This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1954.
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Specific locations
editSpecific genres
editEvents
edit- January 14 – First documented use of the abbreviated term "Rock 'n' Roll" to promote Alan Freed's Rock 'n' Roll Jubillee, held at St. Nicholas Arena in New York City. Previously the genre term was just called "Rock and Roll".[1]
- February 1 – Johnny "Guitar" Watson records "Space Guitar" pioneering reverb and feedback techniques on guitar.[2]
- March 12 – Arnold Schoenberg's opera Moses und Aron has its first performance in Hamburg (it is given a staged première on June 6 in Zürich).[3]
- March 15 – The Chords record "Sh-Boom" for Atlantic Records' Cat subsidiary.[citation needed]
- March 25 – At the 26th Academy Awards, Frank Sinatra wins the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in From Here to Eternity, resuscitating his singing career in the process. At the same ceremony, Bing Crosby is nominated for Best Actor for his role in The Country Girl.[4]
- April – Fender Stratocaster electric guitar first produced in California.
- April 12 – Bill Haley & His Comets record "Rock Around the Clock" in New York City for Decca Records.[5]
- May 5 – The seventeenth Maggio Musicale Fiorentino opens with a performance of Gaspare Spontini's last opera, Agnese di Hohenstaufen, and continues until 20 June, featuring operas by Weber, Adriano Lualdi, Puccini, and Tchaikovsky, as well as the world premiere of Valentino Bucchi's Il contrabasso.[6]
- May 20 – "Rock Around the Clock" is released as the B-side of "Thirteen Women (and Only One Man in Town)". The song is only a moderate success (US # 23 on May 29, 1954, for only one week ; UK # 17, in December 1954) until it is featured in the film Blackboard Jungle the following year.[citation needed]
- July 5 – Elvis Presley has his first commercial recording session at Sun Studios in Memphis, Tennessee. He sings "That's All Right (Mama)" and "Blue Moon of Kentucky", released as his first single on July 19 naming the performers as Elvis Presley, Scotty and Bill.[7] The songs were originally sung by Arthur Crudup in 1946 and Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys in 1947 respectively.
- October 16 – Elvis Presley makes his first radio broadcast, on a show in Shreveport, Louisiana, called Louisiana Hayride.[8]
- October 29 -- John Serry signs with Ben Selvin at RCA Thesaurus to broadcast his arrangements of popular music on national radio networks.[9]
- Fall – A cover version of Big Joe Turner's "Shake, Rattle and Roll" by Bill Haley & His Comets becomes the first internationally popular rock and roll recording.[citation needed]
- Record companies deliver 7-inch 45 rpm record singles to radio stations instead of 78s.[10]
- Lyric Opera of Chicago is founded.[11]
- Composer/conductor Andrzej Panufnik defects from Poland to England.
- Les Paul commissions Ampex to build the first eight track tape recorder, at his own expense.[citation needed]
- The Drifters form.[citation needed]
- The Isley Brothers make their first recordings, featuring only the three eldest brothers, O'Kelly Jr., Rudolph and Ronald.[12]
- The Newport Jazz Festival is established by George Wein.[citation needed]
- São Paulo State Symphony Orchestra is founded.[13]
Albums released
edit- Al Haig Trio (Esoteric) – Al Haig
- Bing: A Musical Autobiography – Bing Crosby
- Blue Haze – Miles Davis
- Chet Baker Sings - Chet Baker
- The Chordettes Sing Your Requests – The Chordettes
- Clap Yo' Hands – The Four Lads
- Crew Cut Capers – The Crew-Cuts
- Dinah Jams – Dinah Washington
- Favorite Songs – The Ames Brothers
- Guy Mitchell Sings – Guy Mitchell
- Irving Berlin Favorites – Eddie Fisher
- Irving Berlin's White Christmas – Rosemary Clooney
- It Must Be True – The Ames Brothers
- Jacques Brel et ses chansons – Jacques Brel
- Just Patti – Patti Page
- Louis Armstrong and the Mills Brothers – Louis Armstrong & The Mills Brothers
- Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy – Louis Armstrong and His All Stars
- Mambo! - Yma Súmac
- The Man That Got Away – Georgia Gibbs
- Meet The Mills Brothers – The Mills Brothers
- Mr. Rhythm – Frankie Laine
- My Heart's In The Highland – Jo Stafford
- A Night at Birdland Vol. 1 – The Art Blakey Quintet
- A Night at Birdland Vol. 2 – The Art Blakey Quintet
- Old Masters – Bing Crosby
- Patti Page Sings for Romance – Patti Page
- Patti's Songs – Patti Page
- RCA Thesaurus – John Serry, Sr.
