Re:Chas's Music Column - Bumber December Issue W/E 15th, 22nd & 29thr

Chasplaya
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Fri Jan 29, 2010 7:54 pm

Week In Review
January 28, 2010
P.J.'s Pants On The Ground … Fans Mourn The Other M. Jackson … Iron Maiden Goes Posh …

This is the week that was in matters musical…

1945, The Andrews Sisters' "Rum & Coca Cola" is the #1 pop hit and will become the biggest seller of the year …

1956, Elvis Presley makes his national television debut on The Dorsey Brothers' Stage Show singing "Heartbreak Hotel"… The Coasters are signed to Atlantic Records … the doo-wop act goes on to score 19 hits in the ensuing 15 years including such novelty smashes as "Charlie Brown" and "Poison Ivy" …

1958, The Champs release "Tequila" which will become one of the more successful one-word songs … Little Richard announces that he is retiring from music at the peak of his popularity to become a minister … the pomaded rocker will flip-flop between his sacred and profane predilections in the coming years …

1959, the world of pop music takes a big hit when a small plane crashes into an Iowa cornfield killing Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson … the three pop stars, who were in the midst of a tour dubbed the Winter Dance Party, had chartered the plane to get to their next gig in Fargo, North Dakota, as an alternative to making the long haul in their tour bus with its defective heater … spared in the tragedy was bassist Waylon Jennings who gave up his seat on the plane …

1961, Bob Dylan cuts his first record, "San Francisco Bay Blues" …

1965, Brit rocker P.J. Proby splits his pants during a London show … the incident gets a big reaction from the crowd and Proby makes the ripping riff a permanent part of his act …

1967, British pop producer Joe Meek, who developed many innovative recording techniques, fatally shotguns his landlady following an argument, then turns the gun on himself with equally deadly results … while browsing in a London antique shop, John Lennon comes across a 19th-century circus poster that incorporates most of what will become the lyrics of "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" …

1969, The Beatles, with Billy Preston joining them on organ, perform in public as a group for the last time on the roof of the Apple Studios building … the filmed rooftop concert ends after four songs when police show up on a noise complaint from the neighbors …

1972, more than 40,000 mourners file past Mahalia Jackson's coffin to pay final respects to the renowned gospel singer who died four days earlier … at her funeral the next day, Sammy Davis Jr. reads a letter from President Nixon and Aretha Franklin sings "Precious Lord, Take My Hand" …

1973, keyboardist Keith Emerson's hands are injured when a piano that's been rigged with pyrotechnics explodes prematurely during an Emerson, Lake and Palmer concert in San Francisco … Elton John's "Crocodile Rock" goes to #1 on the Billboard Pop Chart … it's the singer's first visit to the top of the U.S. chart … NBC debuts TV's first rock concert series, Midnight Special … the show's announcer is gravel-throated DJ Wolfman Jack and each episode features a guest host … the show will air through 1981 … KISS performs their first show at the Coventry Club in Queens … they have yet to develop their trademark look … Paul Stanley will later characterize the band's appearance as a New York Dolls look …

1977, Fleetwood Mac guitarist Peter Green is dispatched to the funny farm following an incident in which he attacked an accountant attempting to deliver a royalty check for $30,000 … turns out Green didn't want the green …

1980, commemorating the first anniversary of Sid Vicious' death, 1,000 punks stage a march in London … the dead Sex Pistol's mother, Ann Beverly, had been slated to head the parade, but she's in hospital recovering from a drug overdose …

1985, the single "We Are The World" is recorded in L.A. by 46 rock stars led by Michael Jackson to raise money for charity …

1988, The Cars reach the end of the road …

1991, Irish singer Sinead O'Connor is nominated in four Grammy categories and announces that she won't accept any awards saying the show reflects "false and destructive, materialistic values" …

1993, graphic artist Reid Miles dies at 65 … he designed iconic album covers for Blue Note Records in the '50s and '60s and his style has been copped by many others …

2004, James Brown is arrested on charges of domestic violence for pushing his wife to the floor during an argument … he later pleads no contest…

2006, a letter written by Don Law, the producer of Robert Johnson's 1936 and 1937 San Antonio recording sessions is unearthed providing and confirming valuable details of the enigmatic blues pioneer's sessions … the management firm representing singer Avril Lavigne provides defense money for an Arlington, TX man who has been sued by the recording industry for sharing downloaded music …among the songs involved is Lavigne's own "Sk8er Boi" …

2009, Metal band Iron Maiden is going soft … that is, if you go by the hotel in London they're financing … the posh Sanctum Soho features a 24-hour bar, a rooftop hot tub, and mini-bars built inside amp stacks … trashing of rooms by naughty rockers is neither encouraged nor discouraged …
…and that was the week that was in matters musical.



Arrivals:

January 28: piano virtuoso Arthur Rubinstein (1887), songwriter Irving Gordon (1915), British jazzman and club owner Ronnie Scott (1927), clarinetist Mr. Acker Bilk (1929), bluesman David "Junior" Kimbrough (1930), dub producer King Tubby (1941), Brian Keenan of the Chambers Brothers (1944), Dick Taylor of The Pretty Things (1944), Nedra Talley of The Ronettes (1946), Rick Allen of The Box Tops (1946), Mountain's Corky Laing (1948), The Alarm's Dave Sharp (1959), Lilith Fair founder Sarah McLachlan (1968), rapper Rakim (1968), Cypress Hill's Muggs (1968), Joey Fatone of *NSYNC (1977), Nick Carter of Backstreet Boys (1980)

January 29: Huddie Ledbetter AKA Lead Belly (1889), Chicago bluesman Eddie Taylor (1923), masterful Motown bassist James Jamerson (1936), jazz pianist Bobby Scott (1937), Peter Cowap of Herman's Hermits (1944), David Byron of Uriah Heep (1947), Tommy Ramone of the Ramones (1949), Louie Perez of Los Lobos (1953), rapper Mitch McDowell of General Kane (1954), Eddie Jackson of Queensryche (1961)

January 30: R&B singer Ruth Brown (1928), Mississippi bluesman Big Jack Johnson (1940), Joe Terry of Danny & the Juniors (1941), Marty Balin of The Jefferson Airplane (1942), Sandy Yaguda of Jay & the Americans (1943), Steve Marriott of Small Faces and Humble Pie (1947), William King of the Commodores (1949), Mary Ross of Quarterflash (1951), Steve Bartek of OingoBoingo (1952), Shalamar's Jody Watley (1959), Jonny Lang (1981)

January 31: Franz Schubert (1979), vaudeville favorite Eddie Cantor (1892), ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax (1915), singer Mario Lanza (1921), Broadway star Carol Channing (1923), Chuck Willis, R&B and rock singer-songwriter (1928), composer Phillip Glass (1937), harpmeister Charlie Musselwhite (1944), Chicago's Terry Kath (1946), Harry Wayne Casey of K.C. & The Sunshine Band (1951), Phil Collins (1951), Phil Manzanera of Roxy Music (1951), harp player Paul deLay (1952), Johnny Lyden aka Johnny Rotten (1956), Slayer's Jeff Hanneman (1964), Al Jaworski of Jesus Jones (1966), Jason Cooper of The Cure (1967), Justin Timberlake (1981)

February 1: rock music critic Lillian Roxon (1932), Bob Shane of The Kingston Trio (1934), Don Everly of The Everly Brothers (1937), Dr. Hook's Ray Sawyer (1937), Jimmy Carl Black of The Mothers of Invention (1938), Rick James (1952), Mike Campbell of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers (1954), Lisa Marie Presley (1968), Patrick Wilson of Weezer (1969), Outkast's Big Boi (1975)

