1950 in music

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of years in music (table)
Clarinetist George Lewis in 1950 was prominent in the revived popularity of traditional jazz.

This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1950.

Specific locations[]

Specific genres[]

Events[]

  • January 3Sam Phillips launches Sun Records at 706 Union Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee.
  • March 14Pablo Casals terminates his recording contract with RCA Records and signs with their chief competitor, Columbia Records.[1]
  • June 26Louis Armstrong records the first American version of C'est si bon with the English lyrics by Jerry Seelen.
  • August 29 – The first American Music Competition of the Sigma Alpha Iota music fraternity is won by Richard Winslow for Huswifery, a choral composition for women's voices.[2]
  • August – Herbert Howells' Hymnus Paradisi is premiered at the Three Choirs Festival.[3]
  • October 1 – Italian composer Luciano Berio marries American mezzo-soprano Cathy Berberian.
  • October 11 – On temporary release from Ellis Island pending a deportation decision from U. S. immigration authorities, 20-year-old Friedrich Gulda makes his Carnegie Hall debut.[4]
  • November – The Eleanor Steber Award is won by soprano Willabelle Underwood.[5]
  • Johann Sebastian Bach is reburied in St. Thomas Church, Leipzig.
  • Malcolm Sargent becomes chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra.[6]
  • Isaak Dunayevsky is named People's Artist of the USSR.
  • Mitch Miller signs as A&R man with Columbia Records.
  • Patti Page becomes the first (and only) artist to have a Number One record on the Pop, R&B and Country charts concurrently.
  • Al Cernick is signed to Columbia by Mitch Miller, who changes the singer's name to Guy Mitchell.
  • Columbia Records lures Jo Stafford away from Capitol.
  • Georgia Gibbs leaves the Majestic label and scores her first charting single with Coral.
  • Bandleader Les Baxter founds the school of "Outer Space" exotica.
  • Sam Cooke replaces R. H. Harris as lead singer of The Soul Stirrers.

Albums released[]

  • American Folks SongsJo Stafford
  • Auld Lang SyneBing Crosby
  • Autumn in New York – Jo Stafford
  • Barber Shop BalladsThe Mills Brothers
  • Blue of the Night – Bing Crosby
  • The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz ConcertBenny Goodman
  • Christmas Greetings – Bing Crosby
  • Cole Porter Songs – Bing Crosby
  • Country FeelinDinah Shore
  • Dedicated to YouFrank Sinatra
  • Drifting and Dreaming ��� Bing Crosby
  • Ella Sings GershwinElla Fitzgerald
  • Frankie LaineFrankie Laine
  • Going My Way – Bing Crosby
  • Historical America in SongBurl Ives
  • King Cole TrioKing Cole Trio
  • King Cole Trio Volume 2 – King Cole Trio
  • Live at Carnegie HallBenny Goodman
  • Oh! SusannaAl Jolson
  • Patti Page - Patti Page
  • Popular Classics for Four PianosPhilharmonic Piano Quartet
  • Porgy and Bess – Various Artists
  • Sing a Song of ChristmasThe Ames Brothers
  • Sing and Dance with Frank SinatraFrank Sinatra
  • Songs By Gershwin – Bing Crosby
  • Songs of Faith – Jo Stafford
  • Songs for Sunday Evening – Jo Stafford
  • Tea for TwoDoris Day
  • Two Loves Have IFrankie Laine
  • Voice of the XtabayYma Sumac
  • Young Man with a Horn – Doris Day

No. 1 hit singles[]

These singles reached the top of Billboard magazine's charts in 1950.

First week Number of weeks Title Artist
January 7, 1950 1 "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" Gene Autry
January 14, 1950 4 "I Can Dream, Can't I?" The Andrews Sisters
February 11, 1950 1 "Rag Mop" The Ames Brothers
February 18, 1950 4 "Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy" Red Foley
March 18, 1950 4 "Music! Music! Music!" Teresa Brewer
April 15, 1950 2 "If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked a Cake" Eileen Barton
April 29, 1950 11 "The Third Man Theme" Anton Karas
July 15, 1950 5 "Mona Lisa" Nat King Cole
August 19, 1950 13 "Goodnight, Irene" Gordon Jenkins & The Weavers
November 18, 1950 2 "Harbor Lights" Sammy Kaye
December 2, 1950 4 "The Thing" Phil Harris
December 30, 1950 9 "The Tennessee Waltz" Patti Page

Biggest hit singles[]

The following songs achieved the highest chart positions in the limited set of charts available for 1950.

