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This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1999.

Specific locations[]

  • 1999 in British music
  • 1999 in Norwegian music

Specific genres[]

Events[]

January[]

  • January 7
    • After eight years of marriage, musician husband Rod Stewart and supermodel wife Rachel Hunter announce their separation.
    • Paul McCartney attends the launch of his daughter Heather's first housewares collection in Georgia.
  • January 11 – During the American Music Awards, Billy Joel is awarded the Special Award of Merit for his "inspired songwriting skills" and "exciting showmanship."
  • January 12Fredrik Johansson is fired from Dark Tranquillity.[1]
  • January 21 - A&M Records is shut down and merged into the Universal Music Group umbrella label Interscope Geffen A&M. It would be relaunched in 2007.
  • January 22 – German industrial band KMFDM announces that it has disbanded.

February[]

  • February 9 - NSYNC release their third single from their debut album, "(God Must Have Spent) A Little More Time on You", which peaks in the top 10 on the Pop charts.
  • February 10 - Iron Maiden announces that singer Bruce Dickinson has rejoined the band.
  • February 14Elton John appears as himself in a special episode of the animated series The Simpsons
  • February 15 – "Rolling Stones Day" is declared in Minnesota by Governor (and former Rolling Stones bodyguard) Jesse Ventura
  • February 19Marilyn Manson files a defamation countersuit against former Spin Magazine editor Craig Marks, in response to a multimillion-dollar lawsuit that Marks filed in January against the singer, the record label Nothing/Interscope, and Manson's bodyguard agency.
  • February 20Trace Adkins performs his first concert following surgery for tendon damage and a broken ankle. Contrary to doctor's orders, Adkins does not remain seated during the performance.
  • February 24 - Lauryn Hill makes history at the 1999 Grammy Awards by being the first female artist to win five Grammys in one night.
  • February 25The Artist Formerly Known as Prince files a lawsuit against nine Web sites for copyright and trademark infringement, claiming that the websites sell bootlegged recordings and offer unauthorized song downloads.

March[]

  • March 1Sony Music Distribution raises wholesale prices on audio compact discs by 8 US cents.
  • March 2
    • Cher's song "Believe" reaches number one on the Billboard Hot 100, making Cher the oldest female artist (at the age of 52) to perform this feat. Cher also set the record for the longest hit-making career span, with 33 years between the release of her first and last Billboard Hot 100 #1 singles (1965 and 1999).
    • The House of Blues in Paradise, Nevada at the Mandalay Bay Resort. Bob Dylan performs a concert at the club and is joined by U2's lead singer Bono for an encore of "Knockin' on Heaven's Door".
  • March 3 - British soul singer Dusty Springfield dies of breast cancer at the age of 59.
  • March 5Trauma Records files a $40 million breach-of-contract lawsuit against the members of Bush for failing to deliver a new album.
  • March 6 – A 67-year-old George Jones is seriously injured in a car accident while on his way home. Jones' Lexus crashed into a bridge at about 1:30 p.m. It is later revealed that alcohol was a factor in the accident.
  • March 15Marilyn Manson is injured when he slips and falls during a concert at the Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California. Manson's performance is cut short.
  • March 16 - The Recording Industry Association of America introduces a new certification level, Diamond, for albums or singles selling ten million units and the first Radio Disney Jams volume gets released on CD and cassette for the very first time.
  • March 21 – Irish girl band B*Witched score their fourth consecutive #1 with Blame It On The Weatherman on the UK singles chart. They become the first band to have all their first four singles enter at the top simultaneously and set a new record. It is broken a year later by Irish boy band Westlife.
  • March 27 – The Bee Gees end their One Night Only tour in Sydney, Australia.

April[]

