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re: Endless Sleep - The Obituary Thread

Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:29 pm to
Posted by FearlessFreep
Baja Alabama
Member since Nov 2009
19988 posts
Posted on 3/25/26 at 2:29 pm to


was just humming this song to myself the other day

brings back a ton of memories
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4398 posts
Posted on 3/26/26 at 10:06 am to
Darrell George "Dash" Crofts (August 14, 1940 – March 25, 2026) was an American musician. He was best known as one half of the soft rock duo Seals and Crofts with Jim Seals.

Crofts was originally a drummer in his early career, when he met Jim Seals, then a saxophonist. The two would go on to play in The Champs, eventually creating the duo Seals and Crofts, in which both members sang and played the guitar and mandolin among other instruments; they would go on to record hits such as "Summer Breeze" and "Diamond Girl.

Born in Cisco, Texas, Crofts began his musical career as a pianist and drummer, eventually meeting Jim Seals in his youth. The two would go on to form a lasting partnership, first performing together in early groups before establishing themselves as Seals and Crofts. After relocating to California and briefly stepping away due to military service, the duo regrouped in the late 1960s and began developing the distinctive sound that would define their career.

Working with Shelton, Seals and Crofts achieved widespread success throughout the 1970s. Albums such as Year of Sunday (1971), Summer Breeze (1972), Diamond Girl (1973), and Get Closer (1976) produced a string of hit songs, including the title tracks of several of those releases, many of which reached the Top 10. Their music helped shape the soft rock genre, blending melodic instrumentation with reflective songwriting.
Crofts contributed as a vocalist and multi-instrumentalist, performing on guitar and mandolin and sharing songwriting duties with Seals. Among their other notable songs were “Hummingbird,” “I’ll Play for You,” and “We May Never Pass This Way (Again).” The duo also achieved strong album sales, including multiple gold and platinum certifications.

Their music often reflected personal beliefs, including themes influenced by the Baha’i Faith, which emphasized unity and shared humanity. While generally well received, some of their work also drew attention for its social commentary, including the 1974 song “Unborn Child.”
Seals and Crofts parted ways in the early 1980s as musical trends shifted, though they reunited periodically in later decades. Crofts eventually returned to Texas, where he spent his later years raising horses. He also released a solo album, Today, in 1998.



This post was edited on 3/26/26 at 10:11 am
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157344 posts
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:20 pm to
LINK
quote:

Ross “The Boss” Friedman, the virtuosic guitarist who co-founded the influential proto-punk group The Dictators and the heavy metal band Manowar, has died at age 72 after a battle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), more commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease.
quote:

Friedman co-founded the New York City band The Dictators in 1972 with bassist, singer, and songwriter Andy Shernoff and rhythm guitarist Scott “Top Ten” Kempner. Longtime frontman “Handsome Dick” Manitoba joined the group in 1974. The Dictators were among the bands that regularly played at CBGB during the famed New Rok City punk club’s early years.


Posted by TFTC
Chicago, Il
Member since May 2010
23558 posts
Posted on 3/28/26 at 7:44 pm to
fricking hell... I just read that Jon Dee Graham passed away yesterday... He's played with a lot of people but I know him best as a member of the True Believers..

Requiescat!
Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4398 posts
Posted on 3/30/26 at 9:10 pm to
Christopher Reed North (January 26, 1951 - March 30, 2026) was an American musician. He was the founding keyboardist of the American progressive rock band Ambrosia. 1970 he formed the progressive rock band Ambrosia with David Pack, Joe Puerta and Burleigh Drummond. North was hired by Puerta after seeing him perform in a "dimly lit room" one night: "There was a coffin with speakers in it. And at the end of the room, Chris was there, playing the organ with a bottle of wine on the top, smoking a cigarette, and there was a girl massaging his shoulders as he played, so I go, 'We gotta get this guy in the band'". Fans of Ambrosia, we honor the legendary life and career of our dearest family member Christopher North, the "Hammond B3 King" whose sonic architecture defined a generation of progressive and soft rock. A founding member since 1970, he was a keyboard wizard who brought an unmatched intensity and emotional depth to every performance.