- Red Garters – Rosemary Clooney
- Rock with Bill Haley and the Comets – Bill Haley & His Comets
- Selections from Irving Berlin's White Christmas – Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Trudy Stevens, Peggy Lee
- So Many Memories – Patti Page
- Some Fine Old Chestnuts – Bing Crosby
- Something Cool – June Christy
- Song Souvenirs – Patti Page
- Songs for Young Lovers – Frank Sinatra
- Songs in a Mellow Mood – Ella Fitzgerald
- Souvenir Album – The Mills Brothers
- Swing Easy! – Frank Sinatra
- Till I Waltz Again with You – Teresa Brewer
- The Tin Angel – Odetta & Larry
- Toshiko at Mocambo – Toshiko Akiyoshi
- Toshiko's Piano – Toshiko Akiyoshi
- Young at Heart – Doris Day & Frank Sinatra
Biggest hit singles
editThe following singles achieved the highest chart positions in the set of charts available for 1954.[14]
# | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart entries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | The Chordettes | "Mr. Sandman" | 1954 | US | US Billboard 1 – Oct 1954 (20 weeks), US 1940s 1 – Nov 1954 (8 weeks), US 1 for 4 weeks – Dec 1954, US CashBox 1 – Oct 1954 (23 weeks), Radio Luxembourg sheet music 1 for 6 weeks – Jan 1955, Australia 1 for 4 weeks – Apr 1955, Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002 (1954), Peel list 1 of 1954, US BB 5 of 1954, DZE 5 of 1954, Your Hit Parade 6 of 1954, POP 7 of 1954, RYM 9 of 1954, UK 11 – Dec 1954 (8 weeks), Brazil 27 of 1955, DDD 45 of 1954, RIAA 252, Acclaimed 1006 (1954) |
2 | Doris Day | "Secret Love" | 1954 | US | UK 1 – Apr 1954 (29 weeks), US Billboard 1 – Jan 1954 (22 weeks), US 1940s 1 – Jan 1954 (20 weeks), US 1 for 3 weeks – Feb 1954, US CashBox 1 – Nov 1953 (30 weeks), Radio Luxembourg sheet music 1 for 7 weeks – May 1954, Oscar in 1953 (film 'Calamity Jane'), Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999 (1953), UKMIX 7, DZE 8 of 1954, US BB 11 of 1954, POP 11 of 1954, Your Hit Parade 12 of 1954, RYM 12 of 1953, Brazil 17 of 1954, Italy 54 of 1954 |
3 | The Crew-Cuts | "Sh-Boom" | 1954 | US | US Billboard 1 – Jul 1954 (20 weeks), US 1940s 1 – Jul 1954 (20 weeks), US 1 for 7 weeks – Aug 1954, US CashBox 1 – Jul 1954 (24 weeks), Australia 1 for 4 weeks – Dec 1954, DZE 1 of 1954, US BB 3 of 1954, Flanders 3 – Dec 1954 (3 months), POP 3 of 1954, UK 12 – Oct 1954 (9 weeks), Brazil 13 of 1954, France (50s) 20 of 1954, RYM 22 of 1954, Italy 95 of 1955 |
4 | Kitty Kallen | "Little Things Mean a Lot" | 1954 | US | UK 1 – Jul 1954 (23 weeks), US Billboard 1 – Apr 1954 (26 weeks), US 1940s 1 – Apr 1954 (25 weeks), US 1 for 9 weeks – Jun 1954, US CashBox 1 – Apr 1954 (28 weeks), Radio Luxembourg sheet music 1 for 12 weeks – Jul 1954, Australia 1 for 5 weeks – Oct 1954, DZE 2 of 1954, Your Hit Parade 9 of 1954, US BB 15 of 1954, POP 15 of 1954, UKMIX 28, RYM 145 of 1954 |
5 | Rosemary Clooney | "Hey There" | 1954 | US | US Billboard 1 – Jul 1954 (27 weeks), US 1940s 1 – Jul 1954 (23 weeks), US 1 for 6 weeks – Sep 1954, US CashBox 1 – Jul 1954 (31 weeks), Australia 1 for 4 weeks – Feb 1957, Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999 (1954), UK 4 – Oct 1955 (11 weeks), DZE 7 of 1954, Your Hit Parade 14 of 1954, US BB 18 of 1954, POP 21 of 1954, Brazil 31 of 1954, RYM 34 of 1954, DDD 66 of 1954 |
US No. 1 hit singles
editThese singles reached the top of US Billboard magazine's charts in 1954.
