Showing posts with label R.I.P.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label R.I.P.. Show all posts

April 7, 2016

MERLE HAGGARD, COUNTRY LEGEND, DEAD AT 79
By Patrick Doyle April 6, 2016, www.rollingstone.com

Merle Haggard, who over six decades composed and performed one of the greatest repertoires in country music, capturing the American condition with his stories of the poor, the lost, the working class, heartbroken and hard-living, died at his home in the San Joaquin Valley, California, after a battle with pneumonia, his spokeswoman Tresa Redburn confirmed. He was 79.

In American and country music, few artists loomed larger. Haggard's career spanned 38 Number One country hits, and his rough hard-edged style influenced country and rock & roll artists from Waylon Jennings and Gram Parsons to Jamey Johnson and Eric Church. As a songwriter, Willie Nelson called him "one of the best."

"Merle Haggard has always been as deep as deep gets," Bob Dylan told Rolling Stone in 2009. "Totally himself. Herculean. Even too big for Mount Rushmore. No superficiality about him whatsoever. He definitely transcends the country genre. If Merle had been around Sun Studio in Memphis in the Fifties, Sam Phillips would have turned him into a rock & roll star, one of the best."

Haggard didn't have to look far for material. His greatest songs – the Depression-era poverty described in "Hungry Eyes," the prison diaries "Sing Me Back Home" and "Mama Tried," the hard-living anthems like "I Think I'll Just Stay Here and Drink" and "Back to the Barrooms" – were all taken from the pages of his own life. He was born April 6th, 1937 near Bakersfield, California, two years after his family moved west from Oklahoma during the great dust bowl migration. Haggard's father found work on the railroad, playing fiddle in roadhouse bands on the side, and bought the family a $500 boxcar house. When Haggard was nine, he lost his father to a stroke, setting him on a path of what he called "illegal motion." A year later, he hopped his first train with a friend, riding for 18 hours until getting caught. "I tried to explain [to my mother] that anybody could ride with a pass; it took a man to ride the way we had," he said.

At 11, Haggard's mother turned him into authorities for being "incorrigible." He spent his teens in an out of reform schools. By his own estimate, Haggard was locked up more than a dozen times, on charges including robbery, truancy, petty larceny, shoplifting, check forgery and car theft.

He credited music as his salvation: At 14, Haggard went to see country star Lefty Frizzell perform in Bakersfield. He snuck backstage and sang one of Frizzell's songs for the performer, who pulled Haggard onstage. Haggard cited that encounter as the moment he fell in love with performing.

Haggard's luck ran out in 1957, when Haggard and a friend attempted to rob a cafe. He was sentenced to five years in San Quentin State Prison. He worked in the textile mill and "started trying to build up a long line of good things to be proud of." The stay shaped the rest of Haggard's life and music; a conversation with convicted rapist Caryl Chessman through the prison air-vents inspired his death row ballad "Sing Me Back Home;" he chronicled his father's death and the regret he felt behind bars in "Mama Tried."

In 1958, Johnny Cash visited San Quentin. Haggard, then 20, was in the audience. "He had the right attitude. He chewed gum, looked arrogant and flipped the bird to the guards—he did everything the prisoners wanted to do. He was a mean mother from the South who was there because he loved us. When he walked away, everyone in that place had become a Johnny Cash fan." In San Quentin, Haggard said he "saw the light. I realized what a mess I made out of my life, and I got out of there and stayed out of there. Never did go back."

After being released early in 1960, Haggard returned home and made his name on the Bakersfield club circuit. Along with Buck Owens, Haggard became one of the key architects of the hard-edged Bakersfield sound, a revved-up, rockier answer to countrypolitain Nashville. One night, his future collaborator George Jones dropped into an early performance. "He kicked the doors of the office open and said 'Who in the fuck is that?'" Haggard said. "One of the greatest compliments of my life was when George Jones said I was his favorite country singer." Haggard soon scored his first national hit with "Sing a Sad Song." That led to a deal with Capitol Records, and he scored his first Number One hit with 1966's "I Am a Lonesome Fugitive." It kicked off a rapid run of Number Ones, including 1967's "Branded Man," 1968's "The Legend of Bonnie and Clyde" and 1968's "Sing Me Back Home."

Outside of his songs, Haggard kept the public in the dark about his prison stint – that is, until he appeared on the Cash's network television show in 1969, and Cash urged Haggard to tell his story. "I was bull-headed about my career. I didn't want to talk about being in prison," Haggard said. "But Cash said I should talk about it. That way the tabloids wouldn't be able to. I said I didn't want to do that and he said, 'It's just owning up to it.'"

After that, Haggard's success only grew. He had a hit with his signature song, "Okie From Muskogee," in 1969, which he wrote after becoming frustrated watching hippies protest the Vietnam War. Released three weeks after Woodstock, the song captured the tension between the hippies and the heartland. Its plainspoken pro-military, anti-drug, anti-premarital sex lyrics became an anthem for Americans feeling alienated by the counterculture movement. It stayed at Number One a month. That year, Haggard won the Academy of Country Music's Top Male Vocalist award four years in a row, and was named Entertainer of the Year in 1970.

In 1972, Ronald Reagan, then Governor of California, pardoned Haggard for the attempted burglary charge that landed him in San Quentin. A decade later, Haggard would perform at the White House and Reagan would call Merle Haggard's music "the heart and soul of America."

