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25 new of 106 responses total.
cyklone
response 33 of 106: Mark Unseen   Sep 27 22:41 UTC 2002

I'm not sure it was entirely voluntary. I think his manager came up with it.
krj
response 34 of 106: Mark Unseen   Oct 30 05:41 UTC 2002

Warren Zevon is still not dead; in fact, he must be feeling pretty 
good, he's been announced as David Letterman's guest for Wednesday
night.   11:30 pm Eastern time on CBS, channel 62/cable 14 in 
Ann Arbor.
dbratman
response 35 of 106: Mark Unseen   Oct 30 17:20 UTC 2002

Warren Zevon's ghost is haunting / Cable Channel 14 ...
scott
response 36 of 106: Mark Unseen   Nov 5 23:08 UTC 2002

Lonnie Donnegan died Sunday at the age of 71.

He'd just be a very minor footnote in music, except that the "skiffle" music
craze he started in 1960's England inspired a lot of kids (including those
who later formed The Beatles and The Who) to start playing.
krj
response 37 of 106: Mark Unseen   Nov 11 16:07 UTC 2002

Skiffle also played a large role in the 1960s British folk revival.
bruin
response 38 of 106: Mark Unseen   Dec 16 22:09 UTC 2002

IWLTA with great sadness the passing of Zal Yanovsky, who was an 
original member of the 1960's group The Lovin'Spoonful.  He left the 
Spoonful under less than friendly terms with the group, especially 
frontman John Sebastian.  More recently, he owned a restaurant in 
Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

"Zally" died of an apparent heart attack on December 13.  He would have 
turned 58 later this week.
remmers
response 39 of 106: Mark Unseen   Dec 17 15:15 UTC 2002

Sad news indeed.  The Lovin' Spoonful is one of my favorite rock groups
from the 60s; I still have some of their LPs that I acquired back then.
I always thought Zal was a great contributor to the group and was sorry
when he split.
jaklumen
response 40 of 106: Mark Unseen   Jan 13 05:35 UTC 2003

I *can't* believe someone didn't get this first!

Maurice Gibb, bassist and keyboardist of the Bee Gees, died at 53 last 
Sunday of cardiac arrest before undergoing surgery for a blocked 
intestine.

One article on the story can be found at:
http://entertainment.msn.com/news/article.aspx?news=111793

Sad.  I really liked the Bee Gees, and thought they very talented and 
not just a disco band, although a lot of their hits were during the 
disco era.
dbratman
response 41 of 106: Mark Unseen   Jan 18 00:05 UTC 2003

Are they the guys who sang that once ubiquitous song that went "ah, ah, 
ah, ah, stayin' alive, stayin' alive"?

If so, I will refrain from commenting on their talent only out of 
respect for the dead.
krj
response 42 of 106: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 22:43 UTC 2003

He's Still Not Dead Department:  Jon Pareles has a lengthy article
on Warren Zevon and his final months of creativity in Sunday's 
New York Times.
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/26/magazine/26ZEVON.html?8hpib
jaklumen
response 43 of 106: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 11:08 UTC 2003

resp:41 Yes, but really, I couldn't disagree with you more vehemently, 
if only because you're probably thinking of their disco hits alone.
I think Barry Gibb, who is still alive, is quite a talented 
songwriter.  The BeeGees may not be to your taste, but I think he 
knows how to write a catchy hook that's easy to sing along to.
"Grease," written for the movie version of the musical of the same 
name and performed by Frankie Van..ack, I forget the last name.. is 
one of my favorite Barry Gibb tunes.
mcnally
response 44 of 106: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 12:49 UTC 2003

  I've always appreciated the Bee Gees less for their music and more for
  their acting career, which included the phenomenally misguided film
  "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."  Despite the fact that it's
  an awful film with the Bee Gees acting the parts of the band and playing
  their own unique interpretations on a number of Beatles classics, 
  I have a mysterious soft spot for it and can't resist watching it on the
  increasingly infrequent occasions when I come across it on late-night TV.

  All hail FVB!
scott
response 45 of 106: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 13:44 UTC 2003

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" - wow, terrible movie.  Still, it's
got Alice Cooper AND Aerosmith, and Earth Wind & Fire's tune is awesome.
dbratman
response 46 of 106: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 21:10 UTC 2003

resp:43 About popular music, I only know what I hear on the radio 
stations that are being played in stores.
jaklumen
response 47 of 106: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 09:14 UTC 2003

resp:44 The storyline was a colossal flop-- was George Harrison doing 
drugs when he wrote it?  (He's done better.  Time Bandits was weird, 
but cute.)  I think my folks still have a taped copy, so resp:45 I'll 
have to go back to look at the EWF segment.  Really, the covers by the 
various bands and other celebrities are what make movie interesting.
dbratman
response 48 of 106: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 17:48 UTC 2003

Obituary: Lou Harrison, aged 85, a late survivor of the Henry Cowell-
John Cage circle of 1940s avant-garde American composers, on Sunday in 
Lafayette IN on his way to a festival of his music at Ohio State.  (He 
lived in Aptos CA.)  His most typical music blended western instruments 
with eastern aesthetics, with more rigor and astringency than Alan 
Hovhaness; he also wrote for what he called the American gamelan, a 
collection of tin crockery and other miscellanea he and his partner, an 
instrument-maker, put together.

It's not been a good couple years for great musicians named Harrison.
bruin
response 49 of 106: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 21:28 UTC 2003

We also lost legendary Latin jazz musicial Mongo Santamaria, who is best
remembered for his 1960's hit "Watermelon Man".
goose
response 50 of 106: Mark Unseen   May 13 14:56 UTC 2003

And as was announced in Agora, Noel Redding, 57, former bassist of The Jimi
Hendrix Experience.
krj
response 51 of 106: Mark Unseen   May 16 18:29 UTC 2003

June Carter Cash, the wife of Johnny Cash, has died following surgery
earlier this month to replace a heart valve.   June Carter was the 
daughter of A.P. and Maybelle Carter, who as The Carter Family were
towering figures in American folk music.    

June Carter was also the mother of country-rock singer Carlene Carter,
from a previous marriage.
 
June Carter Cash had a lovely solo album which came out in 1999, 
"Press On."  USA Today reports that she had just completed another 
album, and presumably it will be released posthumously.

Johnny Cash has been very sick for years, and from all accounts 
June has been taking loving care of him.  Hard to imagine that he'll
outlive her by very long.

The NY Times has an excellent obituary:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/16/obituaries/16CASH.html
albaugh
response 52 of 106: Mark Unseen   May 16 19:04 UTC 2003

A couple of weeks ago I believe she was featured on A&E's "Biography".  
One wonders if this was because of suspected grave state of health affairs...
tod
response 53 of 106: Mark Unseen   May 16 19:06 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

happyboy
response 54 of 106: Mark Unseen   May 18 17:38 UTC 2003

i caught that. :)
tod
response 55 of 106: Mark Unseen   May 19 18:26 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

albaugh
response 56 of 106: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 18:00 UTC 2003

As reported in summer Agora (see item #221), Johnny Cash has passed away at
the age of 71.
dbratman
response 57 of 106: Mark Unseen   Sep 17 06:27 UTC 2003

And according to his obituary, Johnny Cash's first name was actually 
the initial "J."
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