- Source: 1977 in music
This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1977. This year was the peak of vinyl sales in the United States, with sales declining year on year since then.
Specific locations
1977 in British music
1977 in Norwegian music
Specific genres
1977 in country music
1977 in heavy metal music
1977 in jazz
Events
= January–February
=January 1 – The Clash headline the opening night of London's only punk rock club, The Roxy
January 6 – After releasing only one single for controversial English punk rock band the Sex Pistols, EMI terminates its contract with them in response to the band's disruptive behaviour on ITV's Today and later at London Heathrow Airport
January 20 – Jimmy Buffett's Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes is released, featuring the biggest single of his career, "Margaritaville"
January 22 – German cellist Maria Kliegel makes her London debut at the Wigmore Hall, with a programme of Bach, Kodály, and Franck
January 26 – Patti Smith falls off the stage while opening for Bob Seger in Tampa, Florida, and is rushed to the hospital for 22 stitches to close head lacerations
February 4
Paul Desmond gives his last concert with Dave Brubeck, in New York
American Bandstand celebrates its 25th anniversary on television with a special hosted by Dick Clark; an "all-star band", performing "Roll Over Beethoven", is made up of Chuck Berry, Seals & Crofts, Gregg Allman, Junior Walker, Johnny Rivers, the Pointer Sisters, Charlie Daniels, Doc Severinsen, Les McCann, Donald Byrd, Chuck Mangione and three members of Booker T and the MGs
Fleetwood Mac's widely anticipated Rumours is released; it goes on to become one of the best-selling albums of all time
February 14 – The B-52's give their first public performance at a party in Athens, Georgia
February 15 – Sid Vicious replaces Glen Matlock as the bassist of the Sex Pistols.
February 19 – The 19th Annual Grammy Awards are presented in Los Angeles, hosted for the final time by Andy Williams. Stevie Wonder's Songs in the Key of Life wins Album of the Year, George Benson's "This Masquerade" wins Record of the Year and Barry Manilow's "I Write the Songs" wins Song of the Year. Starland Vocal Band win Best New Artist.
= March–May
=March 1 – Sara Lowndes Dylan files for divorce from her husband of 11 years, Bob Dylan
March 4 & 5 – The Rolling Stones play two shows at the El Mocambo club in Toronto
April – Van Morrison releases a new album, A Period of Transition, after a nearly three-year absence
March 10 – A&M Records signs the Sex Pistols in a ceremony in front of Buckingham Palace; this contract is terminated on March 16 as a result of the band vandalizing property and verbally abusing employees during a visit to the record company's office
April 21 – Jesse Winchester, who fled to Canada in January 1967 to avoid military service in Vietnam, performs a concert in Burlington, Vermont, his first on American soil in ten years having recently become free to return under the Presidential pardon given to all draft evaders
April 22 – Pink Floyd open the North American leg of their "Animals" tour in Miami, Florida
April 24 – Several artists, including Joan Baez and Santana, perform at a free concert for 653 inmates of California's Soledad Prison
April 26 – New York's disco Studio 54 opens.
April 30 – Led Zeppelin sets a new world record attendance for an indoor solo attraction at the Pontiac Silverdome when 76,229 people attend a concert here on the group's 1977 North American Tour.
May 2 – Elton John performs the first of six consecutive nights at London's Rainbow Theatre, his first concert in eight months
May 7 – Having been postponed from April 2 because of a BBC technicians' strike, the 22nd Eurovision Song Contest finally goes ahead in London's Wembley Conference Centre: the winner is Marie Myriam representing France with "L'oiseau et l'enfant"; the British entry, Lynsey de Paul and Michael Moran's "Rock Bottom", comes 2nd
May 11 – Punk rock band The Stranglers and support London start a 10-week national UK tour
May 12
Instruments made by all five members of the 17th- and 18th-century Guarneri family of violin makers are auctioned at Sotheby's, with the top price of £105,000 paid for an instrument made in 1738 by Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesù
Virgin Records announce that they have signed the Sex Pistols, the group having had contracts with two previous labels terminated in 4 months
May 28 – Bruce Springsteen and Mike Appel reach an out-of-court settlement, ending the year-long legal battle that has blocked Springsteen's ability to record new music
May 29 – Elvis Presley walks offstage in the middle of a concert in Baltimore, Maryland, the first time in his twenty-three year career he has done so; after receiving treatment from a physician, he reappears onstage thirty minutes later
May 31 – The musical Beatlemania is premièred at the Winter Garden Theatre on Manhattan
= June–August
=June 7
The Nikikai Opera Foundation is founded in Japan
The Sex Pistols attempt to interrupt Silver Jubilee celebrations for Queen Elizabeth II by performing their version of "God Save the Queen" from a boat on the River Thames
June 12
Guitarist Michael Schenker vanishes after a UFO concert at The Roundhouse in London (he is replaced for several months by Paul Chapman)
The Supremes perform for the last time together at Drury Lane Theatre in London before officially disbanding
June 15 – The Snape Maltings Training Orchestra makes its London debut at St John's, Smith Square
June 20 – Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart drives his Porsche over the edge of a canyon, suffering multiple broken bones but surviving as a tree breaks his fall
June 22 – Kiss are elected "most popular band in America" by a Gallup poll
June 26 – Elvis Presley sings his final concert before his death, at Market Square Arena, Indianapolis, Indiana. Earlier that day, he has received a plaque commemorating the two billionth pressing from RCA's record pressing plant in Camden, New Jersey
July 9 – Donna Summer's hit record "I Feel Love" is released in the UK; it is the first hit record to have an entirely synthesised backing track
July 13 – After a massive blackout hits New York City, NRBQ manages to play an all-acoustic set at The Bottom Line with flashlights taped to their microphone stands
July 22 – The first night of The Proms are broadcast in quadraphonic sound by BBC Radio 3 for the first time
July 26 – Led Zeppelin cancels the last seven dates of their American tour after lead singer Robert Plant learns that his six-year-old son Karac has died of a respiratory virus (The show two days before in Oakland proves to be the band's last in the United States)
August 16 – Elvis Presley is found dead at his home Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee. Also that same day, the final concert of Bing Crosby takes place in England, accompanied by Johnny Smith.
