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re: Endless Sleep - The Obituary Thread

Posted on 2/24/25 at 10:07 am to
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
20927 posts
Posted on 2/24/25 at 10:07 am to
Roberta Flack, ’70s R&B Vocalist Known for ‘Killing Me Softly,’ Dies at 88

https://variety.com/2025/music/news/roberta-flack-singer-killing-me-softly-dead-1236318888/

By Chris Morris

Legendary pop/R&B vocalist Roberta Flack, who was launched to stardom in the early ’70s by the Grammy-winning hits “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” and “Killing Me Softly With His Song,” has died, according to a statement from her rep. No cause of death was cited; she was 88.

“We are heartbroken that the glorious Roberta Flack passed away this morning, February 24, 2025,” the statement reads. “She died peacefully surrounded by her family. Roberta broke boundaries and records. She was also a proud educator.”

The classically trained singer-pianist only belatedly found fame when Clint Eastwood employed her 2-year-old version of “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” in his 1971 directorial debut “Play Misty for Me.”

That No. 1 pop smash was succeeded by a second chart-topper, 1973’s “Killing Me Softly.” Both performances were acknowledged in back-to-back years with Grammys as record of the year – a feat that wasn’t duplicated until U2 captured the same award in 2001-02.

She reached her peak with the 1974 pop and R&B smash “Where Is the Love,” which claimed the apex of both charts.

In all, Flack’s supple, slow-burning style brought her six top-10 pop hits and 10 top-10 R&B singles, some of them in partnership with vocalist Donny Hathaway.

Economically summarizing her appeal in “The Rough Guide to Soul and R&B,” Peter Shapiro wrote, “Urbane, genteel and jazzy, Roberta Flack was, in many ways, the perfect soul act of the early ’70s. Her pretty, sensuous ballads appealed to the Burt Bacharach/5th Dimension crowd, while her shimmering keyboards and flawless diction made her the poster child of the penthouse soul crowd.”

Though her chart eminence faded at the close of the ’70s, Flack continued to record into the new millennium; her last album, the Beatles recital “Let It Be Roberta,” was released in 2012.

Born to a musical family in Black Mountain, N.C., Flack was inspired as a girl by the gospel work of Mahalia Jackson and Sam Cooke. He began studying piano at the age of 9; something of a musical prodigy, she entered Howard University in Washington, D.C., at 15 on a full scholarship.

Her graduate work was cut short by her father’s death, and she taught school in North Carolina and the District of Columbia. She also began work as a nightspot performer in D.C.; a fateful engagement at the club Mr. Henry’s was attended by jazz pianist Les McCann, then a crossover star at Atlantic Records. McCann brought Flack to the attention of the label, which signed her in 1968.

Released in 1969, her Joel Dorn-produced debut “First Take” didn’t catch fire. However, “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” — a ballad composed by English folksinger Ewan MacColl and cut by the American folk-pop act the Kingston Trio in 1962 — supplied popular liftoff for Flack after Eastwood used it behind a love scene in his thriller “Play Misty for Me.”

Flack had already garnered a No. 8 R&B hit with her version of James Taylor’s “You’ve Got a Friend,” but “The First Time” became a No. 1 pop ubiquity, and pushed “First Take” to No. 1 for five weeks. In January 1973, it collected the record of the year Grammy.

Almost simultaneously, “Where Is the Love,” Flack’s second pairing with the similarly subdued and sensuous soul singer Hathaway, reached No. 1 on the R&B chart and No. 5 on the pop list. The number was named best pop vocal performance by a duo or group at the ’73 Grammys and pushed the LP “Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway” to No. 3 on the pop rolls.

Flack reached the height of her popularity among both the public and her peers with “Killing Me Softly.” Penned by Charles Fox and Norman Gimbel, the number was inspired by singer Lori Lieberman’s reaction to a performance by pop folkie Don McLean. Lieberman’s 1971 recording of the tune failed to chart, but Flack quickly recorded it after hearing it during an airline flight to New York.

