1989 in music
Appearance
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Template:YYYY music Template:Year nav topic5
This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1989.
Specific locations
[edit]Specific genres
[edit]Events
[edit]- January 14 – Paul McCartney releases Снова в СССР (Back in the USSR) exclusively in the USSR. Bootleg copies sell for as much as US$1,000 in the United States.
- January 23 – James Brown is sentenced in Georgia, US, to six years in jail in connection with a police chase through two different states.
- January 27 – Michael Jackson ends the Bad World Tour in Los Angeles, US.
- February 12
- Roy Orbison joins Elvis Presley as the only singers to ever simultaneously have two top 5 albums on the Billboard charts.
- Tiny Tim launches an unsuccessful campaign to be elected mayor of New York City, US.
- February 17 – Whitesnake's David Coverdale marries Tawny Kitaen.
- February 22 – The 31st Annual Grammy Awards are presented in Los Angeles, hosted by Billy Crystal. George Michael's Faith wins Album of the Year, while Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry, Be Happy" wins both Record of the Year and Song of the Year. Tracy Chapman wins Best New Artist.
- March 21 – Madonna's "Like a Prayer" music video, taped in late December 1988, attracts criticism for its use of Catholic Church iconography and for the use of cross burning imagery, but also garners praise for its interpretation of discrimination, rape, and faith. Pepsi drops Madonna as a spokesperson out of fear the video will cause religious groups to boycott the company.
- April 9 – The Rolling Stones' Bill Wyman announces that he will marry 19-year-old Mandy Smith, his girlfriend for six years.
- April 12 – Michael Jackson is named "King of Pop" after receiving the Soul Train Heritage Awards.
- April 28 – Jon Bon Jovi marries his high school sweetheart Dorothea Hurley at the Graceland Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas, Nevada, US.
- May 1 – California, US jewelry store employees called the police reporting a suspicious person hanging around their store. The person turns out to be Michael Jackson shopping in disguise.
- May 6 — The 34th annual Eurovision Song Contest, held at Palais de Beaulieu in Lausanne, is won by Yugoslavian band Riva, with the song "Rock Me". This is the first year a Balkan country has won the contest, and is also the only win for Yugoslavia as a unified state.
- July 9 – All four original members of The Monkees reunite in Los Angeles, US, for a concert performance at the Universal Amphitheatre. The following day the quartet attend an induction ceremony at the Hollywood Walk of Fame, where they receive a star.
- July 23 – Former Beatle Ringo Starr forms his own band named Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band.
- July 29 – The Bee Gees perform in the U.S. for the first time in 10 years as part of their One for All world tour.
- August 3 – Sergio Franchi collapses before scheduled concert; dies 9 months later of brain cancer.
- August 11-12 – The Moscow Music Peace Festival is held in the Soviet Union. The event is put together by Doc McGhee and the Make-A-Wish Foundation and headline acts include Bon Jovi, Ozzy Osbourne, Mötley Crüe, Skid Row, Cinderella, and the Scorpions.
- August 31 – The Rolling Stones open their Steel Wheels North American tour in Philadelphia, US.
- September 9
- The Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, designed by I. M. Pei, opens in Dallas, Texas, US.<ref>http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/ent/performingarts/stories/092009dngdmeyerson.1377582.html Dallas Morning News, September 20. 2009.</ref>
- Madonna gives a risqué performance at the 1989 MTV Video Music Awards. Clad in baggy black sweatpants and a black bustier, she shocks the audience by simulating masturbation. The version of the song used in the show would later serve as the opening number of 1990's "Blond Ambition World Tour".
- October 15 – Media Rings Corporation, the Japanese music, video game, and software publishing company, is founded in Akasaka.
- December 23 – Ice Cube leaves N.W.A after financial problems and several conflicts with their manager Jerry Heller and the group's founder Eazy-E. By this time, Cube has been recording his solo debut album, which will be released next year.
Also in 1989
[edit]- Iron Maiden guitarist Adrian Smith leaves the band and is replaced by ex-Gillan guitarist Janick Gers who had most recently worked with Bruce Dickinson on his solo project.
- Ars Musica, an annual contemporary music international festival, founded
- The swing revival is generally agreed upon to have begun in 1989.
Bands formed
[edit]Bands disbanded
[edit]Bands reformed
[edit]Albums released
[edit]All releases are an LP record unless otherwise stated.
Multiple entries for the same day are arranged alphabetically by the album's name.
Release dates may vary in different countries.