  • April 10 – A charity tribute, the Concert for Linda McCartney is held at the Royal Albert Hall in London. Here, There and Everywhere: A Concert For Linda, features performances by Paul McCartney, Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders, Elvis Costello, Sinéad O'Connor, and George Michael. Proceeds raised at the event went to animal rights causes.
  • April 19Neil Young performs at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Due to a mistake by a Madison Square Garden staff member, the marquee read "Bob Dylan, Tonight at 8pm". Young jokingly introduced one of his guitar players as Bob Dylan during the show.
  • April 20
    • Billy Joel performs at Meadowlands in New Jersey. Joel announces that this would be his last public pop music concert. Joel also announces plans on devoting his future efforts to classical music.
    • Columbine High School massacre takes place in Jefferson County, Colorado, sparking a widespread moral panic that ultimately tries to place the blame on violent media, including music perceived to be violent and/or connected to the goth culture. American rocker Marilyn Manson receives the brunt of the blame despite evidence that neither of the shooters were fans of his and recludes, only to address the issue in the form of his fourth studio album. The finger is also pointed at German industrial metal acts Rammstein and KMFDM, of whom the shooters were fans. This sensationalism gradually wanes in the years following, and all three music acts ironically achieve more mainstream acceptance in the U.S. than they had prior to the massacre. Christian Contemporary Music artists respond to the concept that Atheism caused the shooting and in particular the Cassie Bernall urban legend (about a girl who was initially believed to have been shot in the head for answering "yes" when perpetrator Eric Harris asked her if she believed in God) with songs such as "A New Hope" by Five Iron Frenzy, about a band member's sister who had been trapped in the choir room returning to school after the shooting, and "This Is Your Time" by Michael W. Smith, a direct response to the Cassie Bernall story.
  • April 26 - Musician and former bandleader of The Sound, Adrian Borland, commits suicide in London.
  • April 28Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
  • April 30Columbine High School massacre: Aerosmith visits Columbine High School shooting victim Lance Kirklin in a Colorado hospital before a concert in Denver, Colorado. Kirklin was one of 24 wounded in the April 20 shooting, 13 others were killed.

May[]

  • May 1
    • "The Paintings of Paul McCartney" exhibit opens at the Lyz Art Forum in Siegen, Germany. The exhibit features around 70 paintings created by the former Beatle.
    • Musical group Atari Teenage Riot starts a riot in Berlin with their anti-consumer and anti-government lyrics. The riot was stopped with concert goers pleading for peace from the Swat crew ruthlessly beating down pedestrians. This band is under the label Digital Hardcore Recordings.

June[]

  • June 1Peer-to-peer file sharing network Napster is launched.
  • June 2Backstreet Boys smashes the old first-week sales record of Garth Brooks' 1.08 million, with (Millennium) which sold over 1.13 million in its first week and was the first album to sell over 500,000 copies at least 2 weeks. The album holds at No. 1 first-weeks sales record of the 1990s.
  • June 13 - S Club 7 debut at #1 on the UK singles chart with their first single "Bring It All Back" and become the largest vocal group to enter at the top.
  • June 22 - Limp Bizkit's second album, Significant Other, debuts at number one on the Billboard 200, with 643,874 copies sold in its first week. The album launches them into mainstream success.
  • June 28 - Britney Spears embarked her first concert tour, ...Baby One More Time Tour. The tour only reached North America and garned a positive review, but generated some controversy due to her racy outfit and accusation of lip syncing.

July[]

  • July 1 – The new Scottish Parliament is formally opened with a rock concert in the shadow of Edinburgh Castle and is headlined by Garbage, of which, lead singer Shirley Manson, is at the time one of the biggest music stars from Scotland.
  • July 3Indie rock icon Mark Sandman collapses on stage at the Giardini del Principe in Palestrina, Latium, Italy (near Rome) while performing with Morphine. He is soon pronounced dead of a heart attack at the age of 46. Morphine immediately disbands.
  • July 8 - Adrian Erlandsson quits The Haunted as the drummer while the band hires Per Möller Jensen as Erlandsson's replacement.
  • July 12Gregg Alexander issues a press release dissolving the New Radicals.
  • July 13–18 – The third Yoyo A Go Go punk and indie rock festival opens in Olympia, Washington.
  • July 23–25 – The highly anticipated Woodstock 99 festival takes place in Rome, New York.

August[]

September[]

  • September 1 - The Irish Music Hall of Fame opens; Van Morrison is the first inducted into the museum.
  • September 17 - Rapper Eminem is sued by his mother for $10 million, claiming that public comments he made about her were slanderous and had caused emotional stress and financial harm.[3] She eventually collects a mere $1,600 settlement in 2001.
  • September 21David Bowie's Hours becomes the first complete album by a major artist available to download over the Internet, preceding the physical release by two weeks.[4]
  • September 30 - Billboard announces that Ministry of Sound Recordings Ltd is expanding into Australia after ending a partnership with MDS Dancenet and establishes Ministry of Sound Australia, known until 2005 as Ministry of Sound (UK) Pty Ltd. Ministry UK also secures a distribution deal with EMI Music Group Australasia Pty Ltd.[5]

October[]

November[]

