Started By
Message

re: Endless Sleep - The Obituary Thread

Posted on 10/19/22 at 5:01 pm to
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142023 posts
Posted on 10/19/22 at 5:01 pm to


LINK
quote:

Robert Gordon, who helped spearhead the rockabilly revival in the 1970s, has died at the age of 75.

According to Gordon’s label, Cleopatra Records, the musician died on Tuesday (October 18).
quote:

Born in Bethesda, Maryland in 1947, Gordon developed a passion for music at a young age after hearing the likes of Elvis Presley, Gene Vincent and Eddie Cochrane. When he was 17, he made his recorded debut fronting a band called the Confidentials.

Gordon moved to New York City in the early 1970s, and soon became involved with its nascent punk rock scene. He was a member of Tuff Darts, one of the earliest bands to establish a following via the CBGB club, and contributed multiple songs to 1976’s ‘Live At CBGB’s’ compilation.

Spurred on by producer Richard Gottehrer, Gordon released his debut album in 1977, which featured the legendary guitarist Link Wray. Gordon and Wray released another album together, ‘Fresh Fish Special’, the following year. The record features contributions from Presley’s former backing vocalists the Jordanaires, and Bruce Springsteen played keyboard on a rendition of his song ‘Fire’.
quote:

After signing with RCA, Gordon’s major label debut arrived in 1979. ‘Rock Billy Boogie’ saw Gordon link up with guitarist Chris Spedding. Gordon went on to release two more albums for RCA: 1980’s ‘Bad Boy’ and 1981’s ‘Are You Gonna Be The One’, the latter of which found some success with a cover of Marshall Crenshaw’s ‘Someday, Someway’.

Gordon continued touring, and went on to release several more studio albums and live records over the following decades. His most recent, ‘Rockabilly For Life’, arrived in 2020. He also ventured into film, co-starring with Willem Dafoe in 1982 biker movie The Loveless and contributing songs for its soundtrack.
Robert Gordon - "Someday Someway" -- the legendary Danny Gatton on guitar
Posted by FightinTigersDammit
Louisiana North
Member since Mar 2006
34686 posts
Posted on 10/20/22 at 7:58 am to
I've got that record with Link Wray
Posted by FearlessFreep
Baja Alabama
Member since Nov 2009
17297 posts
Posted on 10/28/22 at 12:50 pm to
Now it's official.

Jerry Lee Lews (1935-2022)



quote:

He was hailed as rock 'n' roll’s first great wild man and lived long enough to be its last.

Sun Records star, Million Dollar Quartet member and American music icon Jerry Lee Lewis died on Friday. The 87-year-old Lewis passed away at his home in DeSoto County. Lewis had been in failing health over the last few weeks, and was forced to miss his induction in the Country Music Hall of Fame on Oct. 16.

One of the foundational rock 'n' roll artists of the 1950s, Lewis also enjoyed a successful second career as a country artist from the late-'60s through the early '80s. A profound musical and spiritual influence on several generations — on the entire zeitgeist of rock 'n' roll culture — Lewis authoritatively essayed everything from Tin Pan Alley to boogie-woogie to blues over the course of a 60-plus-year career.

Yet his work, his supreme artistry, was often overshadowed by a life that could be described as Southern gothic. His turbulent personal life included seven marriages and numerous well-documented controversies and tragedies, including the deaths of two wives and two sons.

Despite these many twists and turns of fortune, Lewis remained active on stage and on record into his 80s, long after most of his peers had either retired or died.
Just for you, 2022, directly from The Killer his own self:

This post was edited on 10/28/22 at 12:51 pm
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
19246 posts
Posted on 10/28/22 at 1:49 pm to
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
19246 posts
Posted on 11/8/22 at 7:04 am to
Musicians Hall Of Fame Founder Joe Chambers Passes

September 29, 2022
by Robert K Oermann

LINK

Joe Chambers, who founded The Musicians Hall of Fame in downtown Nashville, died on Sept. 28.

Prior to becoming CEO of the multi-million-dollar museum, Chambers was a guitarist, record producer and songwriter on Music Row. The Georgia native arrived in Nashville in 1978 as a member of a rock band seeking recording opportunities. Producer Billy Sherrill and superstar Conway Twitty took him under their wings.

