Why October 17th Matters In Rock History

EDMONTON, AB - APRIL 4:  Musician Stephen Page (C) and other members of the Barenaked Ladies music group arrive for the JUNO Awards ceremony at the Rexall Centre April 4, 2004 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.  (Photo by Donald Weber/Getty Images)
EDMONTON, AB - APRIL 4: Musician Stephen Page (C) and other members of the Barenaked Ladies music group arrive for the JUNO Awards ceremony at the Rexall Centre April 4, 2004 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Donald Weber/Getty Images)

It’s October 17th and here are some reasons why this day matters in rock history:

- In 1998, Canada's Barenaked Ladies had the number one song in the U.S. with “One Week,” which spent one week in the top spot.

- In 1999, Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band played the first rock concert at the brand new Staples Center in Los Angeles.

- In 1989, Billy Joel released the album Storm Front, which featured the hit singles “We Didn’t Start the Fire” and “I Go to Extremes.”

- In 1999, Santana had their first number one album in 28 years when their record, Supernatural, topped the charts.

- In 1995, in an interview with England’s The Observer magazine, Oasis’ Noel Gallagher said he wished Damon Albarn and Alex Cox of Blur would die from AIDS. Gallagher later retracted the comment.

- In 1964, Manfred Mann had the number one song in the country with “Do Wah Diddy Diddy.” It spent two weeks on top of the charts.

- And in 2008, Guns N’ Roses announced that their long-awaited album, Chinese Democracy, would finally be coming out.

And that’s what happened today in rock history.

Original article by Dave Basner at iHeartRadio.