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R.I.P.

Elizabeth Taylor 1932-2011

 

Iconic actress and screen persona ElizabethTaylor has died at age 79 of congestive heart failure. The woman responsible for creating the template of modern celebrity was surrounded by her four children and loved ones as she passed away at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles on Wednesday."We have just lost a Hollywood giant," said Elton John, a longtime friend of Taylor. "More importantly, we have lost an incredible human being."The London-born Taylor appeared in more than 50 films, including 1944’s National Velvet and the Oscan-winning Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?Her personal life, laced with personal tragedy and epic passion, may have provided her with more celebrity than her career. She was afflicted with ill health, drug addiction, and failed romances. Taylor had eight marriages with seven husbands.But it was Taylor’s compassion which put her at the forefront of AIDS advocacy. She was a philanthropist for Israeli War Victims Fund, the Variety Clubs International and the American Foundation for AIDS Research.

 -Court

SoundUnwound's editorial team write about the latest big music news and quirky stories which catch the eye. We also post a selection of these news stories on Chordstrike; for much, much more, visit SoundUnwound.com, the new music site from IMDb and Amazon. Follow us at twitter.com/soundunwound.

Grateful Dead Movie and RIP Owsley Stanley

For the first time since its 1977 theatrical release, “The Grateful Dead Movie” will screen one night only in wide theatrical distribution on Wednesday, April 20 at 7:30pm (local time). Click here for a teaser.

The movie – part psychedelic rockmentary and part concert film – examines the Dead Head phenomena. The 4/20 screening will also include a never before seen interview with iconic leader, Jerry Garcia, conducted while he was directing the production over 35 years ago.

Originally recorded at San Francisco’s Winterland Arena in 1974, the movie features epic performances of “U.S. Blues,” “One More Saturday Night,” the legendary “Casey Jones” and “Sugar Magnolia,” as well as other gems.

Tickets are on sale now. Click here for a list of participating theatres or click here to look for tickets near you.

The announcement is the second time this week the Dead have come up; the first a far more regrettable reason. Long time Grateful Dead friend and their early soundman, Owsley Stanley, creator of perhaps the most recognizable band logo ever, the ‘steal-your-face,’ was killed in a car crash in Australia last Saturday. He was 76.

Stanley, or “Bear,” as the band called him, was also the supplier of LSD for a generation; it is said he produced over 1M hits of the drug. He was the force behind Ken Kesey’s acid tests, which informed Tom Wolfe’s epic documentation of counter-culture, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.

Similarly, Jimi Hendrix’s song, “Purple Haze,” was reportedly about Stanley’s legendary product and Owsley also inspired the Steely Dan song, “Kid Charlemagne.” He was a true individual who, like Timothy Leary or Kesey, was largely responsible for shaping an entire generation and subsequent movement.

-Court

SoundUnwound's editorial team write about the latest big music news and quirky stories which catch the eye. We also post a selection of these news stories on Chordstrike; for much, much more, visit SoundUnwound.com, the new music site from IMDb and Amazon. Follow us at twitter.com/soundunwound.

Losing Louvin: Farewell to a Country Great

 

Country music lost one of the greats Tuesday night. Charlie Louvin passed away after a battle with pancreatic cancer at his home just outside of Nashville, Tennessee. He was 83.

In the 1940’s Charlie began performing with his brother, Ira, under the moniker [[Artist#33305:The Louvin Brothers]]. As an act, the brothers had over 20 singles on the country music charts and became members of the Grand Ole Opry in 1955. The duo is consistently cited as inspiration for artists like Emmylou Harris, Gram Parsons, and The Byrds.

“I just could not get enough of that sound,” said Ms. Harris of the Louvin Brothers’ music, speaking in an interview with The Observer, the British newsweekly, in January 2010. “I’d always loved the Everly Brothers, but there was something scary and washed in the blood about the sound of the Louvin Brothers.”

With the surge in rock ‘n’ roll in the 1960’s, the Louvins' popularity declined and the brothers decided to go their separate ways.Charlie went on to have a successful solo career that included 16 Billboard top 40 hits. In 2001, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Most recently, Louvin reentered the spotlight opening for current touring acts Cake and Elvis Costello, and also performing at Tennessee’s rock festival, Bonnaroo.

 -Erin O. @ SoundUnwound

SoundUnwound's editorial team write about the latest big music news and quirky stories which catch the eye. We also post a selection of these news stories on Chordstrike; for much, much more, visit SoundUnwound.com, the new music site from IMDb and Amazon. Follow us at twitter.com/soundunwound.