February 2: bluesman Walter Vinson (1901), saxophonist Red Prysock (1926), Stan Getz (1927), Skip Battin of The Byrds (1934), Clarence Quick of the Dell Vikings (1937), Graham Nash (1942), Ronnie Goodson of Ronnie and the Hi-Lites (1945), Howard Bellamy of the Bellamy Brothers (1946), Peter Lucia of Tommy James and The Shondells (1947), Alan McKay of Earth, Wind & Fire (1948), Journey's Ross Valory (1949), jazz bassist Alphonso Johnson (1951), Jeff Healy Band drummer Tom Stephen (1955), Robert DeLeo of Stone Temple Pilots (1966), Ben Mize of Counting Crows (1971), Shakira (1977)

February 3: romantic-era composer Felix Mendelssohn (1809), jazz saxophonist John Handy (1933), Apollo Theater regular Varetta Dillard (1933), Johnny "Guitar" Watson (1935), David Lerchey of the Dell-Vikings (1937), Angelo D'Aleo of Dion & The Belmonts (1940), Casablanca Records founder Neil Bogart (1941), Eric Haydock of the Hollies (1943), Dennis Edwards of The Temptations (1943), Johnny Cymbal (1945), Dave Davies of The Kinks (1947), pop singer Melanie Safka (1947), Lee Renaldo of Sonic Youth (1956), Tony Butler of Big Country (1957), Lol Tolhurst of The Cure (1959)

Departures:

January 28: Traffic drummer Jim Capaldi (2005), recording pioneer John Mosley (1996), D.O.A. drummer Ken Jensen (1995), Uriah Heep's David Byron (1985), "British Elvis" Billy Fury (1983)

January 29: guitarist-singer-songwriter John Martyn (2009), jazz/R&B sax man Hank Crawford (2009), founder of The Quarry Men Eric Griffiths (2005), David Lerchey of The Dell-Vikings (2005), seminal blues bassist and songwriter Willie Dixon (1992), Herman "Sunny" Chaney of The Jaguars (1989), Sir Edward Lewis (1980), one-man-band Jesse "Lone Cat" Fuller (1976)

January 30: songwriter Julius Dixon (2004), jazz producer Bob Thiele (1996), bluesman Sam "Lightnin'" Hopkins (1982), influential New Orleans pianist Professor Longhair, born Henry Roeland Byrd (1980), rockabilly singer Warren Smith (1980), songster Mance Lipscomb (1976)

January 31: Barbara Cowsill, mother of The Cowsills (1985), saxophonist Gregory Herbert, member of the 1978 incarnation of Blood, Sweat & Tears (1978), R&B singer-songwriter Buster Brown (1976), swamp bluesman Slim Harpo (1970)

February 1: singer Molly Bee (2009), songwriter John Jarrad (2001), Julius Wechter of Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass and The Baja Marimba Band (1999), Delta slide-guitarist Johnny Littlejohn (1994), Paul Robi, baritone singer with The Platters (1989), music publisher Dick James (1986), Ulysses "Ronnie" Hicks of The Five Keys (1955)

February 2: country harmonica player Terry McMillan (2007), Billy Henderson of the Spinners (2007), singer Eric von Schmidt, who influenced Bob Dylan (2007), Joe Hunter, pianist with The Funk Brothers, Motown's in-house studio band (2007), James Blackwood, the "Frank Sinatra of Gospel," (2002), songwriter Hal Blair (2001), David McComb of The Triffids (1999), jazz drummer and bandleader Mel Lewis (1990), Blue Note Records founder Alfred Lion (1987), bluesman Sam Chatmon (1983), Sex Pistol Sid Vicious (1979)

February 3: pedal steel guitarist Tom Brumley (2009), saxman Cornelius Bumpus (2004), jazz trombonist James Louis "J.J." Johnson (2001), R&B legend and dancer Gwen Guthrie (1999), session guitarist "Wild" Jimmy Spruill (1996), Max Yasgur, the dairy farmer who hosted the Woodstock festival (1973), Scottish rock singer Alex Harvey (1982), British pop producer Joe Meek (1967), Buddy Holly (1959), Ritchie Valens (1959), J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson (1959)


Lavallee
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Fri Jan 29, 2010 8:08 pm

Thanks for posting all of this , Chas, I always enjoy reading about these events.