First week | Number of weeks | Title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
January 2, 1954 | 8 | "Oh! My Pa-Pa" | Eddie Fisher |
February 27, 1954 | 2 | "Secret Love" | Doris Day |
March 13, 1954 | 1 | "Make Love to Me" | Jo Stafford |
March 20, 1954 | 1 | "Secret Love" | Doris Day |
March 27, 1954 | 2 | "Make Love to Me" | Jo Stafford |
April 10, 1954 | 8 | "Wanted" | Perry Como |
June 5, 1954 | 9 | "Little Things Mean a Lot" | Kitty Kallen |
August 7, 1954 | 7 | "Sh-Boom" | The Crew-Cuts |
September 25, 1954 | 6 | "Hey There" | Rosemary Clooney |
November 6, 1954 | 1 | "This Ole House" | Rosemary Clooney |
November 13, 1954 | 3 | "I Need You Now" | Eddie Fisher |
December 4, 1954 | 7 | "Mr. Sandman" | The Chordettes |
Top hits on record
editA–J
edit- "Am I a Toy or a Treasure" – Kay Starr
- "Answer Me, My Love" – Nat King Cole
- "Back Where I Belong" – Frankie Laine and Jo Stafford
- "Baubles, Bangles & Beads", recorded by
- "The Christmas Song" – Nat King Cole (a new version; original release was in 1946)
- "Cross Over The Bridge" – Patti Page
- "Darling, Je Vous Aime Beaucoup" – Nat King Cole
- "Earth Angel" – The Penguins (also in 1955)
- "Ebb Tide" – Roy Hamilton
- "Goodnight, Sweetheart, Goodnight" – The McGuire Sisters
- "Hearts Of Stone" – The Fontane Sisters
- "I Cried" – Patti Page
- "I Need You Now" – Eddie Fisher
- "I Speak to the Stars" – Doris Day
- "If I Give My Heart to You", recorded by
- "If You Love Me (Really Love Me)" – Kay Starr
- "In the Chapel in the Moonlight" – Kitty Kallen
- "In the Beginning" – Frankie Laine
- "In The Mood" – Glenn Miller
- "In the Still of the Night" – The Five Satins
- "Johnny Guitar" – Peggy Lee
L–S
edit- "Let Me Go, Lover" – Joan Weber
- "Little Things Mean a Lot" – Kitty Kallen
- "Lucille" - Clyde McPhatter and The Drifters
- "Make Love to Me" – Jo Stafford
- "The Man That Got Away" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Melancholy Baby" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Melody of Love" – Frank Sinatra and Ray Anthony
- "Mr. Sandman" – Chordettes
- "Muskrat Ramble" – Matys Brothers
- "My Sin" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Mystery Train" – Elvis Presley
- "Oh! My Pa-Pa" – Eddie Fisher
- "Opus One" – The Mills Brothers
- "Out Of Nowhere" – Frankie Laine
- "Papa Loves Mambo" – Perry Como
- "Rain, Rain, Rain" – Frankie Laine and The Four Lads
- "Say Hey", recorded by
- "Secret Love" – Doris Day
- "Sh-Boom", recorded by
- The Crew-Cuts
- The Chords
- Stan Freberg (as a parody of The Chords' version).
