Died On This Date (December 14, 1963) Dinah Washington / Influential Jazz Vocalist
Dinah Washington (Born Ruth Jones)
August 29, 1924 – December 14, 1963
Dinah Washington was one of popular music’s most influential R&B, jazz and blues singers. Over a career that spanned just 20 years, she charted over 30 records in the U.S. and U.K. Washington learned to play the piano as a child, and by her teens, she was singing in local gospel groups. By eighteen, she was singing with Lionel Hampton’s band, and within a year, she was making her own recordings. Over the course of her career she charted with such songs as “Baby (You’ve Got What It Takes),” (with Brook Benton), “Unforgettable,” and “What a Difference a Day Makes,” which won her a Grammy in 1959. Dinah Washington reportedly struggled with weight issues and was taking diet pills when, on December 14, 1963, she died of an accidental overdose when she mixed them with alcohol. She was just 39 when she died.
What You Should Own




Chris Feinstein is best remembered as a producer as well as the most recent bassist for Ryan Adams & the Cardinals. Prior to joining Adams, Feinstein collaborated with Albert Hammond Jr. of the Strokes and Jack Ingram. In 2006, he joined Adams’ band, playing on Easy Tiger, Follow The Lights and Cardinology as well as touring with them. Reports indicate that Chris Feinstein, age 42, died in his home on December 14, 2009. Cause of death was not immediately released.
Kurt Winter was a songwriter and guitarist who replaced Randy Bachman in the Guess Who in 1970. He wrote a few of the songs hits, including Hand Me Down World and Bus Rider. He left the group in 1974 and became a successful businessman. In later years, he participated in various reunions of the group. Kurt Winter, 51, died of kidney failure on December 14, 1997.