Died On This Date (November 17, 2014) Jimmy Ruffin / Motown Great

Jimmy Ruffin
May 7, 1936 – November 17, 2014

jimmy-ruffinJimmy Ruffin was an American soul singer who, through much of the late ’60s, ’70s, and early ’80s, released several hit records.  Born in Mississippi to a family that would later would include brother and future Temptation, David Ruffin, Ruffin began singing at a very young age.  His first group of note was Gospel music’s, the Dixie Nightingales.  By the early ’60s, Ruffin was singing background sessions for Motown subsidiary, Miracle Records.  After serving in the US Army, Ruffin launched his solo career in 1964.  What followed was a succession of hits that included his signature song, “What Becomes of the Brokenhearted,” which reached #7 on the Billboard charts.  The ’70s were less kind to Ruffin, but he still scored some lesser hits while discovering a new audience in the UK.  In the ’80s, he relocated to England where he did well along the Northern Soul circuit.  He also collaborated with Paul Weller, Heaven 17, Maxine Nightingale, and Brenda Holloway, to name a few.  Ruffin eventually moved back to the US, settling in Las Vegas, Nevada.  He continued to record and release albums as recently as 2010’s I Am My Brother’s Keeper.   Jimmy Ruffin was 78 when he passed away on November 17, 2014.

What You Should Own

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Died On This Date (November 28, 2009) Bob Keane / Founder of Del-Fi Records

Bob Keane (Born Robert Kuhn)
January 5, 1922 – November 28, 2009

At right with Ritchie Valens

Bob Keane was the founder of Del-Fi Records, the first label to give a young Ritchie Valens a recording contract.   Keane began his music career as a clarinetist who, after a 1938 concert by his jazz band was broadcast on Los Angeles radio station, KFWB, was offered a record deal by MCA Records.  A couple of years later, he was dropped by the label so he enlisted in the army.  Upon his return home from duty, Keane picked up where he left off, playing in local clubs around Los Angeles.  In 1955, Keane and a partner formed the label, Keen Records, and released a single by then unknown soul singer, Sam Cooke.  The song was “Summertime,” but it was the b-side “You Send Me” that started to get attention at radio, quickly sending it to #1 on the Billboard pop chart.  Unfortunately for Keane, he made an oral agreement with his partner, and before he could collect any of the “You Send Me” earnings, he was out the door.  He soon formed his own label, Del-Fi Records and discovered Valens, a young Latino rock ‘n roller from Pacoima, CA.  Over the next several months, Keane released hit after hit records by Valens but sadly, the musician was killed the following year in the plane crash that also took the lives of Buddy Holly and JP “The Big Bopper” Richardson.  The label continued on, eventually signing a stable of artists that were just as important to the legacy of popular music as Valens had been.  That list included the Surfaris, Frank Zappa, Brenda Holloway, and the Bobby Fuller Four.  In 1967, Keane shuttered the label and went on to manage his sons’ band.  He sold the Del-Fi catalog to the Warner Music Group in 2003.  On November 28, 2009, Bob Keane, 87, died of renal failure.

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