Dueling ex-Beatles today: In 1978, one year after the play “Beatlemania” opened on Broadway, Ringo Starr released his “Bad Boy” album, while Paul McCartney and Wings released “I’ve Had Enough”:
The number six song one year later (with no known connection to Mr. Spock):
Stop! for the number eight single today in 1990 …
… which bears an interesting resemblance to an earlier song:
An interesting juxtaposition of 45 years for these two songs:
The number six single today in 1948:
Then, the number 17 song today in 1993 by Green Jellÿ (which began life as Green Jellö — and we have the CD to prove it — until the makers of Jell-O objected):
Today in 1964, one day after the Rolling Stones recorded their “12×5” album in Chicago, Chicago police broke up their news conference. (Perhaps foreshadowing four years later when the Democratic Party came to town?)
The Stones could look back at that and laugh two years later when “Paint It Black” hit number one:
One year later, David Bowie released “Space Oddity” …
… on the same day that this reached number one in Great Britain:
For readers not in the Green Bay TV market, Tom Zalaski is an anchor at WFRV-TV (channel 5) in Green Bay.
(Irrelevant aside: Zalaski went to WFRV from WBAY-TV (channel 2) in Green Bay. WBAY was the original CBS station in Green Bay before WFRV switched in 1992 from ABC to CBS when CBS purchased WFRV in order to purchase WCCO-TV, the CBS affiliate in the Twin Cities, because WCCO and WFRV were owned by the same company. WFRV, meanwhile, was an NBC station before it switched to ABC in the late 1970s, forcing WLUK-TV (channel 11), the market’s original NBC station before it switched to ABC in 1959, to switch from ABC to NBC.)
Zalaski and I have the same tie, a bright green paisley design. He wore the tie one night on the news, and in my former life as a business magazine editor I called the station asking where he got his tie. Zalaski answered the phone and gave the answer — J.C. Penney in Oshkosh. I wear ties as infrequently as I can, but I have that tie.
Zalaski has other talents besides TV news (for which he has a great voice). He is the author of Classic Rock Woodstock and the Bands That Saved Us from the Beatles: Lessons from Z’s Scho0l of Hard Rocks, now available through Amazon.com.
Zalaski’s introduction, which can be read on Amazon.com, notes his additional broadcast role of afternoon news on WAPL (105.7 FM) in Appleton:
Zalaski also lists songs that, growing up in Connecticut, pushed him away from the Beatles:
If you are a fan of music from the psychedelic era onward, you should get Zalaski’s book.
The number one album in the country today in 1971 was Paul and Linda McCartney’s “Ram”:
Today in 1972, Bruce Springsteen signed a record deal with Columbia Records. He celebrated 19 years later by marrying his backup singer, Patti Scialfa.
Birthdays today start with the Wisconsinite to whom every rock guitarist owes a debt, Les Paul: