1957 in music
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This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1957.
Events
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- January 5 – Renato Carosone and his band start their American tour in Cuba.
- January 6 – Elvis Presley makes his final appearance on the The Ed Sullivan Show.
- January 16 – The Cavern Club opens in Liverpool, England, as a jazz club.
- February 8 – Bo Diddley records his songs "Hey Bo Diddley" and "Mona" (aka "I Need You Baby").
- March – Chicago's Cardinal Stritch bans all rock and roll and rhythm and blues music from Catholic-run schools, saying that "its rhythms encourage young people to behave in a hedonistic manner."
- March 1 – The Everly Brothers record in Nashville their first single Bye Bye Love for Cadence Records
- March 3 – The second annual Eurovision Song Contest is staged in Frankfurt am Main, West Germany. The contest is won by Dutch singer Corry Brokken with the song Net als toen.
- March 19 – Elvis Presley purchases a mansion in Memphis, Tennessee, and calls it Graceland.
- March 26 – Ricky Nelson records his first three songs.
- May 14 – In Paris, Heitor Villa-Lobos records his Bachiana Brasileira No. 4, with the Orchestre Nationale de la Radiodiffusion Française, for EMI. Through May 21 the recording sessions continue with Bachiana Brasileira No. 7 and Bachiana Brasileira No. 3 with Manoel Braune, piano.
- June 20 – Toru Takemitsu's Requiem for Strings is first performed, by the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra.[1]
- July 6 – John Lennon and Paul McCartney of The Beatles first meet at a garden fete at St. Peter's Church, Woolton, Liverpool, England, at which Lennon's skiffle group, The Quarrymen, is playing.
- August 5 – American Bandstand begins its 30-year syndicated run on US network television.
- September 19 – Dalida is the first artist to be awarded a gold record in France for 300,000 sales of "Bambino". This year, she is also the first female recording artist to have her own fan club.
- September 20 – Jean Sibelius dies aged 91 at Ainola, his home in Finland, having completed no significant compositions for thirty years; at the time of his death, a performance of his Symphony No. 5 is being given in Helsinki under the baton of Sir Malcolm Sargent.
- November 25–27 – The first two Hollywood motion pictures starring Pat Boone, Bernadine and April Love, are released.
- Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel name themselves Tom and Jerry and begin their recording career, signing with Sid Prosen of Big Records. Their first single, "Hey, Schoolgirl", backed with "Dancin' Wild", hit #49 on the Billboard pop charts. Garfunkel is Tom Graph (so called because he like to write the pop charts out on graph paper) and Simon is Jerry Landis, a pseudonym he used during his early 1960s solo recordings. They tour for eighteen months before retiring to become college students and then reforming in 1963 as Simon & Garfunkel.
- Leonard Bernstein completes work on the musical West Side Story.
- The Casals Festival is founded in Puerto Rico.
- March 27 - Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera) from 1956's Alfred Hitchcock suspense film, The Man Who Knew Too Much, wins the Academy Award for Best Song. Sung by Doris Day in the film, it proves to be one of her biggest hit records as well.
- When Nat King Cole's television show is unable to get a sponsor, Frankie Laine becomes the first artist to cross TV's color line, becoming the first white artist to appear as a guest, foregoing his usual salary of $10,000. Other top performers follow suit, including Mel Tormé and Tony Bennett, but, despite an increase in ratings, the show still fails to pick up a national sponsor.
- Gorni Kramer makes his first appearance on Italian television, in Il Musichiere.
- Maria Callas is introduced to Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis.
- "Suíte do Pescador" is composed by Dorival Caymmi.
- Actress Debbie Reynolds earns a gold record for her song Tammy, which is the best-selling single by a female vocalist in 1957 in the USA. This song from the motion picture Tammy and the Bachelor is also nominated for an Academy Award.
Bands formed
Albums released
- About the Blues – Julie London
- After Midnight – Nat King Cole
- After School Session – Chuck Berry
- Almendra – Aldemaro Romero
- Anita Sings the Most – Anita O'Day
- April in Paris – Count Basie
- Art Pepper Meets the Rhythm Section – Art Pepper
- At Mister Kelly's – Sarah Vaughan
- At the Gate of Horn – Odetta
- Award Winner: Stan Getz – Stan Getz
- Bags' Groove – Miles Davis
- The Beat of My Heart – Tony Bennett
- Belafonte Sings of the Caribbean – Harry Belafonte
- Bing with a Beat – Bing Crosby
- The Big Beat – Johnnie Ray
- Birth of the Cool – Miles Davis
- Blossom Dearie – Blossom Dearie
- A Blowin' Session – Johnny Griffin
- Blue Starr – Kay Starr
- Blue Train – John Coltrane
- Blue Trombone – J. J. Johnson
- Boy Meets Girl – Sammy Davis, Jr. and Carmen McRae
- Brilliant Corners – Thelonious Monk
- Chet Atkins at Home – Chet Atkins
- The "Chirping" Crickets – Buddy Holly & The Crickets (debut)
- The Christmas Story – Bing Crosby
- Close to You – Frank Sinatra
- A Closer Walk with Thee – Pat Boone
- The Clown – Charles Mingus
- Coltrane – John Coltrane
- Cookin' – Paul Gonsalves
- Cookin' with the Miles Davis Quintet – Miles Davis
- Count Basie at Newport – Count Basie
- Criollísima – Aldemaro Romero
- Day by Night – Doris Day
- Dedicated to You – The "5" Royales
- Double Play! – Russ Freeman & André Previn
- Dream Street – Peggy Lee
- Ella and Louis Again – Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong
- Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Song Book – Ella Fitzgerald & Duke Ellington
- Elvis' Christmas Album – Elvis Presley
- An Evening with Belafonte – Harry Belafonte
- Exotica – Martin Denny
- Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps – Gene Vincent
- The Helen Morgan Story – Gogi Grant
- Grand Ole Opry's New Star – George Jones
- The Great Ray Charles – Ray Charles
- Her Nibs – Georgia Gibbs
- Here's Little Richard – Little Richard
- Hi-Fi in Focus – Chet Atkins
- Hymns We Love – Pat Boone
- I Love John Frigo...He Swings – Johnny Frigo (debut)
- In Las Vegas – Johnnie Ray
- Interplay for 2 Trumpets and 2 Tenors – John Coltrane
- It's All Over but the Swingin' – Sammy Davis, Jr.