- "Sincerely" – McGuire Sisters (also in 1955)
- "Smile" – Nat King Cole
- "Someone to Watch Over Me" – Frank Sinatra
- "Such a Night", recorded by
- "Sway" – Dean Martin
T–Y
edit- "Teach Me Tonight" – The DeCastro Sisters
- "Tenderly" – Nat King Cole
- "Thank You for Calling" – Jo Stafford
- "That's All Right Mama" – Elvis Presley
- "Tweedlee Dee" – LaVern Baker (also in 1955)
- "Wanted" – Perry Como
- "What a Dream" – Patti Page
- "When The World Was Young" – Felicia Sanders
- "Whither Thou Goest" – Les Paul and Mary Ford
- "You'll Never Walk Alone" – Roy Hamilton
- "You're Nobody till Somebody Loves You" – The Mills Brothers
Top R&B and country hits on record
edit- "Bimbo" – Jim Reeves
- "Goodnight Sweetheart Goodnight" – Spaniels
- 'Slowly" – Webb Pierce
- "Hearts Of Stone" – Jewels
- "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man" – Muddy Waters
- "Mambo Baby" – Ruth Brown
- "Oh What A Dream" – Ruth Brown
- "Oop Shoop" – Shirley Gunter and The Queens
- "Shake A Hand" – Faye Adams
- "Shake Rattle And Roll" – Big Joe Turner
- "I Don't Hurt Anymore" – Hank Snow
- "The Things That I Used To Do" – Guitar Slim
- "Tweedlee Dee" – LaVern Baker
- "Work with Me, Annie" – Hank Ballard & The Midnighters
Published popular music
edit- "All of You" words and music: Cole Porter
- "Annie Had a Baby" w.m. Henry Glover & Lois Mann
- "A Blossom Fell" w.m. Howard Barnes, Harold Cornelius & Dominic John
- "Cara Mia" w.m. Tulio Trapani & Lee Lange
- "Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White" w. (Eng) Mack David (Fr) Jacques Larue m. Louiguy
- "Count Your Blessings (Instead of Sheep)" w.m. Irving Berlin
- "Cross Over The Bridge" w.m. Bennie Benjamin & George David Weiss
- "Earth Angel" w.m. Jesse Belvin, Curtis Williams & Gaynel Hodge
- "Ev'ry Day of My Life" w.m.Al Jacobs and Jimmie Crane.
- "The Finger Of Suspicion Points At You" w.m. Paul Mann & Al Lewis
- "From The Vine Came The Grape" w.m. Leonard Whitcup & Paul Cunningham
- "Gilly Gilly Ossenfeffer Katzenellen Bogen by the Sea" w.m. Al Hoffman & Dick Manning
- "Hearts Of Stone" w. Eddy Ray m. Rudy Jackson
- "Hernando's Hideaway" w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross
- "He's A Tramp" Sonny Burke, Peggy Lee
- "Hey There" w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross
- "The High and the Mighty" w. Ned Washington m. Dimitri Tiomkin
- "Honeycomb" w.m. Bob Merrill
- "I Can't Tell A Waltz From A Tango" Al Hoffman, Dick Manning
- "I Could Be Happy With You" w.m. Sandy Wilson
- "I Don't Hurt Anymore" w. Jack Rollins m. Don Robertson
- "I Got A Woman" w.m. Ray Charles & Renald Richard
- "I Left My Heart In San Francisco" w. Douglas Cross m. George Cory
- "If I Give My Heart to You" w.m. Jimmy Brewster, Jimmie Crane & Al Jacobs
- "I'll Walk With God" w. Paul Francis Webster m. Nicholas Brodszky
- "I'm Not At All In Love" w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross. Introduced by Janis Paige in the musical The Pajama Game.
