Died On This Date (September 4, 2009) Rich Cunningham / Founder Of Happy Days Records

Rich Cunningham
DOB Unknown – September 4, 2009

richRich Cunningham was a respected union organizer and one-time head of his own label, Happy Days Records, which he founded in 1995 while still in college.  The punk label, named after the popular ’70s television program whose lead character shared the same name as Cunningham, was the one-time home to such acts as Ink & Dagger and Hot Water Music. In later years, Cunningham formed New Labor, an organization that helped low-income and immigrant workers.  He had suffered from colon cancer since 2005, but cause of death was not immediately released.  He was 32.



Died On This Date (September 3, 1970) Alan “Blind Owl” Wilson / Canned Heat

Alan “Blind Owl” Wilson
July 4, 1943 – September 3, 1970

Member of the 27 Club

Alan Wilson was the co-founder, lead singer and guitarist for blues rock band, Canned Heat. Formed in 1965 by Wilson and and fellow record junkie,  Bob Hite, Canned Heat played an electrified boogie version of the great blues recordings they had collected. Canned Heat endeared themselves to both psychedelic rock fans and the blues crowd by not only kicking ass at the Woodstock AND Monterey festivals, but by producing and recording with John Lee Hooker on the outstanding, Hooker ‘n’ Heat. Alan Wilson died of a drug overdose on September 3, 1970.  He was 27 years old.


What You Should Own

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Hooker 'n' Heat - John Lee Hooker & Canned Heat

Died On This Date (September 3, 2007) Janis Martin / Rockabilly’s “Female Elvis Presley”

Janis Martin
March 23, 1940 – September 3, 2007

Janis Martin was a popular rockabilly performer who came to prominence during the 1950s. Because of her on-stage moves, she was often referred to as the Female Elvis Presley.   An entertainer from a very early age, Martin began appearing on local radio programs while still in her mid teens, sometimes sharing the stage with the likes of Eddy Arnold, Hank Snow and Jim Reeves.  Martin signed to RCA Records, who had recently signed Presley, when she was just 15.  Her first record, “Will You Willyum,” quickly became a pop and country hit, leading to her getting booked on American Bandstand, The Today Show, The Tonight Show and The Grand Ol’ Opry.  She released a string of hits including “My Boy Elvis” and “Let’s Elope Baby.”  In 1958, RCA dropped Martin when they learned she had secretly married her boyfriend and gotten pregnant.  In the early ’60s, Martin’s second husband forced her to leave the music business.  She resurfaced during the rockabilly revival of the late ’70s, touring for adoring fans throughout Europe.  Martin was introduced to a whole new generation of fans when she guested on Rosie Flores’ Rockabilly Philly album.  Janis Martin died of cancer at a Durham, NC hospital.  She was 67 years old.

What You Should Own

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The Female Elvis - Complete Recordings 1956-60 - Janis Martin