R.I.P. Ronnie James Dio, 1942-2010

I'm currently camping in the Rockies, but on a brief foray down to buy supplies, I find that one of the monsters of hard rock, Ronnie James Dio, has died at the age of 67.

A superstar, regarded by many as the finest voice of heavy metal, Dio replaced Ozzy Osbourne as the singer in Black Sabbath, prior to which he sang for Richie Blackmore's Rainbow. His later career included Heaven & Hell, and the self-titled Dio.

The singer revealed last year that he was suffering from stomach cancer, shortly after finishing a US tour with his band.

Dio's wife, Wendy, said that her husband died on the morning of Sunday, May 16, adding her heartfelt comment that "Today my heart is broken."

Black Sabbath's ninth album, Heaven & Hell, which was released in 1980, is considered by many fans to be the finest heavy metal album ever recorded.

R.I.P. Lena Horne, 1917-2010

Another one of the jazz greats, Lena Horne (June 30, 1917 – May 9, 2010), has passed away aged 92.

Horne was the winner of numerous awards, including eight Grammies – one for the incomparable and underrated An Evening With Lena Horne – and has two stars on Hollywood Boulevard - one for music and one for movies.

Lena Horne began singing in the early 1930s, and continued her career well into the 1990s. During the course of her long career she duetted with such great names as Frank Sinatra, Gene Kelly, Tony Bennett, and Sammy Davis Jr.

In addition to being a performance star, Lena Horne was active in the Civil Rights movement. In the early 1940s she worked with noted trades unionist and peace activist Paul Robeson. During WWII Horne refused to play to segregated audiences and as a result, she ended up performing in front of a mixed audience of black US soldiers and white German POWs. Her association with Robeson, along with her uncompromising stand against segregation, led to Horne being blacklisted in the 1950s, but she refused to let it affect her continuing work for what she strongly believed to be one of her highest callings.

Horne died on May 9, 2010, at the NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital  in New York City. The circumstances of her death were withheld.

--James Petts

Lhasa De Sela: 1972-2010

Lhasa This week brought the sad news that Montreal-based singer-songwriter Lhasa De Sela passed away on New Year's Day, after a 21-month battle with breast cancer. The American-born artist had a one-of-a-kind upbringing with her Mexican father and American mother, spending most of her childhood traveling between the two countries, developing her unique and decidedly pan-cultural artistic skills that led her to sing in English, Spanish, and French. From her official site:

    "Lhasa's unusual childhood was marked by long periods of nomadic wandering through Mexico and the U.S., with her parents and sisters in the school bus which was their home.  During this period the children improvised, both theatrically and musically, performing for their parents on a nightly basis.  Lhasa grew up in a world imbued with artistic discovery, far from conventional culture."

Lhasa released three albums in her short life, La Llorona, The Living Road, and one of my favorite albums of last year, and her first in English, the beautiful, simply titled, Lhasa. If you've never heard her stunning voice, do yourself a favor and watch the video for "Rising" below. Rest In Peace, Lhasa.

--Alan Wiley

DJ Roc Raida, 1972-2009

Rocraida02

The hip-hop community suffered another tragic loss this weekend with the untimely passing of one of its best turntablists: DJ Roc Raida of New York City crew the X-Ecutioners.

Born Anthony Williams in 1972, Roc Raida made his first indelible stamp on DJ culture as a young competitor in the DMC World DJ Championships, an international competition that challenges beatmasters to test just how far the turntable can be pushed as an instrument. Each year competitors lift the disciplines of scratching, mixing, beat juggling and body tricks to ever-higher levels. In 1995, ten years after the competition began, Roc took home the champion's spoils: gold turntables and hip-hop infamy. In recent years he has been better known as Busta Rhymes' tour DJ.

Those who were lucky enough to play shows with Roc Raida say he was as humble as he was skillful - always the nicest guy at the party.

His family released the following statement on Saturday: "Anthony Williams... has passed away unexpectedly today, September 19, 2009. He is survived by his wife, three lovely daughters, mother and friends. Raida was recently in a mixed-martial-arts accident, something that he has been practicing for several years. Although he had undergone two surgeries with great success, was released to an inpatient physical therapy facility and was in great spirits the past few days, this morning he started to have complications and passed. The family asks for privacy at this time."

Check out Roc Raida's championship-winning 1995 battle routine for some stunning examples of turntable science. RIP.

-- Courtney Powell

Erich Kunzel dead at 74

ErichK Conductor Erich Kunzel died today, at the age of 74, in a hospital near his home on Swan's Island, Maine.

Four months ago he announced to a stunned classical music world that he had been diagnosed with liver, colon and pancreatic cancer.

Born in New York City, Maestro Kunzel began his conducting career with Santa Fe Opera in 1957, but he will be remembered best for his stewardship of one of America's most successful and active pop programs, The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra.  It came with over-sized flags, indoor fireworks, circus animals and Hollywood stars, but Erich introduced and welcomed untold numbers of new concert-goers to the world of classical music.

 An inductee into the classical music Hall of Fame, he sold more than 10 million records and was awarded the classical crossover artist of the year by Billboard magazine for four consecutive years.  A search under his name will give you some idea of how diverse his reach was. Choosing a favorite from all these is next to impossible, but I'm shamelessly fond of his version of Ron Goodwin's score for the 1969 film "The Battle of Britain."

Here are a couple of the most complete website tributes, currently.  The Cincinnati Enquirer and The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra website.

DJ AM, 1973–2009

DJ AM As reported today, DJ AM, born Adam Goldstein, has passed away.  He was 36 years old. 

Goldstein was a member of the band Crazy Town, known for their 2001 hit song, “Butterfly.”  His work as a DJ appeared on albums by Madonna, Will Smith, Papa Roach, Shifty, and Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds.  He spun at private celebrity events and Hollywood hotspots, and was also known for his romances with reality TV star Nicole Richie and actress-singer Mandy Moore. 

Goldstein was also known for his collaboration with drummer Travis Barker of the punk band blink-182.  The duo played several live DJ-and-drum sets, including one at the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards. 

In September 2008, Goldstein and Barker were involved in a private plane crash in Columbia S.C.  Though critically injured, both Goldstein and Barker survived. 

Goldstein posted his last known public remarks on Twitter on Tuesday, August 25, when he tweeted the following Grandmaster Flash lyrics: "New York, New York.  Big city of dreams, but everything in New York ain't always what it seems."

Rest in peace, DJ AM.

--Bri Nguyen

Image via theinsider.com

Heath Ledger's Music Video for Modest Mouse

The 'Net's been buzzing this month with the release of Modest Mouse's music video for "King Rat," off their recent EP, No One's First and You're Next.  This video was conceived by late actor Heath Ledger, who received a director's credit.  It's a somewhat creepy animated vid--Ledger made it to protest the illegal commercial whale hunts that take place off the coast of Australia.  In an eerie turning-of-the-tables, the vid depicts a crew of whales hunting humans in order to make pet food.  It makes my skin crawl, but it's sobering, not to mention effective.  Check it out.

--Bri Nguyen

Les Paul 1915 - 2009

Lp.songwritershalloffameawards Instrumentalist, entertainer, and inventor of the guitar model that bears his name, Les Paul passed away today in White Plains, New York, at the age of 94.

Born in Waukesha, Wisconsin, on June 9, 1915, Paul began performing in public as a "honky-tonk" guitarist at the age of 13.  In the 1930s and '40s, he played with bandleader Fred Waring and many popular singers, including Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, and The Andrews Sisters. It was Crosby that gave Paul an early tape recorder that he began to modify, allowing him to pioneer the art of multi-track recording.

An electronics enthusiast since his youth, Les Paul began experimenting with new guitar designs in the ‘30s.  As ensemble sound levels were growing with amplification, his goal was to improve tone and sustain, while minimizing feedback, so he designed an instrument with a solid body, reducing vibration in the frame and concentrating it in the string.

His initial design was given the unflattering name "The Log" because of the solid construction.  It was 10 years before a manufacturer picked up a refinement of this design, and the first Les Paul was produced by Gibson in 1952.  Since that date the "Les Paul" has gone on to be one of the most recognizable sounds in rock, famed for its dominance and versatility of tone.

In 2008, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame paid tribute to Les Paul in a week-long celebration of his life, which culminated with a live performance by Paul himself. He is the only individual to share membership of the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the National Inventors Hall of Fame, and the National Broadcasters Hall of Fame. Until recently he continued to perform two weekly New York shows with the Les Paul Trio, at the Iridium Jazz Club in New York City. -- Hugo Munday

Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney Music Video

I've had both the Beatles and Michael Jackson on the brain lately, so I thought I'd see if I could dig up any related video content.  I ended up finding the music video for Say Say Say, a duet between Jackson and Paul McCartney.  It's thoroughly entertaining--check it out below.