January–March
[edit]April–June
[edit]July–September
[edit]October–December
[edit]Release date unknown
[edit]- A Word from the Wise – Pennywise (EP)
- Al Denson – Al Denson
- All Aboard the Mind Train – The Modern Art
- All or Nothing – Milli Vanilli
- All That Jazz – Ella Fitzgerald
- Animal Logic - Animal Logic
- At Peace – Jade Warrior
- Beyond Hell's Gate – Final Axe
- Big Talk – Edin-Ådahl
- Blow – Red Lorry Yellow Lorry
- Bringing It Back Home – The Clark Sisters
- Brotherly Love – Daniel Winans
- Cantemos Juntos – Lynda Thomas (EP)
- Christmas Is... – Johnny Maestro & the Brooklyn Bridge
- Complete Discography – Minor Threat
- Century Flower – Shelleyan Orphan
- The Complete Sham 69 Live – Sham 69
- Cyborgs Revisited – Simply Saucer
- Don't Dance with Danger - Scarlet Red
- Door Into Summer - Jacob's Trouble
- Down on the River - John Hartford
- Drowning in Limbo – Lydia Lunch
- Early Music – Santana
- Enter the Realm – Iced Earth (demo EP)
- Face of Despair – Mortal Sin
- Fight the Power... Live! – Public Enemy – (live, released on VHS)
- First Watch – Guardian (band)
- Freedom – White Heart
- Funk-O-Metal Carpet Ride – Electric Boys
- Get Yer Jujus Out – Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey & His Inter-Reformers Band
- Godhead – Lowlife
- Hard Volume – Rollins Band
- Heroes – New Jersey Mass Choir
- Helter Stupid – Negativland
- Human Soul - Graham Parker
- I Can See You – Black Flag
- Immigrant's Daughter – Margaret Becker
- In Your Face – Shout
- Innocent Blood – REZ
- Imagine That - Dennis Seaton
- It's a Jungle Out There! - Mastedon
- Knights of Heaven – Leviticus
- Les Rythmes Automatiques (fr) – Telex
- Liaison – Liaison
- Live ED – Étienne Daho
- Liberation – Bunny Wailer
- Long Way From Paradise – Allies
- Master's Command – Sacred Warrior
- Matrice - Gérard Manset
- Michigan Rain – Gregg Alexander (debut)
- Modern – Hijokaidan
- Mother Nature's Kitchen – Kevin McDermott
- Night of Rage – Kraut
- No More Blues – Susannah McCorkle
- No Room in the Middle – Greg X. Volz
- Novice - Alain Bashung
- Once We Were Scum, Now We Are God – No
- Out of the Darkness – Bloodgood
- Outdoor Elvis – The Swirling Eddies
- The Pledge – DeGarmo and Key
- Powertrip – Ludichrist (final album)
- Prime 5 – Ween
- Rasta Souvenir – Manu Dibango
- Rage of Angels – Rage of Angels
- Sittin' Pretty – The Pastels
- Samiam – Samiam
- Searchlight – Runrig
- Silence is Madness – Bride
- The Singular Adventures of The Style Council: Greatest Hits Vol.1 – The Style Council – (Compilation)
- Smash – One Bad Pig
- Some Disenchanted Evening – The Verlaines
- State of Control – Barren Cross
- Strange Cargo – David Van Tieghem
- Start Today - Gorilla Biscuits
- Strong Medicine – Bryan Duncan
- Too Long in the Wasteland - James McMurtry
- Tragedy Again – D.I.
- Veuillez rendre l'âme (à qui elle appartient) – Noir Désir
- The Way Home – Russ Taff
- Western Shadows – Carole Laure
- Words for the Dying – John Cale
- Wrong – Nomeansno
- You Can Fly – Steven Prince Band
Biggest hit singles
[edit]The following songs achieved the highest chart positions in the charts of 1989.
# | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart Entries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Madonna | Like a Prayer | 1989 | Template:Flagicon | UK 1 - Mar 1989 (13 weeks), US Billboard 1 - Mar 1989 (16 weeks), US CashBox 1 of 1989, Japan (Tokyo) 1 - Mar 1989 (18 weeks), Finland 1 for 3 weeks - Mar 1989, Switzerland 1 - Mar 1989 (17 weeks), Norway 1 - Mar 1989 (16 weeks), Poland 1 - Apr 1989 (26 weeks), Belgium 1 - Mar 1989 (12 weeks), Italy 1 for 9 weeks - Apr 1989, Eire 1 for 2 weeks - Mar 1989, Canada RPM 1 for 4 weeks - Apr 1989, Canada 1 of 1989, New Zealand 1 for 2 weeks - Apr 1989, Australia 1 for 4 weeks - Apr 1989, Europe 1 for 12 weeks - Mar 1989, Holland 2 - Mar 1989 (11 weeks), Austria 2 - Apr 1989 (5 months), Australia 2 of 1989, Germany 2 - Mar 1989 (5 months), ODK Germany 2 - Mar 1989 (25 weeks) (11 weeks in top 10), MTV Video of the year 1989 (Nominated), US Platinum (certified by RIAA in May 1989), France 4 - Mar 1989 (2 weeks), Germany Gold (certified by