13 August

Pick a Day

13 AUGUST

In Music History

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2025 Florence Welch suffers internal bleeding from a ruptured fallopian tube while performing with Florence + the Machine at the Boardmasters Festival in Cornwall, England. She makes it through the show but requires emergency surgery to save her life.

2024 Rocker Greg Kihn dies at 75 after a battle with Alzheimer's disease. He had a hit with "Jeopardy" in 1983, and later became a novelist and also a longtime DJ on the San Francisco Bay Area radio station KFOX.

2022 Beyoncé's album Renaissance goes to #1 in America, making her the first female solo artist to have her first seven albums top the chart.

2017 David Bowie makes a posthumous appearance in the TV series Twin Peaks: The Return. The late singer, who made a cameo appearance as a deranged FBI agent in the cult classic's 1991 prequel, Fire Walk With Me, was supposed to return for the show's revival but died before filming. Director David Lynch used archive footage from the movie to bring Bowie to life in the episode.

2011 At the Indiana State Fair, tragedy strikes before a Sugarland performance when a gust of high wind blows off rigging, causing the stage to collapse on the crowd, killing five attendees and injuring dozens more. Janet Jackson and Lady Antebellum, both of whom were scheduled to perform, cancel their appearances.

2009 Allen Shellenberger (drummer for Lit) dies of cancer at age 39 in Artesia, California.

2005 Francine Barker (the original Peaches of Peaches & Herb) dies after a long illness in Hyattsville, Maryland, at age 58.

2003 Songwriter/producer Ed Townsend dies of a heart attack at age 74 in San Bernardino, California. He co-wrote Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get It On."

1994 Day 2 of Woodstock '94 welcomes Irish rockers The Cranberries, who entertain the crowd with their forthcoming single "Zombie" and a rendition of the Carpenters' "(They Long to Be) Close to You." In a nod to his 1969 performance, original Woodstock veteran Joe Cocker revisits "With A Little Help From My Friends" on the more prestigious North Stage.

1993 The fantasy-comedy movie Heart and Souls premieres in US theaters. Star Robert Downey Jr. sings the US national anthem in the film, backed by B.B. King on guitar. King also performs his classic "The Thrill is Gone."

1991 Cypress Hill introduce a new strain of West Coast gangsta rap with the release of their self-titled debut album. The lead single is "How I Could Just Kill A Man," a song that deals with gang life in their stomping grounds of South Gate, California.

1988 Robert Smith of The Cure marries his childhood sweetheart, Mary Poole, at the Benedictine Monastery in Sussex, England. Poole appeared in the "Just Like Heaven" video and inspired the hit "Lovesong."

1982 In response to plummeting record sales (which the industry blames on the sale of blank cassette tapes), major labels CBS, Atlantic, and Warner Brothers announce a series of major staff cuts.

1982 Southern Soul singer Joe Tex dies of a heart attack at age 47 in Navasota, Texas.

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A Wind of Change Blows Behind the Iron Curtain

1989

After floating down the Moskva River and passing Gorky Park, the Scorpions play the Moscow Music Peace Festival, inspiring their song "Wind Of Change."

On one of the press days leading up to the festival, Scorpions manager Doc McGhee organized a boat trip that gave Scorpions lead singer Klaus Meine the feeling that the world was changing. Old cultural barriers seemed to be falling away as Mikhail Gorbachev worked to dissolve the Soviet Union and open up Russia to the West. The tension that Meine knew all his life living in West Germany in the shadow of the Berlin Wall was finally dissipating. This is when he started whistling the melody for what would become "Wind Of Change." The festival is of great significance to Europeans, but American bands top the bill, with Bon Jovi headlining and Ozzy Osbourne, Mötley Crüe, Skid Row and Cinderella also performing. To the Scorpions, a German band, it's not just a gig, it's a turing point in geopolitical relations. After the festival, the band fleshes out the song, which is released on their 1990 album Crazy World. It becomes an anthem for freedom, peace, and hope throughout Europe, especially when the Berlin Wall comes down in November, a few months after the song was released. It remains a cultural and historical touchstone for generations to come.

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