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Overview of the events of 1965 in British music
List of years in British music
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This is a summary of 1965 in music in the United Kingdom .
15 January – The Who release their first hit single "I Can't Explain " in the UK. It was released a month earlier in the US.
17 January – The Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts ' book, Ode to a High Flying Bird , a tribute to jazz great Charlie Parker , is published.
21 January
23 January – "Downtown " hits #1 in the US singles chart, making Petula Clark the first British female vocalist to reach the coveted position since the arrival of The Beatles .
24 January – The Animals appear a second time on The Ed Sullivan Show .
27 January – Paul Simon broadcasts on BBC radio for the first time, on the Five to Ten show, discussing and playing thirteen songs, twelve of which would appear on his May-recorded and August-released UK-only solo album, The Paul Simon Song Book .
6 February – Donovan gets his widest audience so far when he makes the first of three appearances on "Ready, Steady, Go!".
12 February – NME reports that the Beatles will star in a film adaptation of Richard Condon 's novel A Talent for Loving . The story is about a 2,253-kilometer (1,400 mi) horse race that takes place in the old west. The film is never made.
24 February –
20 March – Kathy Kirby , singing the UK entry "I Belong ", finishes second in the 10th Eurovision Song Contest in Naples , Italy, behind France Gall , representing Luxembourg .
23 March – Benjamin Britten is appointed to the Order of Merit (OM).[ 2]
April – Michael Tippett is invited as guest composer to the music festival in Aspen, Colorado. The visit leads to major changes in his style.
11 April – The New Musical Express poll winners' concert takes place featuring performances by The Beatles , The Animals , The Rolling Stones , Freddie and the Dreamers , the Kinks , the Searchers , Herman's Hermits , The Moody Blues , Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders , Donovan , Cilla Black , Dusty Springfield and Tom Jones .
5 May – Alan Price leaves The Animals , to be replaced temporarily by Mick Gallagher and permanently by Dave Rowberry .
6 May – Keith Richards and Mick Jagger begin work on "Satisfaction" in their Clearwater, Florida hotel room. Richards comes up with the classic guitar riff while playing around with his brand-new Gibson "Fuzz box".
8 May – The British Commonwealth comes closer than it ever had, or would, to a clean sweep of the US Hot 100's top 10, lacking only the #2 slot.
30 May – The Animals appear for a third time on The Ed Sullivan Show .
12 June – The Beatles are appointed Members of the British Empire (MBE) by the Queen. With no tradition of awarding popular entertainers such honours, a number of previous recipients complain and protest.
June 14 – Paul McCartney records "Yesterday ".[ 3]
July – John Cale , with his new collaborators Lou Reed and Sterling Morrison , makes a demo tape which he tries to pass on to Marianne Faithfull .[ 4] These are the beginnings of the Velvet Underground .
5 July – Maria Callas gives her last operatic performance, in the title role of Tosca , at the Royal Opera House , Covent Garden.
13 July – The Beatles receive a record five Ivor Novello Awards .[ 5]
4 August – Iain Hamilton 's Cantos receives its world première at The Proms , performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and conducted by Norman Del Mar .[ 6]
6 August
27 August – The Beatles visit Elvis Presley at his home in Bel-Air. It is the only time the band and the singer meet.
11 September – The Last Night of The Proms is conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent , with Josephine Veasey as soloist for the traditional rendition of "Rule, Britannia ".[ 7]
30 September – Donovan appears on Shindig! in the U.S. and plays Buffy Sainte-Marie 's "Universal Soldier".
17 October – The Animals appear for a fourth time on The Ed Sullivan Show .
5 November – The Who release their iconic single "My Generation " in the UK. This song contains the famous line: "I hope I die before I get old"
3 December
Film and incidental music [ edit ]
Be My Guest , starring David Hemmings and Steve Marriott
Catch Us If You Can , starring the Dave Clark Five
Every Day's a Holiday , starring John Leyton , Michael Sarne and Peter Birrell .[ 13]
Ferry Cross the Mersey , starring Gerry and the Pacemakers [ 14]
Help! , starring The Beatles
Three Hats for Lisa , starring Joe Brown , Sid James , and Una Stubbs [ 15]
Up Jumped a Swagman , starring Frank Ifield , Annette Andre , and Suzy Kendall .[ 16]