Click here to watch the video on YouTube if you can't see it above.

--Bri Nguyen

Michael Jackson Dance Tribute in Sweden

Michael Jackson's influence was truly global.  Check out this flash mob dance performance to "Beat It" in Stockholm yesterday.


Click here to watch the video on YouTube if you can't see it above.

--Bri Nguyen

Best Hip-Hop Albums of 2009, So Far

Finale Finale, A Pipe Dream and a Promise
Produced by the Motor City’s lava-hot Black Milk, Finale’s Pipe Dream was bound to snare at least a little underground notoriety. Instead, though, it’s the clear-cut leader for the year’s best hip-hop album. Track for track, Milk’s beats outdo almost anything he’s touched before, the pitched instruments rolling like waves atop the twos and fours, but Finale’s delivery is the real discovery here. Lagging about as far behind the beat as possible without derailing, his rhymes layer and resolve with the confidence of a seasoned veteran, and he swings as hard and deeply as anyone out there today. If you only listen to one hip-hop album this year, make it A Pipe Dream and a Promise. (CD, MP3)

               

              
Knaan K'Naan, Troubadour
Though it plays second fiddle to his brilliant, Juno Award-winning debut, The Dusty Foot Philosopher, K’Naan’s Troubadour is a well-played amalgam of hip-hop strength, Afrobeat shimmy, and immediately accessible pop balladry. As he says in song after song, this Somali ex-pat’s street-toughened bona fides provide the bitter, poetic backdrop to a variety of songs about growing up severely disadvantaged and nevertheless letting the love shine brightly through. (CD, MP3)

•    Full album review
•    Interview with K’Naan


Pos P.O.S., Never Better
As mentioned in an earlier post, P.O.S. finally lives up to his potential with the aptly named Never Better. Backed by should-be Minneapolis superstars Doomtree, P.O.S.’s gritty crowning achievement mixes hook-driven sing-alongs with feral, mile-a-minute diatribes in what may prove to be year’s most gymnastic album-length rap attack. (CD, MP3)


Dilla J Dilla, Jay Stay Paid
Under the reverent direction of Pete Rock, J Dilla’s posthumous, 28-track mix highlights guest spots by both hip-hop legends (Black Thought, Doom) and lesser-knowns (Frank Nitty, Cue D), the variety of which throws the full weight of Dilla’s production savvy into the sad vacuum left by his death at 32. Sadly, the guy was just getting started, but he could already mix circles (er, donuts) around almost every producer of his generation. (CD, MP3)


Ugk UGK, UGK for Life
Southern rap isn’t for everyone, but if you’re looking for an in, try the guitars. True to the precedent they irrevocably set on 2007’s Underground Kingz, Pimp C and Bun B continue to enlist the best guitar performances around. A posthumous affair (Pimp C died in December, 2007), the reverently named UGK for Life offers an apt testament to a duo whose sound defined its city (Houston) for more than a decade. (CD, MP3)


Suspicious Omissions

Eminem, Relapse
Eminem’s still got plenty of the zany lyrical swerve with which he made his name. Just listen to “Bagpipes from Baghdad,” a five-minute cut of surreal, R-rated fun interrupted, unfortunately, only by the chorus’s insistence on Shady’s own crazy unpredictability. For 10 years now, Eminem’s been brilliant when he’s not being the least bit serious or self-reflective, and Relapse devotes more time than ever to the self-commentary that chronically deflates his lyrical impact.

Mos Def, Ecstatic
Like The New Danger before it, Mos Def’s Ecstatic is a limp collection of exquisitely mastered sketches. Despite its 16 tracks, the album lacks songs. Everything here sounds like a mediocre MC’s really well-funded demos. Once again, it’s clear that there are few sonic pairings that work as well together as Mos Def’s voice and a fat stack of low brass, but “songs” bearing this unforgettable dance of timbres are few and far between, and even they lack the musical motion of the least memorable tracks from 2002’s Black on Both Sides.