August 17 – Florists Transworld Delivery (FTD) reports that in one day the number of orders for flowers to be delivered to Graceland for the funeral of Elvis Presley has surpassed the number for any other event in the company's history
August 18 – The funeral of Elvis Presley takes place at Graceland.
August 20 – NASA's uncrewed probe Voyager 2 is launched carrying a golden record containing sounds and images representing life and culture on Earth, including the first movements of J. S. Bach's Brandenburg Concerto and Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, Guan Pinghu's Liu Shui, played on the guqin, and Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode"
= September–December
=September 1 – World première at the Royal Albert Hall in London of the expanded version of Luciano Berio's Coro
September 3 – Nearly 110,000 fans pack Englishtown Raceway in Old Bridge, New Jersey, for an 11-hour concert by Grateful Dead, Marshall Tucker Band and New Riders of the Purple Sage
September 15 – The third – and final – annual Rock Music Awards aired on NBC (Fleetwood Mac dominates, winning five awards while Linda Ronstadt receives the Best Rock Female Vocalist trophy for the third time
September 16 – T. Rex frontman Marc Bolan is killed as a passenger in an automobile accident in Barnes, London
September 29 – Billy Joel's The Stranger is released containing "Movin' Out (Anthony's Song)", "Just the Way You Are" and "Only the Good Die Young"
October 3 – Elvis in Concert, a TV concert special filmed during Elvis Presley's final tour, is aired on CBS; Canadian Channel CKND-DT simulcasts it. It got bad reviews.
October 5 – The bicentennial season of La Scala opens in Milan with a production of Giuseppe Verdi's Don Carlo
October 9 – Aerosmith cancels several tour dates after Joe Perry and Steven Tyler are injured by an M-80 explosive thrown onstage at the Philadelphia Spectrum, burning Tyler's left cornea and cutting Perry's left hand
October 20 – A plane carrying Lynyrd Skynyrd crashes in a forest in Mississippi, killing songwriter & vocalist Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines, background vocalist Cassie Gaines and assistant road manager Dean Kilpatrick and seriously injuring many of the remaining band members
October 27 – British punk band Sex Pistols release Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols on the Virgin Records label. Despite refusal by major UK retailers to stock it, it debuts at number one on the UK Album Charts the week after its release. In a promotional stunt the group perform on a boat on the River Thames shortly afterwards, only for the police to wait for them and make several arrests, including that of Malcolm McLaren, the band's manager at this time
October 28 – British rock band Queen release the album News of the World
October 31 – The original version of Karlheinz Stockhausen's Jahreslauf is premièred at the National Theatre of Japan in Chiyoda, Tokyo, by the Imperial Gagaku Ensemble
November 25 – 10 Years of Rolling Stone, a television special commemorating the tenth anniversary of Rolling Stone magazine, airs on CBS in the United States; guests include Bette Midler, Art Garfunkel, Billy Preston, Melissa Manchester and Keith Moon
November 30 – Bing Crosby's final Christmas television special, Bing Crosby's Merrie Olde Christmas, airs on CBS (containing the notable segment of Crosby joined by David Bowie for the duet "Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy")
December 14 – Saturday Night Fever appears in movie theaters, igniting a new popularity for disco music and pushing it to the forefront of American pop culture, with the soundtrack to the film by Bee Gees (who have composed most of the tracks)
December 17 – Elvis Costello makes his American television début on Saturday Night Live as a last-minute replacement for the Sex Pistols, who were refused visas to enter America; Costello is banned after substituting the scheduled performance of "Less than Zero" with "Radio, Radio" instead
December 31 – The sixth annual New Year's Rockin' Eve special airs on ABC and the United States, with performances by Ohio Players, Crystal Gayle, Kenny Rogers, KC and the Sunshine Band and Andy Gibb
= Also in 1977
="Bohemian Rhapsody" named "The Best Single Of The Last 25 Years" by BPI
St Magnus Festival of the Arts founded in Orkney by local resident, composer Sir Peter Maxwell Davies
The Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe begins its annual festival based on the music of George Frideric Handel
Luigi Sagrati becomes president of the Unione Musicisti di Roma
The IRCAM Center, a scientific institute for music and sound and avant-garde electro-acoustical art music, opens in Paris
The Cars sign a contract with Elektra Records
Devo signs a contract with Warner Bros
Midnight Oil sign a contract with CBS Records
The Neville Brothers sign a contract with A&M Records
The Police sign a contract with A&M Records
Van Halen signs a contract with Warner Bros
Bands formed
See Category:Musical groups established in 1977
Bands reformed
The Animals
Bands disbanded
See Category:Musical groups disestablished in 1977
Albums released
= January
== February
== March
== April
== May
== June
== July
== August
== September
== October
== November
== December
== Release date unknown
=Billboard Top popular records of 1977
Billboard's year-end Hot 100 for the year 1977, printed on December 24, 1977, was based on Hot 100 charts from the issue dates of November 6, 1976 through October 29, 1977. The decision to include the last two months of 1976 resulted in Rod Stewart's "Tonight's the Night" being listed as no. 1 record of 1977, despite seven of its eight weeks at #1 occurring in 1976 (keep reading).
