Jazz

Died On This Date (November 23, 2001) O.C. Smith / Had Hit With “Little Green Apples”

Ocia Smith
June 21, 1932 – November 23, 2001

O.C. Smith was an R&B and jazz vocalist whose recording career began with a cover of Little Richard’s “Tutti Frutti” in 1955.  In 1961, Smith was hired by Count Basie to sing lead in his band.  He did so until 1965.  Smith continued to perform and record on his own during and after that time, but didn’t strike gold until 1968 when his “Son Of Hickory Holler’s Tramp” reached #2 in the UK and landed in the U.S. top 40.  He followed that up with “Little Green Apples,” which reached #2 on the U.S. pop chart, sold in excess of one million copies, and earned Smith a Grammy for song of the year in 1969.  Smith continued to record records over the next two decades, many of which charted in either the U.S. or UK.  In later years, he became a pastor and started his own church in Los Angeles.  O.C. Smith was 69 when he passed away on November 23, 2001.

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O.C. Smith

Died On This Date (November 22, 2008) John Osnes / Popular Jazz Pianist

John Osnes
1953 – November 22, 2008

osnes1John Osnes was a beloved lounge pianist and singer who first came to prominence in New York City where he played standards and Broadway hits.  Over the course of his career, he entertained at private functions held by the likes of Al Gore, Rupert Murdoch and Neil Simon.  In 2005, Osnes moved to Los Angeles where he quickly turned The Piano Bar in Hollywood into a favorite entertainment destination for the city’s beautiful people.  On November 22, 2008 while walking home from an engagement, Osnes allegedly got into an altercation with a driver he felt came to close to him while walking in a crosswalk.  Words and anger ensued and Osnes was allegedly killed during a physical confrontation with the driver.  Swedish rapper David Jassey was later arrested for the murder of Osnes.



Died On This Date (November 18, 1994) Cab Calloway / Popular Big Band Singer

Cabell Calloway
December 25, 1907 – November 18, 1994

Cab Calloway was a popular scat singer whose all African American band was one of the most popular big bands of the ’30s and ’40s.  He was also arguably the most dynamic performer of the era.   Calloway began singing and learning music at a very young age, and although his parents disapproved, he started gravitating toward the sounds of jazz.  After high school, he joined a traveling musical review that is sister, a bandleader herself, was involved with.  When the tour ended in Chicago, Calloway stayed behind to further pursue his music career.  It was there that he met Louis Armstrong who taught him the art of scat singing.  By the ’30s, Calloway had one of the most popular bands in the country, thanks in part to his first hit single, 1931’s “Minnie The Moocher.”  He was soon starring in several short reels, in which he could be seen doing what would in later generations be called Michael Jackson’s “moonwalk.”  Over the course of the latter part of his career, Calloway continued to release popular records and made numerous appearances on television and film.  Cab Calloway was 86 when he died on November 18, 1994 of a stroke he had had six months earlier.

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Are You Hep to the Jive? - Cab Calloway

Died On This Date (November 17, 2006) Ruth Brown / Early R&B Great

Ruth Brown (Born Ruth Weston)
January 12, 1928 – November 17, 2007

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Ruth Brown was an R&B singer who, like her idols, Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington and Billie Holiday became one of popular music’s most important vocalists of her generation.  So vital was she, that her young label at the time, Atlantic Records, would come to be known as “The House That Ruth Built.”  After running away from home with trumpeter and future husband, Jimmy Brown, in 1945,  Brown began singing in clubs in the Washington DC area.  A local disc jockey caught her act and recommended her to Ahmet Ertegun at Atlantic.  She soon signed to the fledgling label and began releasing a string of R&B hits that included “Mama He Treats Your Daughter Mean,” “So Long,” “Oh What a Dream” and “I’ll Wait For You.”  Brown stepped away from the business to raise her family during the ’60s, but came back strong during the mid ’70s when she starred in a Broadway musical, Black and Blue, which won her an Tony and a Grammy for the soundtrack.  She also had a role on the sitcom, Hello Larry and in the John Waters film, Hairspray.  Brown became and advocate for musicians’ rights during the late ’80s, and in 1993, she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  On November 17, 2006, Ruth Brown, 78, died of complications from a stroke and heart attack she had suffered the previous month.

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Ruth Brown

Died On This Date (November 17, 2008) Charles Ottaviano / L.A. Jazz Club Owner

Charles Ottaviano
January 3, 1942 – November 17, 2008

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Charles Ottaviano was a the owner of Charlie O’s, a popular yet intimate jazz club located in the Van Nuys section of the San Fernando Valley, just north of Los Angeles.  A musician himself, Ottaviano moved to Los Angeles from Buffalo in 1960.  He opened the Van Nuys location as a restaurant in 1987, and then converted it to a jazz club in 2000.  Charlie O’s became a favorite hangout for local jazz enthusiasts thanks in part, to early regular performers, Earl Palmer and John Heard.  Charles Ottaviano was 66 when he died of a heart attack on November 17, 2008.