Sherrill became his mentor and tutor, allowing Chambers to shadow him in the recording studio. He also gave the guitarist a job at CBS Records and signed him as a staff songwriter for his publishing company.

As Chambers watched Sherrill conduct sessions for George Jones, Elvis Costello, Ray Charles, Marty Robbins, Tammy Wynette and others, he became fascinated by the skills of Nashville’s session musicians. They were the original basis of his museum dream.

Meanwhile, Chambers began to rack up credits as a songwriter. During the 1980s and 1990s, his songs were recorded by Twitty, Jones, Joe Diffie, Ronnie McDowell, Johnny Paycheck, Mel McDaniel, Lacy J. Dalton, The Bama Band, Terri Gibbs, Leon Everette, B.J. Thomas, Ken Mellons and others.

Among his notable copyrights are “I Meant Every Word He Said” (Ricky Van Shelton, 1990), “It’s Hard to Be the Dreamer (When I Used to Be the Dream)” (Donna Fargo, 1982), “Old 8×10” (Randy Travis, 1988), “Beneath a Painted Sky” (Tammy Wynette & Emmylou Harris, 1988) and “Somebody Lied” (Ricky Van Shelton, 1987).

In 1985, Joe Chambers opened Chambers Guitars. This soon expanded into a small chain of instrument stores. Through Chambers Guitars, he expanded his relationships with musicians of all genres and in all music capitals.

Around 1998, he began to explore the idea of creating a television special focused on the musicians who were behind hit songs. The TV show never happened, but Chambers held onto the idea of honoring musicians. He also began collecting artifacts from hit recording sessions.

In 2006, he opened The Musicians Hall of Fame in a former electronics business building on Sixth Avenue South. The 30,000-square-foot facility was unique in the world, and its annual awards galas were star-studded affairs.

But in 2009-10, Chambers became involved in a tangle with Metro government. The city seized his building to make way for the construction of The Music City Center, but did not offer him enough money to relocate it. He stored the artifacts, which were then damaged in the 2010 Nashville flood.

In 2013, the museum found a new home in the spacious old exhibit hall of Municipal Auditorium, which more than doubled its size. Various exhibit spaces are dedicated to The Wrecking Crew of Los Angeles, The Funk Brothers of Detroit, the Memphis Boys, the Swampers of Muscle Shoals, Nashville’s As-Team and the session players of New York, Miami, New Orleans and other music centers.

The Musicians Hall of Fame also houses an outpost of The Grammy Museum and the displays of the annual SOURCE honorees, women who helped to build Nashville’s music industry.

When Neil Young visited, he said, “If you want to see the hood ornaments on the car, go to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. If you want to see the engine, to see what makes it run, go to The Musicians Hall of Fame.”

Joe Chambers and his wife Linda dedicated their lives to the museum, personally funding it and working diligently to make it a part of Nashville’s hospitality industry. The building is visited by school groups, tourists, music-industry insiders and music fans from all over the world. It also hosts after-hours events for various Nashville businesses and convention groups. There is a YouTube channel devoted to it, too.

Joe Chambers passed away at Vanderbilt Hospital following an extended illness. A celebration of his life is being planned. Funeral arrangements have not been announced. In lieu of flowers, please donate to the Musicians Hall of Fame.


Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22284 posts
Posted on 11/9/22 at 2:01 pm to
RIP Gal Costa

This is such a monster record...

Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
19246 posts
Posted on 11/10/22 at 4:33 pm to
Dan McCafferty, Nazareth Lead Vocalist, Dead At 76

"I have lost my best friend and the world has lost one of the greatest singers who ever lived," wrote bassist Pete Agnew

BY CHARISMA MADARANG
NOVEMBER 8, 2022

DAN MCCAFFERTY, THE lead vocalist for the hard rock band Nazareth and who voiced 1970s rock classics “Love Hurts” and “Hair of the Dog,” died Tuesday, Nov. 8, from unspecified causes. He was 76.

Nazareth bassist Pete Agnew confirmed McCafferty’s death in a post on Instagram. “This is the saddest announcement I ever had to make,” Agnew wrote. “Maryann and the family have lost a wonderful loving husband and father, I have lost my best friend and the world has lost one of the greatest singers who ever lived. Too upset to say anything more at this time.”

