Died On This Date (December 7, 2008) Dennis Yost / Lead Singer Of Classics IV

Dennis Yost
July 20, 1943 – December 7, 2008

dennisyost

Dennis Yost was the original lead singer and drummer for the ’60s pop band, Classics IV.  Formed as a cover band in 1961, the group eventually added the vocals of Yost to the mix.  They are best remembered for their 1968 hits, “Spooky” and ‘Stormy.”  Those, plus 1969’s “Traces” all cracked the top 5 on the Billboard singles chart.  Their songs have been covered by the likes of the Supremes, Daniel Ash, Dusty Springfield, Lydia Lunch, Imogen Heap, Santana and John Legend.  Yost continued to front the band, although with different line-ups, for the better part of the next thirty years.  As the band was about to mount a 40th anniversary album and tour in 2006, Yost took a fall down the stairs in his home.  He suffered serious brain injuries that ultimately precluded him from performing again.   On December 7, 2008, Dennis Yost, age 65, died of respiratory failure.

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Classics IV

Died On This Date (September 21, 1987) Jaco Pastorius / Influential Jazz Bassist

John “Jaco” Pastorius
December 1, 1951 – September 21, 1987

One of the most influential bassists of all time, Jaco Pastorius was arguably the greatest modern jazz bass player of all time.  Regarded as a gifted athlete growing up, Pastorius began to focus on his second love, music following a football injury to his wrist at the age of 13.  At the time he was playing to drums, but the injury was bad enough that he had to give up the sticks and find another instrument to excel at.  It was then that he picked up the bass.  As he developed, his interests began to lean toward jazz and R&B.    He began playing with then-unknown Pat Metheny, with whom he made his first recordings.  He got is break in 1975 when Bobby Colomby, then of Blood, Sweat & Tears helped him get a deal with CBS Records who released his self-titled solo debut in 1976.  With a stellar cast that included David Sanborn, Herbie Hancock and Wayne Shorter, many consider Jaco Pastorius to be the best bass album ever recorded.  Shortly thereafter, Pastorius was invited by Joe Zawunil to join the great fusion band, Weather Report.  Though his contributions to Weather Report were undeniable, his tenure with the band was rocky at time due to his increasing abuse of alcohol coupled with his then undiagnosed bipolar disorder.  He parted ways with the band in 1981 and continued his downward spiral.  Although diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 1982, and receiving treatment for it, things weren’t getting much better.  By mid ’80s he was living on the streets of New York City and in 1986, he moved down to Florida where he continued to be homeless.  On September 11, 1987, Pastorius was kicked out of a Santana concert after sneaking up on stage.  He found his way to a local club and after being refused entry, he became violent and confrontational with the bouncer.  A fight ensued during which Pastorius sustained head injuries severe enough to require a visit to a hospital where he soon fell into a coma.  He died ten days later at the age of 35.  The bouncer at the club later served eight months in prison for manslaughter.

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Jaco Pastorius - Jaco Pastorius