Marc


haoli25
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Fri Jan 29, 2010 8:11 pm

It's always a pleasure to read your column, Chas. Great stuff. Thanks


Chasplaya
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Fri Jan 29, 2010 9:03 pm

Bill and Marc,

As long as it keeps getting read i'll keep posting it.

Chas


Chasplaya
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Fri Feb 05, 2010 2:40 pm

Week In Review
February 4, 2010

Rumours Spreading … Billy's Idle … Getting' Ziggy Wit It …

This is the week that was in matters musical…


1958, 14-year-old George Harrison demonstrates his guitar prowess by playing the Bill Justus instrumental "Raunchy" for an impressed John Lennon and Paul McCartney while the three are riding a Liverpool bus … he's invited to join their group, The Quarry Men, thus forming the front line of what will become The Beatles … 30 years later to the day, Harrison's last American chart single "When We Was Fab," a remembrance of the Beatles era, enters the Top 100 …

1960, "Money (That's What I Want)" recorded by Barrett Strong for the Tamla label, enters the Billboard charts and ultimately rises to #23 … the song was written by Tamla founder Berry Gordy and Janie Bradford, becoming the first hit record for Gordy's Motown enterprise … the song will be covered by a plethora of artists including The Beatles, John Lennon during his solo career, Buddy Guy, The Trashmen, Dave Matthews Band, The Kingsmen, The Rolling Stones, The Who, Led Zeppelin, The Doors, Ike & Tina Turner, Bern Elliott and the Fenmen, Pearl Jam, Jerry Lee Lewis, The Flying Lizards, Shonen Knife, The Pretenders, Scissor Sisters, Secret Machines, The Sonics, The Smashing Pumpkins, Hanson, The B-52's, Cheap Trick, Josie and the Pussycats, Great White, RC Succession, The Blues Brothers, The Avengers; plus Motown label mates The Supremes, Jr. Walker & the All Stars, The Miracles, Etta James, Jimmy Barnes, Waylon Jennings and Boyz II Men … the song will also featured in the movie Animal House, performed by John Belushi …

1964, Beatlemania reaches a feverish pitch when The Fab Four deplane in New York and are greeted by thousands of screaming teenyboppers … that same day Baskin-Robbins unveils its newest flavor: Beatle-Nut … The Beatles make their live American TV debut on The Ed Sullivan Show, reaching the eyes and ears of over 70-million viewers, the largest television audience ever recorded at the time … the show receives over 50,000 requests for tickets …

1969, George Harrison's tonsils are removed at University College Hospital in London … it is reported that they have been destroyed to prevent the glands from turning up in the memorabilia market …

1969, former Cream members Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker, together with ex-Traffic singer-keyboardist Stevie Winwood, announce auditions for a bass player to join them in a new quartet … with Rick Grech recruited, the band becomes the short-lived supergroup, Blind Faith …

1972, former Beatle Paul McCartney's new band Wings, featuring his wife Linda and former Moody Blues singer Denny Laine, plays its first concert at Nottingham University in the UK …

1977, Fleetwood Mac's Rumours is released … the LP races to the #1 slot on the album chart where it remains for 31 weeks … it ultimately moves over 17-million platters … ABC-TV's American Bandstand celebrates its 25th birthday with a TV special hosted by perennial teenager Dick Clark … an eclectic all-star band that includes Chuck Berry, Gregg Allman, Johnny Rivers, Donald Byrd, Chuck Mangione, Seals & Crofts, Junior Walker, The Pointer Sisters, Charlie Daniels, Doc Severenson, Les McCann, and three-quarters of Booker T and the MGs, plays "Roll Over Beethoven" …

1979, Stephen Stills is the first rock act to record on digital gear at L.A.'s Record Plant but the tracks are never released … guitarist Ry Cooder's rockabilly-inflected album Bop 'Til You Drop becomes the first ones-and-zeroes pop record …

