Died On This Date (December 15, 1943) Fats Waller / Influential Jazz Pianist

Thomas “Fats” Waller
May 21, 1904 – December 15, 1943

Photo by Alan Fisher

Fats Waller was a jazz pianist and songwriter who came to prominence during the mid ’20s.  Over the course of his short career, he penned more than 400 songs, most notably, “Ain’t Misbehavin’,” “Honeysuckle Rose,” and “Squeeze Me.”  According to legend, Waller was in such demand as a performer that in 1926, he was taken at gunpoint while leaving a gig in Chicago.  The next thing he knew, he was brought to building that was housing a big party and forced to take a sit at the piano and play.  He quickly realized he was the entertainment for Al Capone’s birtheday party.  He supposedly played for the better part of three days and was rewarded with thousands of dollars in tips.  Waller continued to compose, record and tour well into the ’30s.   In December of 1943, he came down with pneumonia and died as a result of it at the age of 39.

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Fats Waller

Died On This Date (December 4, 1993) Frank Zappa / Rock Music Icon

Frank Zappa
December 21, 1940 – December 4, 1993

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

Frank Zappa was one of popular music’s most creative forces.  As a musician, composer, and producer, his 60+ albums crossed most genres while influencing countless artists in their wake.  One of Zappa’s unique talents was that he could could just as easily produce a pop rock hit as he could an avant garde movement, while not losing a fan in the process.  The bottom line, he was one of popular music’s most difficult to categorize, and beloved for being so.  Zappa’s interest in music began when he was a sickly child.  Due to his ailments, the Zappa family moved from the east coast to southern California so he could live in a warmer climate.  He began collecting all kinds of records when he was still a pre-teen, and that early exposure to such diverse genres as R&B, avant garde, blues, modern classical, and doo wop guided him down a path that would see him seamlessly merge those and other styles of music into something that could only be called his own.  Fast forward to the mid ’60s when Zappa and his Mothers of Invention landed their first record deal with Verve Records, oddly, one of the world’s top modern jazz labels.  Zappa’s debut album, Freak Out! immediately established him as one of rock’s strangest yet most respected new voices.  What followed over the next 30-odd years was a series of albums, both with, and without the Mothers of Invention, that built perhaps one of popular music’s biggest cult followings.  Never forgetting the diverse music that inspired him, Zappa occasionally released modern classical and jazz albums along the way.  In 1982, Zappa released what would be his biggest hit single, “Valley Girl,” a song that helped launch a pop culture fad that is still mimicked to this day.  In 1985, Zappa found himself reaching perhaps his biggest audience by testifying during the senate hearings that eventually forced the record industry to label albums that contained “offensive” lyrics.  Zappa, of course felt that was a form of censorship and was their in defense of his fellow songwriters.  Ironically, the stickering completely backfired as such labeling only made the “offensive” albums more attractive to young teens.  In 1990, Zappa was diagnosed with prostate cancer.  Although he continued to record, his focus was primarily on classical music during his final years.  Frank Zappa was 52 when the cancer finally took his life on December 4, 1993.

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Frank Zappa

Died On This Date (November 26, 1973) John Rostill / The Shadows

John Rostill
June 16, 1942 – November 26, 1973

rostillJohn Rostill was an English musician and songwriter who is perhaps best remembered as a bassist for one of England’s most successful rock groups, the Shadows.  With 69 UK charting singles (including 17 #1s) they have been recognized as England’s third most successful charted singles act in history.  Only Cliff Richard and Elvis Presley sit above them.  They are also credited for being one of the very first and most influential rock bands to come to prominence in the years leading up to the Beatles.  After playing around London, at times backing such visiting acts as the Everly Brothers, Rostill was hired by the Shadows as a replacement for  Brian Locking.  He played with the band from 1963 to 1968.  After the group broke up in 1968, Rostill performed in Tom Jones’ touring band during the early ’70s.  He was also a successful songwriter, having been recorded by Presley and Olivia Newton-John (“Let Me Be There,” “If You Love Me, Let Me Know,” and “Please Mr. Please”).  By late 1973, the Shadows had reformed and Rostill was about to join back with them when tragedy struck.  On November 26, 1973, John Rostill, 31, was accidentally electrocuted while working in his home studio.

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Died On This Date (November 26, 1956) Tommy Dorsey / Jazz Icon

Tommy Dorsey
November 10, 1905 – November 26, 1956

tommy

Tommy Dorsey was a trombonist and band leader who came to prominence during jazz’s swing era.  He was also the younger brother of another jazz great, Jimmy Dorsey with whom he found success as the Dorsey Brothers.  Beginning his career in the Scranton Sirens at just 15, Dorsey backed such performers and Rudy Vallee and Paul Whiteman.  He formed his first band in 1935 and began touring nationally.  But as many big bands did in the aftermath of WW2, Dorsey broke up his band due to economics of the times.  Dorsey also released numerous hit records during his career, including 17 that topped the charts.  His biggest hit was “I’ll Never Smile Again” which featured Frank Sinatra on vocals.   Tommy Dorsey, 51, died while choking in his sleep on November 26, 1956.   Reports indicate that after eating a big meal, he took some sleeping pills and retired to bed.  The dosage was apparently strong enough to not allow him to wake up while he choked to death.

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Died On This Date (November 14, 2008) Irving Gertz / Sci-Fi and TV Composer

Irving Gertz
May 19, 1915 – November 14, 2008

gertz

Irving Gertz was a respected composer who came to prominence due to his work on science fiction and fantasy b-films of the ’50s and ’60s.  After serving in the US Army Signal Corps during World War 2, Gertz went to work in Hollywood, creating music for such films as The Leech Woman, and The Alligator People, and such TV shows as Land of the Giants and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.  Irving Getz was 92 when he passed away on November 14, 2008.