Died On This Date (November 23, 1992) Roy Acuff / Country Music Icon

Roy Acuff
September 15, 1903 – November 23, 1992

royacuff

Roy Acuff was a country musician, singer, songwriter, promoter and publisher who was rightfully called, the King of Country Music.  Acuff got his start when, in 1932, he was hired to entertain potential customers of a traveling medicine show.  He left in 1934 to form his first band, the Crazy Tennesseans with whom he moved to Nashville in 1938.  They were soon offered a contract with the Grand Ole Opry.  In 1942, Acuff partnered with Fred Rose to open Acuff-Rose Music, which became Nashville’s biggest country music publishing company. The company quickly became very successful by hiring such songwriters as Lefty Frizzell, Roy Orbison, Don Gibson and many more.  As a performer, Acuff’s career started to falter during the ’50s and ’60s due to the fickle tastes of music fans, but in the early ’70s, he experienced a bit of a comeback thanks to his appearance on the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s landmark album, Will the Circle Be Unbroken.  He continued to perform sporadically throughout his later life.  Roy Acuff was 89 when he died of heart failure on November 23, 1992.

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Died On This Date (November 23, 1969) Spade Cooley / Influential Country Swing Fiddler

Donnell “Spade” Cooley
December 17, 1910 – November 23, 1969

Photo: Getty Images

Spade Cooley was a western swing fiddle player, band leader and television personality who came to prominence during the 1940s.   Born in Oklahoma, Cooley eventually settled in Southern California where he and his band took up residence in the Venice Pier Ballroom.  During the first part of the ’40s, the band performed a then-unheard of run of eighteen months.  During that time, Cooley released his first of a string of Top 10 singles, “Shame On You.” By the early ’50s, Cooley was a popular face on film and television as well, appearing in almost forty westerns, and hosting his own television program from 1949 to 1959.  His career came to an abrupt end in 1961 when he was convicted of beating his second wife, Ella Mae Evans, to death when she told him she wanted a divorce.   After serving eight years of his sentence, Spade Cooley was permitted to perform at a sheriff’s benefit concert on November 23, 1969.  Following his set, Cooley suffered a fatal heart attack backstage.

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Died On This Date (November 23, 1995) Junior Walker / R&B Sax Great

Junior Walker (Born Autry Mixon Jr.)
June 14, 1931 – November 23, 1995

jrwalkerJunior Walker was a saxophone player whose band, Junior Walker and the All Stars became part of the Motown family in 1961.  In 1965, the band released the Walker penned “Shotgun” which reached the top of the Billboard R&B chart, and hit #4 on the pop chart.   The tune became Walker’s signature song even though it was followed by several other hits over the next few years.  Walker had another top 5 pop hit with “What Does It Take (To Win Your Love)” in 1969.  In 1981, rock band, Foreigner took tapes of old Walker sax solos to put together their own “solo” to use as the centerpiece of their hit single, “Urgent.”  On November 23, 1995, Junior Walker died of cancer at the age of 64.

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Died On This Date (November 23, 2008) Robert Lucas / Canned Heat

Robert Lucas
DOB Unknown – November 23, 2008

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Robert Lucas was one of four lead singers to front Canned Heat since its inception in 1965.  Popular for it’s boogie blues rock anthems like “Going Up The Country” and “On The Road Again,” the band never stopped after the early deaths of it’s co-founders, Al Wilson and Bob Hite.  Lucas fronted the band twice during recent years, first in 1994 for about six years, and then again in 2005 for three years.  He left the group to further a solo career which saw the recording of seven albums.  Throughout his career, Lucas lent his guitar and harmonica skills to such legends as Big Joe Turner, Pee Wee Crayton, and Lowell Fulson.  On November 23, 2008, Robert Lucas, 46, died of an apparent drug overdose.



Died On This Date (November 23, 2001) O.C. Smith / Had Hit With “Little Green Apples”

Ocia Smith
June 21, 1932 – November 23, 2001

O.C. Smith was an R&B and jazz vocalist whose recording career began with a cover of Little Richard’s “Tutti Frutti” in 1955.  In 1961, Smith was hired by Count Basie to sing lead in his band.  He did so until 1965.  Smith continued to perform and record on his own during and after that time, but didn’t strike gold until 1968 when his “Son Of Hickory Holler’s Tramp” reached #2 in the UK and landed in the U.S. top 40.  He followed that up with “Little Green Apples,” which reached #2 on the U.S. pop chart, sold in excess of one million copies, and earned Smith a Grammy for song of the year in 1969.  Smith continued to record records over the next two decades, many of which charted in either the U.S. or UK.  In later years, he became a pastor and started his own church in Los Angeles.  O.C. Smith was 69 when he passed away on November 23, 2001.

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O.C. Smith