The completed Billboard year-end list for 1977 is composed of records that entered the Billboard Hot 100 between November 1976 and December 1977. Records with chart runs that started in 1976 and ended in 1977, or started in 1977 and ended in 1978, made this chart if the majority of their chart weeks were in 1977. If not, they were ranked in the year-end charts for 1976 or 1978. If their weeks were equal, they were listed in the year they first entered. Appearing in multiple years is not permitted. Each week thirty points were awarded to the number one record, then nineteen points for number two, eighteen points for number three, and so on. The total points a record earned determined its year-end rank. The complete chart life of each record is represented, with number of points accrued. There are no ties, even when multiple records have the same number of points. The next ranking category is peak chart position, then weeks at peak chart position, weeks on Hot 100 chart, weeks in top forty, and finally weeks in top ten.
The chart presented here depicts the top 30 singles of 1977. In contrast with the Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1977, this chart does not truncate or split chart runs between years. It does not add two months from 1976, delete two months from 1977 and then call itself the "Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1977", which it is obviously not. The true number one record of 1977 is Debby Boone's "You Light Up My Life", which spent the last 18 weeks of the year accumulating 362 points. The seven additional weeks it scored from 1978 were not even needed for the top prize. Rod Stewart's "Tonight's the Night" scored only 73 points in 10 weeks during 1977, so based on its 223 points from 13 weeks in 1976, its 296 total points made it the number one record of that year, not 1977. All chart rankings represented below for the Top Soul Singles, Top Country Singles, Top Easy Listening Singles, and Top CashBox pop singles were all calculated in the same manner.
The chart can be sorted by Artist, Song title, Recording and Release dates, Cashbox year-end ranking (CB) or units sold (sales) by clicking on the column header. Additional details for each record can be accessed by clicking on the song title, and referring to the Infobox in the right column of the song page. Billboard also has chart summaries on its website. Sales information was derived from the RIAA's Gold and Platinum database, the BRIT Certified database and The Book of Golden Discs, but numbers listed should be regarded as estimates. Grammy Hall of Fame and National Recording Registry information with sources can be found on Wikipedia. Archived issues of Billboard from November 1976 to March 1978 and Hot 100 Year-End formulas were used to complete the 1977 year-end chart.
Chronological table of US and UK and Japan number one hit singles
Japanese Oricon number one singles and artist (weeks at number one)
Top 40 Chart hit singles
= Other Chart hit singles
=Notable singles
= Other notable singles
=Published popular music
"After the Lovin'" w. Richie Adams m. Alan Bernstein
"Annie" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"Brazzle Dazzle Day" w.m. Al Kasha & Joel Hirschhorn, from the film Pete's Dragon
"But the World Goes 'Round" w. Fred Ebb m. John Kander. Introduced by Liza Minnelli in the film New York City
"Child In A Universe" w.m. Laura Nyro
"Come In From The Rain" w.m. Melissa Manchester & Carole Bayer Sager
"Easy Street" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"The Greatest Love of All" w. Linda Creed m. Michael Masser
"Happy Endings" w. Fred Ebb m. John Kander. Introduced by Liza Minnelli, Larry Kert and chorus in the film New York, New York
"Here You Come Again" w.m. Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil
"I Don't Need Anything But You" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"I Think I'm Gonna Like It Here" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"It's Not Easy" w.m. Al Kasha & Joel Hirschhorn, from the film Pete's Dragon
"It's the Hard-Knock Life" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"Just the Way You Are" w.m. Billy Joel
"Little Girls" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"The Love Boat theme song" w.m. Norman Gimbel & Paul Williams
"Love Is in the Air" w.m. George Young & Harry Vanda
"Maybe" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"Maybe I'm Amazed" w.m. Paul McCartney
"Movin' Out (Anthony's Song)" w.m. Billy Joel
"N.Y.C." w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"A New Deal For Christmas" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"New York, New York" w.m. Fred Ebb & John Kander. Introduced by Liza Minnelli in the film New York City
"Nobody Does It Better" w. Carole Bayer Sager m. Marvin Hamlisch
"She's Always a Woman" w.m. Billy Joel
"Someone's Waiting for You" w. Carol Connors & Ayn Robbins m. Sammy Fain from the film The Rescuers
"Something Was Missing" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"Star Wars-Main Theme" m. John Williams from the Star Wars films
"Stayin' Alive" w.m. Barry Gibb, Maurice Gibb & Robin Gibb
"Thank You for the Music" w.m. Benny Andersson & Björn Ulvaeus
"There Goes the Ball Game" w. Fred Ebb m. John Kander. Introduced by Liza Minnelli in the film New York, New York
"Tomorrow" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse, from the musical Annie
"We'd Like to Thank You, Herbert Hoover" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"You Won't Be an Orphan for Long" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse from the musical Annie
"You're Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile" w. Martin Charnin m. Charles Strouse, from the musical Annie
Punk rock, new wave music, and mod revival
1977 marks the beginning of the punk rock movement. Several albums associated with the development of punk music were released, including Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols by the Sex Pistols, The Clash by The Clash, Damned Damned Damned by The Damned, the Dead Boys' Young, Loud and Snotty, Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers' L.A.M.F., the Ramones' Rocket to Russia, Richard Hell and the Voidoids' Blank Generation, and Wire's Pink Flag.
