to 1980 and 1987 to 1992. 'Listen to the Music' gave the group their first big hit in 1972.
|
|
26
Sep
1948
British-born Australian singer, actress and activist Olivia Newton-John. She scored the 1978 UK & US No.1 single with John Travolta, You’re the One That I Want and the 1981 US No.1 & UK solo No.7 single 'Physical'. She was a four-time Grammy Award winner whose music career included five No.1 hits. Newton-John, who battled breast cancer three times, was an advocate for breast cancer research. She died on 8 August 2022 from cancer at her home in the Santa Ynez Valley of California, at the age of 73.
|
|
26
Sep
1947
Multi-award-winning American country music singer, Lynn Anderson, who scored the 1970 US No.3 & 1971 UK No.3 single 'Rose Garden'. Anderson charted 12 No.1s, 18 Top 10s, and more than 50 Top 40 hits. She was also an equestrian and professional horse racer and over the course of her life, won 16 national championships and eight world championships. Anderson died on July 30, 2015, at the Vanderbilt University Medical Centre in Nashville, Tennessee, at the age of 67.
|
|
26
Sep
1945
English singer and songwriter Bryan Ferry, who with Roxy Music scored the hit singles 'Street Life', 'Love is the Drug', 'Dance Away', 'Angel Eyes', 'Jealous Guy' and 'Avalon'. Ferry has recorded many cover versions of other artists' songs, including standards from the Great American Songbook, in albums such as These Foolish Things (1973).
|
|
26
Sep
1941
Joe Bauer, drummer with American rock band The Youngbloods. Despite receiving critical acclaim, they never achieved widespread popularity with just one hit, the 1969 US No.5 single 'Get Together'. He died in 1982.
|
|
26
Sep
1926
American singer and actress Julie London, whose career spanned more than 40 years. London recorded over thirty albums of pop and jazz standards between 1955 and 1969. Her recording of 'Cry Me a River', a song she introduced on her debut album Julie Is Her Name, was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001. She died on October 18 200 of what was later determined to be cardiac arrest; she was 74.
|
|
26
Sep
1925
American country and western singer and songwriter Marty Robbins who had the 1960 US No.1 & UK No.19 single 'El Paso'. He was one of the most popular and successful singers of his genre for most of his nearly four-decade career, which spanned from the late 1940s to the early 1980s. He was also an early outlaw country pioneer. He died on 8th December 1982 age 57.
|
Search for another date:



