From the Desk of CLASSICKONG and WTSG Digital Broadcastingโฆ
๐ท Two Giants, One Date
July 17th reminds us that music lost two giants on the same day.
On this date in 1959, the voice of Billie Holiday fell silent. Eight years later, on July 17, 1967, John Coltrane’s saxophone did the same.
One changed the way singers told stories. The other changed the very language of jazz improvisation.
Their styles were different. Their journeys were different. Yet both left behind something remarkably similar: music that continues to speak long after the final note was played.
Today, WTSG-DB pauses to remember two artists whose influence still echoes through concert halls, jazz clubs, recording studios, and radio stations around the world.
Their music never stopped speaking.
๐ท Remembering John Coltrane (1926โ1967)
When John Coltrane passed away on July 17, 1967, the world lost far more than a saxophonist. It lost one of the great musical explorers of the twentieth century.
Coltrane didn’t simply play jazz โ he challenged it, stretched it, and carried it into places few had imagined possible. Albums such as Blue Train, Giant Steps, My Favorite Things, and the monumental A Love Supreme remain essential listening not only for jazz fans, but for anyone who appreciates musical craftsmanship at its highest level.
His approach to harmony and improvisation influenced generations of musicians across jazz, rock, fusion, and classical music. Decades later, music students still study “Coltrane changes” with equal parts admiration and respect.
Perhaps most remarkable of all is the feeling shared by so many when he passed away at only forty years old: that John Coltrane was still climbing.
His saxophone may have fallen silent on that July day in 1967, but his voice continues to echo every time a musician reaches beyond what is comfortable and searches for something new.
๐๏ธ Remembering Billie Holiday (1915โ1959)
Eight years before Coltrane’s passing, music said goodbye to another giant.
Billie Holiday left this world on July 17, 1959, but the emotional honesty she brought to every performance remains timeless.
“Lady Day” possessed one of the most recognizable voices ever recorded, but it wasn’t simply her voice that changed music โ it was her ability to live inside a lyric. She didn’t merely sing songs; she told stories. Every pause, every phrase, every note carried meaning.
Songs such as God Bless the Child, Lover Man, and Strange Fruit demonstrated an artist unafraid to expose vulnerability, pain, hope, and humanity through music.
Her influence can still be heard in jazz, pop, soul, country, and beyond. Countless singers who followed borrowed from the emotional honesty and conversational phrasing that Billie helped pioneer.
When the final note faded in 1959, music lost one of its most distinctive voices.
Thankfully, recordings have a wonderful way of refusing to let great artists disappear.
Billie Holiday’s voice still speaks to anyone willing to listen.
๐ต 1962 โ Elvis Releases “She’s Not You”
On July 17, 1962, Elvis Presley released She’s Not You, another entry in what may be the greatest hit-making run in popular music history.
Written by Doc Pomus along with the legendary songwriting team of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, the song quickly climbed the charts and became yet another hit for The King.
By the summer of 1962, Elvis had already conquered radio, television, film, and the concert stage, yet he continued delivering records that reminded audiences exactly why he occupied such a unique place in American culture.
She’s Not You may not receive the same attention as Hound Dog, Jailhouse Rock, or Can’t Help Falling in Love, but it remains a wonderful example of the warmth, charm, and effortless vocal delivery that made Elvis Presley one of the most beloved performers in music history.
๐ธ 1992 โ Guns N’ Roses and Metallica Hit the Road
On this day in 1992, two of the biggest names in rock music joined forces as Guns N’ Roses and Metallica launched their massive North American stadium tour.
The pairing of hard rock and heavy metal giants created one of the most talked-about tours of the decade, drawing enormous crowds and producing unforgettable performances across North America.
For many fans, it represented a moment when two generations of rock power shared the same stage.
๐ Born on This Day
๐ธ 1935 โ Diahann Carroll, acclaimed actress and singer.
๐ธ 1949 โ Geezer Butler, bassist and principal lyricist for Black Sabbath.
๐ธ 1952 โ David Hasselhoff, whose music career found tremendous success overseas, particularly in Germany.
๐ธ 1967 โ Philip Lewis, vocalist for L.A. Guns.
๐ป Why It Still Matters
July 17th serves as a reminder that great music never truly leaves us.
John Coltrane expanded the boundaries of what music could be.
Billie Holiday showed us what music could feel like.
Elvis Presley reminded us that timeless songs never go out of style.
And generations later, their recordings continue finding new listeners, new admirers, and new homes on radio stations around the world.
That’s the beautiful thing about music.
The artists may leave the stage.
The songs never do.
From the Desk of CLASSICKONG and WTSG Digital Broadcasting.
Great Music. Great Radio. Great Community.