Asher Roth, Asleep in the Bread Aisle
Kudos to the guy’s PR machine for pulling the wool over so many eyes simultaneously, but really, people: How, in 2009, does an MC’s being white and smokin’ dope still lend a hip-hop album this much cultural momentum? Granted, I’ve never been one to subscribe to the absolute value of lyrical sincerity, but could someone please ask Asher Roth to sound a little bit like he cares about his own music? Asleep in the studio is more like it…

     -- Jason Kirk

Michael Jackson Remembered

MJ-remembered To mark the occasion of the public memorial at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, ChordStrikers assembled thoughts and reminiscence about the man, the memories, and the music.

*********************

BE THERE
I try not to think too much about the bizarre behavior, indiscretions, and even outright crimes of the entertainers who create works I've enjoyed, but I'm not great at blocking those things out. The “Wall of Sound” isn't as resonant for me since Phil Spector was found guilty of murder. I find it difficult to clap along with "Rock & Roll Part 2" at a basketball game without thinking of Gary Glitter's illegal interest in minors. And Michael Jackson's fall from grace -- strange physical changes and ugly allegations, not to mention weak remixes and lesser songs -- gradually diminished his unique gifts. I quit listening to his music, and when I ran into it, it didn't make me happy anymore.

Now, though, I can't get "I'll Be There" out of my head, and I'm surprised at its comforting effect. I wonder ... of all the songs Michael Jackson sang, as a solo artist and as the shining center of the Jackson 5, why that one? Maybe because it's a plea for redemption. "You and I must make a pact / We must bring salvation back." He might have thought salvation would come in the form of his upcoming run of sold-out shows across the ocean and a "Thriller"-themed casino. Maybe that would have done it.

Now, though, the suddenness and tragedy of his death has burned away everything but the purity of his performances, from brotherly harmonies to the moonwalk of Motown 25 to the “Man in the Mirror.” As I drove home tonight, bopping along with my sons to "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough," I realized I'd never be able to truly convey to them what MJ meant. So you think you can dance? Not like Michael. American Idol? Try world idol. It was my privilege to have come of pop-cultural age in a world that had him in it. My kids will know stars and see tabloids, but it will never be the same.  -- Stephanie Reid-Simons

*

CAPITAL GAINS
I was 19 when Off The Wall was released. At the time Michael Jackson was a star, even a household name, but more as the most talented output of the Jackson 5/The Jacksons, certainly not as the King of Pop. The arc of his post-child-star career was by no means certain and the music of clubs and discos was still firmly in the grip of Motown.

Right at the time of the album's release in England, a classmate returned to the school town I grew up in with an Aston Martin and limitless cash.

"I'm doing rather well on the stock market. Do you want to go out to dinner?"

He had a minder with him who was a cop. A London club-scene bender of several days ensued that steered to the center of a world I'd never experienced. Everywhere we went there was music, and 90% of it was Off The Wall.

There was a lull when this album stood by itself. It seemed that until mainstream dance music listened to MJ's latest then, en masse, charged off in the same direction he had gone, you could not buy or hear an album that sounded like it. It was more funk, soul -- even smooth jazz -- than disco. Gone was this goofy, funky-chicken Motown sound, replaced with slick, tuxedoed sophistication.

A couple of the clubs, I remember, had sunken floors full of flailing elbows and knees. Watching from above, when "Don't Stop 'til You Get Enough" came on, girl and boy alike, everybody's body posture changed in an instant. The dance floor was trying to get it together in a vocabulary of movements that few had any hope of replicating.

After a day or two of "the scene," I wised up. Things didn't add up with my host. My probes were rebuffed in no uncertain terms by the minder, and so I made my way back to suburbia. Years later I found out he had come into a trust fund and was running through it as fast as he could. There was no stock market job, the car was leased and everything, apart from the music, fell apart not long after.  -- Hugo Munday

*

ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER
I was in 5th grade the year that Off The Wall was released, and I was attached to that record in ways that only Kiss had elicited up to that point. I thought that “Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough” was possibly the greatest song every written, and I had the opportunity to prove it that year.

Every class had a dance once a year. Because my elementary school was on the lower-middle class end of the scale, a “dance” consisted of the entire grade meeting in the auditorium, with a table full of punch on one side, and a record player with two small speakers on the other end. We were all encouraged to bring our favorite record and play one song from it, so that everyone had the opportunity for a turn (I attempted to “buy” turns off people so that I could bring more than one record, but was asked to stop when the principal found out). My choice was, of course, Off the Wall and “Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough.”

