July 19th 2026
Gold Star Oldies USA, Pop and Country News Rest I Peace Freddie Cannon
Look On the Last Page for Dave Edward's Weekly Playlist
Gold Star Oldies USA — your home for the greatest hits of the 50s, 60s, and 70s.
Dickie Lee and the Iceman Mornings, Monday, Tues., Wed, and Friday 7:00 AM CDST
Scheduled Shows Through Out The Week and Weekends
Say hello, to our new Auto DJ'. Tee Mac Booth.
Frederick Anthony Picariello Jr. (December 4, 1936 – July 17, 2026), better known by his stage name Freddy Cannon, was an American rock and roll singer. His biggest international hits included "Tallahassee Lassie", "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans", and "Palisades Park".
Early life and education
Picariello was born in Revere, Massachusetts on December 4, 1936, and moved to neighboring Lynn, Massachusetts as a child.[1] His father worked as a truck driver and also played trumpet and sang in local bands. Freddy grew up listening to the rhythm and blues music of Big Joe Turner, Buddy Johnson and others on the radio, and he learned to play guitar.[2] He attended Lynn Vocation High School.
Welcome to our newest DJ. J. P. McCartney's show is called ABC Oldies JP. He will be airing on Thursday Morning 7:00 AM. His show features the 60's and 70's with a Beatles song each hour.
Kick off your weekend with Mickey Bo’s Rock ’n Roll Revue every Friday at 9: 00 PM, with an encore Sunday at 10:00 PM. Mickey Bo is a long‑time radio personality known for his high‑energy mix of early rock ’n’ roll, doo‑wop, and rare classics.
Join Dave Edwards, veteran broadcaster and host of the internationally syndicated show That Seventies Sound, every Saturday 9:00 AM with a replay at 10:00 PM. His show brings the stories, memories, and music that defined the decade.
Welcome to Dickie Lee and the Iceman, great shows of the 60's and 70's progressive rock and soul. Monday, Wednesday and Friday 7:00 AM. The shows are one hour .
When the scheduled shows are not being aired. Listen to our Auto DJ's . The Gold Star Oldies library cloud is full of the greatest. oldies 60's 70's and More and a few new ones.
JP McCartney the home of ABC Oldies Thursday Morning Show 3 hours 7:00 to 10:00 AM
Broadcast Bulletin (Daily Updates)
1967 — In one of the most bizarre pairings in music performance history, psychedelic rock god Jimi Hendrix opens a show headlined by teenybopper sensations The Monkees in Queens, New York. The coupling was arranged by Hendrix's manager for the publicity, but the guitarist, who was never happy with the deal, quits that night after only eight shows with the quartet, having received poor receptions by the group's young fans who drowned out his guitar performances with shouts of "We want Davy [Jones]!"
July 18, 1953 — 18-year-old Elvis Presley stops into Memphis Recording Service (later renamed Sun Studios), and pays $3.98 to make a private recording of two songs: "My Happiness" and "That's When Your Heartaches Begin."
1966 — Bobby Fuller (of the Bobby Fuller Four, "I Fought The Law," 1966 ) is found dead, soaked in gasoline, in his automobile outside of his apartment in Hollywood, California. The details of the 23-year-old singer's death are murky. It is unclear whether it was a murder, suicide, or accident, but the official cause of death is reported as asphyxia due to inhalation of gasoline.
July 19, 1958 — The Drifters manager George Treadwell, who owns the group's name, fires them backstage at the Apollo theater in Harlem over a pay dispute, then walks to the dressing room of the group's opening act, the Five Crowns, and hires them as the new Drifters. The group's lead singer is Benjamin Nelson, who changes his name to Ben E. King after the transition.
July 20, 1961 — The Beatles, known then as the Beat Brothers with drummer Pete Best (second from right), get notice in the British paper Mersey Beat, which announces their first record contract with German producer Bert Kaempfert for Polydor Records. They record two sides in Hamburg, "Cry For A Shadow" and "Ain't She Sweet" and are the backup band on six other sides by English rocker Tony Sheridan.
July 21, 1961 — The Supremes release their second single, "Buttered Popcorn," produced and cowritten by Motown boss Berry Gordy. It sells poorly and is the last Supremes single with Florence Ballard on lead vocals. The group is still a year away from its first chart single, "Your Heart Belongs To Me."
July 22, 1957 — After six years and 18 R&B chart hits, B. B. King crosses over to the pop chart for the first time with "Be Careful With A Fool" on RPM Records in Los Angeles. He goes on to have 36 charted pop singles through 1989.
July 23, 1955 — Chess Records releases Chuck Berry's first single, "Maybellene." Originally named "Ida Mae," Berry adapts it from a traditional country tune called "Ida Red." He loses much of his songwriting royalties to New York City disc jockey Alan Freed, whom Chess bribes to aggressively promote the record, and another person to whom the record company owes money. Berry eventually sues and is awarded sole songwriting credit in 1986.
Eight Days a Week (Ron Smith)
Eight Days a Week (Kenneth Best)
On This Day in Black Music History (Jay Warner)
Chronology of American Popular Music, 1900-2000 (Frank Hoffman)
calendar.songfacts.com
onthisday.com/music
Birthdays Singers and Song Writers
Early Beatles News
Albums having a birthday in July, Steely Dan Countdown to Ecstasy 1973
Music History UPDATE
Visual Archive