# Artist Title Year Country Chart entries
1 Nat King Cole Mona Lisa 1950 United States US 1940s 1 – Jun 1950, US 1 for 5 weeks Jul 1950, Oscar in 1950, US BB 2 of 1950, RYM 2 of 1950, POP 2 of 1950, DDD 4 of 1950, Italy 48 of 1951, RIAA 109, Acclaimed 1292
2 Patti Page Tennessee Waltz 1950 United States US 1940s 1 – Nov 1950, US 1 for 9 weeks Dec 1950, US BB 4 of 1950, DDD 5 of 1950, Global 7 (10 M sold) – 1950, POP 7 of 1950, RYM 77 of 1951, RIAA 198, Acclaimed 1447
3 Phil Harris The Thing 1950 United States US 1940s 1 – Nov 1950, US 1 for 4 weeks Dec 1950, Peel list 1 of 1950, US BB 12 of 1950, POP 12 of 1950, RYM 108 of 1950
4 Red Foley Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy 1950 United States US 1940s 1 – Jan 1950, US 1 for 4 weeks Feb 1950, DDD 17 of 1950, US BB 18 of 1950, POP 25 of 1950, RYM 117 of 1950
5 Teresa Brewer Music! Music! Music! 1950 United States US 1940s 1 – Feb 1950, US 1 for 4 weeks Mar 1950, US BB 3 of 1950, POP 3 of 1950

Top hit records[]

  • "A-Razz-A-Ma-Tazz" – Georgia Gibbs
  • "All My Love (Bolero)" – Patti Page
  • "Anema e core" – Tito Schipa
  • "Are You Lonesome Tonight?" – Al Jolson
  • "Ballin' the Jack", recorded by
    • Georgia Gibbs
    • Danny Kaye
  • "Be My Love" – Mario Lanza
  • "Bewitched" – Doris Day
  • "Black Lace" – Frankie Laine
  • "Boo-Hoo" – Guy Lombardo &
  • "A Bushel And A Peck" – Perry Como & Betty Hutton
  • "Can Anyone Explain? (No, No, No!)" – The Ames Brothers
  • "Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy" – Red Foley
  • "Count Every Star", recorded by
    • Ray Anthony and His Orchestra
    • Dick Haymes and Artie Shaw
    • Hugo Winterhalter
  • "Cry Of The Wild Goose" – Frankie Laine
  • "Daddy's Little Girl" – The Mills Brothers
  • "Dear, Dear, Dear" – Frankie Laine
  • "Domino" – André Claveau
  • "Dream a Little Dream of Me" – Frankie Laine
  • "A Dreamer's Holiday" – Buddy Clark & The Girlfriends
  • "El rancho 'e la Cambicha" –
  • "Enjoy Yourself" – Guy Lombardo (Kenny Gardner & vocals)
  • "Goodnight, Irene" – The Weavers
  • "Harbor Lights" – Sammy Kaye
  • "Here Comes Santa Claus" – Andrews Sisters
  • "Hymne à l'amour (Hymn To Love)" – Édith Piaf
  • "I Can Dream, Can't I?" – The Andrews Sisters
  • "I'll Never Be Free", recorded by:
    • Kay Starr and Tennessee Ernie Ford
    • Louis Jordan and Ella Fitzgerald
    • Annie Laurie and Paul Gayten and His Orchestra
    • Dinah Washington
  • "I Love You For That" – Patti Page & Frankie Laine
  • "I Wanna Be Loved" – The Andrews Sisters
  • "If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked a Cake" – Eileen Barton
  • "I'm Movin' On" – Hank Snow
  • "It Isn't Fair" – Sammy Kaye (Don Cornell vocal)
  • "Let's Go West Again" – Al Jolson
  • "A Man Gets Awfully Lonesome" – Frankie Laine
  • "Mona Lisa" – Nat King Cole
  • "Music, Maestro, Please" – Frankie Laine
  • "Music! Music! Music!" – Teresa Brewer
  • "My Foolish Heart, recorded by
    • Billy Eckstine
    • Gordon Jenkins
  • "My Heart Cries For You" – Guy Mitchell
  • "Nevertheless" – The Mills Brothers
  • "No Other Love" – Jo Stafford
  • "The Old Piano Roll Blues" Al Jolson & The Andrews Sisters
  • "Patricia" – Perry Como
  • "Peter Cottontail" – Gene Autry
  • "Play A Simple Melody" – Gary Crosby & Friend (Bing Crosby)
  • "Rag Mop" – The Ames Brothers
  • "Red Hot Mama" – Georgia Gibbs
  • "The Roving Kind" – Guy Mitchell
  • "Sentimental Me" – The Ames Brothers
  • "Sleepy Ol' River" – Frankie Laine
  • "Someday", recorded by
    • The Mills Brothers
    • Vaughn Monroe
  • "Sometime" –
  • "Stars & Stripes Forever" – Frankie Laine
  • "Swingin' In A Hammock" – Guy Lombardo ( & vocals)
  • "The Tennessee Waltz" – Patti Page
  • "There's No Tomorrow" – Tony Martin
  • "The Thing" – Phil Harris
  • "Thinking of You" – Don Cherry
  • "The Third Man Theme" from the film The Third Man, recorded by
    • Anton Karas
    • Guy Lombardo
  • "With My Eyes Wide Open I'm Dreaming" – Patti Page