BMieV in 1989), US Radio 5 of 1989 (peak 1 10 weeks), Italy 5 of 1989, POP 5 of 1989, Switzerland 6 of 1989, ARC 8 of 1989 (peak 1 12 weeks), US BB 25 of 1989, Scrobulate 33 of pop, Sweden 36 - Aug 2009 (1 week), Brazil 38 of 1989, Europe 49 of the 1980s (1989), nuTsie 65 of 1980s, Germany 96 of the 1980s (peak 2 15 weeks), France (InfoDisc) 113 of the 1980s (peak 1, 27 weeks, 478k sales estimated, 1989), OzNet 161, Rolling Stone 300, Acclaimed 629 (1989), RYM 13 of 1989 |
2 | Phil Collins | Another Day in Paradise | 1989 | Template:Flagicon | US Billboard 1 - Nov 1989 (17 weeks), US Radio 1 of 1989 (peak 1 11 weeks), Japan (Tokyo) 1 - Nov 1989 (20 weeks), Sweden 1 - Nov 1989 (8 weeks), Finland 1 for 2 weeks - Nov 1989, Switzerland 1 - Nov 1989 (21 weeks), Norway 1 - Nov 1989 (15 weeks), Poland 1 - Nov 1989 (23 weeks), Belgium 1 - Nov 1989 (14 weeks), Germany 1 - Jan 1990 (5 months), ODK Germany 1 - Nov 1989 (31 weeks) (10 weeks at number 1) (15 weeks in top 10), Canada RPM 1 for 8 weeks - Dec 1989, Europe 1 for 5 weeks - Jan 1990, Germany 1 for 10 weeks - Dec 1989, Spain 1 for 1 week - Jan 1990, Grammy in 1990, Brit best song 1990, UK 2 - Nov 1989 (11 weeks), ARC 2 of 1989 (peak 1 13 weeks), Holland 2 - Oct 1989 (12 weeks), Austria 2 - Dec 1989 (5 months), Brazil 3 of 1990, Italy 3 of 1990, US Gold (certified by RIAA in Dec 1989), Germany Gold (certified by BMieV in 1990), Japan (Osaku) 5 of 1990 (peak 1 22 weeks), US BB 7 of 1990, France 9 - Nov 1989 (1 week), Switzerland 11 of 1990, POP 21 of 1989, Canada 23 of 1990, Europe 60 of the 1980s (1989), Scrobulate 67 of ballad, Billboard 50th song 86, 55th Billboard 100 96 (1989), Germany 195 of the 1990s (peak 1 10 weeks), OzNet 214, UK Silver (certified by BPI in Nov 1989), RYM 133 of 1989 |
3 | Fine Young Cannibals | She Drives Me Crazy | 1988 | Template:Flagicon | US Billboard 1 - Jan 1989 (23 weeks), Austria 1 - Mar 1989 (5 months), Canada RPM 1 for 1 week - Apr 1989, New Zealand 1 for 5 weeks - Mar 1989, Australia 1 for 5 weeks - Mar 1989, Germany 2 - Feb 1989 (4 months), ODK Germany 2 - Jan 1989 (22 weeks) (13 weeks in top 10), Grammy in 1989 (Nominated), MTV Video of the year 1989 (Nominated), Holland 3 - Jan 1989 (10 weeks), Switzerland 3 - Feb 1989 (18 weeks), Japan (Tokyo) 4 - Feb 1989 (19 weeks), US Gold (certified by RIAA in Apr 1989), Germany Gold (certified by BMieV in 1989), UK 5 - Jan 1989 (13 weeks), Belgium 5 - Feb 1989 (11 weeks), Australia 5 of 1989, Norway 6 - Apr 1989 (4 weeks), Switzerland 7 of 1989, France 9 - Dec 1988 (1 week), Poland 9 - Mar 1989 (9 weeks), POP 9 of 1989, ARC 11 of 1989 (peak 1 14 weeks), Canada 11 of 1989, US CashBox 12 of 1989, Sweden 13 - Feb 1989 (4 weeks), US BB 18 of 1989, US Radio 19 of 1989 (peak 1 10 weeks), Brazil 29 of 1989, KROQ 31 of 1989, Holland free40 39 of 1989, Italy 47 of 1989, Germany 99 of the 1980s (peak 2 15 weeks), OzNet 134, Acclaimed 672 (1989), RYM 190 of 1988 |
4 | Roxette | The Look | 1989 | Template:Flagicon | US Billboard 1 - Feb 1989 (19 weeks), Sweden 1 - Jan 1989 (11 weeks), Finland 1 for 1 week - May 1989, Switzerland 1 - Apr 1989 (27 weeks), Norway 1 - Mar 1989 (18 weeks), Germany 1 - Apr 1989 (5 months), ODK Germany 1 - Apr 1989 (24 weeks) (4 weeks at number 1) (13 weeks in top 10), New Zealand 1 for 3 weeks - May 1989, Australia 1 for 5 weeks - Jul 1989, Europe 1 for 2 weeks - Jun 1989, Germany 1 for 5 weeks - May 1989, Japan (Tokyo) 2 - Mar 1989 (18 weeks), Holland 2 - Mar 1989 (12 weeks), Austria 2 - May 1989 (7 months), Switzerland 2 of 1989, Belgium 2 - Apr 1989 (12 weeks), Australia 3 of 1989, France 4 - Apr 1989 (2 weeks), US Gold (certified by RIAA in Apr 1989), US CashBox 6 of 1989, UK 7 - Apr 1989 (13 weeks), Poland 8 - Apr 1989 (17 weeks), Italy 9 of 1989, Canada 10 of 1989, US Radio 14 of 1989 (peak 1 9 weeks), US BB 17 of 1989, Germany 30 of the 1980s (peak 1 18 weeks), Brazil 35 of 1989, POP 39 of 1989, ARC 41 of 1989 (peak 1 12 weeks), OzNet 567, RYM 94 of 1989 |
