Peter Tork ~ Bassist, singer and multi-instrumentalist for the Monkees, he didn't sing on many of their hits ("Auntie Grizzelda" being an exemption) but he did play an variety of stringed and keyed instruments including bass, guitar, piano, organ, harpsichord, banjo and sitar.
THE MONKEES ~ "YOUR AUNTIE GRIZZELA";
THE MONKEES ~ "WHAT AM I DOING HANGING ROUND";
PETER TORK ~ "HIGHER & HIGHER";
PETER TORK ~ "Solfeggietto"
Paul Whaley ~ drummer for Blue Cheer, the first Metal band. Also the first Thrash band & first Stoner Rock band. I saw and interviewed them years ago and they sounded the same;
BLUE CHEER ~ "SUMMERTIME BLUES";
BLUE CHEER ~ "FEATHERS FROM YOUR TREE";
BLUE CHEER ~ "SATISFACTION";
Dean Haydcock ~ Bassist with 1960's UK band the Hollies
THE HOLLIES ~ "LOOK THROUGH ANY WINDOW";
THE HOLLIES ~ "CARRIE ANNE";
THE HOLLIES ~ "I CAN'T LET GO";
Dean Ford ~ Singer with 1960's Scottish band Marmalade ("I See The Rain Again")
MARMALADE ~ "I SEE THE RAIN";
MARMALADE ~ "BABY MAKE IT SOON";
MARMALADE ~ "OB-LA-DI-OB-LA-DA";
Gus Backus ~ Singer with 1950's & 60's Doo Wop group The Del Vikings ("Come Go With Me");
THE DEL VIKINGS ~ "COME GO WITH ME";
Pete Posa ~ New Zealand Surf guitarist
PETE POSA ~ "GUITAR BOOGIE";
Johnny Hutchinson ~ Drummer for 1960's Liverpool band The Big Three and (briefly) The Beatles;
THE BIG THREE ~ "WHAT I SAY";
Bonnie Guitar ~ 1950's & 60's Rockabilly & Country singer/guitarist
BONNIE GUITAR ~ "MR FIRE EYES";
Mean Steve Carroll ~ 1950's Rockabilly singer and later pro wrestling TV host
MEAN STEVE CARROLL - "IS IT EVER GONNA HAPPEN";
Sol Yaged ~ Jazz clarinetist w/Red Allen, Jack Teagarden, Willie The Lion Smith, Coleman Hawkins;
Mac Wiseman ~ Country and Blugrass singer from the 1950's & 60's;
MAC WISEMAN ~ "LOVE LETTERS IN THE SAND";
Leon Rausch - 91 - American singer with Bob Wills & The Texas Playboys;
BOB WILLS & TEXAS PLAYBOYS ~ "STAY A LITTLE LONGER";
Maxine Brown ~ Singer with 1950's Country group The Browns ("Three Bells");
THE BROWNS ~ "SCARLET RIBBONS" & "LOOK BEHIND ME";
THE BROWNS ~ "THREE BELLS";
Eddie Tigner ~ Pianist for Elmore James and the Inkspots;
ELMORE JAMES ~ "IT HURTS ME TOO";
THE INK SPOTS ~ "I'D CLIMB THE HIGHEST MOUNTAIN";
Doris Day ~ Pop and Big Band singer and actor from the 1950's to the 70's;
DORIS DAY ~ "MY LAST HORIZON";
DORIS DAY ~ "SECRET LOVE";
Einar Iversen - 88 - Norwegian jazz pianist and composer
EINAR IVERSON;
Yes it's "Rock and Roll Heaven" or "The people who died". A list of obits of Rock & Roll figures and related musical genres like Blues, Country, Folk, Jazz, Swing, R & B, Gospel, Hip-Hop, Pop and some World Beat & Avant Garde Classical Music. From 2009 on regularly updated.