Top R&B hits on record[]

Published popular music[]

  • "Adelaide's Lament" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "African Bolero" m. John Serry, Sr.
  • "American Beauty Rose" w.m. Hal David, Redd Evans & Arthur Altman
  • "Be My Love" w. Sammy Cahn m. Nicholas Brodszky
  • "The Best Thing For You" w.m. Irving Berlin
  • "Blind Date" w.m. Sid Robin
  • "A Bushel And A Peck" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "Candy And Cake" w.m. Bob Merrill
  • "Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy" w.m. Harry Stone & Jack Stapp
  • "Choo'n Gum" w. Mann Curtis m. Vic Mizzy
  • "Cold, Cold Heart" w.m. Hank Williams
  • "The Cry of the Wild Goose" w.m. Terry Gilkyson
  • "Dearie" w.m. Bob Hilliard & David Mann
  • "Domino" w. (Eng) Don Raye (Fr) m. Louis Ferrari
  • "Freight Train" w. Paul James & Fred Williams m. trad arr. Elizabeth Cotton
  • "The French Can-Can Polka" w. Jimmy Kennedy m. Jacques Offenbach
  • "From This Moment On" w.m. Cole Porter
  • "Frosty the Snowman" w.m. Steve Nelson & Jack Rollins
  • "Fugue For Tinhorns" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "Get Out Those Old Records" w.m. Carmen Lombardo & John Jacob Loeb
  • "Gone Fishin'" w.m. Nick Kenny & Charles Kenny
  • "Guys and Dolls" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "Home Cookin"' w.m. Jay Livingston & Ray Evans
  • "Hoop-Dee-Doo" w. Frank Loesser m. Milton De Lugg
  • "The Hostess With The Mostes' On The Ball" w.m. Irving Berlin. Introduced by Ethel Merman in the musical Call Me Madam
  • "I Almost Lost My Mind" w.m. Ivory Joe Hunter
  • "I Didn't Slip, I Wasn't Pushed, I Fell" w.m. Edward Pola & George Wyle
  • "I Don't Care If The Sun Don't Shine" w.m. Mack David
  • "I Leave My Heart in an English Garden" w.m. Harry Parr-Davies and Christopher Hassall from the musical Dear Miss Phoebe
  • "I Tawt I Taw a Puddy Tat" w.m. Alan Livingston, Billy May & Warren Foster
  • "If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked A Cake" w.m. Al Hoffman, Bob Merrill & Clem Watts
  • "If I Were A Bell" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "I'll Know" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "I'll Never Be Free" w.m. Bennie Benjamin & George David Weiss
  • "I'm Movin' On" w.m. Hank Snow
  • "It Is No Secret" w.m. Stuart Hamblen
  • "It's A Lovely Day Today" w.m. Irving Berlin
  • "I've Never Been In Love Before" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "Ivory Rag" Lou Busch, Jack Elliott
  • "Little White Duck" w.m. Walt Barrows & Bernard Zaritsky
  • "The Loveliest Night of the Year" w. Paul Francis Webster m. Juventino P. Rosas
  • "Luck Be a Lady" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "Lucky Lucky Lucky Me" Berle, Arnold
  • "Marry The Man Today" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "Marrying For Love" w.m. Irving Berlin
  • "More I Cannot Wish You" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "My Heart Cries For You" w.m. Carl Sigman & Percy Faith
  • "My Time Of Day" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "No Other Love" adapt from Chopin's Etude No 3 in E, Opus 10. w.m. Bob Russell & Paul Weston
  • "The Old Piano Roll Blues" w.m. Cy Coben
  • "The Oldest Established" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "Orange Colored Sky" w.m. Milton De Lugg & William Stein
  • "Patricia" w.m. Benny Davis
  • "(Remember Me) I'm the One Who Loves You" w.m. Stuart Hamblen
  • "The Roving Kind" adapt. w.m. Jessie Cavanaugh & Arnold Stanton
  • "Sam's Song" w. Jack Elliott m. Lew Quadling
  • "Shot Gun Boogie" w.m. Tennessee Ernie Ford
  • "Silver Bells" w.m. Jay Livingston & Ray Evans. Introduced by Bob Hope in the 1951 Musical film The Lemon Drop Kid.
  • "Sit Down, You're Rockin' The Boat" w.m. Frank Loesser. Introduced by Stubby Kaye in the musical Guys and Dolls.
  • "Sixty Minute Man" w.m. Billy Ward & Rose Marks
  • "Sleigh Ride" w. Mitchell Parish m. Leroy Anderson
  • "Sue Me" w.m. Frank Loesser
  • "The Syncopated Clock" w. Mitchell Parish m. Leroy Anderson
  • "Take Back Your Mink" w.m. Frank Loesser. Introduced by Vivian Blaine in the musical Guys and Dolls.
  • "The Thing" w.m. Charles R. Grean
  • "Tzena, Tzena, Tzena" adapt. trad Hebrew w. (Eng) Mitchell Parish m. Issachar Miron (Stefan Michrovsky) & Julius Grossman
  • "You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry" w.m. Bob Merrill & Terry Shand
  • "You're Just In Love" w.m. Irving Berlin

