1962-08-09
Pete’s mom Betty reads an article in the Ealing and Acton Gazette about Robert Druce’s successful dances at Acton’s White Hart Hotel.
Pete’s mom Betty reads an article in the Ealing and Acton Gazette about Robert Druce’s successful dances at Acton’s White Hart Hotel.
The Detours’ rhythm guitarist Roy Ellis drowns while swimming in the Thames. The Detours inherit his Vox 15s amp.
James Brown’s “Shout and Shimmy,” later covered by The Who, hits the U.S. pop charts. It peaks at #61 Listen to James Browns’s version here Compare it to The Who here
Keith attends a show by Screaming Lord Sutch and The Savages. Afterwards he approaches the band’s drummer, Carlo Little, and asks him to teach him his “wildman” drumming style. Carlo agrees. Two days later, Keith gets his first lesson from Little. Little later describes the 15 year-old Keith as “a lad fumbling, trying to play.”
The Everly Brothers’ LP Instant Party is released in the U.K.
Benny Spellman’s “Lipstick Traces (On a Cigarette)” enters the U.S. charts. The B-side, “Fortune Teller” will be a staple of The Who’s live act 1968-1970.
Roger submits an application for The Detours to audition for the BBC Light Entertainment.
Keith and his friend Gerry Evans attend a Guy Fawkes Night bonfire in Queensbury, London. Keith jumps through the bonfire and torments little girls with firecrackers.
The Regents’ “Barbara Ann,” originally recorded in 1958, hits the U.S. charts
James Brown and The Famous Flames release the original version of “I Don’t Mind.”