The year saw the release of debut albums by bands associated with punk rock, though also with other new music genres, such as the mod revival and new wave music, including In the City by The Jam, My Aim Is True by Elvis Costello, Suicide by Suicide, Marquee Moon by Television, and Talking Heads: 77 by Talking Heads. It also saw the release of Iggy Pop's Lust for Life, his second record as a solo artist.
Classical music
John Adams
China Gates, for piano
Phrygian Gates, for piano
Samuel Adler
Aeolus, God of the Winds, for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano
Concerto for Flute and Orchestra
A Falling of Saints, for tenor, bass, chorus, and orchestra
It is to God I shall Sing, for chorus and organ
Kalevi Aho
Quintet, for 5 bassoons
Quintet, for flute, oboe, violin, viola, and cello
Necil Kazım Akses
Concerto for Orchestra
Concerto for Viola and Orchestra
Franghiz Ali-Zadeh – Zu den Kindertotenlieder (In Memoriam Gustav Mahler), for clarinet, violin, and percussion
Birgitte Alsted – Strygekvartet i CD, for string quartet
Javier Álvarez – Canciones de la Venta, for soprano, violin, viola, and baroque guitar
William Alwyn
Invocations (song cycle), for mezzo-soprano and piano
A Leave-Taking (song cycle), for tenor and piano
Charles Amirkhanian – Dutiful Ducks, for tape with optional live voices
Gilbert Amy
Strophe, for soprano and orchestra (revised version)
Trois études, for flute
Beth Anderson – Joan, for tape
Laurie Anderson
Audio Talk, performance art
On Dit, performance art
Some Songs, performance art
Stereo Decoy, performance art
That's Not the Way I Heard It, performance art
Ruth Anderson – Sound Portraits I–II, text pieces
Hendrik Andriessen – Ricercare, version for wind orchestra
Jurriaan Andriessen
Psalmen-trilogie, for baritone, chorus, and orchestra
Symphony no. 7, The Awakening Dream, for keyboard and electronics
Symphony no. 8, La celebrazione
Louis Andriessen – Hoketus, for two groups of 6 players each
Denis ApIvor
Chant Eolien, for oboe and piano, op. 65
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra, op. 64
Violet Archer – Plainsongs, for mezzo-soprano and piano
Malcolm Arnold
Sonata, for flute and piano, op. 121
Variations on a Theme of Ruth Gipps, for orchestra, op. 122
Larry Austin – Quadrants: Event/Complex no. 11, for double bass and tape
Luciano Berio
Coro, for 40 voices and 40 instruments (revised version)
Fantasia, for orchestra (after Giovanni Gabrieli)
Il ritorno degli snovidenia, for cello and 30 instruments
Sequenza VIII, for violin
Toccata, for orchestra (after Girolamo Frescobaldi)
Harrison Birtwistle – Silbury Air
Rob du Bois
Skarabee, for orchestra
Zodiak, for one or more instruments or instrumental groups
John Buller – Proença for mezzo-soprano, electric guitar, and large orchestra
Enrique Crespo – American Suite No. 1
George Crumb – Star-Child (1977, revised 1979) for soprano, antiphonal children's voices, male speaking choir, bell ringers, and large orchestra
Peter Maxwell Davies
A Mirror of Whitening Light, for chamber orchestra
Our Father Which in Heaven Art, for flute, clarinet, piano, percussion, violin, cello
Runes from a Holy Island, for flute, clarinet, piano, percussion, violin, cello
Westerlings, for SATB choir
Franco Donatoni
Algo, for guitar
Ali, for viola
Diario ’76, for four trumpets and four trombones
Portrait, for harpsichord and orchestra
Spiri, for flute, oboe, clarinet, bass clarinet, celesta, vibraphone, 2 violins, viola, and cello
Toy, for 2 violins, viola, and harpsichord
Morton Feldman
Instruments 3, for flute, oboe, and percussion
Spring of Chosroes, for violin and piano
Brian Ferneyhough – Time and Motion Study I, for bass clarinet
Lorenzo Ferrero