We will always remember "Northwind" for his fiery, "intense" stage presence—a legacy that began when he was first discovered playing in a dimly lit room, his organ topped with a bottle of wine. Even as he faced health challenges in recent years, including a brave and successful battle with throat cancer, his spirit remained tied to the music and the fans he loved.
Christopher North’s work did more than just fill airwaves; it created "aural landscapes" that balanced virtuosity with soulful, radio-friendly hooks. We celebrate a true craftsman of the classic rock era whose lush piano lines and soaring organ swells will remain timeless.

He was truly one of a kind, and loved dearly by his fans and bandmates.
RIP, Brother Chris, forever and ever in our hearts...

This post was edited on 4/22/26 at 2:16 pm
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
22968 posts
Posted on 3/31/26 at 6:23 am to
RIP

Posted by bleeng
The Woodlands
Member since Apr 2013
4398 posts
Posted on 4/21/26 at 10:11 pm to
Dave Mason, May 10, 1946 – April 19, 2026 renowned English Singer-Songwriter and guitarist who first gained fame as a founding member of the rock band Traffic, Dead at 79

Over a career spanning six decades, he was a prolific solo artist and one of the most sought-after session musicians in Rock history, collaborating with legends like Jimi Hendrix, George Harrison, and Michael Jackson.

Mason's tenure with Traffic was disjointed. He was a founding member of the group, but left following the release of their debut album, Mr. Fantasy (1967), only to rejoin halfway through the sessions for their next album, Traffic (1968), after which he left again. Last Exit (1969), a compilation of odds and ends, features little material by Mason apart from his song "Just for You".

Traffic later re-formed without Mason, although he briefly began working with the band for a third time, touring with them in 1971 and playing on Welcome to the Canteen. In his brief spells with the group, Mason wrote alone; Steve Winwood later recalled, "We all [Winwood, Jim Capaldi and Chris Wood] tended to write together, but Mason would come in with a complete song that he was going to sing and tell us all what he expected us to play. No discussion, like we were his backing group"

He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004 for his work with Traffic.

According to recent reports and tributes on social media platforms and music forums, Mason passed away at the age of on April 21, 2026.

Prior to this, in late 2025, he had officially retired from touring due to ongoing heart health challenges, though he planned to continue recording.



This post was edited on 4/22/26 at 1:26 pm
Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157344 posts
Posted on 4/21/26 at 10:38 pm to


This leaves Stevie W as the last surviving original member
This post was edited on 4/21/26 at 10:48 pm
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
95625 posts
Posted on 4/22/26 at 6:55 am to
quote:

Over a career spanning six decades, he was a prolific solo artist and one of the most sought-after session musicians in Rock history, collaborating with legends like Jimi Hendrix, George Harrison, and Michael Jackson.



Had a big hit with We Just Disagree -



Was - pardon the pun - instrumental to Hendrix's cover of All Along the Watchtower. Redding hated it and walked out. Hendrix and Mason recorded the acoustic parts (Jimi 6-string, Dave 12-string), and Dave also at least recorded some bass parts. Now, with Hendrix's perfectionism, he worked and reworked it, almost certainly recorded all new bass parts himself and may have overdubbed some (if not all) of Dave's part.

Regardless, Dave Mason was really at the center of things during that time. Just 3 weeks shy of 80. RIP.
This post was edited on 4/22/26 at 6:57 am
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
22968 posts
Posted on 4/22/26 at 6:58 am to
RIP

Posted by hogcard1964
Alabama
Member since Jan 2017
19790 posts
Posted on 4/22/26 at 7:26 am to
So sorry to hear this.

He was a real talent and very nice person.

RIP
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
95625 posts
Posted on 4/22/26 at 10:37 am to
quote:

This leaves Stevie W as the last surviving original member


And yet time has been fairly kind to the original 4 of the Spencer Davis Group, with only the namesake gone at this point. The Winwoods (Muff and Steve) and Pete York are still alive AFAIK.
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
22968 posts
Posted on 4/22/26 at 1:44 pm to
Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
22968 posts
Posted on 4/26/26 at 8:53 am to

Alan Osmond, Who Led His Brothers in Song, Dies at 76

By Richard Sandomir
April 22, 2026

Alan Osmond, an original member of the Osmonds, a group of singing brothers known for their pop records and wholesome image — and for their siblings Donny and Marie, who became the biggest stars of the family — died on Monday at his home in Salt Lake City. He was 76.