Haggard's hits only made up a small portion of his greatest work. His career is full of left turns; the same year as "Okie From Muskogee," he released a Jimmie Rodgers tribute album Same Train, a Different Time, and 1970's The Best Damn Fiddle Player in the World (Or My Salute to Bob Wills), for which Haggard spent four obsessive months learning to play the fiddle, employing the surviving members of Wills' band the Texas Playboys. He was furiously prolific; only a decade into his career, he released an LP titled Merle Haggard Presents His 30th Album.

Haggard was married five times. His second wife, Bonnie Owens, was his backup singer, and helped shape his sound and shared writing credit on Haggard's hit "Today I Started Loving You Again." They divorced in 1978, but continued to tour together (Owens even was a bridesmaid at Haggard's next wedding, to country singer Leona Williams).

After divorcing Williams in 1983, Haggard moved onto a houseboat on Lake Shasta and bought a stake in a local resort and partied non-stop, a period he sang about on 2011's "Down on the Houseboat." "Johnny Carson and I were spending more money on spousal support in the 1980s than any other Americans," Haggard later wrote. "He used to make jokes about it." In 1993, Haggard married Theresa Ann Lane. They married in 1993, had two children and remained married until Haggard's death.

While the hits slowed down, Haggard never stopped touring. In the Nineties, he summed up his career as "a thirty-five-year bus ride." He and the Strangers played theaters and casinos year-round, often on double-bills with friends like Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson. "There is a restlessness in my soul that I've never conquered, not with motion, marriages, or meaning," Haggard said recently. "I've mellowed a lot, but it's still there to a degree. And it will be till the day I die."

In addition to the musical satisfaction he got out of playing live, he saw touring as a form of self-preservation: "I really don't have a choice," he told RS in 2012. "For me to be able to bring a show in front of people I've got to stay in shape for that and there is no way to slip by. You can go see some old guys, and I won't name any, that have let it go. They'll go out there and play two or three songs and bring somebody else to play the rest of it. I don't want to do that. I want to be able to give them a ticket at the value of the show. I want a good show for the ticket value. If I can't do that then I'll go sit down. Hard work requires hard work. If you get soft you can't do it."

In recent years, Haggard proudly welcomed his son, Ben, into the band, a virtuoso at Roy Nichols-style Telecaster twang. Ben controlled his father's social media accounts, giving a window into a different side of Haggard, goofing off at a restaurant table or wearing an "I Love Haters" sweatshirt.

Haggard's image was a hardened, gruff troubadour, but in his personal life, he was polite, reserved, with an intensely curious mind, especially about current events. A news junkie, he was politically outspoken, taking stances unpopular in the country music world. Decades after his anti-drug anthem "Okie from Muskogee," Haggard shrugged off the lyrics – "I didn't know anything about marijuana back then," Haggard told RS last year – and advocated for marijuana, calling it, "one of the most fantastic things in the world." After receiving a Kennedy Center Honor from President Obama in 2010, Haggard made news speaking in support of the President, describing him as "very different from the media makeout. It's really almost criminal what they do with our President. There seems to be no shame or anything. They call him all kinds of names all day long, saying he's doing certain things that he's not. It's just a big old political game that I don't want to be part of."

Unlike many of his peers, Haggard never stopped writing, releasing 15 albums since 2000. Songs like "What Happened?" and "I've Seen it All Go Away," addressed fading American ideals, describing, as Rolling Stone's Jason Fine wrote in 2009, "a country that has sold out its ideals and abandoned civil liberties, and where people have become timid and small-minded." "It's a bleak time in our history," Haggard toldRS in 2012. "The condition of our country, I don't think has been in the worst condition since I've been alive. I don't think young people have a handle on it, on what they've lost. I feel like a preacher in front of a congregation. I don't know what to tell them but they have lost a great deal and I doubt that we'll gain it back in their lifetime. We may never gain it back. When you look at things realistically, this country was built on three shifts every 24 hours and we are talking about working three or four days a week. I don't see how we can ever gain back to where we were. There's nobody who wants to do the stoop labor, and there is a whole bunch of it to do."

As recently as January, when Haggard last spoke with Rolling Stone, he was writing and recording, preparing to hit the studio for a follow-up with Nelson, encouraged by their record and ticket sales. "Our names are like magic together," he said.

He was looking forward to hitting the road despite reeling from a two-week hospital stay for double pneumonia. "They gave me some steroids one time and I got up and I was giving judo lessons," he joked. "I can't stand up with weight. My wife is taking care of me. I've lost a lot of weight. I'm going to appear different on stage, well, I'm still on top of things. I'm doing a lot of writing and I'm just proud to be alive and hope that people realize that. I really sincerely thank everybody for the prayers."

March 12, 2016

Naná Vasconcelos, Brazilian percussionist, jazz legend dies at 71
RIO DE JANEIRO, March 9
http://www.reuters.com/article/brazil-vasconcelos-obituary-idUSL1N16H1KB

Naná Vasconcelos, the eight-time Grammy Award-winning Brazilian percussionist known for his wide instrumental range and major role in the free-spirited jazz and world music of the 1970s and 1980s, died on Wednesday in Recife, Brazil, at 71.

A master of the berimbau, a single-string, multi-toned Afro-Brazilian instrument, he is best known for collaborations with Brazilians Milton Nascimento and Egberto Gismonti, Argentine Gato Barbieri and Americans Don Cherry and Pat Metheny.

His inventiveness with bongos, bells, gourds, maracas and other Afro-Latin musical instruments added the same rich, mysterious complexity to the period's percussion as his collaborators added to melody, harmony and song structure.

"He made what looked like rudimentary music sophisticated," said Geraldo Magalhaes, a friend and music producer. "He was a free spirit, loved all over the world."