Classical music[]

Premieres[]

Sortable table
Composer Composition Date Location Performers
Andriessen, Hendrik 1950-11-01 Netherlands Amsterdam Concertgebouw OrchestraMonteux[7]
Boulez, Pierre Le Soleil des eaux (2nd version, subsequently withdrawn) 1950-07-18 France Paris Joachim, Mollet, / RTF National OrchestraDésormière[8]
Boulez, Pierre Piano Sonata No. 2 (1948) 1950-04-29 France Paris [9]
Cage, John String Quartet in Four Parts 1950-08-12 United States Black Mountain, North Carolina [10]
Foss, Lukas 1950-03-10 United States Boston Boston SymphonyFoss[11]
Guridi, Jesús 1950-05-14 Spain Madrid [12]
Hartmann, Karl Amadeus 1950-09-10 West Germany Donaueschingen (Musiktage) SWF SymphonyRosbaud[13]
Howells, Herbert Hymnus Paradisi (1938) 1950-09-07 United Kingdom Gloucester (Three Choirs Festival) Baillie, / London Symphony – Howells[14][15]
Jolivet, André 1950-01-24 France Paris Rampla / [unknown orchestra and conductor][16]
Khachaturian, Aram 1950-12-09 Soviet Union Moscow USSR Radio SymphonyGauk[17]
Martinu, Bohuslav 1950-12-29 United States New York City Louisville OrchestraWhitney[18][19]
Martinu, Bohuslav 1950-05-19 United States Cambridge, Massachusetts , , [20]
Martinu, Bohuslav 1950-08-13 United States San Diego, California Sokoloff[21]
Nono, Luigi sulla serie dell'op. 41 di Schoenberg 1950-08-27 West Germany Darmstadt (Ferienkurse) Darmstadt Landestheater OrchestraScherchen[22]
Prokofiev, Sergei Cello Sonata (1949) 1950-03-01 Soviet Union Moscow Rostropovich, Richter[23]
Searle, Humphrey 1950-08-27 West Germany Darmstadt (Ferienkurse) Darmstadt Landestheater OrchestraScherchen[24]
Strauss, Richard Four Last Songs (1948) 1950-05-22 United Kingdom London Flagstad / Philharmonia OrchestraFurtwängler[25]
Villa-Lobos, Heitor Montanhas de Brasil (Symphony No. 6) (1944) 1950-04-29 Brazil Rio de Janeiro – Villa-Lobos [26]
Villa-Lobos, Heitor Piano Concerto No. 2 (1948) 1950-04-21 Brazil Rio de Janeiro  [pt; de; ru] / – Villa-Lobos[27]