5 | The Bangles | Eternal Flame | 1989 | Template:Flagicon | UK 1 - Feb 1989 (20 weeks), US Billboard 1 - Feb 1989 (19 weeks), Holland 1 - Mar 1989 (16 weeks), Sweden 1 - Apr 1989 (10 weeks), Norway 1 - May 1989 (16 weeks), Belgium 1 - Apr 1989 (15 weeks), Australia 1 of 1989, Eire 1 for 3 weeks - Apr 1989, Australia 1 for 1 week - Jun 1989, Japan (Tokyo) 2 - Feb 1989 (22 weeks), Switzerland 2 - May 1989 (19 weeks), Austria 3 - May 1989 (5 months), ODK Germany 4 - May 1989 (22 weeks) (10 weeks in top 10), US Gold (certified by RIAA in Apr 1989), UK Gold (certified by BPI in May 1989), Switzerland 5 of 1989, Germany 5 - May 1989 (4 months), US CashBox 7 of 1989, France 10 - Feb 1989 (1 week), Brazil 10 of 1989, US Radio 21 of 1989 (peak 1 8 weeks), POP 25 of 1989, Canada 26 of 1989, Europe 27 of the 1980s (1988), US BB 32 of 1989, ARC 33 of 1989 (peak 1 13 weeks), Scrobulate 70 of 80s, Holland free40 97 of 1989, OzNet 141, Germany 196 of the 1980s (peak 4 14 weeks), UKMIX 649, RYM 73 of 1989 |
Top 40 Chart hit singles
[edit]Other Chart hit singles
[edit]Notable singles
[edit]Song title | Artist(s) | Release date(s) | Other Chart Performance(s) |
---|---|---|---|
"A Girl Like You" | The Smithereens | Template:Date table sorting|October 1989 | 2 (US Mainstream Rock [Billboard]) - 3 (US Alternative Airplay [Billboard]) - 38 (US Billboard Hot 100) - 62 (Canada Top Singles) |
"The Beat(en) Generation" | The The | Template:Date table sorting|April 1989 | 4 (New Zealand) - 8 (Ireland) - 13 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 18 (UK Singles Chart) - 50 (Australia) - 82 (Germany) |
"Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos" | Public Enemy | 1989 | 11 (U.S. Billboard Hot Rap Singles) - 86 (U.S. Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks) |
"Blow at High Dough" | The Tragically Hip | Template:Date table sorting|April 1989 | 1 (Canada Content) - 48 (Canada) |
"Blues from a Gun" | The Jesus and Mary Chain | Template:Date table sorting|September 1989 | 1 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 32 (UK Singles Chart) |
"Can't Be Sure" | The Sundays | Template:Date table sorting|May 1989 | 45 (UK Singles Chart) - 74 (Australia) |
"Closer to Fine" | Indigo Girls | Template:Date table sorting|July 1989 |
23 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 48 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock) - 52 (US Billboard Hot 100) - 53 (Canada) - 57 (Australia) |
"Come Anytime" | Hoodoo Gurus | Template:Date table sorting|January 1989 | 1 (US Billboard Modern Tracks) - 45 (Australia) - 1 (US Modern Rock Tracks [Billboard]) |
"Dirty Blvd." | Lou Reed | Template:Date table sorting|January 1989 | 1 (US Modern Rock Tracks [Billboard]) - 18 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock) - 45 (Australia) |
"Dizzy" | Throwing Muses | Template:Date table sorting|February 1989 | 8 (US Billboard Modern Tracks) - 85 (United Kingdom) |
"Fight the Power" | Public Enemy | Template:Date table sorting|July 1989 | See chart entry performance |
"God Is a Bullet" | Concrete Blonde | Template:Date table sorting|July 1989 | 15 (US Modern Rock Tracks [Billboard]) - 49 (US Mainstream Rock [Billboard]) - 146 (Australia) - 76 (Triple J Hottest 100, 1990 [Australia]) |
"Happy Birthday" | Concrete Blonde | Template:Date table sorting|May 1989 | 81 (Australia) - 82 (Canada) |
"Head On" | The Jesus and Mary Chain | Template:Date table sorting|November 1989 | 2 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 57 (UK Singles Chart) - 102 (Australia) |
"Here Comes Your Man" | Pixies | Template:Date table sorting|June 1989 | 3 (US Alternative Airplay - Billboard) - 54 (UK Singles Charts) - 11 (New Zealand) - 11 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 32 (Europe) |
"I'll Be You" | The Replacements | Template:Date table sorting|April 1989 | 1 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock Chart) - 1 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 51 (US Billboard Hot 100) - 92 (Canada) |
"Info Freako" | Jesus Jones | Template:Data table sorting|February 1989 | 42 (UK Singles Chart) - 45 (Triple J Hottest 100, 1990 [Australia]) |
"Interesting Drug" | Morrissey | Template:Data table sorting|April 1989 | 4 (Ireland) - 9 (UK Singles Chart) |