1 January – John Digweed , DJ, record producer, and actor
4 January – Beth Gibbons , vocalist (Portishead )
6 January – Murray McLachlan , Scottish pianist[ 17]
10 January – Nathan Moore , singer (Brother Beyond )
14 January – Slick Rick , rapper
20 January – Heather Small , soul singer (M People )
22 January – Andrew Roachford , singer-songwriter and keyboard player
12 February – David Westlake , singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Servants )
23 March – Marti Pellow , vocalist (Wet Wet Wet )
1 April – Robert Steadman , composer
7 April – Yorkie (David Palmer), bassist (Space )
15 April – Graeme Clark , bass guitarist (Wet Wet Wet)
13 May – Tasmin Little , violinist[ 18]
23 May – Simon Gilbert , drummer (Suede )
31 May – Lisa I'Anson , DJ
6 June – David White, guitarist (Brother Beyond )
7 June – Billy Reeves , English guitarist, songwriter, and producer (Theaudience )
23 June – Paul Arthurs , guitarist (Oasis and The Rain )
4 July – Jo Whiley , radio DJ
6 July – Anthony Marwood , English violinist
19 July – Dame Evelyn Glennie , percussionist[ 19]
28 July – Nick Banks , drummer (Pulp )
13 September – Zak Starkey , drummer, son of Ringo Starr [ 20]
19 September – Goldie , electronic music artist and DJ
2 October – Roy Powell , jazz pianist, organist and composer
12 October – Phil Creswick, singer (Big Fun )
9 November – Bryn Terfel , operatic bass-baritone[ 21]
29 October – Richard Ayres , composer and music teacher.
21 December – Stuart Mitchell , pianist and composer
date unknown
Date unknown – Caroline Dale , cellist
8 February – Winifred Christie , pianist and composer, 82[ 22]
8 June – Erik Chisholm , composer, 61[ 23]
18 June – George Melachrino , conductor, singer and composer, 56[ 24]
2 July – Charles Kennedy Scott , organist and choral conductor, 88[ 25]
4 July – Edward Sackville-West, 5th Baron Sackville , music critic, 63[ 26]
24 July – Irene Browne , actress and singer, 69[ 27]
9 October – Ernest Read , conductor, organist, and music educator, 86
10 October – Herbert Kennedy Andrews , organist and composer, 61
25 November – Dame Myra Hess , pianist, 75[ 28]
20 December – Henry George Farmer , musicologist, 83
^ Stanley Sadie, "Richard Rodney Bennett's The Mines of Sulphur . Tempo (New Ser.), 73 , 24–25 (1965).
^ "No. 43610" . The London Gazette (Supplement). 26 March 1965. p. 3047.
^ Lewisohn, Mark (1988). The Beatles Recording Sessions . New York: Harmony Books. p. 10. ISBN 0-517-57066-1 .
^ John Cale & Victor Bockris What's Welsh For Zen London: Bloomsbury, 1999
^ Beatles Bible
^ BBC – The Proms – Archive . Accessed 17 April 2013
^ BBC – Proms – Archive . Accessed 17 April 2013
^ Fitch, Donald (1990). Blake set to music : a bibliography of musical settings of the poems and prose of William Blake . Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 32. ISBN 9780520097346 .
^ Gloag, Kenneth (1999). Tippett, A child of our time . Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 97. ISBN 9780521597531 .
^ Strimple, Nick (2005). Choral music in the twentieth century . Pompton Plains, NJ: Amadeus. p. 89. ISBN 9781574671223 .
^ Latham, Alison (2004). The Oxford dictionary of musical works . Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. p. 145. ISBN 9780198610205 .
^ "Passion Flower Hotel" . The Guide to Musical Theatre . Retrieved 16 October 2019 .
^ "BFI | Film & TV Database | EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY (1964)" . Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. 2009-04-16. Archived from the original on 2007-03-14. Retrieved 2012-02-15 .
^ Archer, Eugene (20 February 1965). "The Screen: 'Ferry Cross the Mersey':New Film Stars Gerry and the Pacemakers" . NYTimes .
^ BFI.org
^ BFI.org
^ Hall, Charles (2002). Chronology of Western classical music . New York: Routledge. p. 1027. ISBN 9780415942171 .
^ "Tasmin Little" . Classic FM . Retrieved 17 August 2021 .
^ Lang, Harry (1995). Deaf persons in the arts and sciences : a biographical dictionary . Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press. p. 146. ISBN 9780313291708 .
^ "News in Brief – A baby named Zak". The Times . No. 56427. 15 September 1965. p. 7.
^ LastName, FirstName (2003). Encyclopedia Britannica almanac . London: Encyclopedia Britannica. p. 111. ISBN 9781593390730 .
^ The London Gazette . H.M. Stationery Office. 1965. p. 2922.
^ University of Edinburgh Journal . 1965. p. 169.
^ Joseph Murrells (1978). The Book of Golden Discs . Barrie and Jenkins. p. 84 . ISBN 978-0-214-20480-7 .
^ Music in Britain . 1965. p. 37.
^ Michael De-la-Noy (1 January 1999). Eddy: the life of Edward Sackville-West . Arcadia Books. p. 297.
^ John Willis (June 1966). Screen World, 1966 . Biblo & Tannen Publishers. p. 234. ISBN 978-0-8196-0307-4 .
^ Gerald Norris (June 1981). A musical gazetteer of Great Britain & Ireland . David & Charles. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-7153-7845-8 .
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