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|
| Author |
Message |
| 23 new of 106 responses total. |
twenex
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response 84 of 106:
|
Apr 12 03:55 UTC 2004 |
Now explain to him where that is...
|
mcnally
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response 85 of 106:
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Apr 12 04:30 UTC 2004 |
Surprisingly far from plain old Umbria..
|
twenex
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response 86 of 106:
|
Apr 13 19:33 UTC 2004 |
Yeah.
Care to hazard why that is?
|
mcnally
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response 87 of 106:
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Apr 13 21:57 UTC 2004 |
All the good names were taken?
|
mcnally
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response 88 of 106:
|
May 8 22:09 UTC 2004 |
Influential music producer Clement 'Coxsone' Dodd died in Jamaica
on May 4th. Dodd's "Studio One" record label was instrumental
(no pun intended) in turning Jamaica into a world music power.
Through his influence over the work of Studio One artsts such
as the Skatalites, the Maytals, and a young Bob Marley, Dodd
changed the course of popular music forever.
http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/story.jsp?story=518871
|
mcnally
|
|
response 89 of 106:
|
Jun 10 21:40 UTC 2004 |
Just about every news source is reporting the death of musical pioneer
Ray Charles, at age 73. It would be difficult to overstate Charles'
contribution to the development of soul music and (to a much lesser extent)
his pioneering country crossover work influenced that genre as well.
Yesterday's mail brought me my copy of "The Birth of Soul: the Complete
Atlantic Recordings, 1952-1959", so I guess I know what I'll be listening
to when I get home tonight..
|
dbratman
|
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response 90 of 106:
|
Jun 25 22:41 UTC 2004 |
Responding to the suggestion that the late R. Reagan's picture be
placed on the $10 bill, The New Yorker this week ran a cover showing
the picture of Ray Charles on a $10 bill: surely on the grounds that if
a recently deceased person should get this honor, it should be someone
generally admirable.
|
jaklumen
|
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response 91 of 106:
|
Jun 30 07:04 UTC 2004 |
Generally, or at least in the opinion of The New Yorker.
|
jaklumen
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response 92 of 106:
|
Jun 30 07:05 UTC 2004 |
not that Ray Charles isn't generally admirable, as he is...
|
otaking
|
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response 93 of 106:
|
Aug 18 21:34 UTC 2004 |
David Raskin, composer for Laura among other movies, died of heart failure
at 92.
Jerry Goldsmith, composer for many movies & shows, including several Star Trek
Movies, The Blue Max, First Knight, The Waltons, Supergirl, Basic Instinct
and countless others died of cancer at 75.
|
albaugh
|
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response 94 of 106:
|
Aug 27 18:58 UTC 2004 |
Re: Jerry Goldsmith, according to http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0000025/
he died July 21. His most recent work is listed as:
1. Star Trek: The Experience - Borg Invasion 4D (2004)
(from "Star Trek: First Contact" and "Star Trek: Voyager")
|
otaking
|
|
response 95 of 106:
|
Aug 28 21:40 UTC 2004 |
Elmer Bernstein, composer of "The Magnificent Seven" and "Far From Home" among
many others, died last week of a long illness at 82.
|
gelinas
|
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response 96 of 106:
|
Aug 29 01:44 UTC 2004 |
Ah. I thought I was hearing "Leonard Bernstein," who I _thought_ died some
years back.
|
albaugh
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response 97 of 106:
|
Aug 30 19:21 UTC 2004 |
Elmer was his waskuwy evil twin. ;-)
|
micklpkl
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response 98 of 106:
|
Oct 26 19:32 UTC 2004 |
R.I.P., John Peel, Radio 1 DJ/broadcaster since the network's launch in 1967,
died suddenly while on holiday in Peru. Check the Radio 1 site for more
details.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/alt/johnpeel/index.shtml
|
mcnally
|
|
response 99 of 106:
|
Oct 26 21:20 UTC 2004 |
Wow. No more Peel Sessions.
|
albaugh
|
|
response 100 of 106:
|
Dec 10 18:38 UTC 2004 |
Received an e-mail announcing the death of famed bandsman from Eastman School
of Music, Frederick Fennell, on Tuesday, December 7, 2004.
Writes his daughter:
Dad asked to be cremated and that
I scatter his ashes in the woods at Interlochen, Michigan this summer.
|
krj
|
|
response 101 of 106:
|
Jan 13 19:36 UTC 2005 |
Spencer Dryden, the drummer for the Jefferson Airplane through their
glory years, has died of cancer at the age of 66. Dryden had had
health problems for years and was nearly destitute.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/01/13/BAGVGAPF1T1.DTL
|
mcnally
|
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response 102 of 106:
|
Jan 13 19:42 UTC 2005 |
How sad..
|
krj
|
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response 103 of 106:
|
Feb 1 18:06 UTC 2005 |
Martyn Bennett died on Sunday, age 33, "following a long
battle with Hodgkin's Lymphoma."
Martyn's last album, GRIT, was a techno-folk masterpiece which
was developed while he was recuperating at his parents' home,
and listening to old traditional Scottish folk LPs.
GRIT was my pick for my favorite CD of 2003.
Here's an obituary from a Scottish newspaper:
http://news.scotsman.com/archive.cfm?id=118752005
Over the last five years, Martyn was probably the musician
whose new recordings I most eagerly looked forward to. I knew that
this premature death was a possibility, but he had sounded pretty
good in the last round of interviews on BBC radio shows.
|
micklpkl
|
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response 104 of 106:
|
Feb 1 18:43 UTC 2005 |
I'm very sad to hear this.
|
mcnally
|
|
response 105 of 106:
|
Feb 1 18:54 UTC 2005 |
I liked this odd scrap of info from his biography in the All Musig Guide:
> He served as personal piper to the president of Tanzania during the
> president's visit to Edinburgh.
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scott
|
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response 106 of 106:
|
Feb 10 09:26 UTC 2005 |
Jazz organ legend Jimmy Smith has died.
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