McCafferty was a founding member of Nazareth, which formed in Dunfermline, Scotland in 1968, alongside Agnew, guitarist Manny Charlton and drummer Darrell Sweet. In 1973, the band gained fame in the U.K. with their third album, Razamanaz; the following year, they released Loud and Proud. Although the albums are largely unknown in the U.S., the song “Love Hurts,” from Nazareth’s 1975 album Hair of the Dog shot to No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100.

While the track was originally recorded in 1960 by the Everly Brothers, the new cover transformed the song for the day’s youth and over the past decades, “Love Hurts” graced iconic shows such as King of the Hill and That ’70s Show, and a scene from the 1993 film Dazed and Confused.

The band was influenced by the sounds of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. While suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, McCafferty retired from touring in 2013 due to complications to his health. He recorded his final album, Last Testament, in 2019.

Posted by MountainTiger
The foot of Mt. Belzoni
Member since Dec 2008
14664 posts
Posted on 11/11/22 at 5:23 pm to
Nik Turner of Hawkwind, dead age 82.
LINK

quote:

"We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of Nik Turner - The Might Thunder Rider, who passed away peacefully at home on Thursday evening," reads the post. "He has moved onto the next phase of his Cosmic Journey, guided by the love of his family, friends and fans. Watch this space for his arrangements."
Posted by Jumpinjack
Member since Oct 2021
6485 posts
Posted on 11/30/22 at 4:58 pm to
RIP Christine McVie

Christine McVie, known for her bluesy-sounding vocals and keyboards, a member of the influential rock band Fleetwood Mac, died on Wednesday at 79 after a brief illness. She also wrote many of the band’s hit songs, such as “Don’t Stop,” “You Make Loving Fun,” and “Songbird,” among others.

However, what the official statement omits to mention makes her passing somewhat suspicious.

The musician’s family reported her death on social media, stating that she threw off her mortal coil at the hospital “following a short illness,” surrounded by her family.

The official statement released by the family reads:

“On behalf of Christine McVie’s family, it is with a heavy heart we are informing you of Christine’s death. She passed away peacefully at hospital this morning, Wednesday, November 30th, 2022, following a short illness. She was in the company of her family. We kindly ask that you respect the family’s privacy at this extremely painful time, and we would like everyone to keep Christine in their hearts and remember the life of an incredible human being, and revered musician who was loved universally.”

Fleetwood Mac was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998. The surviving band members paid tribute to the star, claiming that there were “no words to describe our sadness” in the wake of her death.

What’s left unmentioned in the official statement is her long history of drug abuse. In a 2022 interview, McVie confessed that she couldn’t perform without first drinking champagne and snorting cocaine.

When asked about whether there were gaps in her memory or blackouts during these drug-hazed performances, she responded:

“I have to say I’m not guilt-free in that department but Stevie [Nicks] and I were very careful. The boys used to get provided with cocaine in Heineken bottle tops onstage, but Stevie and I only did the tiny little spoons. I suppose sometimes we got a bit out there, but we were quite restrained, really. I always took fairly good care of myself. My drug of choice was cocaine and champagne. I didn’t use any other drugs at all. It’s easy for me to say, but I think it made me perform better. Maybe somebody could tell me different.”

Years of drug abuse and addiction likely took their toll on the aging musician. It’s unknown whether her passing was the result of an overdose or sickness induced by drug use or withdrawal.

It’s unlikely that we’ll ever know the real cause of McVie’s death. An autopsy won’t be forthcoming because her passing has been blamed on a “brief illness” unrelated to her history of drug abuse. A consolation is that we’ll still have her music to remember her by.

Supposedly she wrote the song “Songbird” in a half hour, the lyrics of which are apropos of her recent passing:

For you, there’ll be no more crying
For you, the sun will be shining
And I feel that when I’m with you
It’s alright, I know it’s right
Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22284 posts
Posted on 12/5/22 at 10:03 pm to
RIP to the brilliant Hamish Kilgour of The Clean(and others)

The Clean - Point That Thing Somewhere Else

The Great Unwashed - Duane Eddy

The Mad Scene - People To Talk To


This post was edited on 12/6/22 at 8:16 am
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4068 posts
Posted on 12/10/22 at 4:12 pm to
Jet Black, (Brian John Duffy) (August 26, 1938 – December 6, 2022) drummer with the Stranglers, has died after “years of ill health” at the age of 84, his representative confirmed.