Arioso
Romanza seconda
Frans Geysen –
Muziek voor toetsenbord, for piano
Omtrent sib, for three oboes
Orgelstuk, for organ
Pentakel, for oboe
Stadssteeg, for 6 oboes, 4 trumpets, 2 trombones
Alberto Ginastera
Barabbas, opera (unfinished)
Concerto No. 1 for Cello and Orchestra, op. 36 (revised version)
Glosses sobre temes de Pau Casals, for orchestra, op. 48
Alexander Goehr – Romanza on the Notes of Psalm IV, op. 38c
Sembiin Gonchigsumlaa – Symphony No. 2
Pelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen
Passacaglia for tabla, clarinet, violin, cello and piano
Symfoni, Antifoni for orchestra
Rodolfo Halffter – Secuencia, op. 39, for piano
Bengt Hambraeus – Antiphonie: Cathedral Music for Organ
Alan Hovhaness
Ananda, piano sonata, op. 303
Celestial Canticle, for coloratura soprano and piano, op. 305
Dawn on a Mountain Lake, for double bass and piano, op. 393
Fred the Cat, piano sonata, op. 301
Glory Sings the Setting Sun, cantata for coloratura soprano, clarinet, and piano, op. 292
How I Love Thy Law, cantata for high soprano, clarinet, piano, op. 298
Mount Belknap, piano sonata, op. 299, no. 1 (revised version)
Mount Ossipee, piano sonata, op. 299, no. 2 (revised version)
Mount Shasta, piano sonata, op. 299, no. 3 (revised version)
A Presentiment, for coloratura soprano and piano, op. 304
Suite, for flute and guitar, op. 300 (1977)
Sonata, for oboe and bassoon, op. 302
Sonata, for 2 clarinets, op. 297
Sonata No. 1, for harpsichord, Op. 306
Sonatina ("Meditation on Mt. Monadnock"), for piano, op. 288
The Spirit's Map, for voice and piano, op. 391
Srpouhi, duet for violin and piano, op. 398
Symphony No. 31, for strings, op. 294
Symphony No. 32 ("The Broken Wings"), op. 296
Symphony No. 33 ("Francis Bacon"), op. 307
Symphony No. 34, for bass trombone and strings, op. 310
Maki Ishii
Black Intention, for recorder
Voices—Violet, for gidayū ensemble, shō, and percussion
David C. Johnson – Ars Subtilior Electrica, electronic music
Mauricio Kagel
An Tasten, étude for piano
MM51, film score
Présentation für zwei
Quatre degrés (Schlagzeugtrio für Holzinstrumente)
Variété (Concert-Spectacle für Artisten und Musiker)
Jonathan Kramer
Renascence, for clarinet and tape (revised version)
Studies on Six Notes, for harpsichord
György Kurtág
Hommage à Mihály András (Twelve Microludes for String Quartet), op. 13
[untitled pieces], op. 15, for guitar (unpublished, withdrawn)
Helmut Lachenmann – Salut für Caudwell, music for two guitarists
André Laporte
Icarus' Flight, for piano and twelve instruments
Mario Lavista
Pieza para caja de música, for music box
Los inocentes, incidental music
Luca Lombardi
Tui-Gesänge, for soprano, flute, clarinet, piano, violin, and cello
Variazioni su ‘Avanti popolo alla riscossa’, for piano
Variazioni, for orchestra
John McGuire – Pulse Music II, for four pianos and small orchestra
Tomás Marco
Herbania, for harpsichord
Hoquetus, for 1, 2, or 3 clarinets, live and/or recorded
Sicigia, for cello
Sonata de Vesperia, for piano
Tormer, for harpsichord, violin, viola, and cello
Bo Nilsson – Madonna, for mezzo-soprano and instrumental ensemble
Pehr Henrik Nordgren
Violin Concerto No. 2, Op. 33
Summer Music for orchestra, Op. 34
Akinosuke-no-yume (安芸之助の夢; The Dream of Akinosuke) for piano, Op. 35
Jyūroku-zakura (十六ざくら) for piano, Op. 36
Jikininki (食人鬼) for piano, Op. 37
Häjyt (The Evil Braggarts), orchestral music for the television play, Op. 38
Butterflies for guitar solo, Op. 39
Tuolla mun heilani asuskeloo (Yonder Lives My Sweet Love) for string orchestra, Op. 40
Per Nørgård
Cantica, for cello and piano
Den afbrudte sang (Orfeus og Euridike), for chorus, percussion, harp, and other instruments ad lib.