The influential American jazz magazine DownBeat named Vasconcelos percussionist of the year each year from 1983 to 1991 in its critics poll.

"When I started to play berimbau differently ... the idea came into my mind that instruments have no limitations," he told Modern Drummer magazine in a 2000 interview.

"This idea came from Jimi Hendrix: instruments have no limitations, and I started to treat music in that way." (Reporting by Jeb Blount; Editing by Brad Haynes and Richard Chang)

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Brazilian Percussionist Nana Vasconcelos Dies at 71
3/9/2016 by Associated Press
http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/latin/6980910/brazilian-percussionist-nana-vasconcelos-dead

Nana Vasconcelos performs in Guerneville, Calif., in 1987

Acclaimed Brazilian percussionist Nana Vasconcelos has died at age 71. He worked over the decades with well-known musicians such as Milton Nascimento.

Vasconcelos died of lung cancer on Wednesday in the northeastern city of Recife where he was born.

He was a master of the single-string percussion instrument known in Portuguese as the berimbao.

The American jazz magazine DownBeat named Vasconcelos percussionist of the year every year from 1983 to 1991.

He started learning music with his musician father and by the time he was 12 he was playing a drum kit, performing at bars with local groups.

Nana rose to national prominence after he moved to Rio de Janeiro in the 1960s and started playing with Nascimento.
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KEITH EMERSON, EMERSON, LAKE AND PALMER KEYBOARDIST, DEAD AT 71
By Daniel Kreps March 11, 2016
"Keith was a gentle soul whose love for music and passion for his performance as a keyboard player will remain unmatched for many years to come," Carl Palmer says of ELP bandmate

Keith Emerson, founding member and keyboardist of Emerson, Lake and Palmer and a prog rock legend, died Friday. He was 71. His bandmate Carl Palmer and the trio's official Facebook confirmed Emerson's death. TMZ reported that police found Emerson with a single gunshot wound to the head, and Santa Monica police confirmed to Billboard that Emerson died by suicide. "We regret to announce that Keith Emerson died last night at his home in Santa Monica, Los Angeles, aged 71. We ask that the family’s privacy and grief be respected," the band wrote.


"I am deeply saddened to learn of the passing of my good friend and brother-in-music, Keith Emerson," Palmer wrote in a statement. "Keith was a gentle soul whose love for music and passion for his performance as a keyboard player will remain unmatched for many years to come. He was a pioneer and an innovator whose musical genius touched all of us in the worlds of rock, classical and jazz. I will always remember his warm smile, good sense of humor, compelling showmanship and dedication to his musical craft. I am very lucky to have known him and to have made the music we did together."

After discovering the Hammond and Moog in his teenage years, Emerson grew into one of the greatest keyboardists of his generation, first as a member of the Nice before founding the prog supergroup Emerson, Lake and Palmer. ELP formed in 1970 after Emerson, guitarist Greg Lake (formerly of King Crimson) and drummer Carl Palmer, a veteran of the Crazy World of Arthur Brown, joined together for a project that would better showcase their musicianship.


After a breakout performance at the Isle of Wight festival in 1970, the trio signed with Atlantic Records' Ahmet Ertegun; 37 years later, Emerson and other prog all-stars would open for Led Zeppelin at the Ertegun tribute concert at London's O2 Arena. ELP's self-titled debut arrived in 1970, the first of four albums the trio would release in their first four years together.

Following the release of 1971's Tarkus – the album's title track serves as a highlight of Emerson's keyboard prowess – and 1972's Trilogy, the group unleashed their landmark 1973 album Brain Salad Surgery; Emerson served as co-writer on that album's most enduring track, "Karn Evil 9."


After a brief hiatus to work on solo projects, ELP reunited for 1977's Works Volume 1 and Volume 2, which was followed soon after by 1978's Love Beach. ELP disbanded for the first time in 1979, although soon after Emerson, Lake and Palmer morphed into Emerson, Lake and Powell with Rainbow and Jeff Beck drummer Cozy Powell on sticks.

Emerson briefly reunited with Palmer for their 1988 project 3 before ELP reunited in 1991 and recorded their 1992 comeback album titled Black Moon; In the Hot Seat, their last studio album together, followed in 1994. After splitting again in the late-Nineties, ELP remained separate for nearly a dozen years until reuniting for one last tour together in 2010. Their final gig together came at London's High Voltage Festival in July 2010.

In addition to his time with ELP, Emerson also enjoyed a long musical career that featured both solo albums and film scores, including Dario Argento's 1980 horror film Inferno and the 1981 Sylvester Stallone thriller Nighthawks.


March 10, 2016

BEATLES PRODUCER GEORGE MARTIN DEAD AT 90

"Thank you for all your love and kindness," Ringo Starr tweeted in tribute to producer

By Andy Greene March 9, 2016

George Martin, who produced much of the Beatles' classic catalog, has died. The cause of death has not yet been released. He was 90.


Ringo Starr reported the news on Twitter. "God bless George Martin," he wrote late Tuesday night. "Peace and love to Judy and his family, love Ringo and Barbara. George will be missed." In another post, accompanied by a photo of Martin with the Beatles, Starr wrote, "Thank you for all your love and kindness."

Over the decades, many people have claimed to be the "fifth Beatle." But the only person who can credibly hold that title was Martin. The producer not only signed the Beatles to their first record contract in 1962 but went on to work extensively with them on the vast majority of music they recorded over the next eight years, from "Love Me Do" to the majestic suite that wrapped up Abbey Road.