"The Last of the Famous International Playboys" | Morrissey | Template:Data table sorting|January 1989 | 3 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 6 (UK Singles Chart) |
"Made of Stone" | The Stone Roses | Template:Date table sorting|March 1989 | 90 (UK Singles Chart) |
"Mayor of Simpleton" | XTC | Template:Date table sorting|January 1989 | 1 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 15 (US Billboard Mainstream Rock) - 42 (Canada) - 46 (UK Singles Chart) - 89 (Australia) |
"Monkey Gone to Heaven" | Pixies | Template:Date table sorting|March 1989 | 5 (US Alternative Airplay - Billboard) - 60 (UK Singles Charts) |
"Nightmares" | Violent Femmes | 1989 | 4 (US Modern Rock Tracks - Billboard) - 146 (Australia) |
"Ouija Board, Ouija Board" | Morrissey | Template:Data table sorting|November 1989 | 2 (US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks) - 4 (Ireland) - 18 (UK Singles Chart) - 28 (New Zealand) - 58 (Europe) |
"Pop Song 89" | R.E.M. | Template:Data table sorting|May 1989 | 14 (US Mainstream Rock [Billboard]) - 16 (US Alternative Airplay [Billboard]) - 86 (US Billboard Hot 100) - 94 (Canada Top Singles) |
"Pure" | The Lightning Seeds | Template:Date table sorting|June 1989 | 8 (U.S. Billboard Alternative Airplya) - 16 (UK Singles Chart) - 31 (U.S. Billboard Hot 100) - 92 (Australia) |
"Regina" | The Sugarcubes | Template:Data table sorting|September 1989 | 1 (UK Indie Singles) – 2 (US Modern Rock [Billboard]) – 27 (Irish Singles Chart) – 55 (UK Singles Chart) – 141 (Australia) |
"She Bangs the Drums" | The Stone Roses | Template:Date table sorting|July 1989 | 9 (US Alternative Songs - Billboard) - 34 (UK Singles Charts) - 37 (New Zealand) - 128 (Australia) |
"Sit Down" | James | Template:Date table sorting|June 1989 | 77 (UK Singles Charts) - 88 (Australia) |
"Sometimes" | Max Q | Template:Date table sorting|October 1989 | 31 (Australia) - 37 (New Zealand) - 52 (UK Singles Chart) |
Other Notable singles
[edit]Published popular music
[edit]- "Kiss the Girl" m. Alan Menken, w. Howard Ashman, from The Little Mermaid
- "Part of Your World" m. Alan Menken, w. Howard Ashman, from The Little Mermaid
- "Under the Sea" m. Alan Menken, w. Howard Ashman, from The Little Mermaid
- "We Didn't Start the Fire" w.m. Billy Joel
- "You Got It" w.m. Roy Orbison, Jeff Lynne & Tom Petty
Classical music
[edit]- Elliott Carter
- Three Occasions for Orchestra (1986–89)
- Violin Concerto
- Peter Maxwell Davies – Symphony No. 4
- Kaija Saariaho - Du cristal...
- Anders Eliasson – Symphony No. 3, for alto saxophone and orchestra
- Einar Englund – Wind Quintet
- Karel Goeyvaerts
- Aquarius, stage cantata, for eight sopranos and 15 instrumentalists
- ...want de tijd is nabij (Because the Time Is Near), for male chorus and strings
- Ingram Marshall – Sinfonia Dolce far Niente
- Toshirô Mayuzumi
- Mukyūdō, for orchestra
- Rokudan, for harp
- John McCabe – String Quartet No. 5
- Einojuhani Rautavaara – Piano Concerto No. 2
- Robert Simpson
- String Quartet No. 13
- Vortex for Brass Band
- John Tavener – The Protecting Veil
- I Nyoman Windha – Puspanjali
Opera
[edit]- Conrad Cummings – Photo-Op
- Anthony Davis – Under the Double Moon
- Lorenzo Ferrero
- Charlotte Corday
- Le Bleu-blanc-rouge et le noir
- Alexander Vustin – The Devil in Love (opera) (not performed)
Musical theatre
[edit]- Aspects of Love (Andrew Lloyd Webber) – London production
- City of Angels – Broadway production opened at the Virginia Theatre and ran for 897 performances
- Grand Hotel – Broadway production opened at the Martin Beck Theatre and ran for 1017 performances
- Gypsy (Jule Styne and Stephen Sondheim) – Broadway revival
- Meet Me in St. Louis – Broadway production based on the 1944 film, ran for 252 performances
- Miss Saigon (Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil) – London production
- Pacific Overtures (Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman) – London production
- Starmites (Stuart Ross and Barry Keating) - Broadway production opened at Criterion Center Stage Right and ran for 60 performances
- 101-Depeche Mode
- Eddie and the Cruisers II: Eddie Lives!
