This is a summary of 1965 in music in the United Kingdom.
Quick Facts List of years in British music ...
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- 15 January – The Who release their first hit single "I Can't Explain" in the UK. It was released a month earlier in the US.
- 17 January – The Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts' book, Ode to a High Flying Bird, a tribute to jazz great Charlie Parker, is published.
- 21 January
- 23 January – "Downtown" hits #1 in the US singles chart, making Petula Clark the first British female vocalist to reach the coveted position since the arrival of The Beatles.
- 24 January – The Animals appear a second time on The Ed Sullivan Show.
- 27 January – Paul Simon broadcasts on BBC radio for the first time, on the Five to Ten show, discussing and playing thirteen songs, twelve of which would appear on his May-recorded and August-released UK-only solo album, The Paul Simon Song Book.
- 6 February – Donovan gets his widest audience so far when he makes the first of three appearances on "Ready, Steady, Go!".
- 12 February – NME reports that the Beatles will star in a film adaptation of Richard Condon's novel A Talent for Loving. The story is about a 2,253-kilometer (1,400 mi) horse race that takes place in the old west. The film is never made.
- 24 February –
- 20 March – Kathy Kirby, singing the UK entry "I Belong", finishes second in the 10th Eurovision Song Contest in Naples, Italy, behind France Gall, representing Luxembourg.
- 23 March – Benjamin Britten is appointed to the Order of Merit (OM).[2]
- April – Michael Tippett is invited as guest composer to the music festival in Aspen, Colorado. The visit leads to major changes in his style.
- 11 April – The New Musical Express poll winners' concert takes place featuring performances by The Beatles, The Animals, The Rolling Stones, Freddie and the Dreamers, the Kinks, the Searchers, Herman's Hermits, The Moody Blues, Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, Donovan, Cilla Black, Dusty Springfield and Tom Jones.
- 5 May – Alan Price leaves The Animals, to be replaced temporarily by Mick Gallagher and permanently by Dave Rowberry.
- 6 May – Keith Richards and Mick Jagger begin work on "Satisfaction" in their Clearwater, Florida hotel room. Richards comes up with the classic guitar riff while playing around with his brand-new Gibson "Fuzz box".
- 8 May – The British Commonwealth comes closer than it ever had, or would, to a clean sweep of the US Hot 100's top 10, lacking only the #2 slot.
- 30 May – The Animals appear for a third time on The Ed Sullivan Show.
- 12 June – The Beatles are appointed Members of the British Empire (MBE) by the Queen. With no tradition of awarding popular entertainers such honours, a number of previous recipients complain and protest.
- June 14 – Paul McCartney records "Yesterday".[3]
- July – John Cale, with his new collaborators Lou Reed and Sterling Morrison, makes a demo tape which he tries to pass on to Marianne Faithfull.[4] These are the beginnings of the Velvet Underground.
- 5 July – Maria Callas gives her last operatic performance, in the title role of Tosca, at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden.
- 13 July – The Beatles receive a record five Ivor Novello Awards.[5]
- 4 August – Iain Hamilton's Cantos receives its world première at The Proms, performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and conducted by Norman Del Mar.[6]
- 6 August
- 27 August – The Beatles visit Elvis Presley at his home in Bel-Air. It is the only time the band and the singer meet.
- 11 September – The Last Night of The Proms is conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent, with Josephine Veasey as soloist for the traditional rendition of "Rule, Britannia".[7]
- 30 September – Donovan appears on Shindig! in the U.S. and plays Buffy Sainte-Marie's "Universal Soldier".
- 17 October – The Animals appear for a fourth time on The Ed Sullivan Show.