When my turn came up, I gingerly pulled the record out of the sleeve, put the vinyl on the turntable, and put the needle on the record. The song started, and I turned up the volume (an action that became a point of contention between my fifth-grade teacher and me). Then I set myself to the task of dancing to my pick.

In a moment pure free of inhibition, I let the music dictate the moves. What came out of me can only be described in retrospect as a cross between a spazzy white-boy dance and a mime trapped in a box. My feet worked in a square, mimicking the boundaries of the box, while my hips attempted to keep up with the rhythm of the song, and my hands pushed up against the invisible walls of the box. This was my entire dance, for the five-plus minutes of the song. I was in a trance, and I didn’t fully realize until near the end of the song that I had everyone’s attention -- their full, undivided attention. I had literally brought everyone else to a stand-still -- mouths gaping, eyes wide and all pointed in my direction.

It did not discourage me in the slightest. I danced until the end of the song and halfway through “Rock with You” before anyone realized I was getting two songs. I thought I was the coolest I had ever been -- so brilliant, in fact, that everyone was compelled to stop what they were doing and revel in my magnificence. No one has ever been able to convince me otherwise. And I can only thank Michael Jackson for that.

Thank you, Michael.  -- Robert Arambel

*

Thriller EIGHT IS ENOUGH
Thriller was released when I was in 4th grade, and it was probably the first album I purchased and listened to over 50 times. It didn’t take too long for me to memorize the album, including the song titles. As it turned out, that proved to be a very good move for me in the 4th grade social scene, where my official nickname had been “Square” for some time. One day during recess there was some discussion started by the cool kids about Thriller and how good it was. I think I made some comment agreeing with them, which apparently did not please the cool kids, for they challenged me to name all the songs on Thriller in order. I immediately did so without difficulty. This feat impressed the leader of the cool kids, who responded with an offhand comment, something to the effect of, “Wow, I guess you’re not “Square,” you’re “Octagon.”

From that day forward, my nickname in grade school was “Octagon,” or the more colloquial version, “Octo.”  -- Lucas Hilbert

*

BRING DOWN THE WALLS
I was 12 when the video for "Thriller" came out – and it was NOT cool to like Michael Jackson at that time. MTV was a baby and we were all obsessed with watching. The build-up to the video’s release was, for me, akin to the release of the last Harry Potter book. They showed little clips and had great teasers for it, and by the time it premiered, we were all hooked. It changed the face of videos. Everything before that now seemed so juvenile. I didn’t want to tell any of my friends how cool I thought it was, but over the years, we all found out that every one of us bought the album: every one of us knew the dance in the “Beat It” video, and we all still know the “Thriller” monster dance. For a little alternative punk kid like me, it was the epitome of great music breaking down the barriers of style.  -- Shauna Furbush

*

WORLD MUSIC
I never considered myself a Michael Jackson fan until I moved to France after college. Michael Jackson is a huge star in Europe, and cultural references to him are literally everywhere. Then I started traveling more widely, and everywhere I went, from the Czech Republic to China, people knew about MJ. His presence -- and his music -- is truly global, more so, I would say, than almost any other pop artist. He will be missed.  -- Bri Nguyen

*********************

What’s your MJ moment? Were you Bad? How do you remember the music? Drop comments, read comments. Don’t stop ‘til you get enough.

   -- ChordStrike

Michael Jackson: 1958-2009

Michaelshoes As reported by numerous sources, Michael Jackson, the “King of Pop,” has died in Los Angeles, California. He was 50 years old.

Jackson was born on August 29, 1958, in Gary, Indiana and began his musical career at age 5 as the youngest member of the Jackson 5. He released 9 regular full-length solo albums with both Motown and Epic Records from 1972-2001. According to Grammy.com, Jackson won 13 Grammy Awards during his career, and was honored with a Grammy Legend Award in 1993.Michaelkid

To this day, his 1982 album Thriller is the biggest-selling album of all time. It was produced by Quincy Jones and featured a duet with Paul McCartney, a guitar track with Eddie Van Halen, and spoken word material from Vincent Price. 

MjcoverIn the twilight of his career, a number of noteworthy and highly publicized news events shadowed Jackson in his personal life for several years.

In more recent news, Jackson was planning a 50-date concert tour starting in London in 2009.

We honor the memory of Jackson for his music and many memorable appearances over the last several decades.

 Rest in Peace, Michael.