- Jazz by Sun Ra – Sun Ra
- Jim Edward, Maxine, and Bonnie Brown – The Browns (debut)
- A Jolly Christmas from Frank Sinatra – Frank Sinatra
- Julie – Julie London
- Like Someone in Love – Ella Fitzgerald
- Losers, Weepers – Kay Starr
- Louis Armstrong Meets Oscar Peterson – Louis Armstrong & Oscar Peterson
- Love Is the Thing – Nat King Cole
- Love Serenade – The Ames Brothers
- Loving You (OST) – Elvis Presley
- Make Love to Me – Julie London
- Mal/2 – Mal Waldron
- The Man I Love – Peggy Lee
- The Many Sides of Toshiko – Toshiko Akiyoshi
- Mating Call – Tadd Dameron
- Mel Tormé's California Suite – Mel Tormé
- Mel Tormé at the Crescendo – Mel Tormé
- Miguel – Dalida
- Miles Ahead – Miles Davis
- Mirage – Art Blakey
- Moanin' the Blues – Hank Williams
- Monk's Music – Thelonious Monk
- Moondreams – Dick Haymes
- Mozart: Clarinet Concerto, Quintet for Clarinet and Strings. Benny Goodman, clarinet, Boston Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Charles Munch; Boston Symphony String Quartet. 12-inch LP. RCA Victor LM 2073.
- New Tricks – Bing Crosby
- A Night at the Village Vanguard – Sonny Rollins
- Now Hear This – The Hi-Lo's
- Once Over Lightly – Jo Stafford
- One Dozen Roses – The Mills Brothers
- One O'Clock Jump – Joe Williams
- Orgy in Rhythm – Art Blakey
- The Pajama Game – Doris Day
- Pal Joey with Frank Sinatra
- Pat – Pat Boone
- Pat Boone Sings Irving Berlin – Pat Boone
- Patsy Cline – Patsy Cline
- Please, Please, Please – James Brown
- Porgy and Bess – Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong
- Prayer to the East - Yusef Lateef
- Pretty Baby – Dean Martin
- Quand on n'a que l'amour – Jacques Brel
- Ray Charles – Ray Charles
- Relaxin' with the Miles Davis Quintet – Miles Davis
- Ricky – Ricky Nelson (debut)
- Ring around Rosie – The Hi-Lo's
- Rockin' – Frankie Laine
- Rockin' the Oldies – Bill Haley & His Comets
- 'Round About Midnight – Miles Davis
- Sammy Swings – Sammy Davis, Jr.
- Saxophone Colossus - Sonny Rollins
- Sea Shells – Peggy Lee
- Sing a Song of Basie – Lambert, Hendricks & Ross
- Sometimes I'm Happy, Sometimes I'm Blue – Jill Corey
- Son nom est Dalida - Dalida
- Songs for Any Taste – Mel Tormé
- Songs for Inspiration & Meditation – Jo Stafford
- Songs of Scotland – Jo Stafford
- Soulville – Ben Webster
- The Sounds of Christmas Harmony – The Ames Brothers
- Such Sweet Thunder – Duke Ellington
- Suddenly It's The Hi-Lo's – The Hi-Lo's
- Suddenly There's Gogi Grant – Gogi Grant
- Sweet Seventeen – The Ames Brothers
- A Swingin' Affair! – Frank Sinatra
- Swingin' Easy – Sarah Vaughan
- Tenor Conclave – Prestige All Stars
- Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane – Thelonious Monk & John Coltrane
- Theory of Art – Art Blakey
- There'll Always Be A Christmas – The Ames Brothers
- Tony – Tony Bennett
- Tormé Meets the British – Mel Tormé
- Toshiko and Leon Sash at Newport – Toshiko Akiyoshi & Leon Sash
- Trane's Blues – John Coltrane
- Walkin' - Miles Davis
- Way Out West – Sonny Rollins
- We Get Letters – Perry Como
- The Weavers at Carnegie Hall – The Weavers
- West Side Story – Original Broadway Cast
- Where Are You? – Frank Sinatra
- Winner's Circle – Oscar Pettiford
- With His Hot and Blue Guitar – Johnny Cash (debut)
Biggest hit singles
The following songs achieved the highest chart positions in the charts of 1957.[2]
# | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart Entries |
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1 | Elvis Presley | Jailhouse Rock | 1957 | UK 1 – Jan 1958, US BB 1 – Oct 1957, US BB 1 of 1957, Canada 1 – Oct 1957, DDD 1 of 1957, POP 1 of 1957, Europe 2 of the 1950s, Scrobulate 2 of rockabilly, RYM 3 of 1957, Netherlands 5 – Jan 1974, France 10 – Dec 1971, US CashBox 11 of 1957, South Africa 11 of 1958, AFI 21, Global 33 (5 M sold) – 1957, Party 54 of 1999, Italy 60 of 1958, Rolling Stone 67, Acclaimed 192, Belgium 214 of all time | |
