Died On This Date (March 10, 2009) Ralph Mercado / “The Berry Gordy of Salsa”

Ralph Mercado
September 29, 1941 – March 10, 2009

ralphRalph Mercado was a successful Latin music impresario who had his hands in many facets of the entertainment industry.  He started out promoting Latin jazz shows in clubs throughout Manhattan, but it was just a matter of time before he was putting on Salsa shows at the Hollywood Bowl and Madison Square Garden.  During the early ’70s, Mercado opened his own management company where he represented the likes of Celia Cruz and Tito Puente.  In 1987, he started his own label, RMM Records, the home to over 100 Latin artists.  He sold the label to Universal Music in 2001.  The success he achieved and the Salsa music dynasty he built lead to his being called “the Berry Gordy of Salsa.”  On March 10, 2009, Ralph Mercado died of cancer at the age of 67.



Died On This Date (March 5 2009) Irby Mandrell / Father and Manager of Barbara Mandrell

Irby Mandrell
1924 – March 5, 2009

irby-mandrellIrby Mandrell was the patriarch of the Mandrell family, making him the father of popular country singers, Barbara Mandrell, Irlene Mandrell, and Louise Mandrell.  With a background in music himself, Irby and his wife taught all of their daughters from an early age to appreciate music.  Oldest child, Barbara learned to play multiple instruments as a young child thanks to the tutelage of Irby, who owned a musical instrument shop at the time.  By the time she was 11 Barbara landed her first gig.   And from those early days on, Irby managed her successful career as one of country music’s first ladies.  Their business partnership lasted the better part of three decades.  On March 5, 2009, Irby Mandrell died following a stroke.  He was 84.



Died On This Date (March 4, 2001) Glenn Hughes / The Village People

Glenn Hughes
July 18, 1950 – March 4, 2001

glenn-hughesGlenn Hughes (not to be confused with Glenn Hughes of Black Sabbath and Deep Purple) was an original  vocalist in one of disco music’s most famous and most lasting institutions, the Village People.  He was primarily known for his leather biker outfits and awesome handlebar mustache which made him a pop culture icon well beyond the group.  And although straight himself, Hughes was cast in a gay leather archetype, thereby becoming a face of that subculture.  Around 1976, Hughes responded to producer, Jacques Morali an ad looking for “macho” types for a new disco vocal group.  Immediately hired and taught to dance, he became bass voice that can be heard in such disco staples as “In The Navy,” “Y.M.C.A.,” and “Macho Man.” Those songs, along with numerous television appearances and their starring roles in the film, Can’t Stop The Music,  helped the Village People become icons of the disco era, and be affectionately parodied ever since.  Hughes left the group in 1996 and formed a successful cabaret act.  He also managed the Village People in later years.  On March 4, 2001, Glenn Hughes died of lung cancer at the age of 50.

What You Should Own

Click to find at amazon.com

Died On This Date (January 25, 1986) Albert Grossman / Legendary Artist Manager

Albert Grossman
May 21, 1926 – January 25, 1986

Albert Grossman is best remembered as an artist manager representing, among others, Bob Dylan between 1962 and 1970.  He also co-founded the Newport Folk Festival with George Wein in 1959.  In 1961, Grossman put three folk singers together, Peter Yarrow, Paul Stookey and Mary Travers, otherwise known as Peter, Paul and Mary.  Over the years, Grossman also represented John Lee Hooker, Johnny Average, Ian & Sylvia, Odetta, Janis Joplin, and the Band.  Grossman also built the legendary Bearsville Recording Studio outside of Woodstock, NY and formed Bearsville Records.  Acts like Todd Rundgren, Foghat, NRBQ and Jesse Winchester recorded for the label. On January 25, 1986, Albert Grossman died of a heart attack while flying from the U.S. to London aboard the Concorde.  He was 59 years old.



Died On This Date (January 12, 2009) Gary Kurfirst / Respected Manager and Label Veteran

Gary Kurfirst
July 8, 1947 – January 13, 2009

Gary Kurfirst was a respected artist manager, label executive and concert promoter.  Kurfirst got his first taste of the music industry when he began promoting dances while still in high school.  In 1967, he launched New York City’s Village Theater which soon became world famous as Bill Graham’s Fillmore East.  The following year, he created the New York Rock Festival which featured the likes of the Doors, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin.  It has been said that the idea of Woodstock came to be thanks to the New York Rock Festival.  By the ’80s, Kurfirst was a well-established artist manager.  Over the course of his career, he guided the careers of the likes of the Peter Tosh, Toots & the Maytals, Talking Heads, the Ramones, Blondie, Jane’s Addiction, the Eurythmics and the B-52s.  Gary Kurfirst was 61 when he died suddenly of an undisclosed cause while vacationing in the Bahamas.

Thanks to Craig Rosen from Number1Albums for the assist.