--Lucas Hilbert

 

Koko Taylor - The Queen of the Blues, dead at 80

Koko1[1]

While recovering from surgery to correct gastrointestinal bleeding, Koko Taylor, the Queen of the Blues has passed away at the age of 80. I've taken this from the press-release put out by Alligator Records today.


Grammy Award-winning blues legend Koko Taylor, 80, died on June 3, 2009 in her hometown of Chicago, IL, as a result of complications following her May 19 surgery to correct a gastrointestinal bleed. On May 7, 2009, the critically acclaimed Taylor, known worldwide as the “Queen of the Blues,” won her 29th Blues Music Award (for Traditional Female Blues Artist Of The Year), making her the recipient of more Blues Music Awards than any other artist. In 2004 she received the NEA National Heritage Fellowship Award, which is among the highest honors given to an American artist. Her most recent CD, 2007’s Old School, was nominated for a Grammy.

Born Cora Walton on a sharecropper’s farm just outside Memphis, TN, on September 28, 1928, Koko, nicknamed for her love of chocolate, fell in love with music at an early age. Inspired by gospel music and WDIA blues disc jockeys B.B. King and Rufus Thomas, Taylor began belting the blues with her five brothers and sisters, accompanying themselves on their homemade instruments. In 1952, Taylor and her soon-to-be-husband, the late Robert “Pops” Taylor, traveled to Chicago with nothing but, in Koko’s words, “thirty-five cents and a box of Ritz Crackers.”

In Chicago, “Pops” worked for a packing company, and Koko cleaned houses. Together they frequented the city’s blues clubs nightly. Encouraged by her husband, Koko began to sit in with the city’s top blues bands, and soon she was in demand as a guest artist. One evening in 1962 Koko was approached by arranger/composer Willie Dixon. Overwhelmed by Koko’s performance, Dixon landed Koko a Chess Records recording contract, where he produced her several singles, two albums and penned her million-selling 1965 hit “Wang Dang Doodle,” which would become Taylor’s signature song.

Koko Taylor was one of very few women who found success in the male-dominated blues world. She took her music from the tiny clubs of Chicago’s South Side to concert halls and major festivals all over the world. She shared stages with every major blues star, including Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, B.B. King, Junior Wells and Buddy Guy as well as rock icons Robert Plant and Jimmy Page.

Taylor’s final performance was on May 7, 2009 in Memphis at the Blues Music Awards, where she sang “Wang Dang Doodle” after receiving her award for Traditional Blues Female Artist Of The Year.

Survivors include Taylor’s husband Hays Harris, daughter Joyce Threatt, son-in-law Lee Threatt, grandchildren Lee, Jr. and Wendy, and three great-grandchildren.

Funeral arrangements will be announced.


The release then finishes with quotes from the press.

It's hard, even unfair to chose her best single recording. Certainly Live From Chicago: An Audience With The Queen ranks up there with the likes of B.B. King's Live at the Regal, as one of the greatest live blues albums of all time. She'll pull your emotions all over the map on this recording, with able assistance from lead guitarist Michael “Mr. Dynamite” Robinson. I'm also really partial to the 2007 "let-me-show-you-how-its-done" tour-de-force Old School cited in the release above.

May she rest in peace. -- Hugo Munday

5 Things I Will Remember About Sasquatch 2009

SASQUATCH

Now that I've finally recovered from three exhausting and thrilling days of sun, music, and elephant ears, here, in descending order, are the five things I will remember most about this year's Sasquatch Music Festival:

Jay

5) Finding out about Jay Bennett's death from Silversun Pickups' frontman, Brian Aubert, who dedicated a song to Bennett, adding, "may he rest in peace" --

I'm so utterly addicted to the interent/blogosphere that it was shocking to actually hear a breaking news item from a real live person, let alone a quasi-rock-star. It was a sad, strange moment.

Mark Kozelek
4) Meeting one of my favorite singers, Mark Kozelek (Red House Painters/Sun Kil Moon), during the Bon Iver set --

I was on my way to go pull a friend away from the YYY's mainstage show when I spotted Kozelek in the crowd taking in the Bon Iver set. I shook his hand, told him how much I love his music (especially his album of acoustic AC/DC covers) and moved on. He seemed genuinely appreciative and I was thoroughly stoked.

St Vincent

3) St. Vincent --

After taking in this performance, my crush on St. Vincent's Annie Clark escalated from "slight" to "unhealthy." H-E-L-P!