- "In Other Words" (aka "Fly Me To The Moon") w.m. Bart Howard
- "In Paris and in Love" w. Leo Robin m. Sigmund Romberg. Introduced by Jeanmaire and David Atkinson in the musical The Girl in the Pink Tights
- "Let Me Go, Lover!" w.m. Jenny Lou Carson & Al Hill
- "The Little Shoemaker" w.(Eng) John Turner & Geoffrey Parsons (Fr) Avril Lamarque m. Rudi Revil
- "Mambo Italiano" w.m. Bob Merrill
- "Mister Sandman" w.m. Pat Ballard
- "Misty" w. Johnny Burke m. Erroll Garner
- "My Son, My Son" w. Bob Howard m. Melville Farley & Eddie Calvert
- "The Naughty Lady of Shady Lane" w.m. Sid Tepper & Roy C. Bennett
- "Only You (and You Alone)" w.m. Buck Ram & Ande Rand
- "Open Up Your Heart (And Let the Sunshine In)" w.m. Stuart Hamblen
- "Papa Loves Mambo" w.m. Al Hoffman, Dick Manning & Bix Reichner
- "Pledging My Love" w.m. Ferdinand Washington & Don Robey
- "The Poor People of Paris" w.(Eng) Jack Lawrence (Fr) Rene Rouzaud m. Marguerite Monnot "La Goulante du Pauvre Jean"
- "Release Me" w.m. Eddie Miller & W. S. Stevenson
- "River of No Return" w. Ken Darby m. Lionel Newman from the film River of No Return.
- "Shake, Rattle And Roll" w.m. Charles Calhoun
- "Sh-Boom" w.m. James Keyes, Claude & Carl Feaster, Floyd F. McRae & William Edwards
- "Sincerely" w.m. Harvey Fuqua & Alan Freed
- "Sisters" w.m. Irving Berlin
- "Skokiaan" w. Tom Glazer m. August Musarurwa
- "Smile" w. John Turner & Geoffrey Parsons m. Charles Chaplin
- "Steam Heat" w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross
- "There Once Was a Man" w. m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross. Introduced by John Raitt and Janis Paige in the musical The Pajama Game
- "This Ole House" w.m. Stuart Hamblen
- "Three Coins In The Fountain" w. Sammy Cahn m. Jule Styne
- "Tweedle Dee" w.m. Winfield Scott
- "What a Dream" w.m. Chuck Willis
- "Whither Thou Goest" w.m. Guy Singer
- "Wonderful, Wonderful Day" w. Johnny Mercer m. Gene De Paul from the film Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
- "Work with Me, Annie" w.m. Hank Ballard
- "Young And Foolish" w. Arnold B. Horwitt m. Albert Hague from the 1955 musical Plain and Fancy
Other notable songs
edit- "Le Déserteur" – Boris Vian
- Tierra bendita y divina – a traditional Spanish language Christian hymn is published.[15]
- "V Put" – Vasili Solovyov-Sedoy and Mikhail Dudin
Premieres
edit- 1 Recording for the Austrian Radio. The Symphony received its two first concert performances in 1955 under Alois Melichar in Graz and Jan Koetsier in Munich.[37]
Compositions
edit- William Alwyn – Autumn Legend for Cor Anglais and Strings
- Luciano Berio – Nones for orchestra
- Boris Blacher – Viola Concerto
- Havergal Brian – Symphony No. 10
- Carlos Chávez – Symphony No. 3
- George Crumb – String Quartet
- Mario Davidovsky – Concertino for Percussion and Strings
- George Enescu – Chamber Symphony in E major, Op. 33
- Ross Lee Finney – Piano Trio No. 2
- Gerald Finzi – Cello Concerto
- André Fleury – Messe pour la fête de tous les saints
- Armstrong Gibbs – Dale and Fell, suite for strings
- Howard Hanson – Sinfonia sacra (Symphony No. 5)
- Andrew Imbrie – Violin Concerto
- Alemdar Karamanov – Symphony No. 1
- Wojciech Kilar –
- The Bird for voice and piano
- Sonata for horn and piano
- Ernst Krenek
- Symphony "Pallas Athene", Op. 137
- Violin Concerto No. 2, Op. 140
- György Kurtág - Mouvement for viola and orchestra
- György Ligeti – Métamorphoses nocturnes (String Quartet No. 1)
- Witold Lutosławski
- Concerto for Orchestra
- Dance Preludes, for clarinet and piano
- Bohuslav Martinů – Sonata for Piano, H. 350
- Darius Milhaud – West Point Suite
- Per Nørgård - Metamorfosi
- Walter Piston – Symphony No. 5