"George Martin made us what we were in the studio," John Lennon said in 1971. "He helped us develop a language to talk to other musicians."

Martin was born January 3rd, 1926 in Highbury, London. He began playing piano at a young age, and in 1943 he joined the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy. After World War II, he worked in the BBC's Classical Music Department and then moved on to EMI. Much of his time was spent producing records for British comedians like Peter Sellers, Dudley Moore and Bernard Cribbins.

Martin met the Beatles in early 1962. At the time, they had a cult following in parts of England, but little success in landing a recording deal. The group's manager, Brian Epstein, approached the producer, who worked for EMI records, and got him to agree to give their demo tape a listen.

"The recording, to put it kindly, was by no means a knockout," Martin wrote in his 1979 memoir, All You Need Is Ears. "I could well understand that people had turned it down. But there was an unusual quality of sound, a certain roughness that I hadn't encountered before. There was also the fact that more than one person was singing." 


He called the Beatles into Abbey Road Studios on June 6th, 1962 for a test session. The band was overjoyed to have a chance to record their material, which at the time already included "Love Me Do" and "P.S. I Love You." There was a clear cultural gap between the clean-cut, older Martin and the scruffy lads. When Martin asked the Beatles if they had any problems with the session, George Harrison shot back, "Well, there's your tie, for a start." But they nevertheless respected Martin. When he suggested that drummer Pete Best wasn't cutting it, they agreed to fire him. 

Weeks later, Martin offered the Beatles their first recording contract. When they returned with new drummer Ringo Starr to cut "Love Me Do," Martin didn't feel like taking chances and insisted the new drummer play tambourine while session ace Andy White sat behind the kit. When it was clear Ringo was extremely hurt, he let him play on another take of the song. Both versions were eventually released.

When "Love Me Do" became a hit, Martin felt pressure to record an entire record with the band quickly, and from that point on he became their go-to producer. "There seemed to be a bottomless well of songs," Martin once said. "And people asked me where that well was dug. Who knows?" 

The Beatles recorded their debut LP, 1963's Please Please Me, during the course of a single day in February of that year. But as the music became more complex, the sessions grew significantly longer. Early on, Martin's contributions were relatively minor. With 1965's "Yesterday," however, he left an indelible mark on their music by adding orchestration to the song. It's something he'd explore deeper in the following year. "My approach [to the strings on 'Eleanor Rigby'] was greatly influenced by Bernard Herrmann and his film score for Psycho," Martin said in a 2012 interview. "He had a way of making violins sound fierce. That inspired me to have the strings play short notes forcefully, giving the song a nice punch. If you listen to the two, you'll hear the connection." 


Martin also played on some Beatles songs, including the piano on "In My Life." "I couldn't play the piano at the speed it needed to be played, the way I'd written the part," he said in another 2012 interview. "I wasn't that good a pianist, but if you had had a really good pianist, he could do it. I couldn't get all the notes in. One night I was by myself and played the notes at half speed but an octave lower on the piano, recording at 15 inches per second. When I ran the tape back at 30 inches per second, the notes were at the right speed and in the correct octave."

By the time of 1966's Revolver, he introduced the band to the concept of creating new songs by playing tape machines backwards, an approach they used on "Tomorrow Never Knows." "I introduced that to John, and he was knocked out," Martin told Rolling Stone in 1976. "They would come in and bring me tapes of all the looks and we would just play them for a giggle. When we made 'Tomorrow Never Knows,' that was all the tapes that they had made at home, made into loops."

Martin's age and cultural distance from the Beatles became an advantage as their music became increasingly psychedelic. "Drugs certainly affected the music," he said in the same interview. "But it didn't affect the record production because I was producing. ... I saw the music growing, but I rather saw it like Salvador Dalí's paintings. I didn't think the reason for it was drugs. I thought it was because they wanted to go into an impressionistic way." 


Toward the end of 1966, the group played "Strawberry Fields Forever" as both a traditional rock tune and a lush, orchestral rendition with brass. Lennon couldn't pick between the two, so he suggested they somehow combine them, despite Martin telling him they were in different keys and in different tempos. "You can do something about it," Lennon said. "You can fix it." Martin took up the challenge, speeding up one version, slowing down the others and using a variable-control tape machine to combine them. The end result was one of his favorite Beatles recordings.  

One of the many remarkable things about Martin is that he managed to produce highly complex, layered pieces of music like Sgt. Pepper Lonely Hearts Club Band, using a mere four-track recorder. "I felt that was the album which turned the Beatles from being just an ordinary rock & roll group into being significant contributors to the history of artistic performance," Martin wrote in his memoir. "It was the watershed which changed the recording art from something which will stand the test of time as a valid art form: sculpture in music, if you like."

By the time of the Let It Be sessions in 1969, the group felt it was time for a change. "They were going through an anti-production thing," Martin said in 1976. "John said, 'I don't want any production gimmicks on this.'" The sessions became extremely laborious and eventually the group handed the tapes over the Phil Spector. "I was shocked when Phil overdubbed heavenly choirs and lush strings and harps and things," Martin said. "I thought we were through then. I wasn't happy and I didn't want to go on."


Much to his surprise, they called him back to produce Abbey Road. "They said, 'Let's try and get back to the way were in the old days, and will you really produce the next album for us?'" Martin said. "We were really amicable and really friendly. We really did try to work together." The only problem was that McCartney loved Martin's idea of creating a pop music symphony and Lennon wanted a more traditional collection of songs. "It was a compromise," Martin said. "Side one was a collection of individual songs and side two was a continual work."