  • November 5
    • Australian independent record label Liberation Music is formed.
    • Gary Cherone leaves Van Halen.
  • November 12 - 1970s rock star Gary Glitter is jailed for four months for downloading child pornography off the Internet.
  • November 15Korn performs their entire album Issues at the Apollo Theater in New York City, becoming the first rock band ever to perform at the Apollo.
  • November 16Korn's fourth studio album, Issues, debuts at number 1 on the Billboard 200 with 575,000 copies sold in its first week.
  • November 23University of Oregon student Jeffrey Levy, having downloaded MP3s without permission, is the first person ever convicted for copyright infringement under the NET Act of 1997. He is sentenced to two years of probation and a limit on Internet access.[6]

December[]

  • December 4 – The Spice Girls start their Christmas Tour around the UK, dubbed as the Christmas in Spiceworld Tour.
  • December 14
    • BMI announces the most played songs on American radio and television in the 20th century [1] (full list)
    • Paul McCartney returns to The Cavern Club to play a special concert for 300 fans.
    • Boy George is injured by a 62-pound disco ball that falls from a concert venue's ceiling during a rehearsal, nearly killing him as it almost landed on his head.
  • December 27 - Puff Daddy and fellow rapper Shyne are arrested for weapons violations and other charges after a shooting in a Manhattan nightclub that leaves three people injured.
  • December 30 - George Harrison survives a knife attack by an intruder in his Friar Park home.[7]
  • December 31 – Many special New Year's Eve concerts are held around the world to celebrate the arrival of the year 2000. Big shows include Barbra Streisand at The MGM Grand Las Vegas, The Eagles at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, Billy Joel at Madison Square Garden, and Metallica with Kid Rock and Ted Nugent playing for 54,000 the Pontiac Silverdome. The biggest concert on Earth that night is by Phish, however, playing for 75,000 people at the Big Cypress Indian Reservation in Florida.[8]

Unknown[]

  • Iron Maiden fires lead singer Blaze Bayley. Bruce Dickinson and Adrian Smith return to the band. The band now has three lead guitarists.
  • Vocalist, Lawrence Mackrory quits Darkane. The band hires by Andreas Sydow as his replacement after.

Bands formed[]

Bands reformed[]

Bands disbanded[]

Albums released[]

  1. Ágætis byrjun Sigur Rós
  2. Hagnesta Hill Kent
  3. Carnival '99 The String Cheese Incident

Biggest hit singles[]

The following songs achieved the highest chart positions in the charts of 1999.

# Artist Title Year Country Chart Entries
1 Britney Spears ...Baby One More Time 1999 United States UK 1 – Feb 1999, US BB 1 of 1999, Netherlands 1 – Jan 1999, Sweden 1 – Jan 1999, Austria 1 – Mar 1999, Switzerland 1 – Feb 1999, Norway 1 – Feb 1999, Australia 1 of 1999, Germany 1 – Feb 1999, Éire 1 – Feb 1999, New Zealand 1 for 4 weeks Feb 1999, Australia 1 for 9 weeks Jun 1999, Poland 3 – Mar 1999, France 6 – Jan 1999, Italy 7 of 1999, US BB 29 of 1999, POP 29 of 1999, Germany 41 of the 1990s, Scrobulate 91 of upbeat, RYM 95 of 1998, OzNet 814, Acclaimed 875
2 Lou Bega Mambo No 5 (A Little Bit of ...) 1999 Germany UK 1 – Sep 1999, Netherlands 1 – Jun 1999, Austria 1 – May 1999, Switzerland 1 – May 1999, Norway 1 – Jun 1999, Germany 1 – May 1999, Éire 1 – Aug 1999, New Zealand 1 for 6 weeks Sep 1999, Australia 1 for 8 weeks Jan 2000, Australia 3 of 1999, Italy 3 of 1999, POP 3 of 1999, Poland 4 – Jul 1999, US BB 4 of 1999, US BB 4 of 1999, Party 04 of 1999, Sweden 5 – Aug 1999, Germany 11 of the 1990s, RYM 189 of 1999
3 Eiffel 65 Blue (Da Ba Dee) 1999 Italy UK 1 – Sep 1999, Netherlands 1 – Jul 1999, Sweden 1 – Aug 1999, Austria 1 – Aug 1999, Switzerland 1 – Jul 1999, Norway 1 – Aug 1999, Germany 1 – Jul 1999, Éire 1 – Sep 1999, New Zealand 1 for 1 weeks Nov 1999, Australia 1 for 9 weeks Mar 2000, Poland 1 for 2 weeks Jan 2000, US BB 6 of 2000, Italy 16 of 1999, Australia 20 of 1999, Germany 20 of the 1990s, US BB 32 of 1999, Party 103 of 1999, RYM 185 of 1998
4 TLC No Scrubs 1999 United States US BB 1 of 1999, Éire 1 – May 1999, New Zealand 1 for 2 weeks Apr 1999, Australia 1 for 7 weeks Aug 1999, UK 3 – Apr 1999, Netherlands 3 – Mar 1999, Australia 4 of 1999, Switzerland 5 – Apr 1999, Germany 5 – Apr 1999, France 6 – Mar 1999, Norway 7 – Apr 1999, US BB 12 of 1999, Sweden 19 – Mar 1999, Poland 21 – Apr 1999, Austria 30 – May 1999, Italy 30 of 1999, POP 33 of 1999, Scrobulate 52 of rnb, RYM 55 of 1999, Acclaimed 268, Germany 302 of the 1990s, RIAA 361
5 Backstreet Boys I Want It That Way 1999 United States Sweden 1 – Oct 1999, France 20 – Sep 1999, Norway 1 – Nov 1999, Germany 1 – Jan 2000, Éire 1 – May 2000, Austria 1 – Sep 1999, UK 1 – Apr 2000, Switzerland 1- Sep 1999, Italy 1 of 2000, Netherlands 1 – Oct 1999, US BB 18 of 2000, POP 18 of 2000, Poland 24 – Oct 1999, Australia 25 of 2000, RYM 41 of 1999, US BB 52 of 2000, Scrobulate 66 of fun, Germany 98 of the 1990s, Party 98 of 1999