Produced by Dorn, Flack’s lustrous version shot to No. 1 on the pop chart and No. 2 on the R&B charts in early 1973; the “Killing Me Softly” album peaked at No. 3 and went double platinum. The song was named record of the year and best female pop vocal performance at the 1974 Grammys ceremony, and was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999. The Fugees’ 1996 cover, featuring vocals by future Grammy winner Lauryn Hill, was also a No. 1 R&B hit.

Flack continued to log chart hits through the ’70s, topping herself with the double-barreled pop and R&B No. 1 single “Feel Like Making Love” in 1974. She also notched another chart-topping pop single, “The Closer I Get to You,” with Hathaway in 1978.

However, that teaming was tragically sundered by Hathaway’s suicide in January 1979; the duet “Back Together Again,” issued posthumously in 1980, reached No. 8. Her subsequent pairing with vocalist Peabo Bryson yielded a No. 5 R&B single, “Tonight, I Celebrate My Love,” in 1983.

Flack’s adult contemporary-oriented sound waned in popularity in the late ’70s, as listeners increasingly gravitated to the harder sounds of funk, rap and hip-hop. Her final top-10 album, “Blue Lights in the Basement” (No. 8), was issued in 1978. Her last major pop singles were the Burt Bacharach-penned movie theme “Making Love” (No. 13, 1982) and “Set the Night to Music,” a duet with reggae singer Maxi Priest (No. 6, 1991).

Nominated a total of 13 times, she received her last Grammy nod in 1995, for best traditional pop vocal performance, for “Roberta,” on which she essayed the standard songbook.

Flack, who was divorced from Stephen Novosel in 1972, is survived by her son, musician Bernard Wright.

This post was edited on 2/24/25 at 10:08 am
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4220 posts
Posted on 2/27/25 at 1:37 am to
William James (Jamie) Graham Muir (July 4, 1945 – February 17 2025) was a Scottish painter and musician, best known for his work as the percussionist in King Crimson from 1972 to 1973, appearing prominently on their fifth album Larks' Tongues In Aspic.

William James Graham Muir was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on 4 July 1945. He attended the Edinburgh College of Art during the 1960s, and began playing jazz on trombone. He soon lost interest and switched to percussion, stating that he preferred to be "in the wilds of uncertainty". At that time, he listened to American jazz drummers such as Tony Williams, Kenny Clarke, and Milford Graves, and other musicians such as Pharoah Sanders, Albert Ayler, and the New York Art Quartet. Regarding his musical direction at the time, he stated: "I just had to improvise. The first time it felt really dangerous, like the sort of thing you had to lock the doors and close the curtains on because if anybody saw you, God would strike you down with a thunderbolt. But I took to it like a duck to water.

In the summer of 1972, Muir received a call from Robert Fripp, and was invited to join what was to become a new incarnation of King Crimson, with a lineup that came to be, according to Muir, focused on "group potential and creating monstrous power in music." During his tenure with the band, Muir occasionally played a standard drum kit, but more often he contributed an assortment of unusual sounds from a wide variety of percussion instruments, including chimes, bells, gongs, mbiras, a musical saw, shakers, rattles, found objects, and miscellaneous drums. Muir initially appeared on a single King Crimson album, 1973's Larks' Tongues In Aspic (the title of which was coined by Muir; when asked by Fripp what the music sounded like, Muir responded "why, larks' tongues in aspic ... what else?" on which he is listed as playing "Percussion and Allsorts"

Following his departure from King Crimson, Muir relocated to Scotland, where he pursued a monastic Buddhist lifestyle at Samye Ling Monastery. He returned to music in 1980, later contributing percussion to studio albums from Derek Bailey, Evan Parker, and Michael Giles, the latter of whom was a founding member of King Crimson. By 1990, Muir had permanently retired from music and focused his efforts on painting.