Compositions[]

  • Hendrik Andriessen – Concerto for Organ and Orchestra
  • Malcolm ArnoldEnglish Dances for orchestra, op. 27
  • Alexander ArutiunianConcerto for Trumpet and Orchestra
  • Arno BabadjanianHeroic Ballade
  • Ernest BlochSuite hébraïque
  • Karl-Birger Blomdahl – Symphony No. 3 Facetter
  • Pierre Boulez
    • Polyphonie X
    • Le soleil des eaux, for soprano, chorus and orchestra (second version)
  • John CageString Quartet in Four Parts
  • Carlos ChávezConcerto for Violin and Orchestra
  • Jani Christou – First Symphony
  • Arnold Cooke – Trio for Violin, Viola and Cello
  • George CrumbA Cycle of Greek Lyrics for voice and piano
  • Henri DutilleuxBlackbird for piano
  • Jesús Guridi – String Quartet in A minor
  • Eivind Groven
    • Hjalarljod Overture, Op. 38
    • Piano Concerto, Op. 39a
  • Karl Amadeus Hartmann – Symphony No. 5 Symphonie Concertante
  • Hans Henkemans – Concerto for Violin and Orchestra
  • Vagn Holmboe - Symphony No. 7
  • Wojciech KilarToccata for piano
  • Ernst Krenek – Suite for String Trio Parvula Corona Musicalis
  • Bohuslav Martinů
    • Concerto No. 2 for two violins and orchestra
    • Duo No. 2, for Violin and Viola
    • Intermezzo for Large Orchestra
    • Sinfonietta La Jolla, in A major, for piano and chamber orchestra
    • Trio No. 2, for violin, cello, and piano, in D minor
  • Luigi NonoVariazioni canoniche sulla serie dell’op.41 di A. Schönberg, for chamber orchestra
  • Vincent Persichetti – Divertimento for Band
  • Allan Pettersson – First Concerto for Strings
  • Walter PistonSymphony No.4
  • Theodor Rogalski – Three Romanian Dances for orchestra
  • Arnold Schoenberg
    • Psalm 130 "De profundis", op. 50b
    • Modern Psalm, op. 50c (unfinished)
    • Style and Idea (collection of essays and other works, translated by Dika Newlin)
  • Humphrey SearlePoem for 22 Strings
  • John Serry, Sr.
    • Eight Accordion Quartet Arrangements
    • La Culebra, for flute & accordion
    • African Bolero, for flute & accordion
  • Karlheinz Stockhausen
    • Choral ("Wer uns trug mit Schmerzen in dies Leben"), for a cappella choir, Nr. 1/9 (1950)
    • Chöre für Doris, for a cappella choir, Nr. 1/11 (1950)
    • Drei Lieder, for alto voice and chamber orchestra, Nr. 1/10 (1950)
  • Heitor Villa-Lobos

Opera[]

  • Luigi DallapiccolaJob
  • Norman Dello JoioThe Triumph of Saint Joan
  • Lukas FossThe Jumping Frog of Calaveras County (opera in two scenes, libretto by Jean Karsavina, premiered on May 18, 1950, at Indiana University)
  • Vittorio GianniniThe Taming of the Shrew
  • Gian-Carlo MenottiThe Consul

Jazz[]

Musical theatre[]

  • Alive and Kicking – Broadway revue opened at the Winter Garden Theatre on January 17 and ran for 46 performances
  • Call Me Madam (Music and Lyrics: Irving Berlin Book: Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse.) Broadway production opened at the Imperial Theatre on October 12 and ran for 644 performances.
  • Carousel (Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics and Book: Oscar Hammerstein II.) London production opened at the Drury Lane Theatre on June 7 and ran for 566 performances.
  • Dear Miss Phoebe London production opened at the Phoenix Theatre on October 13 and ran for 283 performances
  • Guys and Dolls (Music and Lyrics: Frank Loesser Book: Abe Burrows & Jo Swerling). Broadway production opened at the 46th Street Theatre on November 24 and ran for 1200 performances.
  • The Highwayman Music, Lyrics & Book: Edmond Samuels. Australian production opened at the Kings Theatre, Melbourne on November 18
  • Michael Todd's Peep Show Broadway revue opened at Winter Garden Theatre on June 28 and ran for 278 performances.
  • Out Of This World (Music and Lyrics: Cole Porter Book: Dwight Taylor and Reginald Lawrence) Broadway production opened at the New Century Theatre on December 21 and ran for 157 performances.
  • Peter Pan Lyrics and Music: Leonard Bernstein. Broadway production opened at the Imperial Theatre on April 24 and ran for 321 performances
  • Tickets, Please! Broadway revue opened at the Coronet Theatre on April 27 and ran for 245 performances.