Freedom, for tenor and guitar
Kredsløb, for SATB choir
Mating Dance, for flute (+ alto flute) and guitar
Recall, for accordion and orchestra (revised version)
Towards Freedom?, for orchestra
Twilight, for orchestra
Arvo Pärt
Cantus in Memoriam Benjamin Britten
Fratres
Tabula Rasa
Variationen zur Gesundung von Arinuschka, for piano
Henri Pousseur
Ballade berlinoise, for piano
Liège à Paris, electronic music
Einojuhani Rautavaara
Suomalainen myytti (A Finnish Myth), for string orchestra
Serenades of the Unicorn, for guitar
Aulis Sallinen
Simppeli Simme ja Hamppari, for mixed choir
Symphony No. 1
Dieter Schnebel
Canon (‘Diapason’)
Handwerke-Blaswerke I (Arianna), for 1 wind instrument, 1 string instrument, and 1 percussionist
Orchestra, for orchestra
Quintet in B♭ major, for piano and strings
Rhythmen, for 2 guitars, organ, and percussion
Kurt Schwertsik
Concerto for Violin No. 1, op. 31
Wiener Chronik 1848, ballet op. 28
Gerald Shapiro
Dance Suite, for piano
For Nancy, wordless vocalise, for soprano and piano
Questions, for SATB choir
You are Your Own Energy Source, electroacoustic dance score
Makoto Shinohara – Liberation, for orchestra
Roger Smalley – Seven Modulator Pieces, for 4 flutes
Karlheinz Stockhausen
Atmen gibt das Leben, for choir and orchestra, Nr. 39
In Freundschaft, Nr. 46
Jahreslauf, Nr. 47
Jubiläum, for orchestra, Nr. 45
Sirius, electronic music with trumpet, soprano, bass clarinet, and bass voice, Nr. 43
Tierkreis, for chamber orchestra, Nr. 417/8
Tōru Takemitsu
A Flock Descends into the Pentagonal Garden
Gitā no tame no jūni no uta, for guitar
Hanare goze Orin, film score
Ohan, incidental music for television
Quatrain II, for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano
Sabita honoo, film score
Saigō Takamori den, incidental music for television
Toono monogatari wo yuku: Yanagida Kunio no fūkei, incidental music for television
Water-ways for clarinet, violin, cello, piano, two harps, and two vibraphones
Michael Tippett – Symphony No. 4
Alexander Vustin – In Memory of Boris Klyuzner
Iannis Xenakis – Jonchaies
Isang Yun – Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra
Opera
William Alwyn – Miss Julie, opera in 2 acts, after Strindberg
Dominick Argento – Miss Haversham's Fire
Luciano Berio – Opera (revised version, 28 May, Teatro Comunale Florence)
Peter Maxwell Davies – The Martyrdom of St Magnus (June 18, Kirkwall, St Magnus Cathedral)
Julian Livingston – Twist of Treason
Thea Musgrave – Mary, Queen of Scots
Donald Sosin – Esther
Karlheinz Stockhausen – Atmen gibt das Leben (May 22, 1977, Nice)
Michael Tippett – The Ice Break (July 7, Royal Opera House, Covent Garden)
Morton Feldman – Neither (1977, Rome Opera)
Jazz
Musical theatre
The Act – Broadway production opened at the Majestic Theatre and ran for 233 performances
Annie (Martin Charnin and Charles Strouse) – Broadway production opened at the Alvin Theatre on April 21, 1977, and ran for 2377 performances
I Love My Wife – Broadway production opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on April 17 and ran for 857 performances
I Love My Wife – London production opened at the Prince of Wales Theatre on October 6 and ran for 401 performances
The King and I (Rodgers and Hammerstein) – Broadway revival
Privates on Parade – London production opened at the Aldwych Theatre on February 17 and ran for 208 performances
Side by Side by Sondheim – Broadway production opened at the Music Box Theatre and ran for 384 performances
Oliver! (Lionel Bart) – London revival
Musical films
ABBA: The Movie
A Little Night Music
Amar Akbar Anthony
The Hobbit (animation)
New York, New York
Pete's Dragon
Saturday Night Fever
Births
January 1
Donna Ares, Bosnian singer (d. 2017)
Axel, Argentine singer and songwriter
Jerry Yan, Taiwanese singer
January 3 – Michelle Stephenson, British singer and TV presenter (Spice Girls)
January 11 – Nadia Turner, American singer
January 18
Richard Archer, British singer (Hard-Fi)
Michael Tierney, Australian singer (Human Nature)
January 20
Melody, Belgian singer
Sid Wilson, American musician
January 25 – Christian Ingebrigtsen, Norwegian singer (A1)
January 28 – Joey Fatone, American singer (*NSYNC)
February 2
Shakira, Colombian singer, songwriter, dancer, businesswoman, and record producer
Jessica Wahls, German pop singer
February 4 – Gavin DeGraw, American musician and singer-songwriter
February 8 – Dave Farrell, American musician (Linkin Park)
February 11 – Mike Shinoda, American musician, songwriter, record producer and graphic designer
February 15 – Brooks Wackerman, American drummer (Bad Religion, Avenged Sevenfold)
February 18 – Sean Watkins, American guitarist and songwriter
February 20 – Amal Hijazi, Lebanese singer and model
March 2 – Chris Martin, English rock singer and pianist (Coldplay)
March 3 – Ronan Keating, Irish singer (Boyzone)
March 4 – Jason Marsalis, American jazz drummer, vibraphonist and composer
