Died On This Date (March 26, 2004) Jan Berry / Jan and Dean

Jan Berry
April 3, 1941 – March 26, 2004

With Dean Torrence, Jan Berry successfully recorded as Jan and Dean, one of the true pioneers of what would become known as surf music. Along with the Beach Boys, they ruled the genre during the late ’50s through the mid ’60s. Their smash hits included “Surf City,” “The Little Old Lady From Pasadena,” and the prophetic “Dead Man’s Curve.” If being pop stars didn’t take enough time, Berry was also an exceptional college student attending both UCLA and what is now known as the UC Irvine School Of Medicine. Two years into med school, tragedy struck. While on his way to a business meeting, Berry crashed his Corvette into a parked gardener truck on a Beverly Hills road not far from the actual “Dead Man’s Curve” of Sunset Blvd. The accident left Berry with brain damage and partial paralysis from which he never fully recovered. He was able to stay productive through the ’70s and ’80s as a producer and sometime performer and was involved with several Jan and Dean reissue packages into the 2000s. Berry passed away at age 62.


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Jan and Dean

Died On This Date (March 26, 1976) Duster Bennett / British Blues Singer & Musician

Anthony “Duster” Bennett
September 23, 1946 – March 26, 1976

duster-bennettDuster Bennett was a blues singer and musician who emerged from the British blues scene of the last ’60s as a popular club performer.  He was equally adept at the harmonica, guitar and drums, at times even performing as a one-man blues band.  As a session player, Bennett could be heard on countless John Peel programs as well as on recordings by early Fleetwood Mac and later, John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers.  Following a gig with Memphis Slim on March 26, 1976, Bennett allegedly fell asleep while driving home and was killed when he crashed into a truck.

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The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions: Duster Bennett - Duster Bennett

Died On This Date (March 26, 1908) Louis Chauvin / Ragtime Pioneer

Louis Chauvin
March 13, 1881 – March 26, 1908

Member of the 27 Club

Louis Chauvin was a ragtime jazz pioneer and contemporary of Scott Joplin.  Little is known about Chauvin since he died at such a young age and had yet to make any recordings.  He did, however, leave three published compositions behind, one of  which, “Heliptrope Bouquet” was written with Joplin.  The other two were “Babe, It’s Too Long Off” and “The Moon is Shining in the Skies.”  Louis Chauvin was 27 when he died on March 26, 1908.  Possible contributors to his death were listed as multiple sclerosis, syphilis, and starvation due to a coma he was in.



Died On This Date (March 26, 1973) Noel Coward / English Composer

Noel Coward
December 16, 1899 – March 26, 1973

noelNoel Coward was, among other things, a world-renowned English composer of popular music. He had his first hit in 1923 with “Parisian Perriot,” as performed by Gertrude Lawrence. His string of popular plays and songs continued through the mid-’60s, culminating with his final production, Suite In Three Keys in 1966. Coward was knighted in 1970 and died from a heart attack at his Jamaica home at the age of 73.



Died On This Date (March 26, 2002) Randy Castillo / Drummer For Ozzy Osbourne

Randy Castillo
December 18, 1950 – March 26, 2002

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Drummer Randy Castillo became famous throughout the rock world as the drummer for Ozzy Osbourne for ten years (and on his biggest albums) and then briefly replacing Tommy Lee in Motley Crue. He was diagnosed with Squamous Cell Carcinoma in 2000 and lost his life to it just two years later. Besides his stints with Ozzy and the Crue, Castillo also played behind the Motels and Lita Ford.

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