Musical films[]

Dorothy Kirsten and Bing Crosby in "Mr. Music".
  • Annie Get Your Gun (music and lyrics by Irving Berlin), starring Betty Hutton, Howard Keel, Louis Calhern and Keenan Wynn.
  • Bhai Bahen, starring Geeta Bali and Bharat Bhushan.
  • Canzoni per le strade, starring Luciano Taioli and Antonella Lualdi
  • Cinderella, animated film featuring the voice of Ilene Woods and Verna Felton.
  • Come Dance with Me featuring Anne Shelton and Anton Karas
  • Cossacks of the Kuban (Kubanskie kazaki), starring Vladlen Davydov and Marina Ladynina
  • Fancy Pants starring Bob Hope and Lucille Ball
  • Hamara Ghar, starring Meena Kumari and Durga Khote[28]
  • I'll Get By starring June Haver, Gloria DeHaven and Dennis Day, and featuring Harry James.
  • Mr. Music starring Bing Crosby and featuring Peggy Lee, Groucho Marx and Dorothy Kirsten.
  • Mussorgsky, starring Aleksandr Borisov
  • My Blue Heaven, starring Betty Grable and Dan Dailey[29]
  • Pagan Love Song starring Esther Williams and Howard Keel
  • Samsaram, starring N. T. Rama Rao, Akkineni Nageswara Rao and Lakshmirajyam[30]
  • Singing Guns released February 28 starring Vaughn Monroe, Ella Raines, Walter Brennan and Ward Bond
  • Tea For Two starring Doris Day and Gordon MacRae
  • There's a Girl in My Heart starring Lee Bowman, Elyse Knox, Gloria Jean and Peggy Ryan
  • Three Little Words starring Fred Astaire, Red Skelton and Vera Ellen, and featuring Helen Kane dubbing for Debbie Reynolds.
  • The Chocolate Girl (La petite chocolatière), starring Giselle Pascal, Claude Dauphin and Henri Genès[31]
  • The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady, starring June Haver and Gordon MacRae[32]
  • The Toast of New Orleans starring Kathryn Grayson and Mario Lanza
  • Two Weeks With Love starring Jane Powell, Ricardo Montalbán, Louis Calhern, Debbie Reynolds and Carleton Carpenter.
  • The West Point Story starring James Cagney, Virginia Mayo, Doris Day and Gordon MacRae

Births[]

January – February[]

  • January 1
    • Morgan Fisher (Mott the Hoople)
    • Steve Ripley (The Tractors)
  • January 3Beth Anderson, American composer
  • January 5Chris Stein, guitarist and co-founder of Blondie
  • January 7Juan Gabriel, singer (died 2016)
  • January 9David Johansen, proto-punk singer (New York Dolls)
  • January 21Billy Ocean, singer
  • January 23
    • Bill Cunningham, American bass and keyboard player
    • Luis Alberto Spinetta, "father of Argentine rock"
    • Danny Federici (E Street Band)
  • January 26Paul Pena, singer, songwriter and guitarist (died 2005)
  • January 28Bob Hay, American singer-songwriter
  • January 29Max Carl, American singer-songwriter, guitarist and keyboard player (Grand Funk Railroad)
  • February 1Mike Campbell, American guitarist, songwriter and producer (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Mudcrutch)
  • February 2Ross Valory, American rock bass player (Journey and The Storm)
  • February 3John Schlitt, American Christian rock singer (Petra and Head East)
  • February 6Natalie Cole, African American singer, daughter of Nat King Cole (died 2015)
  • February 12Steve Hackett, guitarist and composer (Genesis)
  • February 13Peter Gabriel, singer and composer (Genesis)
  • February 14Roger Fisher, American guitarist (Heart and Alias)
  • February 15David Brown, bass guitarist (Santana) (died 2000)
  • February 16Roman Tam, Chinese Cantopop singer (died 2002)
  • February 19Andy Powell, rock guitarist (Wishbone Ash)
  • February 20Walter Becker, jazz rock bass guitarist, songwriter and record producer (Steely Dan) (died 2017)
  • February 26
    • Jonathan Cain, rock musician (Journey)\
    • Billy Steinberg, American songwriter (Madonna, The Veronicas, Cyndi Lauper)