Black was a founding member of the Stranglers, who formed in Guildford in 1974, and his playing style helped them achieve their unique sound – achieving 23 top 40 singles and 19 top 40 albums, according to the official UK charts.

Their hits included Peaches, No More Heroes and Golden Brown, which won the band an Ivor Novello award, while their third album, Black and White, from 1978, is still considered to be the first post-punk album.

The band’s bassist, Jean-Jacques Burnel, said “The welcoming committee has doubled. After years of ill health, Jet has finally been released. He was a force of nature. An inspiration. The Stranglers would not have been if it wasn’t for him. The most erudite of men. A rebel with many causes.”

Peaches

Golden Brown





This post was edited on 12/12/22 at 6:13 pm
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4068 posts
Posted on 12/15/22 at 4:04 pm to
James Frank Stewart-(July 29, 1930 – December 5, 2022) was an American record producer and executive who in 1957 co-founded, with his sister Estelle, Stax Records, one of the leading recording companies during soul and R&B music's heyday. The label also scored many hits on the Billboard Hot 100 pop music chart, and internationally, during this time.

White musicians and producers worked alongside Black singers, songwriters and instrumentalists to create the “Memphis sound” embodied by Otis Redding, Isaac Hayes, Booker T. and the M.G.s, Carla and Rufus Thomas, The Staple Singers, Wilson Pickett, Sam & Dave and many others.

Stax and its affiliated record labels released 300 albums and 800 singles between 1959 and 1975, according to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Stax fostered a raw sound born from Black church music, the blues and rock ‘n’ roll. It featured strong rhythm sections, powerful horn players, and singers who could be sexy and soulful in one tune, and loud and forceful in another.

Stax built a house band that included organist Booker T. Jones, guitarist Steve Cropper, bassist Donald “Duck” Dunn and drummer Al Jackson Jr. — also known as Booker T. and the M.G.s.

Before Stax went bankrupt in 1975, the recording studio in Memphis’ “Soulsville” neighborhood produced lasting hits such as Otis Redding’s “Dock of the Bay,” Eddie Floyd’s “Knock on Wood,” Sam & Dave’s “Hold On, I’m Comin'” and “Soul Man,” and “Green Onions” by Booker T. and the M.G.s.

Green Onions

Dock of the Bay

Knock on Wood

Tramp

Shaft (live)


Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142023 posts
Posted on 12/16/22 at 2:35 pm to
LINK
quote:

Dino Danelli, THE founding drummer for New Jersey rock and rollers the Rascals, as well as a member of Steven Van Zandt’s backing band the Disciples of Soul, has died at the age of 78.

Danelli’s death was confirmed on his Facebook page in a post from friend and Rascals archivist, Joe Russo. An exact cause of death wasn’t given, though Russo said Danelli’s “primary challenges” were coronary artery disease and congestive heart failure. Russo said the drummer’s health began to falter around 2018, and earlier this year he entered a rehab facility where he remained until his death.

On Facebook, Rascals guitarist Gene Cornish wrote of Danelli, “He was my brother and the greatest drummer I’ve ever seen. I am devastated at this moment.” He added in a separate post, Dino never cared about being a ‘rock star’ it was always about the music and art for him. Everything else was window dressing to him.”

Van Zandt also shared a tribute on social media, writing, “RIP Dino Danelli. One of the greatest drummers of all time. Rascals 1965-1971. Disciples Of Soul 1982-1984. On Broadway at the Richard Rodgers Theater in Once Upon A Dream 2013.”
RIP to one of the great R&R drummers



He always reminded me of some strange mating of Paul McCartney and Syd Barrett

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142023 posts
Posted on 12/19/22 at 4:35 pm to
LINK
quote:


Kim Simmonds, co-founder and guitarist of Savoy Brown, has died at the age of 75. The news was confirmed today via the band's official social media pages.

"Please note one of Kim's last requests was to thank the fans of Savoy Brown," they said. "Your support was and shall always be immensely appreciated."