- 5 November – The Who release their iconic single "My Generation" in the UK. This song contains the famous line: "I hope I die before I get old"
- 3 December
- Be My Guest, starring David Hemmings and Steve Marriott
- Catch Us If You Can, starring the Dave Clark Five
- Every Day's a Holiday, starring John Leyton, Michael Sarne and Peter Birrell.[13]
- Ferry Cross the Mersey, starring Gerry and the Pacemakers[14]
- Help!, starring The Beatles
- Three Hats for Lisa, starring Joe Brown, Sid James, and Una Stubbs[15]
- Up Jumped a Swagman, starring Frank Ifield, Annette Andre, and Suzy Kendall.[16]
- 1 January – John Digweed, DJ, record producer, and actor
- 4 January – Beth Gibbons, vocalist (Portishead)
- 6 January – Murray McLachlan, Scottish pianist[17]
- 10 January – Nathan Moore, singer (Brother Beyond)
- 14 January – Slick Rick, rapper
- 20 January – Heather Small, soul singer (M People)
- 22 January – Andrew Roachford, singer-songwriter and keyboard player
- 12 February – David Westlake, singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Servants)
- 23 March – Marti Pellow, vocalist (Wet Wet Wet)
- 1 April – Robert Steadman, composer
- 7 April – Yorkie (David Palmer), bassist (Space)
- 15 April – Graeme Clark, bass guitarist (Wet Wet Wet)
- 13 May – Tasmin Little, violinist[18]
- 23 May – Simon Gilbert, drummer (Suede)
- 31 May – Lisa I'Anson, DJ
- 6 June – David White, guitarist (Brother Beyond)
- 7 June – Billy Reeves, English guitarist, songwriter, and producer (Theaudience)
- 23 June – Paul Arthurs, guitarist (Oasis and The Rain)
- 4 July – Jo Whiley, radio DJ
- 6 July – Anthony Marwood, English violinist
- 19 July – Dame Evelyn Glennie, percussionist[19]
- 28 July – Nick Banks, drummer (Pulp)
- 13 September – Zak Starkey, drummer, son of Ringo Starr[20]
- 19 September – Goldie, electronic music artist and DJ
- 2 October – Roy Powell, jazz pianist, organist and composer
- 12 October – Phil Creswick, singer (Big Fun)
- 9 November – Bryn Terfel, operatic bass-baritone[21]
- 29 October – Richard Ayres, composer and music teacher.
- 21 December – Stuart Mitchell, pianist and composer
- date unknown
- Date unknown – Caroline Dale, cellist
- 8 February – Winifred Christie, pianist and composer, 82[22]
- 8 June – Erik Chisholm, composer, 61[23]
- 18 June – George Melachrino, conductor, singer and composer, 56[24]
- 2 July – Charles Kennedy Scott, organist and choral conductor, 88[25]
- 4 July – Edward Sackville-West, 5th Baron Sackville, music critic, 63[26]
- 24 July – Irene Browne, actress and singer, 69[27]
- 9 October – Ernest Read, conductor, organist, and music educator, 86
- 10 October – Herbert Kennedy Andrews, organist and composer, 61
- 25 November – Dame Myra Hess, pianist, 75[28]
- 20 December – Henry George Farmer, musicologist, 83
Stanley Sadie, "Richard Rodney Bennett's The Mines of Sulphur. Tempo (New Ser.), 73, 24–25 (1965).
John Cale & Victor Bockris What's Welsh For Zen London: Bloomsbury, 1999
Fitch, Donald (1990). Blake set to music : a bibliography of musical settings of the poems and prose of William Blake. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 32. ISBN 9780520097346.
Gloag, Kenneth (1999). Tippett, A child of our time. Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 97. ISBN 9780521597531.
Strimple, Nick (2005). Choral music in the twentieth century. Pompton Plains, NJ: Amadeus. p. 89. ISBN 9781574671223.
Latham, Alison (2004). The Oxford dictionary of musical works. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. p. 145. ISBN 9780198610205.
Hall, Charles (2002). Chronology of Western classical music. New York: Routledge. p. 1027. ISBN 9780415942171.
Lang, Harry (1995). Deaf persons in the arts and sciences : a biographical dictionary. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press. p. 146. ISBN 9780313291708.
"News in Brief – A baby named Zak". The Times. No. 56427. 15 September 1965. p. 7.
LastName, FirstName (2003). Encyclopedia Britannica almanac. London: Encyclopedia Britannica. p. 111. ISBN 9781593390730.