- The Fabulous Baker Boys
- ChaalBaaz
- Juke-Bar (animation)
- The Little Mermaid — animated feature film
- Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland
- Polly (TV film)
- Sons of Steel
Births
[edit]- January 3 – Julia Nunes, American singer-songwriter
- January 4 – Labrinth, English singer-songwriter, musician, rapper and record producer
- January 6 – James Durbin, American singer
- January 7 – Wrabel, American singer-songwriter
- January 9 – Kyle Craft, American southern blues glam rock singer-songwriter and musician
- January 13 – Triinu Kivilaan, Estonian singer and model
- January 14 – Frankie Sandford, British singer-songwriter (S Club Juniors, The Saturdays)
- January 16 – Kiesza, Canadian singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist
- January 20 – Joel Pott, English musician (Shura)
- January 24
- Calvin Goldspink, British singer (S Club Juniors)
- Trace Cyrus, American musician (The Cyrus Family (Miley Cyrus, Billy Ray Cyrus, Noah Cyrus)) (Metro Station)
- January 25 – Yasmien Kurdi, Filipina singer and actress
- January 28 – Carly Paoli, British mezzo-soprano
- February 2 – Southside, American record producer, songwriter and rapper
- February 3 – Ryne Sanborn, American actor, singer and dancer
- February 7 – Jihae, South Korean singer and actress
- February 8 – Matias Tellez, Norwegian singer-songwriter, composer and record producer
- February 10 – Olga Korsak, Latvian singer-songwriter and actress, previously competitive figure skater
- February 16
- Danielle Haim, American multi-instrumentalist and singer-songwriter (Haim)
- Bry, Irish singer-songwriter
- February 17
- Stacey McClean, British singer (S Club Juniors)
- Chord Overstreet, American actor, Glee cast member, singer, musician and composer
- February 22 – Anna Sundstrand, Swedish singer and model
- February 24 – Lauren Brant, South African-Australian television personality, singer-dancer and actress
- February 27
- Stefano Langone, American singer
- Sam Sweeney, English folk musician
- Shota Shimizu, Japanese singer
- February 28 - Zhang Liyin, Chinese singer-songwriter
- March 1
- Sonya Kitchell, American jazz singer-songwriter
- Karl-Erik Taukar, Estonian singer, bass guitarist and television host
- March 9 – Taeyeon, South Korean K-pop singer (girl group Girls' Generation)
- March 11
- Shin Soohyun, South Korean K-pop singer (boy group U-KISS)
- Rainey Qualley (Rainsford), American actress and singer
- March 13 – Yemi Alade, Nigerian singer-songwriter, actress and activist
- March 14 – Yutaka Yamada, Japanese composer, arranger and orchestrator
- March 19 – Ben Briley, American singer
- March 20 – Sam de Jong, New Zealand-born record producer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist working in the United States (Ella Henderson, Amy Shark)
- March 21 – Rochelle Wiseman, British singer (S Club Juniors, The Saturdays)
- March 23 – Mike Will Made It, American record producer, rapper and singer-songwriter (Miley Cyrus, Kendrick Lamar)
- March 25 – Alyson Michalka, American singer-songwriter and actress
- March 26 – Josiah Leming, American singer-songwriter
- March 29 – Michelle Zauner, Korean-American singer, musician, director and author
- March 30 – Eden xo, American singer-songwriter and actress
- April 8
- Alexander DeLeon, American singer-songwriter (The Cab)
- Matty Healy, British singer-songwriter, musician, producer, performance artist of The 1975 with George Daniel, (worked with: halsey, Taylor Swift, The Japanese House, Beabadoobee, Holly Humberstone, FKA twigs) (Dated: FKA Twigs, Taylor Swift)
- Hitomi Takahashi, Japanese rock singer
- April 11 – Zola Jesus, American singer-songwriter
- April 18 – Jessica, K-pop singer (Girls' Generation)
- April 19 – Simu Liu, Canadian actor and singer
- April 20
- Han Hee-jun, South Korean singer
- Carlos Valdes (actor), Colombian-American singer-songwriter and actor
- April 24 – Thomas Sanders, American singer-songwriter, YouTuber, playwright, scriptwriter and internet personality (Dodie, Joan, Ben J Pierce)
- May 1 – Tim Urban, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
- May 3 – Mary Lambert, American country singer-songwriter and poet
- May 5 – Chris Brown, American singer and rapper
- May 9 – Katy B, English singer-songwriter
- May 15 – Sunny, K-pop singer (girl group Girls' Generation)
- May 24 – G-Eazy, American rapper, producer, singer (working with Britney Spears, Bebe Rexha, Halsey)