March – April[]

May – June[]

  • May 2Lou Gramm (Foreigner)
  • May 3Mary Hopkin, singer
  • May 4Darryl Hunt (The Pogues)
  • May 7Prairie Prince, American rock drummer and graphic artist
  • May 9Tom Petersson (Cheap Trick)
  • May 12Billy Squier, singer-songwriter and guitarist
  • May 13
    • Stevie Wonder, singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist
    • Danny Kirwan, guitarist (Fleetwood Mac)
  • May 16Ray Condo, singer, saxophonist, and guitarist (died 2004)
  • May 18Mark Mothersbaugh (Devo)
  • May 22Bernie Taupin, lyricist
  • May 29Rebbie Jackson, singer
  • May 24Terry Scott Taylor, record producer
  • June 1Graham Russell (Air Supply)
  • June 3Suzi Quatro, rock singer
  • June 5
    • Ronnie Dyson, singer and actor (died 1990)
    • Michael Monarch (Steppenwolf)
  • June 19Ann Wilson (Heart)
  • June 21Joey Kramer (Aerosmith)

July – August[]

  • July 4Tonio K, American singer-songwriter
  • July 5
    • Huey Lewis, singer and songwriter
    • Michael Monarch, American guitarist, songwriter, and producer (Steppenwolf, Detective, and World Classic Rockers)
  • July 10Greg Kihn, rock musician, radio personality and novelist.
  • July 12Eric Carr (Kiss) (died 1991)
  • July 14Gwen Guthrie, singer-songwriter (died 1999)
  • July 18Glenn Hughes (Village People) (died 2001)
  • July 19Freddy Moore, singer-songwriter
  • July 23Blair Thornton (Bachman–Turner Overdrive)
  • August 12Kid Creole, singer
  • August 13Pluto Shervington, reggae singer
  • August 18Dennis Elliott (Foreigner)
  • August 25Willy DeVille, singer and songwriter (died 2009)

September – October[]

  • September 10Joe Perry, guitarist (Aerosmith)
  • September 14Paul Kossoff, guitarist (Free) (died 1976)
  • September 17Fee Waybill rock singer-songwriter (The Tubes)
  • September 27Linda Lewis, singer
  • October 1Elpida, singer
  • October 2Mike Rutherford, musician and songwriter (Genesis)
  • October 8Robert Kool Bell, singer (Kool and The Gang)
  • October 20Tom Petty, rock singer-songwriter and guitarist (died 2017)

November – December[]

Deaths[]

  • January 2Theophrastos Sakellaridis, Greek composer and conductor (born 1883)
  • January 28Kansas Joe McCoy, blues musician and songwriter (born 1905)
  • February 10Armen Tigranian, Armenian composer (born 1879)
  • February 26 – Sir Harry Lauder, Scottish singer, comedian and songwriter (born 1870)
  • February 28Ernst Abert Couturier, cornet virtuoso, composer, inventor and instrument manufacturer (born 1869)
  • March – Kate Carney, English singer and comedian (born 1869)
  • March 8Jaroslav Kocián, violinist, composer and teacher (born 1883)
  • April 2Adolf Wiklund, Swedish composer (born 1879)
  • April 3Kurt Weill, composer in many styles (born 1900)
  • April 8Vaslav Nijinsky, ballet dancer (born 1889/90)
  • April 23Gemma Bellincioni, operatic soprano (born 1864)
  • May 7Bertha "Chippie" Hill, blues singer and vaudeville performer (born 1905)
  • May 13Pauline de Ahna, operatic soprano (born 1863)
  • June 9Joe Burke, pianist and composer (born 1884)
  • June 26Antonina Nezhdanova, coloratura soprano (born 1873)
  • July 1Émile Jaques-Dalcroze, developer of eurhythmics (born 1865)
  • July 7Fats Navarro, jazz musician (born 1923)
  • July 11Buddy DeSylva, songwriter (born 1895)
  • July 21Al Hoffman, songwriter (born 1902)
  • July 26Papa Charlie McCoy, blues musician (born 1909)
  • July 30Guilhermina Suggia, cellist (born 1885)
  • August 3Georg Høeberg, composer and conductor (born 1872)
  • August 8Nikolai Myaskovsky, Soviet composer and teacher of Polish birth (born 1881)
  • August 26Giuseppe De Luca, operatic baritone (born 1876)
  • September 5Al Killian, trumpeter and bandleader (born 1916)
  • October 11Emil Votoček, chemist, composer and music theorist (born 1862)
  • October 15Clément Doucet, pianist (born 1895)
  • October 23Al Jolson, singer and actor (born 1886)
  • October 26Evelyn Suart, English pianist (born 1881)
  • November 20Francesco Cilea, opera composer (born 1866)
  • November 23Percival Mackey, English pianist, composer and bandleader (born 1894)
  • December 2Dinu Lipatti, Romanian pianist and composer (born 1917; Hodgkin's disease)[34]
  • December 9Georg Hann, operatic bass-baritone (born 1897)
  • December 22Julius Weismann, German composer and conductor (born 1879)
  • December 26 – , songwriter and impresario (born 1889)
  • December 28Charles L. Johnson, composer of ragtime and popular music (born 1876)
  • December 31Charles Koechlin, composer and teacher (born 1867)
  • date unknown
    • Jaime de Angulo, ethnomusicologist (born 1887)
    • Auguste Aramini, French singer (born 1875)
    • Edouard Espinosa, dancer, choreographer and teacher (born 1871)
    • Cenobio Hernandez, composer (born 1863)
    • Georges Mager, trumpet player (born 1885)
    • Ray Perry, jazz musician (born 1915)