This post was edited on 2/27/25 at 10:11 pm
Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22903 posts
Posted on 3/1/25 at 10:32 am to
We now live in a world without any living Dolls..

Johansen had been battling Stage 4 cancer for a decade, had a brain tumor and had broken his back in a fall just after Thanksgiving

RIP David Johnasen
This post was edited on 3/1/25 at 10:35 am
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4220 posts
Posted on 3/3/25 at 12:45 pm to
Joseph (Joey) Charles Molland (June 21, 1947 – March 1, 2025) was an English songwriter and rock guitarist whose recording career spanned five decades. He was best known as a member of Badfinger, the most successful of the acts he performed with. Following the death of Mike Gibbins in October 2005, Molland was the last surviving member from the band's classic line-up before his own death almost 20 years later.

Molland joined Badfinger in 1969 and was part of the five records the group recorded for Apple Records. Those records produced the hit singles “Come and Get It”, “No Matter What”, “Baby Blue”, “Day After Day” and “Without You”. The songs were produced by the likes of Paul McCartney, Todd Rundgren, and George Harrison.

Badfinger toured relentlessly behind those five albums before the Apple label came to a chaotic end in 1973.

After that, the band became embroiled in a number of legal, financial and managerial problems and Molland ultimately left in 1974 after several disagreements with his bandmates and struck out on his own.

He achieved touring success playing under the name Joey Molland’s Badfinger and also hit the road with Rundgren, Micky Dolenz of the Monkees and Christopher Cross paying tribute to the Beatles’ White Album in 2019.


Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
20927 posts
Posted on 3/3/25 at 1:52 pm to
Robert John, Beloved ‘Sad Eyes’ Crooner, Dies at 79

The singer-songwriter notched his first Hot 100 hit at just 12 years old.

By Rania Aniftos
Billboard.com
02/25/2025

Robert John, a singer-songwriter whose inimitable voice lent itself to a number of Billboard Hot 100 hits including “Sad Eyes” and an enduring version of “The Lion Sleeps Tonight,” died on Monday (Feb. 24). He was 79 years old.

The star’s son, Michael Pedrick, confirmed the news of his death to Rolling Stone. While no cause of death was given, John was still recovering from a stroke he suffered a few years prior to his passing.

Born Bobby Pedrick, Jr., in Brooklyn, New York, first made waves in the pop world at just 12 years old with the single, “White Bucks and Saddle Shoes.” The song peaked at No. 74 on the Hot 100 in 1958, marking his first of many hits on the chart. In 1965, he changed his name and by 1971, he notched a major hit, a cover of The Tokens’ 1961 classic, “The Lion Sleeps Tonight.” John’s version, one of the most popular renditions of the track to this day, made its way to No. 3 on the Hot 100 and No. 6 on the Adult Contemporary songs chart.

Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, John was a mainstay on the Billboard charts, hitting No. 49 with 1968’s “If You Don’t Want My Love,” No. 71 with 1970’s “When the Party Is Over,” and No. 99 with 1972’s “Hushabye.”

In 1979, after John worked as a staff writer for Motown for a few years, he topped the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart with his seminal hit, “Sad Eyes,” which also hit the top 10 on the Adult Contemporary chart. At the 22nd annual Grammy Awards, “Sad Eyes” was nominated for best pop vocal performance, male.

“Sad Eyes” was also featured on John’s third, self-titled album, which peaked at No. 68 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. His career continued throughout the 1980s, with the release of his last album, Back on the Street in 1980. Overall, John earned a collective 10 Hot 100 tracks and five Adult Contemporary hits.

John is survived by his four sons and several grandsons, his ex-wife Diane and his partner Susan.