- Edmund Rubbra – Symphony No. 6
- John Serry Sr. –
- Allegro – m. Joseph Haydn, arranged for accordion quartet
- The Golden Wedding – m. Jean Gabriel-Marie, arranged for accordion quartet
- Tango of Love – arranged for accordion quartet
- Roger Sessions – Idyll of Theocritus
- Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 3
- Karlheinz Stockhausen – Studie II
- Igor Stravinsky – In memoriam Dylan Thomas
- Virgil Thomson – Concerto for Flute, Strings, Harp and Percussion
- Ernst Toch – String Quartet No. 13
- Henri Tomasi – Horn Concerto
- Eduard Tubin – Symphony No. 6
- Edgard Varèse – Déserts
- Ralph Vaughan Williams
- Sonata in A Minor for Violin and Piano
- Tuba Concerto
- Heitor Villa-Lobos – String Quartet No. 15
- Stefan Wolpe
- Symphony for 24 Instruments
- Piece for Oboe, Cello, Percussion and Piano, "Oboe Quartet"
- Iannis Xenakis - Metastaseis
- Bernd Alois Zimmermann - Nobody knows the trouble I see Concert for trumpet and chamber orchestra
- Jack Beeson – Hello, Out There
- Benjamin Britten – The Turn of the Screw
- Valentino Bucchi – Il contrabasso (Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, 20 June)
- Aaron Copland – The Tender Land
- Paul Hindemith – Neues vom Tage, revised version of 1929 opera
- Bohuslav Martinů – Mirandolina
- Jerome Moross – The Golden Apple
- William Walton – Troilus and Cressida
Film
edit- After the Ball (Music, Lyrics and Book: Noël Coward) London production opened at the Globe Theatre on June 10 and ran for 188 performances
- The Boy Friend Broadway production opened at the Royale Theatre on September 30 and ran for 485 performances
- By the Beautiful Sea (Music: Arthur Schwartz Lyrics: Dorothy Fields) Broadway production opened at the Majestic Theatre on April 8 and transferred to the Imperial Theatre on October 2 for a total run of 268 performances. Starring Shirley Booth
- Can-Can London production opened at the Coliseum on October 14 and ran for 394 performances
- The Duenna ( Music: Julian Slade Lyrics & Book: Dorothy Reynolds) London production opened at the Westminster Theatre on July 28 and ran for 134 performances
- Fanny Broadway production opened at the Majestic Theatre on November 4 and transferred to the Belasco Theatre on December 4, 1956, for a total run of 888 performances
- The Girl in Pink Tights Broadway production opened at the Mark Hellinger Theatre on March 5 and ran for 115 performances
- The Golden Apple Broadway production opened at the Alvin Theatre on April 20 and ran for 125 performances
- Happy Holiday (Music: George Posford Lyrics & Book: Eric Maschwitz and Arnold Ridley) London production opened at the Palace Theatre on December 22 and ran for 31 performances
- House of Flowers Broadway production opened at the Alvin Theatre on December 30 and ran for 165 performances
- On Your Toes Broadway revival opened at the 46th Street Theatre on October 11 and ran for 64 performances
- The Pajama Game (Richard Adler and Jerry Ross) — Broadway production opened at the St. James Theatre on May 13 and transferred to the Shubert Theatre on November 24, 1956, for a total run of 1063 performances
- Pal Joey (Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics: Lorenz Hart Book: John O'Hara) London production opened at Princes Theatre on August 4 and ran for 245 performances
- Peter Pan Broadway production opened at the Winter Garden Theatre on October 20 and ran for 152 performances
- Salad Days (Music: Julian Slade Lyrics & Book: Dorothy Reynolds and Julian Slade) London production opened at the Vaudeville Theatre on August 5 and ran for 2283 performances
- You'll Be Lucky London revue opened at the Adelphi Theatre on February 25. Starring Sally Barnes and Lauri Lupino Lane.
