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Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note Related threads: In Memoriam (196) Folk Singers who Have Died (238) |
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Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: Waddon Pete Date: 21 Dec 11 - 11:19 AM Hello, Just to let you know that the Mudcat "In Memoriam thread has now started. I would ask you to be patient as names are added. I would also like your help to fill out the list! However, be aware of the very few guidance notes! …..This thread is for those people associated with the world of folk music in its widest sense. …..The people on the thread must have had an obit thread running on Mudcat. …..We only go back 15 years to 1996. (Yes, I know Joan MacIsaac slipped in there! Oooops!) If anyone else would like to start a thread for those many and wonderful people who shared their talents with us before then, then I'm sure that will be appreciated! Any post on the "In Memoriam" thread should only be a name and a link to their obit thread please. If you want to discuss or add anything else, please use this thread. Thanks, Best wishes, Peter |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: GUEST,John from "Elsie`s Band" Date: 21 Dec 11 - 03:36 PM I know not all of our friends mentioned below had obits. on Mudcat but anytime is a good time to remember them. Gordon Hall. George Spicer Ron Spicer Mike Hutchison |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: Bill D Date: 21 Dec 11 - 04:10 PM Putting 'obit' in the filter box, and setting it to 'all' will get most of the relevant threads...but not all, as I just discovered. |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: Sandy Mc Lean Date: 21 Dec 11 - 04:20 PM If the roll of honour is restricted strictly to Mudcat members Rick has probably added more expertise to this site than most who have passed on. He was always there to help whoever needed it. Although I often differed with Malcolm's opinions he had an uncanny ability to find answers to difficult questions. Sandy had the attention of all simply because of who he was and his expertise and experience made his star shine bright. I always enjoyed Little John's frequent posts and they are missed to this day! RIP you all! |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: VirginiaTam Date: 23 Dec 11 - 09:47 AM Is it alright to add my daughter Andie to this list? She was not a mudcatter (as far as I know), nor was she a professional musician. She was studying music when she took ill and passed away. She did introduce me to traditional music of Great Britain and blues. Taught me to love both. http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=120764 |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: katlaughing Date: 23 Dec 11 - 01:46 PM Peter, I didn't put this in the other thread, because I cannot find an obit thread for Wayne Scott, but listening to an NPR story about him, today, it seems to me we should note his passing. He was a native of Kentucky, raised five sons, alone, and wrote and sang his own songs all of his life, though never in public. Once his son, Darrell, made a name for himself, he started his own record label and the first release was of his dad, Wayne singing his own songs. He was 71 and that was just six years ago. Here is a link to today's interview of Darrell and here is a link to a really neat interview of the father and son from a few years ago: HERE. Some of the things they've said reminds me of Jean Ritchie's background...from the mountains in KY, born to a holler named after his family, songs of authenticity...really interesting. Thanks, kat P.S. I'll be glad to start an obit thread if you think it would be worthy and best, Pater. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: Peter Kasin Date: 23 Dec 11 - 06:47 PM Mudcatter Winters Wages, who was Lloyd Jones, Jr., a chantey singer and box player in San Francisco. A gentle soul, a member of the SF Bay Area band Skip Henderson and the Starboard Watch, and a regular at the Hyde Street Pier chantey sings. Chanteyranger |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: katlaughing Date: 23 Dec 11 - 07:07 PM Oh, yes, thanks for that, Chanteyranger. Lloyd was special. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: Elmore Date: 23 Dec 11 - 09:38 PM Gamble Rogers,Grant Rogers, Roy Rogers. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: Elmore Date: 23 Dec 11 - 10:22 PM Sorry. Misunderstood the rules. Please disregard my previous entry. I'm out of here. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: BillE Date: 24 Dec 11 - 02:56 AM Cyril Tawney. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: GUEST,Keith Date: 24 Dec 11 - 11:43 PM Jack Elliot, Pete Elliot, Pat Elliot, willie Scott |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: Bernard Date: 08 Jan 12 - 03:13 PM 25 December 2011 Helen Jocys Subject: Obit: Mudcatter Helen Jocys 25/12/11 From: John J - PM Date: 25 Dec 11 - 10:30 AM My Mum, Mudcatter Helen Jocys, died this morning aged 80. Mum was a singer of traditional songs and played melodeon and accordian. It was her energy that gave Bollin Morris the kick in the pants that brought it back to life and helped make it the successful side it is today. Mum was the founder of The Marmalade Band, a group of ladies who would gather at her house on Saturday mornings to sing and play and eat breakfast of toast and marmalade. Mum was always looking for fun and any chance to sing or play in a session. A couple of years ago at Shrewsbury Folk Festival she woke me up beyond midnight after a particularly heavy day of sessioning. Mum had heard a music session kicking off and wanted us to join in. It was well past 4am when we eventually gave up. Ever the one to go against convention, the term 'grow old disgracefully' could have been written for her. Above all, Mum was mother to six - all who will miss her terribly. Christmas Day will never be the same in our family. JJ |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: Waddon Pete Date: 08 Jan 12 - 03:33 PM Thanks Bernard, Your Mum is included in the Memorial. ...the folk festival in the clouds has gained another performer.... Condolences, Peter |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: Gene Date: 24 Jan 12 - 12:15 AM Gone But Not Forgotten! Singers, Musicians and Writers that passed away in 2011. Billie Jo Spears - died in 2011 at her home in Vidor, Texas at the age of 74. Spears was best known for her No. 1 hit 'Blanket on the Ground,' but also for 'Mr. Walker, It's All Over' in 1969. She released over a dozen Top 20 hits during the '70s and remained an active touring act until just recently. In 2005, Spears released her final album called 'I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry' at the age of 68. Billy Grammer - was known for his two Top 20 hits 'I Wanna Go Home' and 'Gotta Travel On,' but also for inventing the Grammer Guitar. In the 1960s, it was called the "finest flat-top guitar on the market," and one that was made especially for Johnny Cash fetched over $130,000 at auction. The Illinois native was a member of the Grand Ole Opry and the Illinois Country Music Hall of Fame. He died in a hospital in Illinois in August 2011 at the age of 85. Charlie Louvin - succumbed to complications from pancreatic cancer. The country icon was best known as one-half of the Louvin brothers, who scored a No. 1 hit in 1956 with 'I Don't Believe You've Met My Baby.' After the death of Ira Louvin, he went on to enjoy a very successful solo career, including hits like 'I Don't Love You Anymore'and 'The Only Way Out.' The Country Music Hall of Famer was working to almost his last days, having just released 'The Battle Rages On'album in November 2010. Don Wayne - wrote the 1974 hit 'Country Bumpkin,' a song that went on to win the CMA and ACM Song of the Year awards, but prior to that he was a known Nashville songwriter who penned the chart-topping hit 'Saginaw, Michigan' for Lefty Frizzell in the early '60s and 'Lonesome Waltz' in 1953. He kept writing even after being drafted for a stint in the Army in 1954 but hit a dry patch in the '70s as his songs were thought to be too rural. A co-worker said something to the effect that "no one wants to hear about that frost on the pumpkin,"which went on to inspire 'Country Bumpkin,' where he recycled that pumpkin line. Don Wayne died of cancer in 2011 at the age of 78. Ferlin Husky - was one of country music's earliest crossover artists. Best known for his 1957 hit 'Gone,' the Country Music Hall of Famer proved that Nashville twang could appeal to mass audiences with three No. 1 hits and many more Top 20 songs. In 2010, Merle Haggard said, "There were a lot of years when nobody in the business could follow Ferlin Husky. He was the big live act of the day." In his later years, the Missouri native fought off congestive heart failure and eventually had seven bypass surgeries by 2009. "I just pray and keep going," Husky once said. Ferlin also had starring roles in several movies and hosted a Network Show. He passed away at the age of 85 in March 2011. Jack Barlow - got his start as a radio DJ. His big country pipes drove songs like 'I Love Country Music' and 'Catch the Wind.' After cutting four records in Nashville, he switched gears to commercial work, writing jingles for Big Red chewing gum and doing voiceover work for companies like Budweiser, Kraft and Kellogg's. The World War II veteran died at the age of 87 after a long illness. He is survived by Dianne, his wife of 24 years, along with several children and grandchildren. Johnny Wright - famous for writing the 1965 chart-topper 'Hello Vietnam,' much of his success came as a collaborator. He was part of the Tennessee Mountain Boys, '50s duo Johnnie and Jack, and he was married to Country Music Hall of Famer Kitty Wells. With Johnnie and Jack, Wright had several No. 1 hits, including '(Oh Baby Mine) I Get So Lonely' and 'Stop the World.' He died in September 2011 at the age of 97 in his Madison, Tenn. home. Liz Anderson - died on Halloween 2011 at the age of 81. The singer-songwriter was best known for her hits 'Mama Spank' and 'The Game of Triangles,' but she also penned songs like '(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers' and 'I'm a Lonesome Fugitive' for Merle Haggard, the first of which helped him decide on the band name the Strangers. She is the mother of singer Lynn Anderson, whom she also wrote songs for. During her long career, Liz Anderson won two Grammy Awards. Marshall Grant - the last original member of Johnny Cash's 'Tennessee Two,' died in August 2011. Grant was there –literally — the day Cash first picked up a guitar, and he was with him throughout most of his career, even managing the Man in Black until 1980. During a 2003 speech, Grant joked that the band didn't spend 10 years trying to refine their classic sound. It only took about five minutes to come up with it, and then they spent four years trying to get rid of it. Members of the Cash family have often said how important Grant's steady hand was to the often unpredictable Cash. He died in a hospital in Jonesboro, Ark. at the age of 83. Mel McDaniel - Grand Ole Opry member Mel McDaniel's hits can still be heard on great country radio stations today. His No. 1 tallies include 'Baby's Got Her Blue Jeans On' and 'Louisiana Saturday Night,' but he also recorded hits like 'Big Ole Brew' and 'Stand Up.'McDaniel's career was at its peak in the '80s, but he continued to tour heavily into the mid '90s before an accident at a show in Louisiana slowed him down until his death in April 2011. The Checotah, Okla. native died at the age of 68 after a battle with cancer. Ralph Mooney - Bakersfield country pioneer Ralph Mooney died in March 2011 at 82-years-old. The steel guitar player was part of Waylon Jennings' band for over 20 years, and was once referred to as the "only steel guitar player" by Jennings. But he was a star prior to that; Beginning in 1966, he was a frequent nominee and occasional winner of the ACM Guitarist of the Year award. He also wrote the chart-topping hit 'Crazy Arms,' first recorded by Ray Price, but then by Patsy Cline, Willie Nelson and Patty Loveless. Mooney continued to perform and record until 2010. His wife, Wanda, said he died of complications that arose from cancer. Wade Mainer - Bluegrass pioneer Wade Mainer paved the way for a new era of artists like Ricky Skaggs and the Monroe Brothers. He started playing bluegrass in western North Carolina and formed popular ’30s duo Mainer’s Mountaineers with his older brother, J.E. Mainer. The younger Mainer invented a two-finger banjo picking style that proved to be the cornerstone for a bluegrass era. Eventually Mainer moved to Flint, Mich. at the boom of the auto industry, and he was virtually forgotten until Tex Ritter ran into him one day — and he picked up the banjo once again. He died in September 2011 at the age of 104. Wilma Lee Cooper - was as familiar of a face around the Grand Ole Opry as Little Jimmy Dickens. Known as the ‘First Lady of Bluegrass’, Wilma Lee enjoyed her greatest success as an artist with her husband, Stoney Cooper. For over 30 years, they built a resume that included hits like ‘Cheated Too’, ‘There’s a Big Wheel’ and ‘Come Walk With Me’. She also wrote ‘Big Midnight Special’. Stoney died in 1977, but Wilma Lee continued to perform on the Opry stage until she suffered a stroke in 2001. She died of natural causes in September 2011 at her Sweetwater, Tenn. home. Their daughter Carol Lee Cooer was inducted with them as Grand Ole Opry members at the age of 13, making Carol Lee Cooper the youngest ever member of the Opry. G |
Subject: RE: In Memoriam From: katlaughing Date: 27 Jan 12 - 06:25 PM Thanks, again, Peter. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: GUEST,GUEST Date: 09 May 12 - 08:16 PM Seems like the Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note list is missing many great names (who we all wish were not on it because they are still alive). Is there an older list? Where is Roy Williamson's name? And what about Matt McGinn? |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: GUEST,999 Date: 09 May 12 - 09:26 PM And you? You are . . . ? |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: kendall Date: 12 Nov 12 - 08:31 AM Don Stover Sam Tidwell Fred Pike |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: Dave Hanson Date: 12 Nov 12 - 10:46 AM The four original Dubliners, Luke Kelly Ronnie Drew Barney McKenna and Ciaran Bourke. Dave H |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: Waddon Pete Date: 12 Nov 12 - 12:02 PM Check out the "In Memoriam" Thread. Far more information for those who are interested. Best wishes, Peter |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch Date: 06 Oct 16 - 10:35 PM olddude: Yeah, pretty much covers it. Gargoyle: RTFM (top of the thread in Standard Oxford English) Pete: Oy. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: GUEST,pauperback Date: 06 Oct 16 - 10:46 PM Gargoyle - (using the well known Britism) - not the grief whore type - excuse the bluntness Ladies. |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: Beer Date: 18 Mar 25 - 05:32 PM I can't seem to find if I'm breaking any rules or not, so I'll post a few names as I didn't see them in the thread mentioned. If I'm doing something wrong, please remove my post. Jesse Winchester Penny Lang Willie Dunn Ron Bankley (Mudcatter for awhile) John Prine |
Subject: RE: Obit: Mudcat Honor Roll: Musicians of Note From: GUEST,mg Date: 19 Mar 25 - 01:05 AM I just got word today from a trusted source that Lynn Pinkerton of Vancouver BC has died. I have no details. She was a professor of anthropology I believe at one of the BC universities. RIP. |
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