Throughout the 1970s, there was tremendous pressure on the Beatles to re-form, but Martin never felt it was a good idea. "It would be a terrible mistake for them ever to go into the studio together," he said in 1976. "The Beatles existed years ago; they don't exist today. And if the four men came back together, it wouldn't be the Beatles."

He did continue to work with the members of the group on their solo projects, producing McCartney's 1973 hit "Live and Let Die" and his early 1980's LPs Tug of War, Pipes of Peace and Give My Regards to Broad Street, as well as Ringo Starr's 1970 album Sentimental Journey. Martin also oversaw the soundtrack to the 1978 movie Sgt. Pepper Lonely Heart's Club Band, the Beatles' 1995 Anthology collection and, in 2006, the Beatles Las Vegas show, Love.

Although his name will always be closely connected to the Beatles, he also produced albums for Gerry and the Pacemakers, Kenny Rogers, Cheap Trick, Jeff Beck and Celine Dion. In 1997, he produced Elton John's new version of "Candle in the Wind" to honor the late Princess Diana. It became one of the best-selling singles of all time.

His work began slowing down considerably in the late 1990s as his hearing deteriorated. By that point, his son, Giles Martin, began assisting him. They worked closely on the Love project, mashing up Beatles songs and turning them into brand new works.

In 2011, Martin looked back fondly on his time with the Beatles. "I think they're so damn good they'll be with us for generations, into the middle of the next century," he said. "They're just great musicians and great writers, like Gershwin or Rodgers and Hammerstein. They are there in history, and the Beatles are there in history, too. They'll be there in 100 years, too. But I won't be."


January 19, 2016

GLENN FREY, EAGLES GUITARIST, DEAD AT 67
By Daniel Kreps, January 18, 2016, www.rollingstone.com

Glenn Frey, Eagles guitarist and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, passed away Monday. He was 67. "It is with the heaviest of hearts that we announce the passing of our comrade, Eagles founder, Glenn Frey, in New York City on Monday, January 18th, 2016. Glenn fought a courageous battle for the past several weeks but, sadly, succumbed to complications from rheumatoid arthritis, acute ulcerative colitis and pneumonia," the Eagles wrote in a statement Monday.


Randy Meisner, Don Henley, Glenn Frey, Bernie Leadon, The Eagles, perform, Popgala TV, concert
Eagles: Chips Off the Old Buffalo

"The Frey family would like to thank everyone who joined Glenn to fight this fight and hoped and prayed for his recovery," the statement continued. "Words can neither describe our sorrow, nor our love and respect for all that he has given to us, his family, the music community & millions of fans worldwide."
In a separate statement, Don Henley said of Frey, "He was like a brother to me; we were family, and like most families, there was some dysfunction.  But, the bond we forged 45 years ago was never broken, even during the 14 years that the Eagles were dissolved.  We were two young men who made the pilgrimage to Los Angeles with the same dream:  to make our mark in the music industry — and with perseverance, a deep love of music, our alliance with other great musicians and our manager, Irving Azoff, we built something that has lasted longer than anyone could have dreamed.  But, Glenn was the one who started it all.  He was the spark plug, the man with the plan."
Henley continued, "He had an encyclopedic knowledge of popular music and a work ethic that wouldn’t quit.  He was funny, bullheaded, mercurial, generous, deeply talented and driven.  He loved is wife and kids more than anything.  We are all in a state of shock, disbelief and profound sorrow.  We brought our two-year History of the Eagles Tour to a triumphant close at the end of July and now he is gone.  I'm not sure I believe in fate, but I know that crossing paths with Glenn Lewis Frey in 1970 changed my life forever, and it eventually had an impact on the lives of millions of other people all over the planet.  It will be very strange going forward in a world without him in it.  But, I will be grateful, every day, that he was in my life.  Rest in peace, my brother.  You did what you set out to do, and then some."

Frey recently suffered from "a recurrence of previous intestinal issues, which will require major surgery and a lengthy recovery period," the Eagles announced in November when they postponed their Kennedy Center Honors ceremony from December to the following year.
"The colitis and pneumonia were side effects from all the [medications],” Eagles manager Irving Azoff told The Wrap. "He died from complications of ulcer and colitis after being treated with drugs for his rheumatoid arthritis which he had for over 15 years."
The Detroit-born Frey performed with groups in the Motor City area before relocating to Los Angeles in the late Sixties. Frey would eventually meet and live with J.D. Souther — his partner in the short-lived duo Longbranch Pennywhistle — and singer-songwriter Jackson Browne. It was Souther who encouraged Linda Ronstadt, his girlfriend at the time, to hire Frey and three other artists - drummer Don Henley, bassist Randy Meisner and guitarist Bernie Leadon - to serve as her backing band during a 1971 tour. When the trek concluded, the Eagles were born.


