Why March 5th Matters In Rock History

LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES:  US singer Grace Slick draws an eye in the cement as she is inducted in Hollywood's Rockwalk, in Los Angeles, 22 October 2002. Slick was the lead singer of the rock groups 'Jefferson Airplane,' 'Jefferson Starship,' and 'Starship' from the 1960s to the 1980s.  AFP PHOTO/Lucy NICHOLSON (Photo credit should read LUCY NICHOLSON/AFP via Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES: US singer Grace Slick draws an eye in the cement as she is inducted in Hollywood's Rockwalk, in Los Angeles, 22 October 2002. Slick was the lead singer of the rock groups 'Jefferson Airplane,' 'Jefferson Starship,' and 'Starship' from the 1960s to the 1980s. AFP PHOTO/Lucy NICHOLSON (Photo credit should read LUCY NICHOLSON/AFP via Getty Images)

It’s March 5th and here are some reasons why this day matters in rock history:

- In 1994, Jefferson Airplane singer Grace Slick was arrested for pointing a shotgun at police at her Northern California home. She blamed the stress she’d been suffering since another home burned down a few months earlier.

- In 1971, Led Zeppelin performed “Stairway to Heaven” in concert for the first time ever at the Ulster Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland on the first date of their Back to the Clubs tour. They also debuted “Black Dog,” “Going to California” and “Rock and Roll” at the gig.

- In 1982, actor, singer and one-half of The Blues Brothers, John Belushi, died from a drug overdose. His tombstone reads, “I may be gone, but rock n’ roll lives on.”

- And in 2002, the first episode of the hit MTV reality show The Osbournes aired. 

And that’s what happened today in rock history.

Original article at iHeartRadio