Born in Wales in 1947, Simmonds began honing his skills as a guitarist while he was still a teenager by listening to his brother's blues records. He and his sibling would often attend shows in London performed by the likes of Fats Domino, Bo Diddley, Freddie King and even the Rolling Stones on one of their early tours. "I recognized as a kid, this is the future of guitar music and I wanted to be a part of it," Simmonds told Blues Rock Review in 2020.

Simmonds formed the Savoy Brown Blues Band in 1965, when he was 18, with an original lineup that also featured singer Brice Portius, keyboardist Trevor Jeavons, bassist Ray Chappell, drummer Leo Manning and harmonica player John O'Leary. Before long, the band could be found playing gigs in London alongside acts like Cream and John Lee Hooker, helping to usher in the modern blues movement in England.

Savoy Brown's lineup changed frequently. Several members of Chicken Shack, the band Christine McVie helped to launch before Fleetwood Mac, were recruited into the group at one point, including keyboardist Paul Raymond, bassist Andy Silvester and drummer Dave Bidwell. This lineup traveled overseas to America, where they were supported on tour by Rod Stewart and the Faces.

Around this time, 1971's Street Corner Talking spawned a few mildly successful songs, like the album's title track, "Tell Mama" and a cover of the Temptations' "I Can't Get Next to You." Their 1972 follow up, Hellbound Train, reached No. 34 on the Billboard 200. Though high-level commercial success evaded them, Savoy Brown became a mainstay of the British blues scene.
Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22284 posts
Posted on 12/19/22 at 7:09 pm to
Terry Hall from The Specials..

Requiescat!
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
27103 posts
Posted on 12/20/22 at 6:18 am to
quote:

Terry Hall from The Specials


He was a good one. The Specials are my favorite from the two-tone ska era. I was reading his obit this morning, and he had a rough childhood. He was apparently abducted into a pedo ring at age 12 and put through the ringer. Crazy.

The Specials - Ghost Town

Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
19246 posts
Posted on 12/23/22 at 12:20 pm to
‘Sound of Philadelphia’ Producer Thom Bell Dies at 79

The pioneer of Philly Soul wrote songs for the Stylistics, the Delfonics, and produced a track for Elton John

LINK

BY TOMÁS MIER
DECEMBER 22, 2022

PRODUCER THOM BELL, who co-created “The Sound of Philadelphia” alongside Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff as the Mighty Three, has died at age 79. His cause of death was not immediately made known.

“Tommy and I have been best friends for over 60 years,” said Gamble in a press statement. “When we first met, we decided to start writing songs together and form a singing duo ‘Kenny and Tommy’ and then our band The Romeos… He was a great talent and my dear friend. Rest in peace buddy.”

“Thom Bell was my favorite musician, arranger, songwriter, and music producer of all time!” added Leon Huff. “It was my esteemed honor and pleasure to work with him creatively and as a business partner. Rest in peace.”

Among Bell’s greatest works as he helped pioneer Philly Soul in the Seventies are songs like “La-La Means I Love You” by the Delfonics, “Rubberband Man” by the Spinners, “Backstabber” by the O’Jays and the Stylistics’ “I’ll Be Around” and “Betcha By Golly Wow.” He also produced Elton John’s song “Mama Can’t Buy You Love.”

For his work, Bell won the prize for Producer of the Year at the 1975 Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2006. Russell Thompkins, Jr. of the Stylistics honored Bell in a Grammy interview for their Salute to Music Legends back in 2017, calling Bell “the major influence of my career.”

“That’s when I first started learning my craft,” he said. “And from the things that I learned from doing the sessions with him, it’s lasted me my whole career.”

The Mighty Three gave interviews for an a Sam Pollard-directed documentary about Philadelphia International Records, showcasing the trio’s work in spreading the music of Philly with the world.

“After six decades, we are incredibly proud to finally share our life stories with the world and showcase all the hard work that has gone into creating this great music,” the trio said in a statement earlier this year. “Our longtime fans and new fans will get a unique look into the creation of the Sound of Philadelphia with the themes of empowerment and love, to ‘people all over the world’ as we’ve always had a ‘Message in our Music!!!’”