Shearwater

2) Shearwater --

Shearwater was flat-out fantastic live. I liked 2008's Rook, but I wasn't expecting much when I meandered over to the Wookie stage to check out this Texas-based band, fronted by former Okkervil River member and bird-enthusiast Jonathan Meiburg. I won't go into the details, but if you like this band at all, don't miss them the next time they roll through town--they are the real deal.  

Bon Iver

1) Bon Iver --

Closing out the first night of the festival on the Wookie stage, Bon Iver came off less like a new-kid-on-the-indie-singer-song-writer-block and more like an elder statesman showing all the wannabes how it's done. The sun had just set when Justin Vernon and co. took the stage, the waning light and surreal landscape of the Gorge providing the perfect backdrop to Vernon's sad, rousing melodies. Even Mos Def, who I spotted checking out the set from stage-side, was bobbing up and down to "Skinny Love." 

Oh, 'Squatch, I miss you already.      

RIP: Jay Bennett (1963-2009)

Jay bennett Jay Bennett died in his sleep Saturday night at the age of 45. Best known for his work with alt country legend Wilco, Bennett was an incredible talent, an oft-described perfectionist and enthusiastic performer. It has been argued that he was the driving force behind Wilco’s expanding musical depth from the ashes of Uncle Tupelo, and would frequently work in tandem with Jeff Tweedy for the songwriting of the band’s most important albums, Summerteeth and Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. Immediately after Wilco finished recording Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, of which Bennett engineered the majority, he was dismissed from the band following rising tensions. Since then, Bennett has released five albums mostly through Undertow Music and has been a force behind the studio glass as a producer, mixer and engineer.

Bennett was a founding member of the power pop outfit Titanic Love Affair. They released three albums in the 90s, the last of which overlapped with his newfound duties with Wilco. Bennett was recruited to Wilco shortly after the band released their debut LP, an album that seemed to be little more than a retread of Uncle Tupelo. But with Bennett alongside Jeff Tweedy, Wilco soon found themselves no longer pigeonholed as an alternative country act but began ascribing rich pop textures, keyboards and electronics to the earthy melodies. Fractures grew larger during the tumultuous recording of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and the turmoil inevitably forced one of them out. Bennett admitted that he was saddened but not surprised in the least by the dismissal. The conflict can be seen in I Am Trying to Break Your Heart, a documentary film about Wilco directed by Sam Jones.

While the cause of Bennett’s death is unknown as of now, speculation points to complications arising from Bennett’s hip problems. He first injured it during a stage dive while performing with Titanic Love Affair. It had never healed right and caused him tremendous pain off and on for years. Only about a month ago, he publicly announced on his MySpace page that he needed hip replacement surgery but could not afford it due to a lack of health care insurance. It is unclear about the debilitating nature of the injury, but pain medication could have attributed to an accidental overdose. It is all speculation now, though; I’ll wait for facts to emerge in the near future.

One of the final public acts in Bennett’s life is, unfortunately, a lawsuit he filed against Tweedy for breach of contract in regard to his work with Wilco, notably royalties for songs he wrote and for his appearance in Jones’ documentary. But Tweedy apparently holds no ill will. He and Wilco are touring in Europe right now, and in response to the heartrending news, he said, “We are all deeply saddened by this tragedy. We will miss Jay as we remember him—as a truly unique and gifted human being and one who made welcome and significant contributions to the band's songs and evolution. Our thoughts go out to his family and friends in this very difficult time.”

Rest in Peace, Jay.

-- Matt Medlock

R.I.P. Vern Gosdin: "The Voice" of Country

Vern As reported today, "The Voice" of Country, Vern Gosdin, has died at age 74.

One of his best-known songs, "Chiseled in Stone," was voted 1989 song of the year by the CMA. In the tune, an older man tells a younger man who is going through tough times, "You don't know about sadness 'til you faced life alone | you don't know about lonely 'til it's chiseled in stone."

A number of contemporary country stars mourned the loss.

"He was one hell of a country singer and helped me out a lot on my very first tour," George Strait said in a statement.

Josh Turner called Gosdin a "singer of sad songs... the news of Vern's death puts me beyond sad," Turner said. "He was one of my unofficial vocal coaches. He taught me what 'country soul music' was. Country music has lost one of its ambassadors."

Fans continue to push for Vern Gosdin to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. You can find more details and join the cause here.

Rest in Peace, Vern Gosdin.

--Lucas Hilbert

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