1981, Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau inducts Joni Mitchell into the Juneau Hall of Fame …

1990, Billy Idol fractures an arm and leg in a Hollywood motorcycle wreck … the mishap dashes his plans to play a major role in Oliver Stone's film, The Doors …

1995, Bob Marley's backup singing group, The I-Threes, which includes his widow Rita, stages a 50th birthday concert for the late reggae star at the Bob Marley Museum in Kingston, Jamaica … son Ziggy Marley also performs …

1999, Foo Fighter Dave Grohl and his music publisher sue movie distribution outfit Miramax for unauthorized use of the Fighters' hit "Big Me" in the trailer for the film Rounders …

2000, ABBA rejects an offer of nearly $1 billion to reunite for a world tour after being apart for 17 years … it's the largest rejection in history … apparently Frank Zappa was only in it for the money; ABBA is all about the art …

2005, Courtney Love, the woman who put the "court" in Courtney, pleads no contest to charges of assaulting musician Kristin King … she is ordered by a Los Angeles court to take anger-management classes, pay a $1,000 fine, and perform 100 hours of community service … Love then travels across town to a Beverly Hills court where a judge reduces her two felony charges of illegal possession of prescription drugs to one misdemeanor … she is ordered to continue a rehab program she is already enrolled in and avoid alcohol and drugs …

2006, Israel Ramirez, a Busta Rhymes bodyguard, is shot dead outside a Brooklyn studio where his boss is recording a video … word on the street is that the shooting resulted from rapper Tony Yayo being ejected from the session for being disruptive … this brings new meaning to the judgment "does not work and play well with others" …

2007, Van Halen announces they'll be touring with David Lee Roth's tonsils aboard for the first time since 1984 … Prince keeps his costume intact while delivering a well-received halftime show at the Super Bowl … a Los Angeles court grants producer Phil Spector a $900,000 judgment against a former assistant whom he claimed had embezzled the money from his pension fund … Spector will need all that money and more to defend against murder charges involving the death of starlet Lana Clarkson … in a convoluted deal between Apple (formerly Apple Computer Inc.) and The Beatles' Apple Corps, the Mac-maker acquires rights to all Apple logos used by both companies and will license the green apple logo back to Apple Corps … country singer Keith Urban files suit against New Jersey painter Keith D. Urban, claiming that the latter's website, keithurban.net, misleads people into believing the site is related to the performer … the suit does not specify any monetary damages and asks the court to transfer the URL to the country star … the painter countersues … Apple chief Steve Jobs calls on record companies to quit building anti-piracy features into digital music … SoundScan reports that January 2007 was the worst month for record sales since it began tracking sales in 1991 … with only 34.1 million records sold, the industry is down 40% compared to a decade earlier …

2008, Green Day frontman Billy Joe Armstrong plays a five-date mini-tour with his side project, Pinhead Gunpowder … at the Troubador club in West L.A., Armstrong is faced with an arsenal of fans pointing their cell-phone cameras at him … he tells the crowd to put the cameras away saying, "YouTube can't own everything. There's also something called memories." … hours after a Velvet Revolver show in L.A., vocalist Scott Weiland checks himself into rehab … it's reported that AC/DC's "Highway to Hell" has become one of the most requested funeral songs in Australia …

2009, Death Cab For Cutie organizes a mock-political campaign against Auto Tune abuse in music …
…and that was the week that was in matters musical.