- Zuleika — premiere in Cambridge, England
- Athena, starring Jane Powell, Debbie Reynolds, Edmund Purdom and Vic Damone
- Brigadoon
- Carmen Jones
- Casanova's Big Night starring Bob Hope
- Chandraharam, starring N.T. Rama Rao
- Deep in My Heart, starring José Ferrer
- French Cancan, starring Jean Gabin and María Félix
- The French Line, starring Jane Russell
- Living It Up, starring Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis and Janet Leigh
- Lucky Me, starring Doris Day, Robert Cummings and Phil Silvers
- Mayurpankh, directed by and starring Kishore Sahu
- New Faces
- Red Garters, starring Rosemary Clooney, Jack Carson and Guy Mitchell
- Rhapsody, starring Elizabeth Taylor
- River of No Return, starring Marilyn Monroe
- Rose Marie, starring Ann Blyth and Howard Keel
- Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, starring Jane Powell, Howard Keel and Julie Newmar.
- A Star Is Born
- The Student Prince, starring Ann Blyth and Edmund Purdom with Mario Lanza dubbing for Purdom.
- There's No Business Like Show Business
- Top Banana (film), starring Phil Silvers
- White Christmas, starring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney and Vera Ellen
Musical television
edit- Babes in Toyland
- Lady in the Dark (starring Ann Sothern)
Births
editJanuary–April
edit- January 1 – Richard Edson, American drummer
- January 2 – Glenn Goins, American R&B/funk guitarist and singer (Parliament-Funkadelic) (died 1978)
- January 4 – Eugene Chadbourne, American guitarist and songwriter
- January 7 – José María Vitier, Cuban pianist and composer
- January 16 – Cheryl Bentyne, vocalist (The Manhattan Transfer)
- January 19 – Katey Sagal, American singer-songwriter and actress
- January 25 – Richard Finch, funk composer (K.C. and the Sunshine Band)
- January 29 – Richard Manitoba, singer
- February 1 – Chuck Dukowski, American singer-songwriter and bass player (Black Flag, Würm, Black Face and October Faction)
- February 10 – Carita Holmström, pianist, singer and songwriter
- February 18 – John Travolta, actor, singer and dancer
- February 19 – Jimmy Pursey, vocalist (Sham 69)
- February 20 – Jon Brant, bass guitar player (Cheap Trick)
- February 27 –
- JoAnn Falletta, orchestral conductor
- Neal Schon, rock musician (Journey) Santana
- March 3 -
- Chris Hughes, british producer and drummer (Adam and the Ants)
- John Lilley, American singer/songwriter and guitarist (The Hooters)
- March 10 – Tina Charles, disco singer
- March 16 – Nancy Wilson, rock singer-songwriter (Heart)
- March 27 – Wally Stocker, rock guitarist (The Babys)
- March 31 – Tony Brock, rock drummer (The Babys)
- April 1 – Knut Værnes, Norwegian guitarist
- April 2 – Susumu Hirasawa, singer-songwriter, guitarist and keyboardist (P-MODEL)
- April 4 – Michel Camilo, pianist
- April 5 – Peter Case, singer-songwriter and guitarist,
- April 13 – Jimmy Destri, rock keyboard player and songwriter (Blondie)
- April 17 – Michael Sembello, singer, instrumentalist and songwriter
- April 28 – Michael Daugherty, composer
May–December
edit- May 1 – Ray Parker Jr., guitarist, songwriter and record producer
- May 2 –
- Angela Bofill, singer songwriter
- Elliot Goldenthal, composer
- May 10 – Barrington Pheloung, screen composer (died 2019)
- May 11 – Judith Weir, composer, Master of the Queens Music
- May 18 – Reinhold Heil, composer
- May 20 – Jimmie Henderson (Black Oak Arkansas)
- May 21 – Marc Ribot, session guitarist and composer
- May 31 – Vicki Sue Robinson, US disco singer (died 2000)
- June 3 – Dan Hill, singer-songwriter
- June 8 – Greg Ginn, punk guitarist (Black Flag)
- June 13 – Robert Donaldson (Bo Donaldson & the Heywoods)
- June 14 – Gianna Nannini, Italian rock musician
- June 15 – Terri Gibbs, country singer
- June 20 – Michael Anthony (Van Halen)
- July 7 –
- Pam Bricker, American singer and guitarist (died 2005)
- Ron Jones, composer