Notes[]

  1. ^ Anon., "Columbia Records Acquires Casals", The New York Times (14 March): 21.
  2. ^ "Composer Wins Music Contest". The New York Times. August 30, 1950. p. 27.
  3. ^ "Hymnus Paradisi". The Musical Times. Musical Times Publications Ltd. 91 (1291): 352–353. September 1950. doi:10.2307/935574. JSTOR 935574.
  4. ^ Howard Taubman (October 12, 1950). "Gulda Impresses in Piano Program: 20-Year-Old Austrian Artist Shows Great Musical Gifts in Recital at Carnegie Hall". The New York Times. p. 51.
  5. ^ "Soprano Winds Steber Award". The New York Times. November 4, 1950. p. 13.
  6. ^ Ronald Crichton, "Sargent, Sir (Harold) Malcolm (Watts)", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
  7. ^ "Bruno Klassiek". Archived from the original on June 24, 2015. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
  8. ^ IRCAM
  9. ^ Encyclopedia Universalis
  10. ^ Black Mountain Studies Journal
  11. ^ Boston Symphony Orchestra
  12. ^ Doce Notas
  13. ^ Schott Music
  14. ^ Naxos
  15. ^ Thesis by Martin John Ward for the University of Birmingham, p.75
  16. ^ IRCAM
  17. ^ "Le Chant du Monde" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2015. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
  18. ^ Naxos Records
  19. ^ "Louisville Orchestra". Archived from the original on June 26, 2015. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
  20. ^ "Classics Online". Archived from the original on June 26, 2015. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
  21. ^ Boosey & Hawkes
  22. ^ "Fondazione Onlus". Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
  23. ^ Classical Connect
  24. ^ Darmstädter Ferienkurse, 1946–1966
  25. ^ Musicweb International
  26. ^ Historia de la sinfonía
  27. ^ Villa-Lobos, sua obra Archived October 16, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Version 1.0. (MinC / IBRAM, and the Museu Villa-Lobos, 2009; based on the third edition, 1989): 56–57.
  28. ^ "Hamara Ghar : Lyrics and video of Songs from the Movie Hamara Ghar (1950)". HindiGeetMala. October 17, 2016. Retrieved December 20, 2016.
  29. ^ "Grable to appear in 'Blue Heaven': Star Ends Hold-Out Against the Fox Studios". New York Times. October 19, 1949. p. 37.
  30. ^ Naati 101 Chitralu, S.V. Rama Rao, Kinnera Publications, Hyderabad, 2006, pp: 54-5.
  31. ^ =Goble, Alan (1999). The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter. p. 176.
  32. ^ Crowther, Bosley (March 31, 1950). "The Screen In Review". The New York Times: 43.
  33. ^ "Info on ciao.it". Ciao.it. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved August 17, 2018.
  34. ^ Prince of Pianists | Lipatti | Classical Music | Mark Ainley Archived October 22, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
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