the eagles

A year later, the Eagles' inaugural lineup released their 1972 self-titled LP, featuring the Frey- and Browne-penned "Take It Easy" and the Frey-sung "Peaceful Easy Feeling." Eagles, one of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, set the band on a trajectory toward being one of the biggest selling acts ever, a reputation cemented the following year with the arrival of Desperado. The latter album featured multiple hit singles co-written by Frey, including "Tequila Sunrise" and the title track.
"Sometimes I wonder if the other guys in the band know how much I like them. How much of a foundation they are. We never even talk about it. We each have our own spaces. We play sometimes and we fight sometimes," Frey told Rolling Stone in 1975. "I get so caught up in all this – the pressures of being Glenn Frey of the Eagles, the guy who talks a lot – that if Randy or Bernie needed some confidence building, I might be too self-involved to realize it. I worry about that. But even though there's a keg of dynamite that's always sitting there, this band is fairly together. I just figure we can't lose. The longer the Eagles stay together, the better it's gonna be. No matter what. We never expected to get this far, anyway. I thought we'd break up after our first album."
Frey also had a hand in writing the Eagles' "One of These Nights," "Take It to The Limit" and "Lyin' Eyes," with the guitarist contributing lead vocals to the latter. The Eagles would reach their peak in 1976 with their landmark Hotel California, with the title track - penned by Frey, Henley and guitarist Don Felder - winning the Grammy for Record of the Year; "Hotel California" and "Life in the Fast Lane" (the latter written by Frey, Henley and Joe Walsh) would become classic rock staples, and the LP itself would place Number 37 on Rolling Stone's all-time list.
In 1979, the Eagles released The Long Run, which featured the last songs they would record together until the 1994 reunion live LP Hell Freezes Over. On Long Run, Frey provided vocals on the album's most lasting single, "Heartache Tonight," while also co-writing the title track and the Timothy B. Schmit-sung "I Can't Tell You Why." The following year, a fallout between Frey and Felder ultimately resulted in the group disbanding.
As a solo artist, Frey enjoyed a string of hits that included the Beverly Hills Cop track "The Heat Is On" and "You Belong to the City," a song penned for Miami Vice. "City" would go on to take on a second life as a New York anthem thanks to its association with the 1986 World Series-winning New York Mets and Jay Z's Frey-sampling "The City Is Mine." Frey released five solo albums during this period, and also dabbled in acting, appearing in Miami Vice and later Jerry Maguire. That film's director, Cameron Crowe, famously interviewed the Eagles for a 1975 Rolling Stone cover story, which would later inspire the filmmaker's 2000 movie Almost Famous.
In 1993, thanks in part to Travis Tritt's attempts to reconcile the Eagles for the video for his "Take It Easy" cover, the Eagles lineup of Frey, Henley, Felder, Schmit and Walsh reunited for good for 1994's Hell Freezes Over, the title a nod to what it would take to get the Eagles back together. The reunited Eagles toured for nearly six years, with sporadic postponements as Frey dealt with medical issues that would occasionally plague him over the next two decades. In 1998, the Eagles were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, with the seven core members performing "Hotel California" and "Take It Easy" together.
In 2007, an Eagles lineup of Frey, Henley, Walsh and Schmit released Long Road Out of Eden, the band's first full-length LP since The Long Run. That was followed by a critically acclaimed documentary History of the Eagles as well as another long stretch of tour dates. In 2012, Frey released After Hours, his first solo LP in 20 years.
"I don't get up every morning and say, 'God dang! Eagles Greatest Hits is now past 30 million! It's unbelievable!' But, you know, it boggles the mind somewhat," Frey told Rolling Stone in 2012. "You have to adjust when things like this happen. You just have to keep perspective. As long as I keep taking out the garbage and cleaning up after the dogs and taking the kids to school, I'll have perspective. I don't get to bask in the afterglow much. I told the guys in my band, 'The reason I like coming out there is because people do what I say, and this is the only place where that happens.' It's very gratifying to think that we've found this place and that we are where we are."
In addition to the Eagles' statement - signed by Frey's fellow band members, their management and Frey's family - the group also shared the lyrics to Eagles' "It's Your World Now," a Frey co-written track from their Long Road Out of Eden. "But first a kiss, one glass of wine / Just one more dance while there's still time / My one last wish: someday, you'll see /How hard I tried and how much you meant to me."
Frey is survived by his wife Cindy and children Taylor, Deacon and Otis. Azoff told the Wrap that a memorial for Frey is currently being planned.
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20 Essential Songs
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DALE ''BUFFIN'' GRIFFIN, MOTT THE HOOPLE DRUMMER, DEAD AT 67
By Daniel Kreps, www.rollingstone.com, January 18 2016


Dale "Buffin" Griffin, drummer and founding member of the Seventies glam rock group Mott the Hoople, passed away Sunday in his sleep following a long battle with Alzheimer's. He was 67. The band's manager Peter Purnell confirmed Griffin's death to the BBC, adding that the drummer was "one of the nicest, friendly and talented men I have ever known." Griffin's death comes just one week after the passing of David Bowie, who penned and produced Mott the Hoople's biggest hit, "All the Young Dudes."

After performing in series of bands in his native Herefordshire, Griffin along with bassist Pete Overend Watts, organist Verden Allen, singer/guitarist Ian Hunter and guitarist Mick Ralphs formally formed Mott the Hoople - named after a Willard Manus novel - in 1969. After a series of albums that were modestly received both commercially and critically, Mott the Hoople were on the verge of breaking up when Bowie, a fan of the band, offered them a pair of songs to record. After rejecting his "Suffragette City," Mott the Hoople opted to record "All the Young Dudes," which became the title track of the band's 1972 Bowie-produced LP. The smash single was named one of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Mott the Hoople continued on for another few years before Allen, Hunter and Ralphs departed the group. Augmented by replacements like Spiders of Mars guitarist Mick Ronson, Griffin and Watts continued on under the moniker Mott. After releasing two albums under that name, following another series of lineup changes, Griffin and Watts recorded music as the British Lions. However, by 1980, Mott the Hoople and its offshoots had officially disbanded.

Nearly 30 years later, in 2009, Hunter announced that the five founding members of Mott the Hoople would reunite for a string of U.K. performances; unfortunately, Griffin, having recently been diagnosed with Alzheimer's, was unable to perform in the reunion gigs, although he did partake in the encores portion. "All he ever wanted was for his beloved Mott The Hoople to reform and it was his determination that achieved that very feat in 2009, but sadly by then he was too ill to perform at the five sold-out dates - though he did join the band for encores," Purnell told the BBC.

"I used to be fearless, but Alzheimer's has stopped me in my tracks. It is my dreadful little bug and I have to fight to keep it from controlling me," Griffin said at an Alzheimer's Society campaign in 2010 (via The Telegraph). "Alzheimer's has prevented me from doing a lot of the things I love - like reading and writing - but I try to keep as relaxed and easygoing as possible. It is really important for people to 'remember the person' and look beyond someone's diagnosis of dementia. Many old friends now avoid me as they do not know what to say, which is really hurtful. I just wish they would realise that inside, I am still the same old 'Buffin' I always was."

Throughout the Eighties and Nineties, Griffin also served as producer on some of John Peel's BBC Radio 1 sessions; one such session, an October 1990 studio visit by Nirvana, resulted in the Incesticide tracks "Molly's Lips" and "Son of a Gun" (originally by the Vaselines) as well as a cover of Devo's "Turnaround."


November 10, 2015



ALLEN TOUSSAINT, DEAD AT 77
By Daniel Kreps November 10, 2015, www.rollingstone.com

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Grammy-winning musician passes away while on tour in Spain.

Allen Toussaint, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame songwriter, producer, pianist, performer and New Orleans legend, passed away Monday night while on tour in Spain. He was 77. Toussaint suffered a heart attack at his hotel after performing at Madrid's Teatro Lara earlier in the night; after being resuscitated, he suffered a second, fatal heart attack en route to the hospital.

The Grammy-winning Toussaint was one of the Big Easy's most influential, beloved and iconic musicians, having penned oft-covered songs like "Working in the Coal Mine," "Mother-in-Law," "Fortune Teller," "Southern Nights," "Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley," "Get Out of My Life, Woman" and countless more. Toussaint's songs were recorded by the likes of Jerry Garcia, Ringo Starr, Little Feat, Robert Palmer, the Yardbirds, Glen Campbell, Bonnie Raitt, the Band, Warren Zevon, the Rolling Stones and many more.

Born in 1938 in New Orleans, Toussaint began playing piano at age seven and broke into the music industry by his teens when he was recruited to sit in for a recording session that fellow New Orleans great Fats Domino couldn't attend. By 1960, Toussaint was serving as chief songwriter at Minit Records, where he penned Ernie K-Doe's chart-topping "Mother-in-Law." After a stint in the military, Toussaint returned to form the production company Sansu with Marshall Sehorn, which resulted in the Lee Dorsey hits "Ride Your Pony," "Working in the Coal Mine" and "Holy Cow."

Toussaint also played a pivotal role of formulating a unique style of soul, funk and R&B that became emblematic of New Orleans. Toussaint served as producer for the Meters, who got their start as Toussaint's backing band on Sansu before becoming one of the greatest funk acts of their era. Toussaint and Sehorn also built their Sea-Saint Studio in New Orleans, which became a go-to for local musicians like Dr. John and the Neville Brothers as well as superstars like Paul McCartney – who recorded portions of Wings' 1975 LP Venus and Mars with Toussaint on piano at the studio – and Paul Simon, New Orleans' WWL writes. Labelle also recorded the Toussaint-produced "Lady Marmalade" at the studio.

For all his contributions to New Orleans' musical legacy, a life-size bronze statue of Toussaint was placed in a park off the city's Bourbon Street, making him the eighth musician honored by the city. However, Hurricane Katrina ravaged Toussaint's home and studio in 2005, forcing the musician to take a more prominent role in the spotlight as opposed to just songwriting; he toured frequently in the years following Katrina and collaborated on an album with Elvis Costello in 2006 titled The River in Reverse.

Toussaint was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998 and is similarly enshrined in the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame and the Blues Hall of Fame. In 2013, Toussaint was awarded a National Medal of the Arts. "After his hometown was battered by Katrina and Allen was forced to evacuate, he did something even more important for his city — he went back," President Barack Obama said at the award ceremony. "And since then, Allen has devoted his musical talent to lifting up and building up a city. And today, he's taking the stage all over the world, with all kinds of incredible talent, doing everything he can to revive the legendary soul of the Big Easy."

At the time of his death, Toussaint was scheduled to perform with friend Paul Simon at a December 8th benefit for New Orleans Artists Against Hunger and Homelessness, a charity Toussaint helped found. Below, watch video from Toussaint's final performance.





October 14, 2015

Dear All Of You,

We are very sad to say that JIM (DIAMOND) passed away on Thursday (october 8), unexpectedly, but peacefully in his sleep.

It was always such a pleasure to him that his voice touched so many people and brought them so much happiness.

He absolutely loved reading all your messages and to hear how his music had touched you all.

Put on your favourite song today and have a think about him, as as well as being an incredible singer, he was an incredible man and we feel so lucky to have had him in our lives.

Thank You Very Much
The Diamond Family

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JIM DIAMOND - I SHOULD HAVE KNOW BETTER - CONCERTO DELL'EPIFANIA 2010, AUDITORIUM RAI DI NAPOLI

September 23, 2015


REO Speedwagon guitarist Gary Richrath died Sunday. He was 65.

The news came in a Facebook post from REO lead singer Kevin Cronin.

“My longtime friend and collaborator Gary Richrath passed away earlier today,” Cronin wrote on the band's official Facebook page. “Gary was both a unique guitarist and songwriter, and the embodiment of the tough guy with a heart of gold. I learned most of what I know about being in a rock band from Gary Richrath.

“The entire REO Family mourns his death and shares in the grief of his family, friends, and fans. These words do not come close to expressing the depth of emotions I am feeling at this time...''

The cause of death was not given.

Richrath joined REO Speedwagon prior to the group’s 1971 debut album. The band didn’t break through until the late Seventies. Richrath contributed to their success not only with his playing but with his songwriting as well. He wrote some of the band’s biggest hits, including “Take It on the Run,” “Ridin’ the Storm Out” and “In Your Letter.”

Though he left the group in 1989, he rejoined in 2013 to perform a benefit concert to aid tornado victims in Bloomington, Illinois. Below is a video of REO Speedwagon in 1981 performing “Ridin’ the Storm Out.”



GARY RICHRATH R.I.P. 1949-2015
Gary Richrath, lead guitarist and a songwriter for REO Speedwagon from 1970 until 1989, has died on September 13, 2015. He was 65. With his mane of blonde curls and thumping guitar solos, Richrath was the epitome of the '70s rock guitarist and he wrote several of the group's more guitar-driven tracks, including Golden Country (1972) and Ridin' the Storm Out (1973). Throughout the '90s, Richrath struggled with alcoholism, and although there were times when he seemed to have overcome it, his health was permanently affected. While no cause of death has been revealed, REO Speedwagon's Kevin Cronin told Billboard that Richrath's wife told him that the guitarist had abdominal surgery a few days before his death and was in the hospital at the time.



Lady Bo, the ‘Mother of Rock ‘n’ Roll,’ Dies at 75
By Jeff Giles, ultimateclassicrock.com, September 21, 2015

Groundbreaking guitarist Peggy Jones, who achieved fame as a long-running member of Bo Diddley’s band, has died at the age of 75.

Born in 1940, the New York native recorded a few regional hits in the mid-’50s before a chance meeting led to Jones replacing Diddley’s previous guitarist, Jody Williams, who’d been drafted into military service. Quickly developing a symbiotic creative relationship, the duo worked together on a string of recordings between 1957 and 1962, with Diddley teaching Jones to play in open tunings and Jones incorporating an increasing array of effects and technical innovations (in later years, she’d become one of the few guitarists to make use of the unwieldy MIDI controller known as the Synthaxe).

Present for early trademark Diddley hits such as “Road Runner” and “Hey Bo Diddley,” Jones embarked on a solo career in the early ’60s, leading a band that started out as the Jewels before eventually settling on Lady Bo and the Family Jewel. Recording with the Jewels (including the 1966 hit “We Got Togetherness“) as well as working as a session player for other artists (Jones appeared on Eric Burdon’s “San Franciscan Nights“), she established herself as a performer in her own right before returning to Diddley — and bringing the Family Jewel along with her — in 1970.

Jones and Diddley remained together until the early ’90s, performing countless shows along the way, and after they parted ways again, she remained active on the live circuit; here you can watch fan-shot footage from her performance at the Ponderosa Stomp in 2011.

According to She Shreds, news of Jones’ death was spread by Stomp organizers following an announcement from her husband Wally Malone, who met her while playing bass for the Family Jewel in the ’70s. “Today is one of the saddest days of my life,” wrote Malone. “My wife and partner of 47 Years has been called up to that great rock ‘n’ roll band in the heavens to be reunited with Bo Diddley, Jerome Green and Clifton James.”

For more information about Lady Bo’s life and distinguished career, visit her official site.

August 5, 2015

LYNN ANDERSON R.I.P. 1947-2015
US country singer Lynn Anderson, best known for her worldwide 1971 hit (I Never Promised You A) Rose Garden, has died on July 30, 2015, aged 67. She had been in hospital in Nashville, where she suffered a heart attack. Other US hits included You're My Man, How Can I Unlove You? and Top of the World, also recorded by the Carpenters. Singer Dolly Parton said, "Lynn is blooming in God's Rose Garden now. We will miss her and remember her fondly." Anderson said: [Rose Garden] was popular because it touched on emotions. It was perfectly timed. It was out just as we came out of the Vietnam years and a lot of people were trying to recover. This song stated that you can make something out of nothing. You take it and go ahead." - BBC

CILLA BLACK R.I.P. 1943-2015
Singer and TV star Cilla Black, who enjoyed a 50-year showbusiness career, has died in Spain on August 1, 2015. She was 72. The singer and TV presenter was sunbathing on the balcony at her villa in Estepona, Spain when she fell and hit her head. She was knocked unconscious by the fall and subsequently died of a stroke. Championed by The Beatles, she began her career as a singer in 1963, and her singles "Anyone Who Had a Heart" (1964) and "You're My World" (1964) both reached number one. Along with a successful recording career in the 1960s and early 1970s, Black hosted her own eponymous variety show, Cilla, for the BBC between 1968 and 1976. After a brief time as a comedy actress in the mid-1970s, she became a prominent television presenter in the 1980s and 1990s, hosting hit entertainment shows such as Blind Date (1985­2003) and Surprise Surprise (1984­2001). Black was a staunch supporter of the Conservative Party during the 1980s and publicly voiced her admiration of Margaret Thatcher, stating in 1993 that Thatcher "put the Great into Great Britain". In memory, Paul McCartney said: "Such a shock to hear about Cilla's passing. She was a lovely girl who infected everyone with her great spirit. From first meeting her as a cloak room girl at the Cavern in Liverpool, to seeing her many times since, she always had a fun-loving dignity that made her a great pleasure to be around." - BBC/wikipedia