- July 10 – Neil Tennant, British singer-songwriter and record producer (Pet Shop Boys)
- July 18 –
- Tobias Picker, American composer
- Ricky Skaggs, American singer-songwriter, mandolin player and producer (New South)
- August 11 – Joe Jackson, singer, songwriter and composer
- August 17 – Eric Johnson, guitarist, songwriter and record producer
- August 25 – Elvis Costello, singer-songwriter
- September 7 – Sergio Rendine, Italian composer (died 2023)
- September 14 – Barry Cowsill, American drummer (died 2005)
- September 17 – Joël-François Durand, French composer
- September 21 – Phil Taylor, English heavy metal drummer (Motörhead) (died 2015)
- September 28 – George Lynch, American heavy metal guitarist (Dokken)
- September 30 –
- Basia, Polish singer
- Patrice Rushen, American pianist, singer and composer
- October 3 – Stevie Ray Vaughan, guitarist, singer and songwriter (died 1990)
- October 3 – Dawayne Bailey, guitarist, singer and songwriter (alias Bob Seger-Chicago)
- October 9 – James Fearnley (The Pogues)
- October 10 –
- Susan Frykberg, electroacoustic composer and sound artist
- David Lee Roth (Van Halen)
- October 12 – Michael Roe, guitarist, lead singer of The 77s
- November 3 – Adam Ant, singer
- November 4 – Chris Difford, singer, songwriter and record producer (Squeeze)
- November 9 – Dennis Stratton (Iron Maiden)
- November 10 – Mario Cipollina (Huey Lewis and the News)
- November 14 –
- Anson Funderburgh, American guitarist and bandleader
- Yanni, pianist, keyboardist and composer
- November 15 – Randy Thomas, American singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer (Sweet Comfort Band and Allies)
- November 16 – Donald Runnicles, conductor
- November 18 – John Parr, singer
- November 23 – Bruce Hornsby, pianist, singer and songwriter (Grateful Dead)
- December 11 – Jermaine Jackson, singer (The Jackson 5)
- December 25 –
- Robin Campbell (UB40)
- Annie Lennox, singer
- date unknown – Gérard Buquet, tubist, conductor and composer
Deaths
edit- January 9 – Eugen Coca, violinist and composer, 60
- January 11 – Oscar Straus, Viennese operetta composer, 83[38]
- March 3 – Noel Gay, English songwriter, 55
- March 11 – Frankie Newton, American trumpeter, 48
- March 19 – Walter Braunfels, pianist and composer, 71
- March 27 – Carl T. Fischer, composer and jazz pianist, 41
- April 5 – Claude Delvincourt, pianist and composer, 66
- April 8 – Edwin Grasse, violinist and composer, 69
- April 9 – Philip Greeley Clapp, pianist and composer, 65
- April 11 – Paul Specht, violinist and bandleader, 59
- April 14 – Lil Green, blues singer, 34 (pneumonia)
- April 17 – Torsten Ralf, operatic tenor, 53
- May 1 – Arthur Johnston, songwriter, 56
- May 19 – Charles Ives, composer, 79
- May 20 – Linda Lee Thomas, socialite and wife of Cole Porter, 70
- May 31 – Pedro Elías Gutiérrez, musician and composer, 84
- June 17 – Danny Cedrone, session guitarist (soloist on "Rock Around the Clock"), 33 (fell downstairs)
- July 7 – Idabelle Smith Firestone, American composer and songwriter, 79
- July 16 – Lucien Muratore, operatic tenor and actor, 77
- August 8 – Phil Ohman, film composer and pianist, 57
- August 13 – Demetrius Constantine Dounis, violin teacher
- August 17 – Billy Murray, singer, 77
- August 24 – Fred Rose, songwriter, music publisher, 56
- October 24 – Pepito Arriola, pianist, 57
- October 27 – Franco Alfano, composer and pianist, 79
- November 11 – J. Rosamond Johnson, composer and singer
- November 29 – Dink Johnson, jazz musician, 56
- November 30 – Wilhelm Furtwängler, conductor and composer, 68
- December 14
- Papa Celestin, jazz musician, 70
- Sergei Protopopov, Russian composer and music theorist, 61
- December 25
- Johnny Ace, American rhythm and blues singer, 25 (shooting accident)
- Rosario Scalero, violinist, teacher and composer, 84
- date unknown – Per Reidarson, composer and music critic
References
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