Died On This Date (September 30, 2012) Marv Tarplin / Guitarist In Smokey Robinson & The Miracles

Marv Tarplin
June 13, 1941 – September 30, 2011

Marv Tarplin was a guitarist and songwriter who is perhaps best remembered as a founding member of Smokey Robinson & the Miracles.   Tarplin was playing guitar for Detroit girl group, the Primettes, when they auditioned for Robinson, who was doing A&R at Motown at the time.  Robinson was so taken by Tarplin’s playing that he offered him a gig in his own group.  The year was 1958, and Tarplin was suddenly the lead guitarist and co-songwriter for the Miracles, who would eventually become one of Motown’s most popular acts.  Meanwhile, the Primettes would soon make history themselves after morphing into the Supremes. Tarplin went on to play on and co-write numerous hits for the band. That list includes “My Girl Has Gone,” “Going To A Go-Go,” and most famously, “Tracks Of My Tears.”  After both he and Robinson left the Miracles in 1973, Tarplin continued to write and perform with Robinson.  He also co-wrote the Marvin Gaye hits, “Ain’t That Peculiar” and “One More Heartache,” among others.  Tarplin remained active in the music business until his retirement in 2008.  As reported in the American Spectator, Marv Tarplin was 70 when he passed away on September 30, 2011.  Cause of death was not immediately released.

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Ooo Baby Baby: The Anthology - Smokey Robinson & The Miracles

Died On This Date (February 22, 1976) Florence Ballard / The Supremes

Florence Ballard
June 310, 1943 – February 22, 1976

florence-ballardFlorence Ballard was a founding member of influential Motown singing group, the Supremes.  Born and raised in Detroit, Ballard began singing in local groups while still a teenager.  In 1959, she successfully auditioned for a female vocal group called the Primettes who, after a few personnel changes eventually signed with Motown Records as the Supremes, with the most successful formation of the group including Ballard, Diana Ross and Mary Wilson.  Over the next eight years with the Supremes, Ballard sang on nearly a dozen #1 hits and helped the women become one of the most influential female groups in history.   In the spring of 1967, Ballard left the group and launched a solo career, but it failed to bring her back into the spotlight.  Personal and financial problems plagued Florence Ballard during the final years of her life, and on February 22, 1976, she died of cardiac arrest.  She was 32.

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Gold: The Supremes - The Supremes