Died On This Date (November 21, 2011) Paul Yandell / Band Leader For Chet Atkins
Paul Yandell
September 6, 1935 – November 21, 2011
Paul Yandell was a Nashville guitar wiz who is perhaps best remembered for the 25 years he served as Chet Atkins’ band leader and guitar duo partner. Having become proficient on the guitar at an early age, Yandell moved to Nashville during the mid ’50s and launched his Music City career playing with the Louvin Brothers. From there he joined up with Kitty Wells on whose show he performed from 1961 until 1970. After a brief run with Jerry Reed, Yandell was hired by Atkins. The year was 1975, and he went on to play alongside the guitar legend for the next quarter century. Throughout his career, Yandell released a handful of albums, including a tribute to Atkins, Forever Chet after he passed away in 2001. As an in-demand session player, Yandell can also be heard on records by the likes of Dolly Parton, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Perry Como, George Strait, and more. Paul Yandell died of cancer on November 21, 2011. He was 76.

Robert Champion was the drum major for the prestigious Florida A&M Marching Band, also known as the Marching 100. On November 19, 2011, Champion’s unresponsive body was discovered on a chartered bus following the school’s football game in Orlando, Florida. Reports indicate that he had been vomiting and was having trouble breathing prior to collapsing. Many close to the investigation have speculated that hazing may have led to his death. Robert Champion was 26 when he passed away.
Wayne Scott was a gifted songwriter and musician who could easily hold his own amongst the likes of such respected troubadours as Billy Joe Shaver and
Joe Gracey was an Austin, Texas radio disc jockey who, since the early ’70s, championed what was then called progressive country on KOKE-FM. Also referred to as alt country, Americana, outlaw country, redneck rock, or simply Texas music, this hybrid of country, blues, rock, and folk found its home outside the mainstream. And it was Gracey who helped make many of its practitioners – like Willie Nelson,
Moogy Klingman was a keyboardist, singer, and songwriter who is perhaps best remembered as a founding member of Todd Rundgren’s Utopia. Klingman was still in high school when he was fronting such bands as the Living Few and Glitterhouse. At 16 he found himself playing in the Blue Flame with