Died On This Date (April 10, 1938) Joe “King” Oliver / Influential Jazz Musician

Joseph “King” Oliver
December 19, 1885 – April 10, 1938

king-oliverKing Oliver was a popular jazz cornetist, composer and bandleader at the turn of last century.   Louis Armstrong has cited him as being a major influence on his own playing.  Born in Louisiana, Oliver and his family settled in New Orleans when he was a child.  When he got older, he played in the local brass bands throughout the city’s famed red light district, Storyville.  He hooked up with Kid Ory and together they built a band that was one of the most popular and successful at the time.  Oliver was one of the few African-American musicians that could easily get work at both black joints, and white high society parties.   Unfortunately, Oliver’s business sense was not as strong as his musical skills, so he made some poor career decisions and lost money to some less-than-honest managers.  During the Great Depression, he lost everything when his bank collapsed.  He continued on as best he could, taking low paying gigs while working as a janitor.   Sadly, he was broke and living in a rooming house when he passed away on April 10, 1938.

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Kid Ory

Died On This Date (April 10, 2008) Carl Evans Jr. / Fattburger

Carl Evans Jr.
February 19, 1955 – April 10, 2008

carl-evans-jrCarl Evans Jr. was the keyboardist for San Diego contemporary jazz band, Fattburger. Evans began playing the keyboards as a child and by the time he was in high school, he was in a funk band called Power. The band was so good that Barry White hired them to go on tour with him, forcing Evans to finish high school a semester early. In later years, Evans could be heard performing with the likes of Cannonball Adderley, Stevie Wonder and Anita Baker. In 1984, Evans co-founded Fattburger, a jazz band that found great popularity throughout Southern California and beyond. They recorded several critically acclaimed albums and earned a Grammy nomination. Evans died at the age of 53 of complications from diabetes.

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Livin' Large - Fattburger

Died On This Date (April 9, 1997) Yank Rachell / Country Blues Musician

James “Yank” Rachell
March 16, 1910 – April 9, 1997

yank-rachellYank Rachell was a country blues musician with a twist in that he played the mandolin.  Born in Brownsville, Tennessee in 1910, Rachell began to teach himself to play the mandolin at just eight years old.  He hooked up with the legendary Sleepy John Estes in the mid ’20s and by 1929 they formed the Three J’s Jug Band, making a name for themselves along the jug band circuit.  Unfortunately, the Depression derailed the band’s plans for fame and fortune so they broke up.  In 1933, Rachell dicovered a young harmonica player by the name of Sonny Boy Williamson with whom he recorded for the next ten years.  He was finally earning a comfortable living doing what he loved.  Rachell met a girl and got married in 1938 and decided to settle down and raise a family.   By the time Williams was murdered in 1948, Rachell was all but retired from music, at least as a profession.  In the early ’60s, he again teamed up with Estes and began touring the college and festival circuit.  After Estes’ death in 1977,   Rachell continued to perform solo and occasionally recorded up until his death at the age of 87.

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Died On This Date (April 9, 1988) Brook Benton / Soul Great

Brook Benton
September 19, 1931 – April 9, 1988

Brook Benton was an R&B singer from South Carolina who began his career in the late ’40s when he moved to New York and began writing songs for the likes of Clyde McPhatter and Nat King Cole. It wasn’t until 1959 that Benton scored a hit of his own with the release of “It’s Just A Matter Of Time” which shot up the #3 on the Billboard singles chart.  Benton’s last major hit came in 1970 with the release of “Rainy Night In Georgia.” He passed away on April 9, 1988 from spinal meningitis at the age of 56, but not before charting 49 songs on the Billboard singles chart.

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Brook Benton

Died On This Date (April 9, 2009) Randy Cain / The Delfonics

Randy Cain (Born Rudy Cain)
May 2, 1945 – April 9, 2009

Randy Cain at right
Randy Cain at right

As one of the Delfonics, Randy Cain helped put Philly soul on the map back in the mid-1960s.  The group, originally called the Four Gents formed while Cain was still in high school.  The vocal group went on to record some of the era’s most memorable songs including “Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind),” and “La La (Means I Love You).”  Both of which found new audiences when they were prominently featured in Quentin Tarantino’s Jackie Brown.  The Delfonics’ songs are favored by many of today’s Hip Hop artists including Nas, the Nortorious B.I.G., and Missy Elliott.  Cain left the group in 1971 but returned for a reunion in the mid 80s.  He later sued the group and their label for back royalties.   Cain’s lifeless body was found in his home.  Cause of death is not known.  He was 63.

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Delfonics