Died On This Date (June 2, 2006) Vince Welnick / The Tubes, Grateful Dead
Vince Welnick
February 21, 1951 – June 2, 2006
Vince Welnick first rose to fame as the keyboard player for the cult fave rock band, the Tubes during the ’70s and ’80s. With the Tubes he played on such FM staples as “Don’t Touch Me There,” “White Punks On Dope,” and the more commercially successful, “Talk To Ya Later” and “She’s A Beauty.” In the early ’90s, Welnick successfully auditioned to replace Brent Mydland in the Grateful Dead. Mydland had just died from a drug overdose, following a tragic path of Grateful Dead keyboardists who preceded him. Original player Ron McKernan and then Keith Godchaux died unexpectedly at young ages while playing for the band. Welnick remained as the group’s keyboard player until Jerry Garcia’s death in 1995, which is when the group disbanded. Welnick participated in a couple of the splinter groups that formed in the ashes of the Grateful Dead, but apparently nothing felt right. He attempted suicide six months after Garcia’s death, reportedly in part due to the depression he was suffering from the loss. He went on to form his own group called Missing Man Formation, but sadly committed suicide on June 2, 2006 at the age of 55.
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As one-time lead singer of the Temptations, David Ruffin is arguable the greatest lead voice to come out of Motown. From 1965’s “My Girl,” to “All I Need” and “I Wish It Was Rain,” Ruffin’s voice defined the group and perhaps the era. But mounting friction caused mostly by Ruffin’s swelling ego along with his addiction to cocaine began to tear the group apart, so he was replaced in 1968. Ongoing legal problems with Motown along with his growing dependency on drugs kept his post-Temptations career from reaching the level his true talent deserved. But in 1989, things appeared to be turning around when the Temptations were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame, and Ruffin subsequently made peace with the other members of the group. He began working with 
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