Died On This Date (November 14, 2012) Laura Kennedy / Bassist For Bush Tetras

Laura Kennedy
DOB Unknown – November 14, 2011

Laura Kennedy is perhaps best remembered as the original bassist for influential New York post punk band, Bush Tetras.  Formed in 1979, the no wave band built a legion of loyalists thanks in part to their early ’80s club hits, “Too Many Creep,” and “Can’t Be Funky/Cowboys In Africa.”  The band is often recognized as the first all female post punk band and for their part in developing a scene that also included Television, Sonic Youth, and Lydia Lunch.  As reported on prefix, Laura Kennedy died on November 14, 2011 as a result of Hepatitis C which she had been living with for nearly two decades.

 

What You Should Own

Click to find at amazon.com

Happy - Bush Tetras

Died On This Date (November 14, 2011) Jackie Leven / Scottish Singer-Songwriter

Jackie Leven
June 18, 1950 – November 14, 2011

Jackie Leven was an influential Scottish folk singer who actually first found recognition as part of a new wave band, Doll by Doll.  The group, formed by Leven in 1975, was critically acclaimed, but never quite caught on like many of its peers, perhaps due to their darker sound.  Following the break up of Doll by Doll in 1983, Leven went on to have a notable solo career during which time he released over 20 albums.  In 1984, Leven was randomly attacked and strangled which left him unable to speak for nearly two years.  In 1994, Leven signed with the influential Cooking Vinyl Records, who was also home, at one point of another, to Billy Bragg, Prodigy, Killing Joke, and the Lemonheads, to name a few.  He released his final album, Wayside Shrines And The Code Of The Traveling Man, in September of 2011.  Jackie Leven died of lung cancer on November 14, 2011.  He was 61.

Thanks to Paul Bearer for the assist.

What You Should Own

Click to find at amazon.com

Forbidden Songs of the Dying West - Jackie Leven

Died On This Date (November 14, 2011) Lee Pockriss / Wrote Hit Pop Songs

Lee Pockriss
January 20, 1924 – November 14, 2011

Lee Pockriss was a New York born songwriter who wrote or co-wrote several pop hits during the ’50s and ’60s.  He also scored music for film and Broadway.  Pockriss’ biggest hit came by way of 1960’s “Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini,” which he co-wrote with Paul Vance.  The song as recorded by Brian Hyland shot to #1 on the Billboard charts and has since been used in countless commercials, films and TV shows.  Pockriss also penned “Catch A Falling Star” (Perry Como), “Tracy” (the Cuff Links), “Johnny Angel” (Shelley Fabares), and “My Little Corner” (Anita Bryant).  For Broadway, he wrote the songs for Tovarich which earned him a Grammy nomination.  Pockriss’ film work includes Stagecoach, The Phantom Tollbooth, and The Subject Was Roses.   He also wrote several songs for Sesame Street during the ’80s.  Lee Pockriss was 87 when he passed away on November 14, 2011.

Thanks to Harold Lepidus for the assist.