2010

Died On This Date (March 7, 1971) Harold McNair / Jazz Flute Great

Harold McNair
November 5, 1931 – March 7, 1971

harold-mcnairHarold McNair was a respected jazz flautist and saxophonist who followed a less-than-traditional way to jazz greatest.  Born in Jamaica, McNair spent the early years of his career making Island music.  He also sang Calypso.  McNair recorded his first album, 1960’s Bahama Bash, in Miami, Florida, and in 1960, he moved to Europe where he toured with Quincy Jones before settling in London.  He also played on the scores of several Paris films and television programs.  Soon, McNair joined up with  Charles Mingus, but the quartet was quickly derailed thanks to a U.K. musicians’ strike.  McNair released several albums throughout his career, and played on recordings by the likes of Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, Blossom Dearie, Donovan, and Ginger Baker.  Harold McNair died of lung cancer on March 7, 1971.  He was just 39 years old.

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Died On This Date (March 6, 2010) Mark Linkous / Sparklehorse

Mark Linkous
September 9, 1962 – March 6, 2010

Mark Linkous was the multi-instrumentalist leader of alternative rock group, Sparklehorse, who became an critics’ darling cult band after the release of their debut album, Vivadixiesubmarine- transmissionplot, in 1995.  Prior to that, he was a member of the Dancing Hoods, who he co-founded  in the mid ’80s.  In 1996, while on tour with Radiohead, Linkous overdosed Valium, antidepressants and alcohol, causing him to lay unconscious with his legs pinned underneath him for fourteen hours.  He literally died for two minutes when rescuers tried to straighten his legs which had been cut off from circulation for the duration of his unconsciousness.   The incident left him with permanent damage to his legs.  In 2009, Linkous collaborated on a Dark Night of Soul with famed indie producer Danger Mouse and iconic film director, David Lynch.  The multi-media project also includes performance by  Flaming Lips, Suzanne Vega, Vic Chesnutt, Frank Black, Iggy Pop and more.  He was recently working on a new album due out in late 2010.  On March 6, 2010, Mark Linkous died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.  He was 47.

Thanks to Craig Rosen of Number1Albums

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Good Morning Spider - Sparklehorse

Died On This Date (March 6, 1999) Lowell Fulson / Blues Great

Lowell Fulson
March 31, 1921 – March 6, 1999

lowell-fulsonLowell Fulson was an influential west coast blues guitarist, singer, and songwriter who was one of the key figures of the ’40s and ’50s. After moving to Los Angeles in the early ’40s, Fulson formed his first band which included future greats, Ray Charles and Stanley Turrentine.    Over the course of his career, Fulson released such now-classics as “3 O’Clock Blues,” “Lonesome Blues,” and “Reconsider Baby” which was later made into a hit by Elvis Presley and selected by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as one of the 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll. He continued recording and performing well into the ’90s.  Lowell Fulson was 77 when he died from complications of diabetes, kidney disease and congestive heart failure on March 6, 1999.

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Lowell Fulson

Died On This Date (March 6, 1967) Nelson Eddy / Singer & TV Personality

Nelson Eddy
June 29, 1901 – March 6, 1967

nelson-eddy

Nelson Eddy was a popular singer, actor, television personality, and radio personality for some forty years.  He is one of the few entertainers who are represented on the Hollywood Walk of Fame with three stars; one for music, one for radio and one for film.  Praise for Eddy’s singing talents began as far back as 1922 for his early stage work.  As a film actor and singer, he starred in 19 films, 14 of which were with MGM during their golden age of movie musicals.  He is best remembered for his leading roles opposite Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he was reportedly romantically linked.   As for his music career, Eddy made nearly 300 records, which included numerous duets with some of Hollywood’s biggest singing starlets of the era.  On March 6, 1967, Nelson Eddy died following a cerebral hemorrhage he had suffered the previous night while performing on stage.  He was 65 years old.

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Nelson Eddy

Died On This Date (March 6, 1932) John Philip Sousa / World Renowned Composer and Band Conductor

John Philip Sousa
November 6, 1854 – March 6, 1932

john-philip-sousaJohn Philip Sousa was a composer and band conductor who achieved great acclaim for his military and patriotic marches.  Fittingly born in our nation’s capital city, he began learning music at just six years old.  When he was 13, his father, who was a Marine band member, found a place for him within the Corps’ band as an apprentice, thus paving the way for his musical legacy.  It was either that, his father thought, or the circus. Besides later leading the Marine Corps Band himself, Sousa lead the President’s Own Band under five U.S. Presidents.  Of the 100s of compositions he penned, Sousa is best remembered for “Stars and Stripes Forever,” “Semper Fidelis” (the official march of the Marine Corps), “U.S. Field Artillery’ (Official march of the U.S. Army), and “The Liberty Bell,” which became popular as the closing theme for Monty Python’s Flying Circus.  He was also the namesake for the sousaphone, a tuba instrument he commissioned that was taller than normal so it could be heard over the heads of the other band members.  John Phillip Sousa was 77 when he died of heart failure on March 6, 1932.