Posted by 14&Counting
Eugene, OR
Member since Jul 2012
37643 posts
Posted on 12/23/22 at 9:11 pm to
RIP: Terry Hall of The Specials, Fun Boy Three, and The Colorists
Co - Wrote Our Lips Our Sealed made famous by The Go-Go's

This post was edited on 12/23/22 at 9:17 pm
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
19246 posts
Posted on 1/2/23 at 11:16 am to
Ian Tyson, of Renowned ’60s Folk Duo Ian and Sylvia, Dies at 89

The singer reinvented himself as a rancher and cowboy artist based in his native Canada from the '70s forward.

By Chris Willman
Variety Magazine

LINK

Ian Tyson, a towering figure in Canadian music who found his greatest renown as half of the ’60s folk-singing duo Ian and Sylvia, died Thursday at 89. The cause of death was attributed to “ongoing health complications.”

Ian and Sylvia’s most famous song, the Tyson-penned “Four Strong Winds,” released in 1963, became a folk standard. It has been covered by dozens of artists over the last six decades, among them Neil Young (on his “Comes a Time” album), Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, John Denver, Teenage Fanclub, the Carter Family, Marianne Faithful, Waylon Jennings, Bobby Bare, Gillian Welch and Conor Oberst. In 2005, CBC listeners voted “Four Strong Winds” the most essential Canadian piece of music.

Tyson began singing with his future wife, Sylvia Fricker, as Ian and Sylvia in the early 1960s, and they became a critical part of the New York folk scene alongside emerging figures like Dylan, whose manager, Albert Grossman, took them on, as they signed to the Vanguard label. The two singers married in 1965 and divorced in 1975 after releasing 13 albums together. (They have often been cited as the closest analog for the fictional “Mitch and Mickey” singing duo in the satirical “A Mighty Wind” film.)

In the very early ’60s, original material was not considered essential on the New York folk scene, with even Dylan’s debut album consisting mostly of covers. Tyson remembered how that suddenly changed in a big way in 1962, recalling how Dylan “sang me ‘Blowin’ in the Wind’ — he’d just wrote it. And I thought: ‘I can do that’ …He wrote ‘Blowin’ in the Wind’ and the next day I wrote ‘Four Strong Winds’.”

Following the martial and professional split between Ian and Sylvia in the ’70s, Tyson reinvented himself back in Canada, as someone devoted to the ranching lifestyle in a small town near Alberta, and as a solo artist focusing more on Western-style, often cowboy-themed music. It was not a complete left turn, musically, given that Ian and Sylvia had moved their base to Nashville for a period in the late ’60s and formed the group Speckled Bird, considered a pioneering force in the burgeoning country-rock movement. But as he focused on his new solo music, Tyson had little lingering interest in the folk scene, rock ‘n’ roll or even mainstream country music, preferring to focus on music that reflected his passion for wide open spaces.

“I always wanted to be a cowboy — not a songwriter or a singer, a cowboy. I just got lucky in the music business,” Tyson told the website Cowboy Showcase in 2008.

“It’s like I had two careers,” Tyson further said in an interview with Folkworks‘ Terry Roland in 2009. “There were the Ian and Sylvia days and then this new music, which had no association to ‘60s music. It was kind of nice. But I’ve found a way to bring back the Ian and Sylvia music as well in my recent shows. It’s like you can’t just drop all of that, it has to be in there somehow. … I was identified with the name Ian and Sylvia. My acceptance happened after I’d reinvented myself in an authentic way. I came to be so identified with that period of my career, it was hard to walk out of the shadow of that. But, finally, I was able to move on.”

Tyson did not just adopt the rural lifestyle later in life. He participated in the rodeo circuit for several years beginning when he was 18, and didn’t begin his music career until he was 24. In Vancouver, he was the rhythm guitarist in a rockabilly band called the Sensational Stripes, which he recalled sharing a bill with Buddy Holly, Eddie Cochran, LaVern Baker and Paul Anka in Vancouver in 1956.