March 6 – Bubba Sparxxx, American rapper
March 7 – Paul Cattermole, British singer (S Club 7) (died 2023)
March 10
Bree Turner, American dancer and actress
Colin Murray, British radio disc jockey
Matt Rubano, American rock bassist (Taking Back Sunday)
March 11 – Jason Greeley, Canadian singer
March 15 – Joseph Hahn, American musician, DJ, director, and visual artist (Linkin Park)
March 16 – Ben Kenney, American rock bassist (Incubus)
March 18 – Devin Lima, American musician (LFO) (d. 2018)
March 19 – Jorma Taccone, American actor, comedian, director, writer, producer, record producer, and musician (The Lonely Island)
March 24 – Natalie Hemby, American country music songwriter and singer
April 9 – Gerard Way, American vocalist, visual artist, and songwriter (My Chemical Romance)
April 17 – Frederik Magle, Danish composer, concert organist, and pianist
April 23 – John Cena, American professional wrestler, actor and singer
April 25 – Matthew West, American guitarist and singer
April 26 - Célena Cherry, British group (Honeyz)
April 28 – Joanne Yeoh, Malaysian violinist
May 1 – Dan Regan, American musician (Reel Big Fish)
May 7 – Lisa Kelly, Irish singer
May 8 – Joe Bonamassa, American musician
May 12 – Wu Fei, Chinese musician and composer
May 13 – Pusha T, American rapper and record executive
May 16 – Emilíana Torrini, Icelandic singer and songwriter
May 17 – Aleksandra Gryka, Polish classical composer
May 31
Scott Klopfenstein, American musician and vocalist (Reel Big Fish)
Joel Ross, British disc jockey
June 3 – Yuri Ruley, American drummer and percussionist (MxPx)
June 5 – Nourhanne, Lebanese singer
June 8 – Kanye West, American rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer, fashion designer, and entrepreneur
June 10
Adam Darski, Polish musician
Takako Matsu, Japanese singer-songwriter and actress
June 12 – Kenny Wayne Shepherd, guitarist
June 23 – Jason Mraz, American singer-songwriter and musician
June 25 – Tim Anderson, American songwriter and producer
June 28
Mark Stoermer, American rock guitarist (The Killers)
Harun Tekin, Turkish rock vocalist and guitarist (Mor ve Ötesi)
June 29 – DEALZ, American rapper
July 1 – Tom Frager, French-born singer and surfer
July 7 – Dan Whitesides, American drummer (The Used and The New Transit Direction)
July 10 – Jesse Lacey, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Brand New and Taking Back Sunday)
July 12 – Airin Older, American musician
July 14 – Gordon Cree, composer
July 15 – Ray Toro, American musician and vocalist (My Chemical Romance)
July 18 – Tony Fagenson, American musician, producer, and songwriter (Eve 6, Dead Posey)
July 28 – Jacoby Shaddix, American singer-songwriter, rapper, and TV presenter (Papa Roach)
July 29
Danger Mouse, American record producer (Gnarls Barkley)
Rodney Jerkins, American record producer, songwriter, and rapper
July 30 – Ian Watkins, Welsh singer (Lostprophets)
August 7 – Samantha Ronson, English DJ and singer-songwriter (Lindsay Lohan, Mark Ronson)
August 8 - Marsha Ambrosius, English singer-songwriter
August 10 – Aaron Kamin, American guitarist and vocalist (The Calling)
August 12 – Park Yong-ha, South Korean actor and singer (d. 2010)
August 16 – Tamer Hosny, Egyptian singer and actor
August 17
Claire Richards, British singer and dancer (Steps)
Tarja Turunen, Finnish operatic soprano singer-songwriter
August 19 – Katrina Woolverton, American singer-songwriter
August 30 – Jens Ludwig, German guitarist
August 31 – Craig Nicholls, Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Vines)
September 1 – Chris Cain, American rock bassist (We Are Scientists)
September 2 – Elitsa Todorova, Bulgarian singer-songwriter
September 4
Ian Grushka, American musician and songwriter (New Found Glory)
Lucie Silvas, English singer
September 6 – Kiyoshi Hikawa, Japanese enka singer
September 11
Jonny Buckland, English-born Welsh rock guitarist (Coldplay)
Ludacris, American rapper and actor
September 12 – 2 Chainz, American rapper and businessman
September 13 – Fiona Apple, American singer-songwriter
September 15 – Angela Aki, Japanese singer-songwriter
September 19 – Ioana Maria Lupascu, Romanian pianist
September 20
Namie Amuro, Japanese singer
The-Dream, American singer, songwriter and record producer (Christina Milian, Rihanna, Beyoncé)
September 23 – Susan Tamim, Lebanese singer and actress (d. 2008)
October 1 – Owen Biddle, rock bass guitarist (The Roots)
October 5 – Wendy Vera, Ecuadorian musician and composer
October 6 – Melinda Doolittle, American singer
October 12 – Young Jeezy, American rapper
October 13 – Justin Peroff, Canadian drummer and percussionist (Broken Social Scene)
October 15 – Erin McKeown, American folk-rock singer-songwriter
October 16
John Mayer, American singer, songwriter, and guitarist
Chris Knapp, American drummer (The Ataris)
October 17 – Nicole Cabell, American operatic soprano