- May 28 – Asuca Hayashi, J-pop singer
- May 30 – Kevin Covais, American Idol finalist
- June 3 – Jillette Johnson, American singer-songwriter, musician
- June 8 – Miya Folick, American musician
- June 9 – Chloë Agnew, Irish multilingual singer-songwriter (Celtic Women)
- June 13 – Lisa Tucker, American singer
- June 14 – Lucy Hale, American actress and singer
- June 15 - Oliver Sim, English singer and bass guitarist (the xx; Hideous Bastard)
- June 17 – Simone Battle, American actress, singer and dancer (G.R.L) (died 2014)
- June 18 – Renee Olstead, American actress and jazz singer
- June 20
- Benyamin Nuss, German pianist
- Christopher Mintz-Plasse, American actor, comedian and musician
- June 25 – Sam Ryder, British singer-songwriter
- June 27 – Kelley Jakle, American actress and singer-songwriter
- July 2 – Dev, American singer-songwriter, rapper, model, musician and radio host
- July 3
- July 5 – Joseph King, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Canvas and Deadbeat Darling)
- July 6 – Laith Ashley, American model, actor, activist, singer-songwriter and entertainer of Dominican descent. (Taylor Swift,
- July 10 – Jennifer Åkerman, Swedish, blogger, model and singer-songwriter
- July 11 – Hana Pestle, American singer-songwriter and record producer (HANA) (Collaborator with Grimes and band member)
- TĀLĀ – musician, singer-songwriter, record producer
- July 13 – Sayumi Michishige, Japanese musician and longest running member of Morning Musume
- July 14 – Isaiah Sharkey, American guitarist and singer
- July 20 – Brooke Candy, American rapper, singer-songwriter, director, activist and dancer
- July 21 – Jasmine Cephas Jones, American stage and screen actress-singer
- July 26 – Travis Garland, American singer and dancer
- July 31 – Alexis Knapp, American actress and singer
- August 1 – Tiffany, member of Girls' Generation
- August 2
- Priscilla Betti, French singer
- Jonas Blue, English DJ, record producer, songwriter and remixer
- Relja Popović, Serbian rapper and actor
- August 4 – Jessica Mauboy, Australian singer- songwriter and actress (Young Divas)
- August 9 – Tainy, Puerto Ricano record producer
- August 15
- Belinda Peregrin, Spanish Mexican singer-songwriter and actress
- Joe Jonas, American vocalist, singer-songwriter and musician (DNCE, Jonas Brothers) {dated AJ Michalka, Taylor Swift; married Sophie Turner; brother of Nick Jonas}
- August 17 – Mitchell Tenpenny, American Nashville country pop singer-songwriter
- August 18
- Anna Akana, American actress, musician, filmmaker, author, YouTuber and comedian
- Romy Madley Croft, English indie pop guitarist and vocalist (the xx)
- August 19
- Lil' Romeo, American entertainer
- Runtown, Nigerian singer
- August 21 – Hayden Panettiere, American actress, model, singer and activist
- August 23 – Lianne La Havas, British singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist
- August 27 – Jessica Lea Mayfield, American singer-songwriter and musician
- August 30 – Bebe Rexha, American singer-songwriter and record producer
- September 1
- Mohammed Assaf, Palestinian singer
- Bill and Tom Kaulitz of Tokio Hotel
- September 2 – Zedd, Russian-German record producer, DJ, musician, multi-instrumentalist and songwriter (Foxes, Hayley Williams, Selena Gomez, Kesha)
- September 3 – Gusttavo Lima, Brazilian singer
- September 4 – Ryota Kohama, Japanese musician (One Ok Rock)
- September 5 – Kat Graham, American actress, singer, dancer and model
- September 7 – Loren Allred, American musician
- September 8 – Avicii, Swedish musician, DJ, remixer and record producer (d. 2018)
- September 10 – Sanjaya Malakar, American Idol finalist
- September 14 – Logan Henderson, actor and singer (Big Time Rush)
- September 21
- Jason Derulo, American singer-songwriter and dancer
- Emma Watkins, Australian singer, actress and dancer
- September 22
- Hyoyeon, member of Girls' Generation
- Cœur de pirate, Canadian bilingual singer-songwriter and musician
- September 24 – Kreayshawn, American rapper, creative director of OK 1984 and music video director
- September 25
- Vick Hope, British TV and radio presenter, journalist and published author.
- Danny L Harle, British music producer
- October 4
- Rich Homie Quan, American singer-songwriter and rapper
- Tei Shi, Colombian-Canadian singer-songwriter and record producer
- Stacey Solomon, English television personality and singer.
