2010

Died On This Date (February 8, 1990) Del Shannon / Early ’60s Rock ‘n Roll Star

Del Shannon (Born Charles Westover)
December 30, 1934 – February 8, 1990

With Tom Petty

Del Shannon was a country leaning rock ‘n roll star of the early ’60s.  His hits included “Hats Off to Larry,” “Little Town Flirt,” and 1961’s “Runaway,” which became a #1 single.  Shannon continued to release moderate hits until he turned to producing during the mid ’60s.  In a 1968 comeback attempt, Shannon released an album more fitting of the time, the psychedelic leaning The Further Adventures of Charles Westover.   Although it was considered his masterpiece by many critics and core fans alike, it failed to produce any hit singles and struggled with sales.  Shannon all but vanished from the music business during the ’70s, only to resurface in 1981 thanks to the help of fan, Tom Petty who produced and lent his Heartbreakers to his Drop Down and Get Me.  The album was a welcome return, and Shannon continued to release albums throughout much of the ’80s.  Around that time, his “Runaway” found a new audience by way of the NBC television drama, Crime Story, for which it became the theme song.  As the ’90s dawned, there was talk that Shannon was to replace the recently deceased Roy Orbison in the Traveling Wilburys.  Sadly however, Shannon, who reportedly struggled with depression, fatally shot himself at his Canyon Country, California home on February 8, 1990.  He was 55.

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Drop Down and Get Me - Del Shannon

Died On This Date (February 8, 2010) Jacques Hetu / Canadian Composer

Jacques Hetu
August 8, 1938 – February 8, 2010

Photo by Takashi

Jacques Hetu was a much respected Canadian composer and educator.  Over the course of his career, he composed over 50 pieces, helping him become one of the most performed composers in the world.  He taught at the University of Montreal and was later the head of the music department at the University of Quebec.  Jacques Hetu was 71 when he died of cancer on February 8, 2010.



Died On This Date (February 7, 2000) Lonesome Dave Peverett / Lead Singer For Foghat

Dave Peverett
April 16, 1943 – February 7, 2000

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Lonesome Dave Peverett is best remembered as a one-time lead singer and rhythm guitarist for Savoy Brown and later a founding member and lead singer of ’70s rock band, Foghat.  A native of London, Peverett became a member of the blues rock band, Savoy Brown during the mid ’60s.  In 1971, he and other members of the group left to form Foghat, another blues-based band, but one that put a bit more emphasis on the rock sound of the slide guitar, famously played by Rod Price.  Throughout the ’70s, Foghat released a series of hit records including “I Just Want To Make Love To You,” “Stone Blue,” “Drivin’ Wheel” and their biggest, “Slow Ride.”  All quickly became staples of FM rock stations.  Foghat was one of the few rock bands that continued to stay popular during the disco era.  As their popularity slowed down in the ’80s, Peverett decided to take a break to spend more time with his family.  Even though the band had all but disappeared, their music lived on throughout the ’80s and ’90s thanks to Hollywood’s growing nostalgia for the ’70s.  Foghat’s music provided much of the soundtrack for films trying to capture that era.  During the mid ’90s, Peverett, on the urging of Rick Rubin, reunited with the original members of Foghat, but their second coming proved to be less fruitful, but they continued on in one form or another into the 2000s.  On February 7, 2000, Lonesome Dave Peverett died of cancer at the age of 56.

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Live - Foghat

Died On This Date (February 7, 1995) Billy Jones / The Outlaws

Billy Jones
November 20, 1949 – February 7, 1995

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Billy Jones was a founding guitarist for popular Southern rock band, the Outlaws.  You can hear Jones’ outstanding guitar work on such classic ’70s records as “There Goes Another Love Song” and “Green Grass & High Tides.”  The Outlaws’ guitar driven country rock made them just as vital to the growth of  Southern rock as Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Allman Brothers Band were.    Jones left the Outlaws in 1981 and reportedly kept a very low profile until word surfaced that he killed himself with a gun shot to the head on February 7, 1995.  He was 45 when he died.

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Best of The Outlaws - Green Grass and High Tides (Remastered) - The Outlaws

Died On This Date (February 7, 1999) Bobby Troup / Popular Jazz Musician & Actor; Wrote “Route 66”

Bobby Troup
October 18, 1918 – February 7, 1999

bobby-troupBobby Troup was a producer, jazz pianist and songwriter who penned one of pop music’s most lasting songs.  He was also an actor who is familiar to many for his starring role in the popular ’70s drama, Emergency!.  He played Dr. Joe Early opposite his wife, Julie London.  In 1946, he wrote “(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66,” which was first popularized by Nat King Cole, and later recorded by the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, the Cramps, Depeche Mode, Tom Petty and the Replacements to name just a few.  As a producer, Troup recorded future wife, London’s “Cry Me A River,” which sold over a million copies.   Troup made several of his own albums during the ’50s and ’60s, and even though they are considered a vital part of the history of West Coast Jazz, they never sold significantly.    Bobby Troup died of a heart attack on February 7, 1999.  He was 80 years old.

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Bobby Troup