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
150131 posts
Posted on 3/3/25 at 4:39 pm to
quote:

We now live in a world without any living Dolls
And w/o any Bad Fingers

Perhaps now we will get a Badfinger biopic, one that will tell the truth about the phone argument Molland had w/Tom Evans a few hours before the latter's suicide
Posted by hogcard1964
Alabama
Member since Jan 2017
13695 posts
Posted on 3/3/25 at 5:41 pm to
Molland was not a nice person.
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4220 posts
Posted on 3/6/25 at 9:41 am to
Roy Ayers (September 10, 1940 – March 4, 2025) was an American vibraphonist, record producer and composer. Ayers began his career as a post-bop jazz artist, releasing several studio albums with Atlantic Records, before his tenure at Polydor Records beginning in the 1970s, during which he helped pioneer jazz-funk. He is a key figure in the acid jazz movement, and has been described as "The Godfather of Neo Soul". He is best known for his compositions "Everybody Loves the Sunshine", "Lifeline", and "No Stranger to Love" and others that charted in the 1970s. At one time Ayers was listed among the performers whose music was most often sampled by rappers.

Ayers started recording as a bebop sideman in 1962. In 1963, he released his debut studio album West Coast Vibes featuring a collaboration with the saxophonist Curtis Amy. He rose to prominence when he dropped out of Los Angeles City College, and joined jazz flautist Herbie Mann in 1966.

In the early 1970s, Ayers formed his own band called Roy Ayers Ubiquity, a name he chose because ubiquity means a state of being everywhere at the same time.
Ayers was responsible for the highly regarded soundtrack to Jack Hill's 1973 blaxploitation film Coffy, which starred Pam Grier. He played Elgin in Idaho Transfer the same year. He later moved from a jazz-funk sound to R&B, as heard on Mystic Voyage (1975), which featured the songs "Evolution" and the underground disco hit "Brother Green (The Disco King)", as well as the title track from his studio album Everybody Loves the Sunshine (1976).

\


Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4220 posts
Posted on 3/7/25 at 1:34 pm to
Brian James (born Brian Robertson, February 18, 1955 – March 6, 2025) was an English punk rock guitarist, who was best known for being a founding member of the Damned as well as of the Lords of the New Church.

James wrote most of the material for, and appeared on, the first two albums by the Damned – Damned Damned Damned and Music for Pleasure, both released in 1977. Later that year, James left the band but returned for a spell in the 1980s and again in 2022.

Parting ways with the Damned following the release of their second album, the Nick Mason-produced Music for Pleasure, Brian created the short-lived Tanz Der Youth, before he formed The Lords of the New Church with his friend and fellow rocker Stiv Bators.

In a wave of excitement, headed by the twin powers of Brian James and Stiv Bators, three successful studio albums followed for The Lord of the New Church, spawning singles such as Open Your Eyes, Dance with Me, and Method to My Madness.

Always looking for new challenges and keen to work with different musicians, over the years that followed, Brian formed The Dripping Lips and guested on different records, while creating the Brian James Gang and working on his solo albums.

Incessantly creative and a musical tour de force, over a career which spanned more than six decades, with his music also gracing film and television soundtracks, in addition to The Damned and The Lords of the New Church, Brian worked with a plethora of punk and rock ‘n’ roll’s finest, from Iggy Pop to Wayne Kramer, Stewart Copeland to Cheetah Chrome.

Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
150131 posts
Posted on 3/23/25 at 2:20 pm to
LINK
quote:

Larry Tamblyn, founding member and keyboardist for the pioneering garage rock band the Standells, has died at the age of 82.
quote:

While the Standells formed in Los Angeles, their producer Ed Cobb hailed from Boston; it was Cobb who penned the band’s 1965 single “Dirty Water,” which would later become both an unofficial Boston anthem (thanks to references to the city laced into the lyrics) as well as a garage rock classic (thanks to its inclusion on the acclaimed 1972 Nuggets compilation).
Larry leads the way



They're known for "Dirty Water" but my fave Standells track is this:

Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22903 posts
Posted on 4/6/25 at 11:54 am to
Al Barile.. guitarist and founder of SS Decontrol (SSD) has passed away from cancer.. RIP

Their first two records are legendary in the hardcore/straight edge world.. they then turned more metal(y) and subsequently broke up..


