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| Author |
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krj
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Musical Obituaries
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Mar 9 22:15 UTC 2006 |
In which we pay tribute to musical persons who have gone on to
The Great Gig In The Sky.
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| 13 responses total. |
krj
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response 1 of 13:
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Mar 9 22:16 UTC 2006 |
The death of Malian guitarist and singer Ali Farka Toure was announced
this week. Toure died of bone cancer; his age was around 67.
Toure was from the north of Mali, near Timbuktu, so his music had
more of an Arabic/Islamic influence than the more numerous musicians
from the tropical south of the country. Western listeners found
links to the blues in Toure's style. Toure recorded two albums
in the early 1980s for a French label which didn't pay him; disillusioned
with the music business, he returned home. A few years later, a
British DJ played those French albums on the radio, and the boss of
a small record company was motivated to have one of his staff go to
Mali and find Toure.
Toure recorded about six albums after that, included two collaborations
which won Grammy awards: one with Ry Cooder, and one just last year with
kora player Toumani Diabate from the south of Mali.
Toure's audience was almost entirely a Western one; he was not
well known as a musician in Mali. He brought the money
he made from touring and recording back to his community, where he helped
fund development projects. He had been appointed the mayor of
his region in recent years.
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mcnally
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response 2 of 13:
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Jul 11 16:55 UTC 2006 |
Syd Barrett, the much-troubled founding member of Pink Floyd,
apparently died several days ago. Barrett was a driving creative
force in the early stage of the band but drug use and schizophrenia
forced his departure in 1968, several years before the band reached
its apogee. His bandmates later paid tribute to him on the album
"Wish You Were Here", an emotional album bracketed by two longer
pieces entitled "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" and dedicated to Barrett.
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twenex
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response 3 of 13:
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Jul 11 17:10 UTC 2006 |
Goddammit.
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krj
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response 4 of 13:
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Aug 4 01:15 UTC 2006 |
"Rufus Harley, the world's first jazz bagpipe player and self-proclaimed
international ambassador of freedom, died Monday. He was 70."
http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/news/local/15186068.htm
I had at least one of Harley's old LPs, a very beat up copy of
SCOTCH AND SOUL. It certainly was a strange album.
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mcnally
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response 5 of 13:
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Aug 4 21:48 UTC 2006 |
Ken sent me a note today to point out that Arthur Lee, the front
man for the largely forgotten 1960s psychedelic band Love, died
of leukemia at the age of 61.
Along with guitarist Bryan MacLean, Lee was the driving creative
force behind Love, a pioneering, critically acclaimed, mutiracial
band and fixture of the 1960s' Los Angeles psychedelic scene.
Today their music is largely forgotten -- I dare say most people
who will read this have never heard even one of their songs -- but
it was highly respected at the time and has only grown in esteem
as time progresses. The band reached the peak of its creative
powers with "Forever Changes", a chaotic, creative album of dystopian
lyrics matched with gentle acoustic arrangements on some tracks
and energetic horn-filled uptempo arragnements on others. Cited
by many critics as one of the great "lost" albums of the sixties
and ranked by Rolling Stone at number 40 on their "500 Greatest
Albums of All Time" list, "Forever Changes" was the band's high
point (probably in more sense than one.) Most likely Love was
already doomed by the time of "Forever Changes" but within a short
time thereafter the group was split by internal tension; in the
end MacLean left the band and Lee's talent faded away through drugs,
stress, and disillusionment.
Lee spent years of the later part of his life in prison on firearms
charges, having allegedly threatened a neighbor with a handgun.
After his release, he launched a semi-successful comeback attempt
in England, touring with old material and a new band to good reviews,
including (according to Salon.com) this enthusiastic 2002 mention
from Labour party MP Peter Bradley (Early Day Motion, House of
Commons (May 22))
Motion: "That this House pays tribute to the legendary
Arthur Lee, also known as Arthurly, frontman and inspiration
of Love, the world's greatest rock band and creators of
'Forever Changes,' the greatest album of all time; notes
that following his release from gaol he is currently touring
Europe; and urges the honourable and especially Right
honourable Members to consider the potential benefit to
their constituents if they were, with the indulgence of
their whips, to lighten up and tune in to one of his
forthcoming British gigs."
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mcnally
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response 6 of 13:
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Dec 15 02:45 UTC 2006 |
Sad news for music fans: NPR is reporting that Ahmet Ertegun died
today at the age of 83.
Born in Istanbul, Turkey, Ahmet Ertegun and his brother Nesuhi Ertegun
moved to the United States with their father, Munir Ertegun, then the
Turkish ambassador to the USA. Both brothers developed a strong
interest in American music, especially jazz and pop, which grew into
a passion. In 1947 Ahmet Ertegun and Herb Abramson formed Atlantic
Records, which flourished under Ertegun's direction, becoming a
titanic force in the development of soul music, jazz, and rock & roll,
signing such artists as Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Charles Mingus,
and John Coltrane and releasing some of their best recordings, as well
as founding influential subsidiaries such as Stax Records, the Memphis-
based label which ruled the soul scene in the mid sixties.
With the rise of Rock & Roll the label broadened its catalog, as
Ertegun signing rising stars like the Rolling Stones and worked with
them during some of their most creative periods.
Atlantic Records was acquired by the Warner Entertainment Group in
1967, becoming part of the huge conglomerate known in the industry
today as "WEA" (standing for "Warner/Elektra/Atlantic") but Ertegun
remained involved, signing Led Zeppelin among many other acts.
Ertegun was both passionate and visionary about popular music and
foresaw many of the developments and directional changes it would
take up into the 1990s, for example by buying 50% of influential
rap label Interscope for WEA and developing hit grunge band Stone
Temple Pilots.
His influence over almost sixty years of popular music can hardly
be overstated.
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