Ian and Sylvia achieved mainstream popularity through TV shows like “Hootenanny,” which Tyson called “a dreadful show — appalling.” Of the duo, Tyson told the Classic Bands website in 2005, “We had a sound that was pretty unique. It was pretty vibrant for a couple of years, then it just kind of fell apart. It was based on our vocal blend. It wasn’t like anybody. It was pretty unique. We made a couple of great albums. Then the albums got un-focused and the direction got strange and then pressure from the record companies to get a radio hit and pressure from ourselves. We wanted it too. Everybody was getting hits. We almost got one. You know, just couldn’t stand the stress.”

While “Four Strong Winds” was the first song Tyson wrote, after the duo got its start doing covers, Sylvia Tyson’s first contribution as a songwriter was “You Were on My Mind,” which became a hit via a cover version by the We Five.

Ian Tyson said that the British Invasion “killed the Folk movement. I would say the California rock scene killed it just as potently. Jefferson Airplane, Country Joe and the Fish… all that San Francisco stuff. That shut down the folk thing. Totally shut it down. … Folk came back stronger than ever. And it is stronger. It has out-lasted San Francisco rock, acid rock and all that shite. Folk will always be around. In those days we thought it was the apocalypse. People didn’t want to listen to what they thought was folk. Who the hell knows what folk is? But, they didn’t want to listen to that stuff. That’s fine. We all had to find something else to do.”

Of the contrast between his old and new styles, and fans’ expectations in concert, Tyson said in 2005, “I don’t do nostalgia. I’m a writer and I keep writing. Some people get frustrated, they want to hear nothing but the old stuff, but I have never given them just the old stuff. Never. They gotta listen to new stuff at least half of the evening. If they don’t want to listen to it, they don’t have to come back again, but they do come back again. So, I guess in the final analysis, the approach I’ve taken has given me longevity.”

His solo albums included “18 Inches of Rain,” “Cowboyography,” “Songs Along a Gravel Road” and “Yellowhead to Yellowstone and Other Love Stories.” Tyson also worked extensively with fellow singer-songwriter Tom Russell. He wrote a children’s book, “Primera: The Story of the Mustangs.”

Tyson told Folkworks that the subject of the vanishing West was “covered in most of my songs. It’s a big part of what I do. There’s a sense of solitude that many of us feel who are from these parts of the world. The more populations come in, the less this culture will survive. For younger people today who are in the ranching culture, this way of life is really under attack. The lifestyle starts to disappear because of the population increase; that big, empty, romantic West disappears. You know, in California, there’s a lot of open country, especially at the northern end of the state. But the West you and I love and grew up with can’t sustain itself. It gradually is becoming something else.”

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
142023 posts
Posted on 1/2/23 at 3:27 pm to
LINK
quote:

Anita Pointer, of the sibling hit-making group the Pointer Sisters, died on Saturday at age 74, her family in a statement.

“While we are deeply saddened by the loss of Anita, we are comforted in knowing she is now with her daughter, Jada and her sisters June & Bonnie and at peace,” said the statement issued by publicist Roger Neal. “She was the one that kept all of us close and together for so long. Her love of our family will live on in each of us. Please respect our privacy during this period of grief and loss. Heaven is a more loving beautiful place with Anita there.”

Sisters June and Bonnie started the original group in 1969. By 1973, the group had expanded to include their two sisters, Anita and Ruth. The group’s first major pop hit was “Yes We Can Can,” written by Allen Toussaint, “a funky unity anthem.” The Pointer Sisters’s fiddle-driven 1974 ballad, “Fairytale,” written by Anita and Bonnie, was a hit on the country charts and scored the group its first of three Grammys. In the 1970s and 1980s the group had a string of hits beginning with their version of Bruce Springsteen’s “Fire” that reached Number Two on the U.S. pop charts in 1978.

Other big successes included 1980 smash “He’s So Shy” and 1981’s “Slow Hand,” which reached Number Three and Number Two respectively. The Anita-led “I’m So Excited,” “Neutron Dance,” and “Jump (For My Love)” established the Pointer Sisters as a chart-ruling group through the first half of the decade.

The Pointer Sisters also recorded the memorable pinball counting song for Sesame Street in the 1970s.

Anita Pointer is survived by her sister, Ruth Pointer, brothers Aaron Pointer, Fritz Pointer, and granddaughter Roxie McKain Pointer.
Jump to page
Page First 18 19 20 21 22 ... 25
Jump to page
first pageprev pagePage 20 of 25Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram