Blues

Died On This Date (September 1, 2005) R.L. Burnside / Blues Great

Robert “R.L.” Burnside
November 23, 1926 – September 1, 2005

burnside
Photo by Jim "Boogie" Wells

R.L. Burnside was a Mississippi back country blues musician who remained in relative obscurity until he was championed by alternative blues rocker, Jon Spencer in the mid ’90s.   Born in Mississippi, Burnside spent his early adult life as a sharecropper and fisherman, playing at parties on the weekends.   After a stint living in Chicago, Burnside moved back to Mississippi and was soon convicted of murder for shooting a man in the head.  He was sentenced to six months at the notorious Parchman prison.  Upon release, Burnside began making records for roots label, Arhoolie.  During the ’90s, Burnside began recording for Fat Possum Records, a label that specialized in “rediscovering” aging and relative obscure blues artists from the southern region.  He then hooked up with Spencer to record and tour, exposing him to a whole new generation of underground “punk blues” fans.  Burnside had heart surgery in 1999 and a heart attack in 2001.  He passed away at the age of 78 in a Memphis hospital.

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Too Bad Jim - R.L. Burnside

Died On This Date (August 31, 2009) Jesse Fortune / Chicago Blues Singer

Jesse Fortune
February 28, 1930 – August 31, 2009

Jesse_FortuneSinger Jesse Fortune was a Chicago blues mainstay since the 1950s.  Known as “Fortune Tellin’ Man,” had a minor hit with “Too Many Cooks” in 1962.  Discovered by Willie Dixon, Fortune went on to record with such luminaries as Buddy Guy and Big Walter Horton.  While performing on a Chicago club stage on August 31, 2009, Jesse Fortune collapsed and later died at an area hospital.  Cause of death was coronary atherosclerosis.  He was 79 years old.



Died On This Date (August 29, 1976) Jimmy Reed / Electric Blues Legend

Mathis “Jimmy” Reed
September 6, 1925 – August 29, 1976

Jimmy Reed was an influential electric blues guitarist, singer and songwriter during the ’50s and ’60s.  Throughout a career that began with him busking in Mississippi, Reed released several hit records, including “Bright Lights Big City,” “Big Boss Man,” and “You Don’t Have To Go.”  His songs have been covered by such greats as the Rolling Stones, Elvis Presley and Hank Williams Jr. Unfortunately, Reed’s career quickly to a nosedive due to his heavy alcoholism and bouts with epilepsy.  The fact that his label, Vee-Jay Records, was on its last leg didn’t help either.  This perhaps kept him from attaining legendary status and world fame like many of his contemporaries.  Jimmy Reed was 50 when he passed away on August 29, 1976.

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Jimmy Reed

Died On This Date (August 27, 1990) Stevie Ray Vaughan

Stevie Ray Vaughan
October 3, 1954 – August 27, 1990

Photo by David Plastik – Click To Order Quality Prints – Discount code: 10OFF

Stevie Ray Vaughan was a Texas rock and blues artist who exploded on to the scene thanks, in part to a firey performance at the July 17, 1982 Montreux Jazz Festival whose audience included  David Bowie and Jackson Browne.  After meeting backstage, Bowie hired Vaughan to play guitar on Lets Dance which became his best selling album, and Browne offered his recording studio at no charge for him to record his demos.  Not long after, a tape of Vaughan’s Montreux set found its way to legendary scout, John Hammond Sr. who got him a deal with Columbia Records.   Quickly building a reputation as one of the greatest electric guitar slingers popular music has ever known, Vaughan’s albums became bestsellers and his concert performances became stuff of legend.  Unfortunately, his long-time drug addictions were also catching up with him, both creatively and physically.  In September of 1986, Vaughan collapsed while on tour in Germany.  After checking himself into rehab, he was clean and sober by the end of the year.  Over the next few years, Vaughan won a Grammy, headlined the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, and performed and George Bush Sr.’s inauguration party.  While on tour with Eric Clapton in August of 1990, Vaughan opted to take a helicopter in order to avoid local traffic after his Alpine Valley (Troy, WI) show.  Due to multiple factors including heavy fog, the pilot crashed the helicopter into a nearby hillside shortly after takeoff, killing Vaughan, the pilot and three of Clapton’s associates on impact.  Stevie Ray Vaughan was 35 at the time of his death.

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Couldn't Stand the Weather (Legacy Edition) - Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble

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Photo by David Plastik – Click To Order Quality Prints – Discount code: 10OFF
Photo by David Plastik – Click To Order Quality Prints – Discount code: 10OFF



Died On This Date (August 26, 1992) Professor Eddie Lusk / Chicago Blues Musician

Eddie Lusk
September 21, 1948 – August 26, 1992

Raised by parents who were Pentacostal ministers, Eddie Lusk was exposed to gospel music at a very young age.  And although he, himself became ordained in 1968, he couldn’t resist the call of the blues music he heard around him on Chicago’s south side.  A pianist since childhood, Lusk went on to play with some of the biggest names in contemporary blues.  That list includes Luther Allison, Otis Rush, Buddy Guy and Koko Taylor.    Lusk learned he was suffering from colon cancer in 1992.  That revelation apparently lead him to jump to his death into the Chicago River on August 26, 1992.

Thanks to Suzanne Swanson for the assist