October 22 - The Blessed Madonna, American DJ, musician and producer
October 25 – Yehonathan Gatro, Israeli singer and actor
November 1 – Alistair Griffin, British singer and songwriter
November 4 – Kavana, British singer
November 7 – Wigor, Polish rapper and producer
November 8
Khia, American rapper, songwriter and record producer
Bucky Covington, American singer
Tiffani Wood, Australian singer-songwriter (Bardot)
November 10 – Brittany Murphy, American actress and singer (d. 2009)
November 13 – Huang Xiaoming, Chinese actor and singer
November 14 – Obie Trice, African-American rapper
November 15 – Logan Whitehurst, American one man band (died 2006)
November 20 – Daniel Svensson, Swedish drummer
November 21 – Annie, Norwegian singer-songwriter and DJ
November 23 – Christopher Amott, Swedish guitarist
November 27 – Ivar Bjørnson, Norwegian songwriter and guitarist (Enslaved)
November 28 - Katrina Parker, American idendependant artist and featured on The Voice
November 30 – Steve Aoki, American musician, record producer, DJ, and music executive
December 1
Brad Delson, American guitarist (Linkin Park)
Akiva Schaffer, American actor, filmmaker, comedian, and musician (The Lonely Island)
December 7 – Dominic Howard, drummer (Muse)
December 9 – Imogen Heap, English singer, songwriter, record producer, and audio engineer
December 21 – Toby Rand, Australian singer-songwriter (Juke Kartel)
December 24 - Gil Seong-joon, South Korean hip hop duo (Leessang)
December 25 - Mariama Goodman, British group (Honeyz)
December 31 – Psy, South Korean singer-songwriter
Deaths
January 1 – Michael Mann, violinist, son of Thomas Mann, 57 (suicide)
January 2 – Erroll Garner, jazz pianist, 53 (heart attack)
January 16 – Tom Archia, jazz saxophonist, 57
January 23 – Dick Burnett, folk songwriter, 94
February 8 – Eivind Groven, microtonal composer and music theorist, 75
February 10 – Grace Williams, composer, 70
February 12 – Ernst Mehlich, German-Brazilian conductor and composer, 89
February 23 – Margaret Daum, operatic soprano, 70
February 26 – Bukka White, blues guitarist and singer, 67
February 28 – Eddie "Rochester" Anderson, comic actor and singer, 71
March 10 – E. Power Biggs, organist, 70
May 6 – Joseph Hislop, operatic and concert tenor, 93
May 9 – Harold Spivacke, music librarian and administrator, 72
May 22 – Hampton Hawes, jazz pianist, 48 (brain haemorrhage)
May 26 – William Powell (The O'Jays), 35 (cancer)
May 30 – Paul Desmond, jazz saxophonist, 52 (lung cancer)
June 5 – Sleepy John Estes, blues guitarist and singer, 78
June 13 – Matthew Garber, former child star of Mary Poppins, 21 (pancreatitis)
June 22 – Peter Laughner, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Rocket From the Tombs and Pere Ubu), 24
June 30 – Ernst Oster, pianist, musicologist, and music theorist, 69 (stroke)
July 2 – Gert Potgieter, South African operatic tenor and actor, 47 (car accident)
July 20 – Gary Kellgren, American record producer, co-founded Record Plant, 38 (drowned)
July 26 – Gena Branscombe, composer and conductor, 95
August 16 – Elvis Presley, singer, 42 (heart attack)
August 19 – Groucho Marx, comedian, actor, singer and performer, 86 (pneumonia)
September 1 – Ethel Waters, American blues, jazz and gospel singer, 80
September 5 – George Barnes, swing jazz guitarist, 56
September 13 – Leopold Stokowski, conductor, 95
September 16
Marc Bolan, singer-songwriter, 29 (car crash)
Maria Callas, operatic soprano, 53 (heart attack)
September 29 – Alexander Tcherepnin, composer, 78
September 30 – Mary Ford, guitarist and vocalist, 53 (diabetes-related)
October 13 – Shirley Brickley, the Orlons, 32 (shot)
October 14 – Bing Crosby, singer and actor, 74
October 19 – Marino Capicchioni, musical instrument maker, 82
October 20 – Ronnie Van Zant, 29, Steve Gaines, 28, and Cassie Gaines, 29, members of Lynyrd Skynyrd (plane crash)
November 5 – Guy Lombardo, violinist and bandleader, 75
November 14 – Richard Addinsell, Warsaw Concerto composer, 73
December 5 – Rahsaan Roland Kirk, jazz saxophonist, flutist, composer, 42 (stroke)
December 24 – Salvatore Papaccio, Canzone Napoletana tenor, 87
December 25 – Charlie Chaplin, actor and composer, 88
December 28 – Sam Brown, jazz guitarist, 38
December 30 – St. Louis Jimmy Oden, blues singer, 74
date unknown – Jimmy Cooper, hammered dulcimer player, 70
Awards
Grammy Awards of 1977
Country Music Association Awards
Eurovision Song Contest 1977
19th Japan Record Awards
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Joe Biden
- Musik dansa elektronik
- Kanye West
- Madonna
- Sarah Azhari
- Gladiator (film)
- Mike Shinoda
- Heavy metal
- Ji Sung
- ABBA
- 1977 in music
- 1977 in British music
- 1977 in country music
- 1977 in Norwegian music
- Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1977
- 1977
- Suicide (1977 album)
- 1977 in film
- 1977 in heavy metal music
- American Music Awards of 1977