2 | Paul Anka | Diana | 1957 | UK 1 – Aug 1957, US BB 1 – Jul 1957, Canada 1 – Jul 1957, Australia 1 for 8 weeks Jun 1957, Italy 2 of 1958, Poland 9 – Apr 1989, US CashBox 13 of 1957, US BB 14 of 1956, POP 14 of 1956, Europe 17 of the 1950s, RYM 17 of 1957, Global 33 (5 M sold) – 1957, DDD 36 of 1957 | |
3 | Elvis Presley | All Shook Up | 1957 | UK 1 – Jun 1957, US BB 1 – Apr 1957, Canada 1 – May 1957, RYM 5 of 1957, US CashBox 8 of 1957, DDD 11 of 1957, Scrobulate 12 of rock & roll, US BB 13 of 1957, POP 13 of 1957, Netherlands 33 – Jan 2005, Global 33 (5 M sold) – 1957, Europe 78 of the 1950s, Party 179 of 2007, Rolling Stone 352, Acclaimed 835 | |
4 | Jerry Lee Lewis | Great Balls of Fire | 1957 | UK 1 – Dec 1957, RYM 1 of 1957, US BB 2 – Dec 1957, Canada 2 – Dec 1957, DDD 5 of 1957, US BB 14 of 1958, POP 14 of 1958, South Africa 15 of 1958, Netherlands 27 – Sep 1989, Scrobulate 63 of oldies, RIAA 64, Europe 76 of the 1950s, Acclaimed 86, Rolling Stone 96, Party 242 of 1999 | |
5 | Danny & The Juniors | At the Hop | 1957 | US BB 1 – Dec 1957, Canada 1 – Dec 1957, UK 3 – Jan 1958, US BB 3 of 1958, POP 3 of 1958, South Africa 6 of 1958, US CashBox 10 of 1958, RYM 11 of 1957, DDD 21 of 1957, Europe 73 of the 1950s, RIAA 250, Acclaimed 728 |
US No. 1 hit singles
These singles reached the top of US Billboard magazine's charts in 1957.
First week | Number of weeks | Title | Artist |
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February 9, 1957 | 3 | "Too Much" | Elvis Presley |
March 2, 1957 | 4 | "Young Love" | Tab Hunter |
March 30, 1957 | 1 | "Party Doll" | Buddy Knox |
April 6, 1957 | 1 | "Round and Round" | Perry Como |
April 13, 1957 | 8 | "All Shook Up" | Elvis Presley |
June 3, 1957 | 5 | "Love Letters In The Sand" | Pat Boone |
June 10, 1957 | 1 | "Bernadine" | Pat Boone |
July 8, 1957 | 7 | "Teddy Bear" | Elvis Presley |
August 26, 1957 | 2 | "Tammy" | Debbie Reynolds |
September 9, 1957 | 1 | "Diana" | Paul Anka |
September 16, 1957 | 1 | "Tammy" | Debbie Reynolds |
September 23, 1957 | 1 | "That'll Be the Day" | The Crickets |
September 30, 1957 | 2 | "Honeycomb" | Jimmie Rodgers |
October 14, 1957 | 1 | "Wake Up Little Susie" | The Everly Brothers |
October 21, 1957 | 7 | "Jailhouse Rock" | Elvis Presley |
December 9, 1957 | 2 | "You Send Me" | Sam Cooke |
December 23, 1957 | 2 | "April Love" | Pat Boone |
Top hits on record
- "All Shook Up" – Elvis Presley
- "An Affair To Remember" – Nat King Cole
- "And That Reminds Me" – Della Reese
- "Almost In Your Arms (Love Theme From Houseboat) – Sophia Loren
- "April Love" – Pat Boone
- "Around The World" – Nat King Cole
- "A Teenager's Romance" - Ricky Nelson
- "At the Hop" — Danny and the Juniors
- "Be-Bop Baby" - Ricky Nelson
- "Bernadine" – Pat Boone
- "Black Slacks" – Joe Bennett & the Sparkletones
- "Blue Starr" – Kay Starr
- "Blueberry Hill" – Fats Domino
- "Butterfly" – Andy Williams
- "Buzz-Buzz-Buzz" - The Hollywood Flames
- "Bye Bye Love" – Everly Brothers
- "Chances Are" – Johnny Mathis
- "Come Go With Me" – The Dell-Vikings, one of the first integrated groups
- "Crazy Street" – Matys Brothers (some sources say 1958)
- "Dark Moon" – Gale Storm originally recorded by Bonnie Guitar
- "Deep Purple" – Billy Ward & The Dominoes
- "Diana" – Paul Anka
- "Drive-In Show"- Eddie Cochran
- "Everyday" – Buddy Holly
- "Fascination", recorded by
- "Forbidden Fruit" – Anita Ellis
- "Four Walls" – Jim Reeves
- "Gonna Find Me a Bluebird" – Marvin Rainwater
- "Great Balls Of Fire" – Jerry Lee Lewis
- "The Greater Sin" – Frankie Laine
- "Gunfight At the OK Corral" – Frankie Laine
- "Happy, Happy Birthday, Baby" – The Tune Weavers
- "Hey, Schoolgirl" – Tom and Jerry
- "Histoire d'un amour" – Dalida
- "Honeycomb" – Jimmie Rodgers
- "Hoot Owl" – Guy Mitchell