Popular songs[]

  1. Svefn-g-englar Sigur Rós
  2. Let Forever Be The Chemical Brothers
  3. Goodnight Moon Shivaree

Births[]

  • January 5Marc Yu, American pianist and cellist
  • June 20 - Yui Mizuno, Japanese singer (Babymetal)
  • July 4 - Moa Kikuchi, Japanese singer (Babymetal)
  • July 14Camryn, American singer and actress

Deaths[]

  • January 2Rolf Liebermann (88), composer
  • January 21 - Charles Brown, (76), blues singer and pianist
  • January 22 - Gabor Carelli (83), operatic tenor
  • January 23 – "Prince" Lincoln Thompson (49), reggae musician
  • February 3Gwen Guthrie (48), singer
  • February 4Kenneth C. Burns (68), country musician
  • February 6Jimmy Roberts (74), American tenor
  • February 12Toni Fisher (67), singer
  • February 14 - Buddy Knox (65), singer and songwriter
  • February 15
    • Lamont "Big L" Coleman (24), rapper (gunshot)
    • Agnes Bernelle (75), actress and singer
  • February 16Necil Kâzım Akses (90), Turkish composer (date of death from this contemporary newspaper)
  • March 2
  • March 4Eddie Dean (91), country music artist, actor
  • March 7 - Lowell Fulson (77), blues guitarist and songwriter
  • March 9Harry Somers (73), Canadian composer
  • March 12Yehudi Menuhin (92), violinist and musical director
  • March 13Bidu Sayão (97), Brazilian opera singer
  • March 14
    • Gregg Diamond (49), jazz pianist
    • Marius Müller (40), Norwegian guitarist (car crash)
  • March 26Ananda Shankar (50), Indian classical musician and composer (cardiac arrest)
  • March 28 - Freaky Tah (27), rapper (Lost Boyz) (shot)
  • March 29Joe Williams (80), jazz singer
  • April 1 - Jesse Stone (97), R & B musician and songwriter
  • April 3Lionel Bart (68), songwriter and composer
  • April 6Red Norvo (91), jazz musician
  • April 14Anthony Newley (67), songwriter, actor and singer
  • April 16Skip Spence (52), musician (Jefferson Airplane, Moby Grape), lung cancer
  • April 21Buddy Rogers (94), jazz musician
  • April 25
    • Roger Troutman (47), R&B singer (gunshot wounds)
    • Larry Troutman (54), R&B percussionist (suicide after killing younger brother)
    • Kemi Olusanya (35), British drum and bass duo Kemistry & Storm (freak highway accident)
  • April 26Adrian Borland (41), English singer, songwriter, guitarist (The Sound) (suicide)
  • April 27
    • Al Hirt (76), New Orleans trumpeter
    • Maria Stader (87), operatic soprano
  • April 30Darrell Sweet (51), drummer (Nazareth), heart attack
  • May 8 - Leon Thomas (61), jazz singer
  • May 14William Tucker, guitarist, Ministry, suicide by slitting own throat
  • May 17 - Bruce Fairbairn (49), producer
  • May 18 - Augustus Pablo (44), reggae producer and instrumentalist (collapsed lung)
  • May 26Paul Sacher (93), Swiss conductor
  • May 30Don Harper, Australian jazz violinist and composer (cancer)
  • June 5Mel Tormé, (73), singer
  • June 15Fausto Papetti, (76), Italian saxophonist
  • June 16 - Screaming Lord Sutch (58), UK musician
  • June 21Kami, (26), Japanese drummer for Malice Mizer, subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • June 27Sven Einar Englund, (83), Finnish composer
  • July 1
    • Dennis Brown (42), reggae singer
    • Guy Mitchell (72), pop singer
  • July 3Mark Sandman, (46), alternative rock musician, member of Morphine, heart attack
  • July 6
    • Benny Bell, (93), musician
    • Joaquín Rodrigo (97), Spanish composer
  • July 11Helen Forrest (82), big band singer
  • July 13 - Louise Caselotti (88), operatic mezzo-soprano
  • July 17Kevin Wilkinson (41), drummer (suicide by hanging)