His brother Merrill announced the death on Facebook. Debbie Ihler Rasmussen, who collaborated with Mr. Osmond on his 2024 autobiography, “Alan Osmond: One Way Ticket,” said the cause was complications of multiple sclerosis.

The Osmonds began as a quartet in the late 1950s, with the brothers Merrill, Wayne, Jay and Alan, the eldest and designated leader. They soon went from singing at churches, fairs and civic events to performing as a barbershop quartet at Disneyland in California.

Their big break came in 1962, when Alan was 12: They landed an audition for “The Andy Williams Show,” an NBC variety program, at the suggestion of Mr. Williams’s father, who had seen the Osmonds in a Disney TV show.

“I wasn’t sure what to think when everyone, including Andy, laughed at us,” Mr. Osmond wrote in his autobiography. “But it was actually because we were cute and could sing so well.”

The brothers were asked to sing on two episodes, performances that generated enough buzz to earn them a five-year contract to appear regularly on the show through 1967. They returned to appear on a reboot of the program from 1969 to 1970.

During their time there, the Osmond brothers learned to tap dance, ride unicycles, ice skate and juggle. They appeared in skits and were constantly learning new songs. When Mr. Williams went on the road, they accompanied him; they also opened for comic stars like Phyllis Diller and Jimmy Durante.

The four brothers were eventually joined on the Williams show by their younger siblings Donny and Marie, who would later become famous with solo careers and their own variety series, “Donny & Marie,” which ran on ABC from 1976 to 1979. The youngest Osmond brother, Jimmy, also later joined the group, which was sometimes compared to the Jackson 5.

The group hit its peak from 1971 to 1975, when it had a No. 1 hit, “One Bad Apple,” on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, and three Top 10 hits, “Yo-Yo,” “Down by the Lazy River” (written by Alan and Merrill) and “Love Me for a Reason.”

The family was at home listening to the radio on a Sunday in February 1971 when they heard the disc jockey Casey Kasem announce that “One Bad Apple” had reached No. 1.

“We screamed like crazy, and Wayne ran outside and ran around our house,” Mr. Osmond wrote. “That was our goal, and we finally made it!”

They had already sold 20 million records when they made their first visit to England the next year, a trip that included performing for Queen Elizabeth II at the London Palladium. As Bernard Weinraub wrote in The New York Times, the brothers “seemed to be living proof that toothpaste grins, innocuous voices and well-timed routines are enough to make them millionaire culture heroes.”

Alan Ralph Osmond was born on June 22, 1949, in Ogden, Utah. His father, George, sold insurance and real estate and ran a small farm. His mother, Olive (Davis) Osmond, helped with the insurance and real estate businesses, owned a dress shop and managed the household, which grew to include nine children.

In 1957, on a family trip to Yellowstone National Park, Mr. Osmond recalled, his parents were singing “The Old Oaken Bucket” when he added his alto voice to his father’s while his mother sang melody. Then his brothers joined in.

Recognizing their talent, “Mother taught us to sing in three-part harmony,” he wrote. “Our little quartet was born, and we called ourselves the Osmond Brothers.”

The boys soon began rehearsing after their chores were done; their bond would carry them for decades.

At the height of their success, they took a break from pop music to release “The Plan” (1973), a concept album inspired by the family’s faith as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

As Mr. Osmond recalled, “I said to my brothers, ‘We need to say something — something important!’”

It was a departure from their previous albums, and one that their record label and distributor struggled to sell, although Mr. Osmond managed to persuade KHJ, a popular radio station in Los Angeles, to play one of the songs, “Traffic in My Mind.” The album went gold in England but not in the United States, a distinction that four of the group’s previous albums had achieved.

Harold B. Lee, the president of the church, however, gave it a rave review. According to Mr. Osmond’s autobiography, after reading the lyrics, Mr. Lee said, “This was inspired.”

The group’s record sales never recaptured their early 1970s peak, but the brothers continued to release music and had some modest country hits in the 1980s, including “I Think About Your Lovin’.”