Dance Macabre

Showing posts with label Ink Spots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ink Spots. Show all posts
Sunday, 16 June 2019
Saturday, 2 July 2011
Some Obits of early rock and roll figures of 2009
Les Paul was not only one of the first electric guitar heroes, he also made all subsequent guitar heroes possible. He invented or perfected a number of inventions including the iconic Les Paul Guitar, as well as pioneering such modern recording practices as multi-tracking, overdubbing, phase delay effects, echo effects, and feedback, in some cases inventing sound tools to make use of these techniques. He also scored a series of hits as a duo with his wife Mary Ford in the early 1950's which, while not exactly rockin' did feature some spectacular guitar work that would influence future generations of Rock, Jazz and Country guitarists. He also hosted (again with Mary Ford) hit radio and TV shows in the mid-to-late 50's. He was inducted in to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as an "architect" and has a stand alone exhibit, an honour given as well only so far to Sam Phillips and Alan Freed. He was 94.
Les Paul Trio ~ "Dark eyes"
Mike Seeger was less well known than his famous older half-brother Pete but he was still an important fonder of the folk revival of the late 1950's & early 1960's. He played virtually every stringed insturment used in North American folk and blues music including guitar, banjo, mandolin, dulcimer, autoharp, and fiddle as well as harmonica. Since 1959 he played on or produced at least a hundred recordings, mostly for Smithsonian/Folkways Records first with his band The New Lost City Ramblers or solo and with artists such as; Pop Stoneman, Hazel Dickens, Kilby Snow and Cousin Emmy. He was also an important historian, song collector and folklorist. Still active as of last year, he died of cancer at 75.
James Luther Dickenson Dickenson was a behind-the-scenes producer and songwriter from Memphis who started as a session musician playing guitar and piano for the likes of Aretha Franklin, The Rolling Stones (on "Wild Horses"), and The Flaming Groovies ("Teenage Head") then producing albums for Big Star, Screaming Jay Hawkins, Willy DeVille, Tav Falco, The Replacements, Green on Red, Mojo Nixon and Mudhoney. He also worked with Bob Dylan and Ry Cooder as well as recording some solo albums.
One of Dickenson's collaborators, Willy DeVille also died this month. Deville was the founder of Mink DeVille a fixture CBGB' era scene that also spawned The Ramones, Blondie, Suicide, Talking Heads, Richard Hell, Television and Robert Gordon. Like Gordon, DeVille's sound was closer to traditional Rock and Roll than punk and he later moved to New Orleans where he continued his career scoring an academy award nomination in 1987. Sometime after that I saw him do a drunken gig at the Diamond Club in Toronto where I stole one of his harmonicas after he fell off stage, which I still have.
Willy Deville ~ "Hey Joe"
Ellie Greenwhich never actually sang or played on a hit record but the Brill Building songwriter was responsible for more than her quota; "Be My Baby","River Deep Mountain High","Da Doo Ron Ron","The Leader of The Pack", dies at 68
The Shangri Las ~ "The Leader of the pack";
Sun Records Rockabilly great Billy Lee Riley who recorded the classic versions of "Red Hot" and "Flying Saucers Rock and Roll" dies at 75.
Billy Lee Riley ~ "Flying saucers rock and roll";
Deake Levin; Guitarist with Classic 1960's Seattle garage rockers Paul Revere and the Raiders, played on classics "Kicks", "Steppin Stone"," Just like me" dies at 62.
Paul Revere and the Raiders ~ "Kicks";
Doo Wop singer Johnny Carter, co-founder of 1950's The Flamingos ("I only have eyes for you"), later in the Dells after 1960 ("Oh what a night" & "There is") dies at 75.
The Flamingos (w/Alan Freed intro) ~ "Would I be crying";
Huey Long (not to be confused with the Kingfish), the last remaining member of the Ink Spots, a hugely influencial vocal pre-doo wop group of the 1930's & 40's died recently at age 104. Seriously.
