9/11 We Remember the Day The Towers Fell 

Sunrise Broadcast Bulletin (Daily Updates)

Segment Features

Vault Rarities 

Legacy and Lore 

Visual Archives 

Sunrise and Classic Gold Country Steaming Directories 

Legends Remembered & Celebrated — Sunrise Concerts and Tributes

Movie Star Robert Redford has died at the age of 89

Birthdays Singers and Song Writers 

 

1950 - David Bellamy

David Bellamy, Bellamy Brothers, (1976 US No.1 single 'Let Your Love Flow', 1979 UK No.3 single 'If I Said I Had A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me').

1948 - Kenny Jones

Kenny Jones, drummer, The Small Faces (1967 UK No.3 single 'Itchycoo Park' & 1968 UK No.1 album 'Ogden's Nut Gone Flake'). The Faces (1972 UK No.6 single 'Stay With Me'). The Who (after Keith Moon, 1981 UK No.9 single 'You Better You Bet').

1963 - Richard Marx

American singer-songwriter Richard Marx. He is the only male artist in history to have his first seven singles reach the top 5 of the Billboard charts. He has scored a total of 14 No.1 singles, both as a performer and as a songwriter/producer. As a singer, his No. 1 hits include 'Hazard', 'Right Here Waiting', 'Hold On to the Nights', 'Endless Summer Nights', and 'Satisfied'. Marx has been nominated for five Grammy Awards. In 2003, he won the Grammy for Song of the Year for 'Dance with My Father'.

 

September 16th—turns out it’s a landmark date in Beatle history. 

Beatles News – September 16, 2025

Big shift in Beatle-land today: Apple Records has officially announced that Anthology 4 will be released as a standalone album—available in 2-CD and 3-LP formats. This is a major pivot from the earlier plan to bundle it only within the deluxe box sets, which were priced steeply at $110 for CDs and $375 for vinyl1.

Here’s what’s included:

  • Remixed versions of “Free As a Bird,” “Real Love,” and “Now and Then” by Jeff Lynne

  • A brighter, more energetic mix of “Free As a Bird”

  • Rare demos and outtakes that wrap up the 30-year Anthology project2

Segment Features 

Here’s what’s included:

  • Remixed versions of “Free As a Bird,” “Real Love,” and “Now and Then” by Jeff Lynne

  • A brighter, more energetic mix of “Free As a Bird”

  • Rare demos and outtakes that wrap up the 30-year Anthology project2

 

The Beatlemaniacs!!!   Beatles Novelty Records just for laughs

AI Imagines  Below and Beatle Mandaic Crazy 

Segment Features 

Very sad news to report: Bobby Hart, the songwriting dynamo who was half of the duo responsible for so many Monkees songs, has died. With partner Tommy Boyce, Bobby penned tracks like "I Wanna Be Free," "Last Train to Clarksville," the iconic 'Monkees' theme, and so many more, in addition to his solo songwriting career with hits like "Hurts So Bad" for Little Anthony & the Imperials. He will be remembered for his incredible talent and his innate spirituality.

Said Bobby: “It’s interesting and gratifying to look back these many years later and see that the Monkees are still with us, and they’re still being played somewhere...the records themselves have been staples that have gone on to sell for years and years. They still sound pretty fresh, and that we had an opportunity to do a lot of music that was married to visuals, and so, that in itself kind of seems to ensure that they’ll have a life of their own that’ll probably far outlast mine.”

You will be so missed, Bobby.

News In Music Sept. 12 thru  18

 

September 12, 1966 — The Monkees TV show makes its debut in the U.S. with four actors chosen to portray a pop band based on the Beatles. Although they begin as a fictional group, they become very real, eventually replacing studio musicians and making their own recordings.

That extra seated Monkee in the original sketch wasn’t meant to represent Tommy Boyce or Bobby Hart, though it’s easy to see why you’d wonder. Boyce and Hart were the songwriting engine behind many of The Monkees’ biggest hits—like “Last Train to Clarksville” and “I Wanna Be Free”—but they weren’t official members of the band2.

They did, however, play a pivotal role in shaping the sound and even sang lead vocals on the pilot’s soundtrack before the show was cast. Later, in a fascinating twist of Monkee history, they teamed up with Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones in the 1970s to form a touring group called Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart.


 

September 13, 1960 — The U.S. broadcast regulator, the Federal Communications Commission,  bans "payola," the controversial practice of paying disc jockeys for playing songs. The decision is the result of a major scandal involving top air personalities, including Dick Clark and Alan Freed, that led to Congressional hearings. Many in the music industry consider the events an attack on rock 'n' roll pushed by the big music publishing firm ASCAP to help it to maintain its dominance over smaller competitor BMI, which has a near-monopoly in the youth music market.

September 14, 1955 — Little Richard records "Tutti-Frutti" in New Orleans for Specialty Records. Originally an obscene ditty called "Tutti-Frutti, Good Booty" that Richard wrote and performed in nightclubs around the southern U.S., a female lyricist at the label rewrites it to take out the prurient references. The record, Richard's first for the Los Angeles company, reaches #17 pop, #2 R&B and helps take him from a struggling southern U.S. R&B artist to the pinnacle of fame. It is enshrined in the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Rolling Stone's 2010 list of  the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time at #43, and the Record Industry Association of America's top 365 Songs of the Century at #130.



September 15, 1915 — Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton's "Jelly Roll Blues" is published in Chicago, apparently the first published jazz arrangement. (Morton would be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998 as an early influence on rock.)




September 17, 1931 — RCA Victor unveils its new invention, the 33⅓ r.p.m. long-playing record, at the Savoy Plaza Hotel in New York. (See RCA's magazine ad at bottom) The company badly overprices the record players themselves, however, leaving the new format dormant until Columbia revives it in 1948.