- October 7 – El General (Hameda Ben Amor), Tunisian rapper
- October 14 – Arca, Venezuelan musician and record producer
- October 15 – Fedez, Italian rapper and musician (Zara Larsson)
- October 19 - Empress Of, American singer-songwriter, musician and record producer
- October 20 – Jess Glynne, English soul-pop singer-songwriter
- October 22 – JPEGMafia, American rapper, songwriter and producer
- October 28 - Jack Colwell, Australian singer-songwriter (d. 2024)
- October 30 – Jay Asforis, British singer (S Club Juniors)
- November 2 – Katelyn Tarver, American singer-songwriter and actress
- November 3 – Paula DeAnda, American singer-songwriter
- November 11 – Reina Tanaka, Japanese pop singer (Morning Musume)
- November 17 – Ali Tamposi, American songwriter
- November 22 – Candice Glover, American R&B singer and actress
- November 30 – Daisy Evans, British singer (S Club Juniors)
- December 5 – Yuri, member of Girls' Generation
- December 12
- Janelle Arthur, American singer
- Marcel "Shin" Gothow German drummer (Cinema Bizarre)
- December 13 – Taylor Swift, American singer-songwriter, musician, multi-instrumentalist, director, businesswoman and sometime actress
- December 14 - Onew, South Korean singer (Shinee)
- December 17 – Taylor York, American musician, songwriter and guitarist (Paramore; collaborator with Hayley Williams)
- December 18 – Ashley Benson, American model, singer and actress
- December 22 – Jordin Sparks, American Idol Season 6 winner
- December 27 – Calyssa Davidson, American violinist
- December 29 – Pardison Fontaine, American rapper and songwriter (Cardi B, Megan thee Stallion)
- December 31 – Andrew Taggart, producer and vocal (The Chainsmokers)
- Unknown – Jai Paul, English songwriter, record producer and recording artist
Deaths
[edit]- January 12 – Satyam, Indian film music director, 65
- January 20 – Beatrice Lillie, Canadian actress and singer, 94
- January 21 – Billy Tipton, American jazz musician, 74
- February 5 – Joe Raposo, composer and lyricist, "Bein' Green", 51 (non-Hodgkin's lymphoma)
- February 6 – King Tubby Jamaican DJ and composer, father of dub reggae, 48 (gunshot wounds)
- February 14 – Vincent Crane (The Crazy World of Arthur Brown), 45 (drug overdose)
- February 23 – Florencio Morales Ramos, singer and composer, 72
- March 19 – Alan Civil, horn player, 59
- March 20 – Archie Bleyer, US arranger and bandleader, 79
- April 8 – A. M. Rajah, Indian playback singer and composer, 59 (rail accident)
- April 26 – Lucille Ball, US actress and singer, 77
- May 9 – Keith Whitley, American singer, guitarist, and producer, 34
- May 10 – Woody Shaw, jazz musician, 44 (kidney failure)
- May 15 – Johnny Green, composer, conductor and arranger, 80
- May 30 – Zinka Milanov, operatic soprano, 83
- June 2 – Guido Agosti, Italian pianist and piano teacher, 87
- June 14 – Pete de Freitas, drummer with Echo & the Bunnymen, 27 (motorcycle accident)
- June 22 – Henri Sauguet, composer, 88
- June 24 – Hibari Misora, Japanese enka singer, 52 (hepatitis)
- July 5 – Ernesto Halffter, Spanish composer and conductor, 84
- July 16 – Herbert von Karajan, conductor, 81
- July 21 – Mushtaq Ali Khan, Indian sitar, surbahar and pakhawaj player, 78
- August 1 – John Ogdon, pianist, 52 (diabetes-related)
- August 2 – Luiz Gonzaga, Brazilian musician, 76
- August 21 – Raul Seixas, singer and songwriter, 44 (diabetes-related)
- August 25 – Gunnar Berg, Danish composer
- September 7 – Mikhail Goldstein, violinist and composer, 71
- September 14 – Perez Prado, Cuban bandleader and composer, 72
- September 15 – Jan DeGaetani, mezzo-soprano, 56 (leukemia)
- September 22 – Irving Berlin, composer, lyricist, 101
- September 24 – Jean Perrin, pianist and composer, 79
- September 30 – Virgil Thomson, composer, 92
- October 17 – Morteza Hannaneh, composer, 66
- October 19 – Alan Murphy, guitarist, member of Level 42 and Go West, 35 (AIDS-related)
- October 22 – Ewan MacColl, folk singer, 74
- October 31 – Conrad Beck, Swiss composer, 88
- November 5 – Vladimir Horowitz, pianist, 86
- November 15 – Alejo Durán, composer of vallenatos, 80
- November 29 – Yam Kim-fai, cantonese opera singer, 76
- December 6
- Billy Lyall, keyboardist of Pilot and Bay City Rollers, 46 (AIDS-related)
- Sammy Fain, US composer, 87
- December 21 – Ján Cikker, Slovak composer, 78
- December 26 – Sir Lennox Berkeley, composer, 86
Awards
[edit]- The following artists are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: Dion, Otis Redding, The Rolling Stones, The Temptations and Stevie Wonder
- Grammy Awards of 1989
- 1989 Country Music Association Awards
- Eurovision Song Contest 1989
- 31st Japan Record Awards
Charts
[edit]- List of Billboard Hot 100 number ones of 1989
- 1989 in British music#Charts
- List of Oricon number-one singles of 1989
See also
[edit]References
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