The Ink Spots ~ "If I didn't care";
Jazz drummer Rashied Ali who played on the final recordings of John Cotrane as well as Alice Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders and James Blood Ullmer dies at 75.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
While everybody's getting all 80's nostalgic over Jacko and Farrah lets take a minute for 1960's garage and surf heros Sky Saxon (of the Seeds) and Bob Bogle (of the Ventures) as well as 1950's blues diva Koko Taylor (of "Wang Dang Doodle" fame). So there.
The Seeds ~ Pushing too hard (worst lip-synching ever, with the possible exception of the Monkees);
The Ventures ~ Wipeout;
Les Paul Trio ~ "Dark eyes"
Mike Seeger was less well known than his famous older half-brother Pete but he was still an important fonder of the folk revival of the late 1950's & early 1960's. He played virtually every stringed insturment used in North American folk and blues music including guitar, banjo, mandolin, dulcimer, autoharp, and fiddle as well as harmonica. Since 1959 he played on or produced at least a hundred recordings, mostly for Smithsonian/Folkways Records first with his band The New Lost City Ramblers or solo and with artists such as; Pop Stoneman, Hazel Dickens, Kilby Snow and Cousin Emmy. He was also an important historian, song collector and folklorist. Still active as of last year, he died of cancer at 75.
James Luther Dickenson Dickenson was a behind-the-scenes producer and songwriter from Memphis who started as a session musician playing guitar and piano for the likes of Aretha Franklin, The Rolling Stones (on "Wild Horses"), and The Flaming Groovies ("Teenage Head") then producing albums for Big Star, Screaming Jay Hawkins, Willy DeVille, Tav Falco, The Replacements, Green on Red, Mojo Nixon and Mudhoney. He also worked with Bob Dylan and Ry Cooder as well as recording some solo albums.
One of Dickenson's collaborators, Willy DeVille also died this month. Deville was the founder of Mink DeVille a fixture CBGB' era scene that also spawned The Ramones, Blondie, Suicide, Talking Heads, Richard Hell, Television and Robert Gordon. Like Gordon, DeVille's sound was closer to traditional Rock and Roll than punk and he later moved to New Orleans where he continued his career scoring an academy award nomination in 1987. Sometime after that I saw him do a drunken gig at the Diamond Club in Toronto where I stole one of his harmonicas after he fell off stage, which I still have.
Willy Deville ~ "Hey Joe"
Ellie Greenwhich never actually sang or played on a hit record but the Brill Building songwriter was responsible for more than her quota; "Be My Baby","River Deep Mountain High","Da Doo Ron Ron","The Leader of The Pack", dies at 68
The Shangri Las ~ "The Leader of the pack";
Sun Records Rockabilly great Billy Lee Riley who recorded the classic versions of "Red Hot" and "Flying Saucers Rock and Roll" dies at 75.
Billy Lee Riley ~ "Flying saucers rock and roll";
Deake Levin; Guitarist with Classic 1960's Seattle garage rockers Paul Revere and the Raiders, played on classics "Kicks", "Steppin Stone"," Just like me" dies at 62.
Paul Revere and the Raiders ~ "Kicks";
Doo Wop singer Johnny Carter, co-founder of 1950's The Flamingos ("I only have eyes for you"), later in the Dells after 1960 ("Oh what a night" & "There is") dies at 75.
The Flamingos (w/Alan Freed intro) ~ "Would I be crying";
Huey Long (not to be confused with the Kingfish), the last remaining member of the Ink Spots, a hugely influencial vocal pre-doo wop group of the 1930's & 40's died recently at age 104. Seriously.
The Ink Spots ~ "If I didn't care";
Jazz drummer Rashied Ali who played on the final recordings of John Cotrane as well as Alice Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders and James Blood Ullmer dies at 75.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
While everybody's getting all 80's nostalgic over Jacko and Farrah lets take a minute for 1960's garage and surf heros Sky Saxon (of the Seeds) and Bob Bogle (of the Ventures) as well as 1950's blues diva Koko Taylor (of "Wang Dang Doodle" fame). So there.
The Seeds ~ Pushing too hard (worst lip-synching ever, with the possible exception of the Monkees);
The Ventures ~ Wipeout;
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