September 18, 1899 — The U.S. Copyright Office receives Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag." It is not the first rag (short for ragged rhythm, or syncopation), nor even Joplin's first, but it becomes the genre's biggest hit, sparking a nationwide ragtime craze. By the end of World War I, young pianists like James P. Johnson and Jelly Roll Morton (see item above) are studying and performing Joplin's works, but introduce rhythmic drive, showmanship, and improvisation. New styles derived from ragtime are stride piano and jazz, which eclipse it and, with boogie woogie, become precursors to swing, rhythm & blues, and rock 'n' roll.
                                 1948 — Muddy Waters' debut 78 r.p.m. single , "I feel Like Going Home," reaches #11 on the R&B chart. (Born McKinley Morganfield, he gets his nickname as a child while playing in a muddy creek near the Mississippi River.)


Sources:
Eight Days a Week (Ron Smith)
On This Day in Black Music History (Jay Warner)

Chronology of American Popular Music, 1900-2000 (Frank Hoffman)
calendar.songfacts.com
onthisday.com/music

 

Neil Diamond, seated in the glow of the theatre, mic raised, singing “Sweet Caroline” with the crowd around him like a living chorus. Katie stands beside him, radiant and proud. It’s a moment of grace, grit, and shared joy. This drawing is a different interpretation when  Neil Diamond sang "Sweet Caroline" . 

Spinning Those Records

Classic Jingle Musical from the GwinSound Collection 

Vault Ratties and their Stories   

The History of  "Let It Be"  Naked Album from Paul McCartney's concept

  • The Concept Behind the Album Released in 2003, Let It Be... Naked was Paul McCartney’s attempt to strip away the lush orchestration and studio embellishments added by producer Phil Spector to the original 1970 Let It Be album. McCartney felt Spector’s production clashed with the Beatles’ original intent: a raw, back-to-basics sound that echoed their early rock roots.

    🎛️ Musical Differences

    • The album features remixed and remastered versions of the original tracks, minus Spector’s strings and choirs.

    • Two tracks—“Dig It” and “Maggie Mae”—were removed, while “Don’t Let Me Down,” a fan favorite from the Get Back sessions, was added2.

    • Songs like “The Long and Winding Road” were restored to their simpler, piano-driven arrangements, closer to McCartney’s original vision.

    📼 Recording Origins The material was recorded during the tumultuous Get Back sessions in January 1969, including the legendary rooftop concert. The band was fraying, but the music still carried emotional weight and spontaneity. Let It Be... Naked tries to recapture that spirit—warts and all.

  • Legacy and Reception While McCartney championed the project, Lennon had once defended Spector’s work, calling it a salvage job on a messy set of recordings. Ringo and George were more diplomatic, with George giving his blessing to the Naked project before his passing

Little Richard Story behind Tutti-Frutti 

 

    • September 14, 1955 — Little Richard records "Tutti-Frutti" in New Orleans for Specialty Records. Originally an obscene ditty called "Tutti-Frutti, Good Booty" that Richard wrote and performed in nightclubs around the southern U.S., a female lyricist at the label rewrites it to take out the prurient references. The record, Richard's first for the Los Angeles company, reaches #17 pop, #2 R&B and helps take him from a struggling southern U.S. R&B artist to the pinnacle of fame. It is enshrined in the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Rolling Stone's 2010 list of  the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time at #43, and the Record Industry Association of America's top 365 Songs of the Century at #130.

      1955 — Pat Boone earns his first #1 on the U.S. pop charts when "Ain't That A Shame" hits the top spot. Some folks think it's a shame that his sterilized version is far more popular than Fats Domino's original, but Boone's cover draws lots of attention to Domino and earns the New Orleans singer substantial royalties. (Boone tells of how Domino once invited him onstage at a concert and displayed his big gold ring to the crowd, graciously quipping, “Pat Boone bought me this ring.”)

       
       
       

       

     

     

     

     
     
     
     

     

     

     

     

     
     
     
     

     

 

 

 
 
 
 

 

 

Legacy and Lore 

 

Featuring Paul Revere and the Raiders 

Paul Revere and the Raiders carved out a wild, genre-blending legacy that danced between garage rock, pop psychedelia, and theatrical showmanship. Their story is a time capsule of 1960s American rock—equal parts rebellious energy and TV-friendly charisma.

🎹 Origins and Breakthrough

  • The band began in 1958 in Boise, Idaho, originally called The Downbeats. Organist Paul Revere and vocalist Mark Lindsay were the creative nucleus.

  • Their early sound was raw and R&B-inflected, with a dash of rockabilly swagger. They scored a minor hit with “Like, Long Hair” in 1961.

  • By 1963, their version of “Louie Louie” was battling The Kingsmen’s for dominance—an early sign of their punchy garage-rock chops.

  • 🧨 The Raider Persona and TV Stardom

    • Their Revolutionary War costumes weren’t just gimmick—they became a visual brand, making them one of the first rock bands to fully embrace theatricality.

    • Between 1966 and 1969, they landed 12 Top 30 hits including “Kicks,” “Hungry,” and “Steppin’ Out.” Their albums Midnight Ride and The Spirit of ’67 are considered garage-pop classics.

    The segment Paul Revere & the Raiders 3-5-67 history lessons with Carl shows how they even blended music with educational skits—prefiguring Schoolhouse Rock with their own quirky flair.

    🎤 Evolution and Peak

    • As the psychedelic era took hold, the Raiders adapted with heavier, fuzzier sounds. Mark Lindsay took over production duties, and the band shortened its name to “Raiders.”

    • In 1971, they scored their biggest hit with “Indian Reservation,” which hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became a platinum single.

Visual Archive 

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