  • July 22Gar Samuelson (41), American drummer (liver failure)
  • July 27 - Harry "Sweets" Edison (83), jazz trumpeter
  • July 29 - Anita Carter (66), country and folk singer
  • August 3 - Leroy Vinnegar (71), jazz bassist (heart attack)
  • August 20Bobby Sheehan (31), bassist for Blues Traveler (drug overdose)
  • August 25Rob Fisher (42), keyboardist and songwriter (cancer)
  • September 8 - Moondog (83), avant-garde musician
  • September 10
    • Beau Jocque (46), zydeco musician
    • Alfredo Kraus (72), opera singer
  • October 4Art Farmer (71), jazz trumpeter
  • October 6Amalia Rodrigues (79), Portuguese singer
  • October 9Milt Jackson (76), jazz vibraphonist
  • October 10Robert Wright (90), songwriter and librettist
  • October 12 - Frank Frost (63), blues harmonica player
  • October 15 - Josef Locke (82), Irish tenor
  • October 16Ella Mae Morse, (75), singer
  • October 19Harry Bannink (70), Dutch songwriter
  • October 26
    • Hoyt Axton (61), country music singer/songwriter (heart attack)
    • Rex Gildo (63), German singer
  • October 28Robert Linn (74), composer and teacher
  • November 8 - Lester Bowie (58), jazz trumpet player and composer
  • November 13 - Donald Mills (84), American singer (Mills Brothers)
  • November 18Doug Sahm (58), country and rock musician
  • November 21Marie Kraja (88), operatic and folk singer
  • December 2Charlie Byrd (74), jazz guitarist
  • December 3Scatman John (57), pop musician
  • December 6 – Todd Barnes (34), T.S.O.L.
  • December 10Rick Danko (56), rock singer in The Band (drug-related heart failure)
  • December 17Grover Washington Jr. (56), American saxophonist
  • December 18 - Joe Higgs (59), reggae musician
  • December 20 - Hank Snow (85), country music artist
  • December 26Curtis Mayfield (57), singer/composer

Awards[]

Grammy Awards[]

  • Grammy Awards of 2000

Country Music Association Awards[]

Eurovision Song Contest[]

  • Eurovision Song Contest 1999

Mercury Music Prize[]

  • OkTalvin Singh wins.

MTV Video Music Awards[]

  • 1999 MTV Video Music Awards

Glenn Gould Prize[]

  • Yo-Yo Ma (laureate), Wu Man (protégé)

Charts[]

Triple J Hottest 100[]

See also[]

  • 1999 in music (UK)
  • 1999 in Norwegian music
  • Category:Record labels established in 1999

References[]

  1. http://darktranquillity.com/oldnews.html
  2. "Prince Sells Off Memorabilia At Charity Yard Sale". MTV. August 16, 1999. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  3. Kara Manning (September 20, 1999). "Eminem Sued By His Mother For $10 Million". MTV. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  4. Cummings, Sue (1999-09-22). "The Flux in Pop Music Has a Distinctly Download Beat to It". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-11-01.
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=eAgEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA40&dq=ministry+of+sound+australia&hl=en&sa=X&ei=xONdT4OpOs6iiAflmLy8DQ&ved=0CDkQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=ministry%20of%20sound%20australia&f=false
  6. Jennifer Sullivan (November 24, 1999). "MP3 Pirate Gets Probation". Wired. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  7. Lyall, Sarah (December 31, 1999). "George Harrison Stabbed in Chest by an Intruder". The New York Times. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  8. "Top Five New Year's Gigs". Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone LLC (834): 26. February 17, 2000.
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