In addition to his brother Merrill, Mr. Osmond is survived by his wife, Suzanne (Pinegar) Osmond; his sons Michael, Nathan, Scott, Alex, Tyler, Douglas, Jonathan and David, who was also diagnosed with multiple sclerosis; his siblings Donny, Marie, Jay, Jimmy, Virl and Tom; 30 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. His brother Wayne died last year.

For about a decade after his multiple sclerosis diagnosis, in 1987, Mr. Osmond continued to perform with his brothers.

He was involved in other ventures as well, including running Stadium of Fire, an annual July Fourth fireworks and music extravaganza in Provo, Utah, which he started in 1980 and continued until 1992. He also produced albums, some of them by family members, and directed the video for Marie’s 1985 song “There’s No Stopping Your Heart,” a No. 1 country hit.

In 2019, for her 60th birthday, Marie Osmond reunited the quartet.

“When my husband and I decided to fly the original four Osmond brothers to Hawaii to perform together one last time and honor them for starting it all,” she wrote on Facebook after Mr. Osmond’s death. “Alan, with tears in his eyes, said, ‘So you’re producing me now.’”

Mr. Osmond wrote several children’s books with his wife: “If the Shoe Fits” and “Just Right,” both published in 1998, and “Huff ‘N’ Puff” (1999), based on fairy tales.

Reflecting on his career trajectory, he told The Daily Herald of Provo in 1997: “Well, you can look at it many ways, and I have chosen to adapt.”

He added, “I’ve examined myself, and guess what? I’m still me.”

Richard Sandomir, an obituaries reporter, has been writing for The Times for more than three decades.







Posted by Kafka
I am the moral conscience of TD
Member since Jul 2007
157344 posts
Posted on 4/27/26 at 6:40 pm to
LINK
quote:

Nedra Talley Ross, a founding member of the seminal girl group the Ronettes, has died. The group’s official social media accounts confirmed the news on Sunday, April 26. Ross was the final living original Ronette—her cousins and bandmates, sisters Estelle Bennett and Ronnie Spector, predeceased her in 2009 and 2022, respectively. Ross was 80.

“It is with heavy hearts that we share the news of Nedra Talley Ross’ passing. She was a light to those who knew and loved her,” the trio’s statement read. “As a founding member of The Ronettes, along with her beloved cousins Ronnie and Estelle, Nedra’s voice, style and spirit helped define a sound that would change music. Her contribution to the group’s story and their defining influence will live forever.”

Born in Manhattan in 1946, Ross began singing with Bennett and Spector as a little girl, performing covers at local sock hops and bar mitzvahs first as the Darling Sisters, then as Ronnie and the Relatives, and, finally, as the Ronettes. Ross credited her mother, Susie Talley, with encouraging her to perform and instilling the importance of family. “Part of the reason I believe the Ronettes continued and we were as successful as we were, is because we held each other’s hand when we walked out on stage, and we believed that God was watching what we did,” Ross said in an interview with Cleveland Digital in February.

The trio signed with Columbia subsidiary Colpix in 1961, but struggled to make their mark at the label. In 1963, they auditioned for Philles Records and producer Phil Spector with a version of Frankie Lymon’s “Why Do Fools Fall in Love.” Rapt, Spector took a special interest in the Ronettes—he and Ronnie would eventually get married—and helped craft their breakthrough 1963 single “Be My Baby,” which reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Although the Ronettes released just one proper album, 1964’s Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes, they were behind hits like “Baby I Love You,” “(The Best Part of) Breaking Up,” “Do I Love You” and “Walking in the Rain.” The group parted ways after a 1967 European tour, in part due to Phil Spector’s increasingly dictatorial oversight of their releases. (Ross has also said she left the group due to a desire to make Christian music she felt the Ronettes did not allot room for.) Following the split, the trio spent decades fighting Spector over unpaid royalties and income—a judge ordered Spector to pay the group $2.6 million in 2000. In 2007, he was arrested and convicted for shooting and killing the actress Lana Clarkson.




Posted by Mizz-SEC
Inbred Huntin' In The SEC
Member since Jun 2013
22968 posts
Posted on 4/28/26 at 8:35 am to
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