This post was edited on 4/6/25 at 11:56 am
Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22903 posts
Posted on 4/6/25 at 12:34 pm to
Well, I'll be damned... Michael Hurley, the godfather of freak folk, also passed this week... Resquiat!

Posted by hogcard1964
Alabama
Member since Jan 2017
13695 posts
Posted on 4/7/25 at 12:37 pm to
Blondie Drummer Clem Burke... RIP


LINK /
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
20927 posts
Posted on 4/7/25 at 3:30 pm to
quote:

Blondie Drummer Clem Burke... RIP

Wow. This one hurts.

That has to be the end of Blondie. RIP
Posted by hogcard1964
Alabama
Member since Jan 2017
13695 posts
Posted on 4/7/25 at 4:09 pm to
Yeah

Great drummer
Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
22903 posts
Posted on 4/7/25 at 6:19 pm to
quote:

Blondie Drummer Clem Burke... RIP


AKA Elvis Ramone... sad day indeed! RIP
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4220 posts
Posted on 4/16/25 at 1:40 pm to
David Geoffrey Allen ( December 23, 1955 – April 5, 2025) was an English musician, at one time the bass guitarist for the post-punk band Gang of Four. In 1981 he left the band to form Shriekback.

While no cause of death was given, the band said Allen had been living with early-onset dementia for several years. He was 69 years old.

He joined Jon King, Andy Gill, and Hugo Burnham in the early days of Gang of Four, replacing original bassist Dave Wolfson in time to work on the band’s 1979 debut, Entertainment! The album’s spartan arrangement of post-punk and funk elements, paired with a lyric sheet full of witty barbs that critiqued and demystified consumer capitalism, made the band a cult sensation, beloved by critics, art punks, and indie-rockers for decades to come. Allen remained with the band for second album Solid Gold, a record that made waves in the United States and secured their enduring legacy as a major influence on the likes of R.E.M., Nirvana, and Red Hot Chili Peppers.

After Solid Gold’s release, in 1981, tensions within the group—as well as issues with exhaustion and drug use—prompted Allen to part ways with his bandmates during a tour. The same year, he formed Shriekback with XTC’s Barry Andrews. It was the first in a series of Allen side projects (later including the Elastic Purejoy, Low Pop Suicide, King Swamp, and Faux Hoax) that preceded his eventual return to Gang of Four for a 2004 reunion tour.

After Gang of Four’s late ‘70s and early ‘80s heyday, Allen enjoyed a whole second act in the Portland music industry. Most recently, Allen co-founded DinWorkshop in 2018, a consultancy and design studio for musicians. In addition to stints in artist relations at Apple Music and as an advocacy director at Beats Music, Allen also lectured at Pacific Northwest College of Art and University of Oregon. He served as founder and president of Pampelmoose, a Portland music label and artist platform, until 2010.

Posted by FearlessFreep
Baja Alabama
Member since Nov 2009
18412 posts
Posted on 4/24/25 at 2:09 pm to
Pere Ubu frontman David Thomas, 71
quote:

In a statement shared on the Pere Ubu page on Facebook, it was confirmed that Thomas died in Brighton and Hove, England, on April 23rd, 2025. He had his “wife and youngest step-daughter by his side” during his final moments. The statement also noted: “MC5 were playing on the radio. He will ultimately be returned to his home, the farm in Pennsylvania, where he insisted he was to be ‘thrown in the barn’.”
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
150131 posts
Posted on 4/24/25 at 4:35 pm to
quote:

Gang of Four
their guitar style was memorably different



Perhaps too different
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
150131 posts
Posted on 4/24/25 at 4:38 pm to
quote:

Pere Ubu
I've never heard them but I've read Lester Bangs' obit for their founder, Peter Laughner(?). Need to see if that is online.
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