- "How High The Moon" – Pat Suzuki
- "I Like Your Kind of Love" - Andy Williams
- "I'm Sorry" – The Platters
- "I'm Walkin'" - Ricky Nelson
- "I'm Walking The Floor Over You" – Georgia Gibbs
- "It's Not For Me To Say" – Johnny Mathis
- "Jailhouse Rock" – Elvis Presley
- "Jim Dandy"- LaVern Baker
- "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine" – Jimmie Rodgers
- "Last Train to San Fernando" – Johnny Duncan (huge hit in the UK)
- "Lips of Wine" - Andy Williams
- "Little Darlin' " – The Diamonds, a cover of The Gladiolas' rhythm and blues hit
- "The Lonesome Road" – Frankie Laine
- "Starlight" Jack Huddle
- "Long Lonely Nights"- Lee Andrews & the Hearts
- "Look Homeward, Angel" – Johnnie Ray
- "Love Letters In The Sand" – Pat Boone
- "Loving You" – Elvis Presley
- "Lucille" – Little Richard
- "Mr Lee" - The Bobbettes
- "My Juanita"- The Crests
- "My Special Angel" – Bobby Helms
- "Not Fade Away" – Buddy Holly
- "Oh Boy" – Buddy Holly
- "Old Cape Cod" – Patti Page
- "Party Doll" – Buddy Knox
- "Peggy Sue" – Buddy Holly
- "Pink Champagne" – The Tyrones
- "Queen Of The Senior Prom" – The Mills Brothers
- "Raunchy" – Bill Justis
- "Reet Petite" – Jackie Wilson
- "Remember You're Mine" – Pat Boone
- "Rock-A-Billy" – Guy Mitchell
- "Rock-A-Bye Baby Blues" – Brenda Lee
- "Rock and Roll Music" – Chuck Berry
- "Round and Round" – Perry Como
- "Rumble" – Link Wray, early feedback, only instrumental ever banned
- "Searchin' " – The Coasters
- "Shangri-La" – The Four Coins
- "Silent Lips" – Georgia Gibbs
- "So Rare" – Jimmy Dorsey
- "Stardust" – Nat King Cole
- "Stood Up" - Ricky Nelson
- "Sugar Moon" – Pat Boone
- "Sugartime" – McGuire Sisters
- "Tammy", recorded by
- "Teddy Bear" – Elvis Presley
- "That'll Be the Day" – The Crickets, Buddy Holly's group
- "3:10 To Yuma" – Frankie Laine
- "Too Much" – Elvis Presley
- "Too Young To Have A Broken Heart" – Gayla Peevey
- "Treat Me Nice" – Elvis Presley
- "The Twelfth Of Never" – Johnny Mathis
- "Tu n'as pas très bon caractère" – Dalida
- "Tutti Frutti" – Little Richard
- "Up Above My Head" – Johnnie Ray and Frankie Laine
- "Wait A Minute"- Jo Ann Campbell
- "Waitin' in School" - Ricky Nelson
- "Wake Up Little Susie" – The Everly Brothers
- "Walkin' After Midnight" – Patsy Cline
- "When I Fall in Love" – Nat King Cole
- "White Silver Sands – Don Rondo
- "Who Needs You" – The Four Lads
- "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" – Jerry Lee Lewis
- "Why Baby, Why" – Pat Boone
- "Willie and the Hand Jive" – Johnny Otis
- "Witchcraft" – Frank Sinatra
- "Wonderful! Wonderful!" – Johnny Mathis
- "Words of Love", recorded by
- "You Know How It Is" – Frankie Laine
- "You Send Me" – Sam Cooke
- "Young Blood" – The Coasters, a two-sided hit with "Searchin"'
- "Young Love", recorded by
- "You're My One and Only Love" - Ricky Nelson
Published popular music
- "An Affair to Remember" w. Harold Adamson & Leo McCarey m. Harry Warren
- "After School" w.m. Dick Wolf & Warren Nadel
- "All Shook Up" w.m. Otis Blackwell & Elvis Presley
- "All the Way" w. Sammy Cahn m. Jimmy Van Heusen
- "Almost Paradise" m. Norman Petty
- "Alone (Why Must I Be Alone)" w. Selma Craft m. Morton Craft
- "America" w. Stephen Sondheim m. Leonard Bernstein
- "April Love" w. Paul Francis Webster m. Sammy Fain
- "Are You Sincere?" w.m. Wayne Walker
- "At the Hop" w.m. Artie Singer, Johnny Medora & Dave White
- "Bernadine" w.m. Johnny Mercer
- "Bony Moronie" w.m. Larry Williams
- "The Book of Love" w.m. Warren Davies, George Malone & Charles Patrick
- "Boy on a Dolphin" w.(Eng) Paul Francis Webster (Greek) Jean Fermanoglou m. Takis Morakis
- "Build Your Love (On A Strong Foundation)" O. Jones
- "Butterfly" w.m. Anthony September
- "Bye Bye Love" w.m. Felice & Boudleaux Bryant
- "Ca, C'est L'Amour" w.m. Cole Porter. Introduced by Taina Elg in the film Les Girls.
- "Catch a Falling Star" w.m. Lee Pockriss & Paul Vance
- "Chances Are" w. Al Stillman m. Robert Allen
- "Chantez, Chantez" w. Albert Gamse m. Irving Fields
- "Cocoanut Sweet" w. E. Y. Harburg m. Harold Arlen
- "Come Fly with Me" w. Sammy Cahn m. Jimmy Van Heusen
- "Come Go with Me" w.m. Clarence E. Quick
- "Cool" w. Stephen Sondheim m. Leonard Bernstein
- "Could This Be Magic" w.m. Hiram Johnson & Richard Blandon
- "Dark Moon" w.m. Ned Miller
- "The Day the Rains Came" w.(Eng) Carl Sigman (Fr) Pierre Delanoë m. Gilbert Bécaud
- "Diana" w.m. Paul Anka
- "Do I Love You Because You're Beautiful?" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Richard Rodgers
- "Everyday" Charles Hardin, Norman Petty
- "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" w.m. Ewan MacColl
- "Four Walls" w.m. George Campbell & Marvin Moore
- "From a Jack to a King" w.m. Ned Miller
- "Gee, Officer Krupke" w. Stephen Sondheim m. Leonard Bernstein from the musical West Side Story
- "Gigi" w. Alan Jay Lerner m. Frederick Loewe
- "The Girl with the Golden Braids" m. Eddie Snyder w. Stanley J. Kahan
- "Goodnight My Someone" w.m. Meredith Willson
- "Got-Ta Have Something in the Bank, Frank" Bob Hilliard, Mort Garson
- "Great Balls of Fire" w.m. Jack Hammer & Otis Blackwell
- "A Handful of Songs" Tommy Steele, Lionel Bart & Michael Pratt
- "Happy, Happy Birthday Baby" w.m. Margo Sylvia & Gilbert Lopez
- "Hey Schoolgirl" w. Art Garfunkel m. Paul Simon
- "Hula Love" adapted by Buddy Knox from the 1911 song "My Hula Hula Love"
- "I Can't Stop Loving You" w.m. Don Gibson
- "I Feel Pretty" w. Stephen Sondheim m. Leonard Bernstein
- "I Just Don't Know" w. Joe Stone m. Robert Allen
- "I Like Your Kind of Love" Melvin Endsley
- "I'm Sorry" w.m. Buck Ram
- "In My Own Little Corner" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Richard Rodgers
- "In the Middle of an Island" w.m. Ted Varnick & Nick Acquaviva
- "Island in the Sun" w.m. Harry Belafonte & Irving L. Burgie
- "It's Good to Be Alive" w.m. Bob Merrill
- "Ivy Rose" w.m. Al Hoffman & Dick Manning
- "Jailhouse Rock" w.m. Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
- "Jingle Bell Rock" w.m. Joseph Beal & James Boothe
- "Joey's Song" m. Joe Reisman
- "Just Between You and Me" w.m. Lee Cathy & Jack Keller
- "Just Born" w.m. Luther Dixon & Billy Dawn Smith
- "Let It Be Me" w.(Eng) Mann Curtis (Fr) Pierre Delanoë m. Gilbert Bécaud
- "Lida Rose" w.m. Meredith Willson
- "Liechtensteiner Polka" w.(Eng) Joseph Seener w.m. Edmund Koetscher & Rudi Lindt
- "Lips of Wine" w. Shirley Wolfe m. Sy Soloway
- "Little Biscuit" w. E. Y. Harburg m. Harold Arlen
- "The Little Blue Man" w.m. Fred Ebb & Paul Klein
- "Little Darlin' " w.m. Maurice Williams
- "Loving You" w.m. Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
- "Lucille" w.m. Richard Penniman & Albert Collins
- "Magic Moments" w. Hal David m. Burt Bacharach
- "Mama Look a Booboo" w.m. Lord Melody
- "Mean Woman Blues" w.m. Claude Demetrius
- "Mi Casa, Su Casa" w.m. Al Hoffman & Dick Manning
- "Moonlight Swim" w. Sylvia Dee m. Ben Weisman
- "My Heart Reminds Me" (aka "And That Reminds Me") w. (Eng) Al Stillman m. Camillo Bargoni
- "My Little Baby" w.m. Joe Shapiro and Lou Stallman
- "My Special Angel" w.m. Jimmy Duncan
- "Napoleon" w. E. Y. Harburg m. Harold Arlen
- "A New-Fangled Tango" w. Matt Dubey m. Harold Carr
- "Oh Boy!" w.m. Sunny West, Norman Petty & Bill Tilghman
- "Oh, Lonesome Me" w.m. Don Gibson
- "Old Cape Cod" w.m. Claire Rothrock, Milt Yakus & Allan Jeffrey
- "One Hand, One Heart" w. Stephen Sondheim m. Leonard Bernstein
- "Party Doll" w.m. Jimmy Bowen & Buddy Knox
- "Passing Strangers" Mel Mitchell, Stanley Applebaum
- "Peggy Sue" w.m. Jerry Allison, Norman Petty & Buddy Holly
- "Pretend You Don't See Her" w.m. Steve Allen
- "Proceed with Caution" Wilson Stone
- "Promise Her Anything" w.m. Roy Alfred
- "A Pub with No Beer" w.m. Gordon Parsons
- "Put a Light in the Window" w. Rhoda Roberts m. Kenny Jacobson
- "Rainbow" w.m. Russ Hamilton
- "Raunchy" m. William E. Justis Jr & Sidney Manker
- "Reet Petite" T. Carlo, Berry Gordy
- "Remember You're Mine" Bernie Lowe, Kal Mann
- "Rock and Roll Music" w.m. Chuck Berry
- "Rock-A-Billy" w.m. Woody Harris & Eddie V. Deane
- "Sadder But Wiser Girl for Me" w.m. Meredith Willson
- "Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)" w.m. Claude Demetrius & Aaron Schroeder
- "Sayonara" w.m. Irving Berlin
- "School Day" w.m. Chuck Berry
- "Searchin' " w.m. Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
- "Send for Me" w.m. Ollie Jones
- "Seventy-Six Trombones" w.m. Meredith Willson
- "She Was Only Seventeen" w.m. Marty Robbins
- "Shiralee" w.m. Tommy Steele
- "Short Fat Fanny" Larry Williams
- "Silhouettes" w.m. Frank Slay & Bob Crewe
- "Something's Coming" w. Stephen Sondheim m. Leonard Bernstein
- "Somewhere" w. Stephen Sondheim m. Leonard Bernstein, Introduced by Reri Grist in the musical West Side Story
- "The Song of Raintree County" w. Paul Francis Webster & Raymond Egan m. Richard Whiting
- "Song of the Clyde" w. R. Y Bell m. Ian Gourlay
- "The Story of My Life" w. Hal David m. Burt Bacharach
- "The Stroll" w.m. Nancy Lee & Clyde Otis
- "Tammy" w. Jay Livingston m. Ray Evans. Introduced by Debbie Reynolds in the film Tammy and the Bachelor
- "Teddy Bear" w.m. Kal Mann & Bernie Lowe. Introduced by Elvis Presley in the film Loving You
- "Tele Vee Shun" Stan Freberg
- "Ten Minutes Ago" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Richard Rodgers
- "That'll Be the Day" w.m. Buddy Holly, Norman Petty & Jerry Allison
- "Till" w.m. Carl Sigman, Charles Sananes & Pierre Buisson
- "Till There Was You" w.m. Meredith Willson. Introduced by Robert Preston and Barbara Cook in the musical The Music Man
- "Tonight" w. Stephen Sondheim & Leonard Bernstein m. Leonard Bernstein
- "Tonite, Tonite" W. Nobles
- "Treat Me Nice" w.m. Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
- "Trouble (In River City)" w.m. Meredith Willson. Introduced by Robert Preston in the musical The Music Man.
- "The Twelfth of Never" adapt. (folk song) w. Paul Francis Webster m. Jerry Livingston
- "Twenty-six Miles" w.m. Bruce Bell & Glen Larson
- "A Very Special Love" w.m. Robert Allen
- "Wake Up Little Susie" w.m. Felice & Boudleaux Bryant
- "Walking Along" Sam Weiss, Winston Willis
- "White Silver Sands" w.m. Charles G. Matthews & Gladys Reinhardt
- "A White Sport Coat" w.m. Marty Robbins
- "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" w.m. Dave Williams & Sunny David
- "Whole Lotta Woman" w.m. Marvin Rainwater
- "Why Baby Why" w.m. Luther Dixon & Larry Harrison
- "Why Don't They Understand?" Jack Fishman, Joe Henderson
- "Wild Is the Wind" w. Ned Washington m. Dimitri Tiomkin
- "Wind in the Willows" Wecht, Singer, Singer
- "Witchcraft" w. Carolyn Leigh m. Cy Coleman
- "Wonderful! Wonderful!" w. Ben Raleigh m. Sherman Edwards
- "Yellow Bird" w.m. Alan Bergman, Marilyn Keith & Norman Luboff
- "Yes Tonight, Josephine" w.m. Winfield Scott & Dorothy Goodman
- "You Need Hands" w.m. Roy Irwin
- "You Send Me" w.m. L. C. Cooke
Classical music
Premieres
- 1 Posthumous premiere.
- 2 Recording. The Sonata was performed publicly for the first time in concert on April 1967 by Elisabeth Klein in Copenhagen.[28]
- 3 Revision of a cantata composed in 1938 and premiered in 1948. Until then Miserae had been Hartmann's Symphony No. 1.
- 4 Concert premiere. The Symphony had been previously recorded by the BBC Symphony conducted by Adrian Boult in March 1950 for a radio broadcast.
- 5 In two versions. Unofficial premiere, given at the time without permission, but now acknowledged by the publisher.[29] Originally, the official premiere was given as 28 July 1957, the last day of the Darmstädter Ferienkurse, in the Orangerie at Darmstadt, in two versions played by Paul Jacobs. This is now regarded as the European premiere.
Compositions
- Aaron Copland – Orchestral Variations
- Pierre Gabaye – Boutade
- Jørgen Jersild – 3 Madrigali
- Giselher Klebe – Concerto for cello and orchestra
- László Lajtha – Symphony No. 7, Revolution (A tribute to the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 against the Soviet suppression)
- Walter Piston – Viola Concerto
- Hilding Rosenberg – String Quartets nos. 8 – 12
- Edmund Rubbra – Seventh Symphony
- Roger Sessions – Symphony No. 3
- Alfred Schnittke – Symphony No. 0
- Dmitri Shostakovich – Symphony No. 11 G minor, Op. 103 "The Year 1905"
- Elie Siegmeister – Symphony No. 3
- Karlheinz Stockhausen – Gruppen for three orchestras (1955–57)
- Toru Takemitsu – Requiem for Strings
- Vladimir Ussachevsky – Metamorphosis
- Heitor Villa-Lobos –
- Mieczysław Weinberg – Symphony No. 4
- Malcolm Williamson
- A Vision of Beasts and Gods, song-cycle for high voice & piano
- Santiago de Espada, overture for orchestra
- Symphony No. 1 – Elevamini, for orchestra
- Bernd Alois Zimmermann
- Canto di speranza
- Die fromme Helene
- Omnia tempus habent
Opera
- John Eaton – Ma Barker
- Bohuslav Martinů – The Greek Passion
- Douglas Moore – Gallantry
- Ildebrando Pizzetti – Assassinio nella Cattedrale
- Francis Poulenc – Dialogues of the Carmelites (Dialogues des Carmelites)
- Heitor Villa-Lobos – Daughter of the Clouds
Musical theater
- Bells Are Ringing London production
- Brigadoon (Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe) — Broadway revival
- Damn Yankees (Richard Adler and Jerry Ross) — London production
- Harmony Close London production opened at the Lyric, Hammersmith on April 17.
- Katharina Knie opened at the Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz in Munich on January 20
- The Music Man (Meredith Willson) opened at the Majestic Theatre on Broadway on December 19, 1957, and ran for 1375 performances.
- New Girl In Town (George Abbott and Bob Merrill) Broadway production, opened at the 46th St. Theatre and ran for 431 performances
- West Side Story (Leonard Bernstein) — Broadway production, opened at the Winter Garden Theatre and ran for 732 performances
- Zuleika — London production, Saville Theatre
Musical films
- Funny Face starring Fred Astaire and Audrey Hepburn
- Les Girls starring Gene Kelly, Mitzi Gaynor and Kay Kendall
- Loving You released July 9 starring Elvis Presley.
- Mayabazar starring Savithri
- The Pajama Game starring Doris Day and John Raitt
- Pal Joey starring Frank Sinatra, Rita Hayworth and Kim Novak
- Pardesi, with music by Anil Biswas
- Silk Stockings, featuring Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse
Births
- January 4
- Brian Roy Goble, Canadian singer-songwriter (Subhumans and The Skulls) (d. 2014)
- Patty Loveless, country singer
- January 23 – Earl Falconer (UB40)
- January 27 – Janick Gers (Iron Maiden)
- February 2 – Tony Butler (Big Country)
- February 19 – Falco, classical and rock musician (d. 1998)
- February 27 – Adrian Smith, musician Iron Maiden and Urchin
- February 28
- Phil Gould, drummer (Level 42)
- Cindy Wilson, The B-52's
- March 12 – Marlon Jackson, vocalist (The Jackson 5)
- March 21 – John Whitfield, conductor
- March 26 – Paul Morley, music journalist
- April 12 – Vince Gill
- May 2 – Markus Stockhausen, trumpeter and composer
- May 10 – Sid Vicious, punk musician (d. 1979) Sex Pistols
- May 18 – Michael Cretu, musician
- May 27 – Siouxsie Sioux, singer (Siouxsie and the Banshees)
- June 11 – Jamaaladeen Tacuma
- June 17
- Phil Chevron, Irish singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Pogues)
- Martin Dillon, American tenor and educator (d. 2005)
- June 22 – Gary Beers (INXS)
- June 26 – Patty Smyth, American singer-songwriter (Scandal)
- July 3
- Peter Breiner, composer
- Poly Styrene, punk musician
- July 30 – Christopher Miller, known as Rat Scabies, drummer
- August 2
- Mojo Nixon, American singer-songwriter
- Butch Vig, American drummer, songwriter, and producer (Garbage and Spooner)
- August 18 – Ron Strykert, Men at Work
- August 21 – Budgie, drummer (Siouxsie and the Banshees)
- August 22 - Holly Dunn, country singer/songwriter
- August 31
- Glenn Tilbrook, vocalist (Squeeze)
- Gina Schock, The Go-Go's
- September 1
- Gloria Estefan, singer Miami Sound Machine
- Jon Moss, drummer (Culture Club)
- September 22
- Johnette Napolitano, Concrete Blonde
- Nick Cave, singer-songwriter
- October 3 – Tim Westwood, DJ
- October 5 – Lee Jay Thompson (Madness)
- October 7 – Michael W. Smith
- October 19 – Karl Wallinger (World Party)
- October 20 - Anouar Brahem, oud player and composer
- October 21
- Steve Lukather, Toto
- Julian Cope, singer
- October 16 – Kelly Marie, disco singer
- October 28 – Stephen Morris (New Order)
- November 1 – Lyle Lovett, country musician
- November 5 – Mike Score (A Flock of Seagulls)
- November 8 – Porl Thompson (The Cure)
- November 24 – Chris Hayes, pop rock musician Huey Lewis and the News
- December 6 - Adrian Borland, post-punk musician The Sound (d. 1999)
- December 6 – Bob Drake, avant-garde musician
- December 9
- Donny Osmond, singer (Osmonds)
- Steve Taylor, singer, record producer
- December 10 – Paul Hardcastle, composer and musician
- December 12 – Sheila E., singer-songwriter and percussionist
- December 20
- Anita Baker, R&B singer-songwriter
- Billy Bragg, singer-songwriter
- Anna Vissi, singer
- December 22 – Tsai Chin, singer
- December 25 – Shane MacGowan, Celtic punk singer (The Pogues)
- date unknown
- Annette A. Aguilar, Latin jazz percussionist
- Charles Roland Berry, composer
- Kartik Seshadri, sitarist and composer
Deaths
- January – Gertie Gitana, music hall entertainer, 69
- January 16 – Arturo Toscanini, conductor, 89
- January 18 – George Girard, jazz trumpeter, 26 (cancer)
- February 7 – Rudolph Réti, pianist, composer and musicologist, 71
- February 16 – Josef Hofmann, pianist and composer, 81
- February 21
- Marguerite Sylva, operatic mezzo-soprano, 81
- "Klondike" Kate Rockwell, vaudeville performer, 83
- March 8 – Othmar Schoeck, composer, 70
- March 13 – Lena Ashwell, Forces entertainer, 84
- March 24 – Carson Robison, country music singer and songwriter, 66
- April 15 – Pedro Infante, actor and singer, 39 (air crash)
- May 2 – Tadeusz Kassern, composer, 53 (cancer [30])
- May 9 – Ezio Pinza, Italian singer and actor, 64
- May 12 – Marie Rappold, operatic soprano, 83
- June 5 – Frances Densmore, ethnomusicologist, 90
- June 6 – Kulyash Baiseitova, opera singer, 52
- June 12 – Jimmy Dorsey, jazz musician and big band leader, 53 (cancer)
- July 7 – Hiski Salomaa, folk singer and songwriter, 66
- July 9 – Alexander Goedicke, pianist and composer, 80
- July 16 – Serge Chaloff, saxophonist. 33 (cancer)
- August 4 - Ivan Zorman, poet and composer
- August 28 – Erik Tuxen, conductor, composer and arranger, 55
- September 1 – Dennis Brain, horn virtuoso, 36 (in unexplained car accident)
- September 11 – Petar Stojanović, violinist and composer, 80
- September 20 – Jean Sibelius, composer, 91
- October 14 – Natanael Berg, composer, 78
- October 20 – Jack Buchanan, Scottish singer, dancer, actor and director, 66
- October 23 – Abe Lyman, US bandleader, composer and drummer, 60
- November 4 – Joseph Canteloube, composer, 78
- November 29 – Erich Wolfgang Korngold, composer, 60
- November 30 – Beniamino Gigli, operatic tenor, 67
- December 19 – Abolhasan Saba, instrumentalist, 55
- December 20 – Walter Page, jazz musician, 57
- December 21 – Eric Coates, composer, 71
Awards
Eurovision Song Contest
References
- ↑ "Toru Takemitsu - Chronology". Schott Music. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
- ↑ "Songs from the Year 1957". Tsort.info. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ Stephen Pettitt (2012-11-15). "Dennis Brain: A Biography". Books.google.es. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ Dr Rhoderick McNeill. "The Australian Symphony from Federation to 1960". Books.google.es. p. 112. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Symphony no. 3 in C minor (Musical LP, 1958)". WorldCat.org. 1957-03-25. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Sonate pour piano, Jean Barraqué". Brahms.ircam.fr. 1967-04-24. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Mutazioni | Centro Studi Luciano Berio - Luciano Berio's Official Website". Lucianoberio.org (in Italian). Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "TRADITIONAL FORMAL STRUCTURES AND 20TH CENTURY SONORITIES: A SUCCESSFUL PAIRING IN THE SOLO CELLO SONATAS OF LIGETI, CRUMB, AND STEVENS by MARTIN GUEORGUIEV" (PDF). Getd.libs.uga.edu. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Work Detail - Sir Peter Maxwell Davies". Maxopus.com. 1957-07-20. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Shop - Karl Amadeus Hartmann - 1. Symphonie". Schott Music. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Maratona, Hans Werner Henze". Brahms.ircam.fr. 1957-02-08. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Harald Banter- Bio, Albums, Pictures – Naxos Classical Music". Naxos.com. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "String Quartet No. 1: From the Salvation Army, Charles Ives". Brahms.ircam.fr. 1943-03-17. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Concertino för fagott och stråkorkester - Gehrmans Musikförlag". Gehrmans.se. 1957-12-10. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ Michael Brim Beckerman; Michael Henderson. "Martinů's Mysterious Accident: Essays in Honor of Michael Henderson". Books.google.es. p. 118. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Figures Sonores Orchesra Full Score Music Musica Musik - Mv - Musica e Vita - Vendita spartiti online". Mvmusica.eu. 1957-01-06. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Varianti | Fondazione Archivio Luigi Nono Onlus". Luiginono.it. 2002-05-07. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Prokofiev: Symphony No. 4 in C Major, Op. 112 | HDtracks - The World's Greatest-Sounding Music Downloads". HDtracks. 2014-12-22. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "John Feeney Charitable Trust - Feeney Commissions". Feeneytrust.org.uk. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "1950-1999 The British Symphony | atuneadayblogdotcom". Atuneadayblogdotcom.wordpress.com. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- 1 2 "Opus by Shostakovich". Home.online.nl. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ Donald Macauley (2013-06-07). "The Power of Robert Simpson". Books.google.es. p. 75. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ Michael Kurtz, Stockhausen: A Biography, translated by Richard Toop (London: Faber and Faber, 1992): 87–88. ISBN 0-571-14323-7 (cloth); ISBN 978-0-571-17146-0 (pbk).
- ↑ Imke Misch and Markus Bandur (eds.), Karlheinz Stockhausen bei den Internationalen Ferienkursen für Neue Musik in Darmstadt 1951–1996: Dokumente und Briefe (Kürten: Stockhausen-Verlag, 2001): 147, 166, 169–72. ISBN 3-00-007290-X.
- ↑ "Requiem for strings, Tōru Takemitsu". Brahms.ircam.fr. 1957-06-20. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "HISTORY (7) - Vito D.Liuzzi - THE CLASSICAL DOUBLE BASS "Il Contrabbasso classico"". Vitoliuzzi.com. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Biography". Iannis Xenakis. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Slee Sinfonietta" (PDF). Music21c.buffalo.edu. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "Karlheinz Stockhausen – Klavierstück 11". Universal Edition. 1957-04-22. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ↑ "KASSERN IS DEAD - COMPOSER WAS 53 - Polish Musician Defected From Government Post- Found Asylum Here Work for Strings Hailed Came Here in 1945 - Article - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
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