Died On This Date (February 22, 2001) John Fahey / Folk Guitar Legend

John Fahey
February 28, 1939 – February 22, 2001

john-fahey John Fahey was an influential folk and blues guitarist who is revered for his minimalistic steel string finger-picking style of play.  Fahey bought his first guitar at the age of 13, and by the time he was 20, he was making his own recordings.  Besides his amazing guitar skill, what separated Fahey from most other musicians at the time, was that he started his own record label, Takoma Records through which to release while he was still just a teenager.  Through all this, Fahey continued his education, eventually earning a Master’s degree in folklore from UCLA.  As a musicologist, Fahey tracked down the long forgotten blues great, Bukka White whom he recorded and helped re-launch a career during the folk and blues revival of the early ’60s.  And he did the same for Skip James.  Fahey continued to release his own outstanding guitar-centric albums throughout the ’70s while helping to launch the careers of the likes of Leo Kottke, George Winston and Robbie Basho.  In recent years, he has been noted as a direct influence by such contemporary musicians as M. Ward, Sufjan Stevens, Devendra Banhart, and Sonic Youth’s Lee Renaldo.  Health and financial problems plagued John Fahey during his final years, and he was reportedly living out of cheap hotels until on February 22, 2001, he died following bypass surgery at the age of 61.

What You Should Own

Click to find at amazon.com

The Yellow Princess - John Fahey

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.

What You Should Own

Click to find at amazon.com

Gold: The Supremes - The Supremes

Died On This Date (February 22, 2007) Ian Wallace / Accomplished Studio Drummer; King Crimson

Ian Wallace
September 29, 1946 – February 22, 2007

Ian Wallace was an accomplished session rock drummer who is most often remembered for his short stint in King Crimson during the early ’70s.  He can be heard playing on Islands and their live album, Earthbound.  Throughout the years, Wallace played with a who’s who of rock music.  He played on such albums as Bob Dylan’s Street Legal and At BudokonBonnie Raitt’s Nine Lives, Don Henley’s Building A Perfect Beast, Rodney Crowell’s Houston Kid, Stevie Nicks’ Wild Heart, and many more.  He released just one album, 2003’s Happiness With Minimal Side Effects.  Ian Wallace was diagnosed with esophageal cancer in August of 2006, and subsequently died of it on February 22, 2007.  He was 60.

Thanks to Jim McGathey for the help

What You Should Own

Click to find at amazon.com

Happiness With Minimal Side Effects - Ian Wallace

Died On This Date (February 21, 2008) Joe Gibbs / Reggae Producer

Joe Gibbs (Born Joel Gibson)
1943 – February 21, 2008

joegibbs

Joe Gibbs was a respected Jamaican reggae producer.  He first began making records out of the back of his electronics repair shop during the late ’60s.  One of his earliest collaborators was Lee Scratch Perry.  In 1968, he formed his own record label, Amalgamated Records, home of one of rocksteady’s earliest hits, Roy Shirley’s “Hold Them.”  In 1972, he and engineer, Errol Thompson put together a house band that included the great Earl “Chinna” Smith, Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare, and together they generated hundreds of records, with over 100 becoming #1 singles in Jamaica.  In 1977, Gibbs produced Culture’s Two Sevens Clash, considered to be one of the most influential albums on the growing punk scene.  He continued to produce some of reggae’s most successful records well into the later years of his life.  Joe Gibbs was 65 when he suffered a fatal heart attack on February 21, 2008.



Died On This Date (February 21, 2008) Calvin Owens / Respected Jazz Trumpeter

Calvin Owens
April 23, 1929 – February 21, 2008

calvin-owensCalvin Owens was a respected jazz and blues trumpeter and band leader from Houston, Texas.  He started learning to play the trumpet at the age of 13, and after graduating from high school, he turned professional by touring with a vaudeville act.  In 1953, Owens began working with B.B. King, eventually becoming his bandleader.  He played with him until 1957,  when he landed a job at Peacock Records as a session player.   Owens went on to play with the likes of T-Bone Walker and Junior Parker.  In the late ’70s, he reunited with King for another handful of years, contributing to his Grammy winning, Blues ‘n’ Jazz album.  On February 21, 2008, Calvin Owens, 78, died of kidney failure while recuperating from a surgery to treat liver cancer.

What You Should Own

Click to find at amazon.com

Best of Calvin Owens - Calvin Owens