Arrivals:

Feb 4: Bernie West of The Five Keys (1930), The Animals' John Steel (1941), Florence LaRue of the Fifth Dimension (1944), saxophonist John Stubblefield (1945), Alice Cooper aka Vincent Furnier (1948), Phil Ehart of Kansas (1951), Humble Pie's Jerry Shirley (1952), country singer Clint Black (1962), singer-songwriter Natalie Imbruglia (1975), Rick Burch of Jimmy Eat World (1975), rapper-actor Cam'ron, AKA Killa Cam (1976)

Feb 5: rural blues harmonica player Will Shade (1898), Samie "Sticks" Evans, session drummer with Ray Charles and James Brown (1923), Louisiana rockabilly star Jackie Lee Cochran (1934), Alex Harvey, Scottish jazz and blues bandleader (1935), soul singer-songwriter Barrett Strong (1941), country singer Henson Cargill (1942), Cory Wells of Three Dog Night (1942), Chuck Winfield of Blood, Sweat & Tears (1943), Al Kooper, founder of Blood, Sweat & Tears (1943), J.R. Cobb of Atlanta Rhythm Section (1944), Steve Miller Band's Dave Denny (1948), Elton John drummer Nigel Olsson (1949), Steppenwolf bassist Andy Chapin (1952), Duff McKagan of Guns N' Roses/Velvet Revolver (1964), Chris Barron of Spin Doctors (1968), Bobby Brown of New Edition (1969)

Feb 6: songwriter-musician Leon Rene (1902), teen idol Fabiano Forte AKA Fabian (1943), funk and soul keyboardist-singer-songwriter Wilson "Willie Tee" Turbinton (1944), reggae pioneer Bob Marley (1945), Richie Hayward, drummer with Little Feat (1946), Canadian folksinger Kate McGarrigle (1946), singer-songwriter-performer Natalie Cole (1950), Axl Rose of Guns N' Roses, born William Bruce Rose (1962), pop singer Rick Astley, famous for unwittingly Rickrolling unsuspecting YouTube viewers (1966)

Feb 7: pianist Eubie Blake (1883), bluegrass singer Wilma Lee Cooper (1921), Warren Smith, rockabilly artist discovered by Roy Orbison (1932), king of soul sax, King Curtis, born Curtis Ousley (1934), the first lady of bluegrass mandolin, Donna Stoneman (1934), Earl King, major New Orleans singer, guitarist, and songwriter (1934), Walter Scott, lead vocalist for Bob Kuban and the In Men (1943), country singer-songwriter Sammy Johns (1946), Jimmy Greenspoon of Three Dog Night (1948), Alan Lancaster of Status Quo (1949), Brian Travers of UB40 (1959), Steve Bronski of Bronski Beat (1960), keyboardist David Bryan of Bon Jovi (1962), country music artist Garth Brooks (1962)

Feb 8: composer John Williams (1932), rockabilly artist Donnie Owens (1932), folk singer Tom Rush (1941), Creed Bratton II of the Grass Roots (1943), Jim Capaldi of Traffic (1944), Adolfo "Fito" De La Parra of Canned Heat (1946), Vince Neil of Motley Crue (1961), Sam Llanas of The BoDeans (1961), Collective Soul's Will Turpin (1971), Darren "Phoenix" Farrell of Linkin Park (1977)

Feb 9: country music pioneer Ernest Tubb (1914), Chicago soul singer Johnny Sayles (1932), prolific Canadian folk singer "Stompin" Tom Connors (1936), singer-songwriter Carole King, born Carole Klein (1942), Dennis Thomas of Kool & the Gang (1951), country artist Travis Tritt (1963)

Feb 10: singer Jimmy Durante (1893), zydeco accordionist Rockin' Dopsie, born Alton Jay Rubin (1932), Don Wilson of The Ventures (1933), singer-songwriter Roberta Flack (1939), James Merchant of Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers (1940), noted Elvis impersonator Ral Donner (1943), folk singer-songwriter Donovan, born Donovan Phillip Leitch (1946), folksinger-songwriter Tom Jans (1949), pop singer Robbie Nevil (1961), Cliff Burton of Metallica (1962)

Departures:

Feb 4: Cramps founder and punk pioneer Lux Interior (2009), pioneering black singer-actress Barbara McNair (2007), composer Iannis Xenakis, pioneer of stochastic music (2001), mandolinist Jethro Burns of Homer and Jethro (1989), Vincent Crane, leader of Atomic Rooster (1989), Australian singer-songwriter Trevor Lucas (1989), flamboyant pianist Liberace (1987), Paul Gardiner, bassist with Gary Numan's The Tubeway Army (1984), singer-drummer Karen Carpenter of The Carpenters (1983), alto sax-playing singer and band leader Louis Jordan (1975), saxophone inventor Adolphe Sax (1894), singer-pianist Cecil Gant (1951)

Feb 5: Tim Kelly, guitarist for metal rockers Slaughter (1998), Rudy Pompilli, sax player and bandleader of Bill Haley's Comets (1976)

Feb 6: Mutsumi Fukuhara of Super Junky Monkey (1999), Carl Wilson, founding member of the Beach Boys (1998), Australian techno-pop star Falco (1998), composer-conductor Hugo Montenegro (1981), R&B balladeer Jesse Belvin (1960)

Feb 7: jazz singer and pianist Blossom Dearie, born Marguerite Blossom Dearie (2009), big-voiced crooner and balladeer Frankie Laine (2007), Real Kids bassist Allen "Alpo" Paulino (2006), Elton Dean, British sax man with Soft Machine and Elton John (2006), "Ring of Fire" co-writer Merle Kilgore (2005), singer-songwriter Dale Evans, born Lucille Wood Smith (2001), Dave Peverett of Foghat (2000), songwriter Bobby Troup (1999), smooth British crooner Matt Monro (1985), Al Smith, Chicago blues producer and bassist (1974), New Orleans blues guitarist Eddie "Guitar Slim" Jones (1959)

Feb 8: Buffalo Springfield drummer Dewey Martin (2009), Keith Knudsen of The Doobie Brothers (2005), pioneering jazz organist Jimmy Smith (2005), pop singer Del Shannon, born Charles Weedon Westover (1990)

Feb 9: guitarist-songwriter-producer Scott Turner (2009), Cuban bassist Orlando "Cachaito" Lopez (2009), soul singer Tyrone Davis (2005), Billy Jones, guitarist with The Outlaws (1995), The Reverend Dr. James Cleveland, gospel singer, arranger, and composer (1991), Bill Haley of Bill Haley & His Comets (1981), jump blues bandleader Buddy Johnson who wrote "Since I Fell For You" (1977)

Feb 10: rock 'n' roll singer Freddie Bell (2008), '60s NY folkie and Dylan mentor Dave Van Ronk (2002), saxophonist Buddy Tate (2001), Brian Connolly of Sweet (1997), British music promoter Tony Secunda (1995), Stooges bassist Dave Alexander (1975)


Lavallee
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Fri Feb 05, 2010 8:57 pm

It is quite amazing that MOney (That'swhat I want) was played by so many artists. Pretty deceived by Led Zeppelin 's version.

Thnaks for the info Chas

Marc


johnrfeeney
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Fri Feb 05, 2010 10:45 pm

my oh my - now that is alot of work

and great information

incredible


haoli25
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Tue Feb 09, 2010 7:58 am

One more for you Chas;


Ringo Starr gets a STAR....


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100209/ap_ ... lk_of_fame


afterwards, Pete Best was heard to say, "I am really f@#&?^g happy for him".




Bill


izzyhara
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Tue Feb 09, 2010 9:05 am

I really love this.... but this thread is going to be pages and pages long. Would it be alright with the "powers that be" that you start a new thread each week? You just need your own category !!! What a phenomenal walk down memory lane this is.....


Chasplaya
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Tue Feb 09, 2010 12:38 pm

izzyhara wrote:
I really love this.... but this thread is going to be pages and pages long. Would it be alright with the "powers that be" that you start a new thread each week? You just need your own category !!! What a phenomenal walk down memory lane this is.....
If it had its own category it would certainly be easier to post and less need for me to go back and Edit titles etc, also easier for members to find. The site is to be overhauled I understand and the forum is to be tidied up. Matt asked me a while back to compile a list of 'new' Categories , this wasn't one of them but what you say maybe has merits.


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