Singer

Died On This Date (March 16, 1970) Tammi Terrell / R&B Great

Tammi Terrell
April 29, 1945 – March 16, 1970

tammi-terrellThe incomparable Tammi Terrell was one of those special gifts that was taken from us far too soon. Although Terrell began performing at the age of 13, it wasn’t until she hit her early 20s when Motown’s Barry Gordy, Jr. discovered her and teamed her up with Marvin Gaye that her career began to soar. With a string of hits, the duo took their show on the road, but a series of severe headaches began to take their toll on both Terrell and their act. It all came crashing down in October of 1967 when Terrell collapsed in Gaye’s arms while on stage at Hampden-Sydney College on Vermont. She was diagnosed with a brain tumor which lead to her death on March 16, 1970 at just 24. Gaye was so distraught by her passing that he went into a self-imposed isolation for a couple of years. It was during this time that he wrote and recorded his classic, What’s Going On?. His maturation on that album was likely a byproduct of his great loss of Miss Terrell.

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The Complete Duets - Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell

Died On This Date (March 16, 1976) Arthur Gunter / Electric Blues Guitarist

Arthur Gunter
May 23, 1926 – March 16, 1976

arthur-guntherArthur Gunter was an electric blues guitarist from Nashville, TN who recorded for the Excello label throughout the 1950s. During that time he wrote and recorded “Baby, Let’s Play House” which became an international hit for Elvis Presley.  He continued recording and performing until the mid ’60s when he more-or-less retired for the music business.  On March 16, 1976, Arthur Gunter died of pneumonia.



Died On This Date (March 15, 2008) Mikey Dread / Reggae Legend

Mikey Dread (Born Mike Campbell)
January 1, 1954 – March 15, 2008

Mikey Dread started his career in music as an engineer at the JBC, the Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation.  At the time, the station was broadcasting mostly foreign pop songs, so Dread convinced the higher-ups to give him his own program which he called Dread At The Controls. It eventually became the most popular show on the network. One group of fans of the show were the Clash who invited Dread to England to produce some tracks on their 1980 release, Sandinista! as well as to tour with them through Europe and beyond. Throughout this time he was building his own audience as a respected singer and performer. In his later years, Dread grew disillusioned with the record industry so he quietly retired and went back to school to study electronics and business in his new home city of Miami. This paid off as he was able to regain the rights to his music which he began re-releasing on his own label.  In October of 2007, it was announced that he was being treated for a brain tumor. He passed away surrounded by his family at his Connecticut home on March 15, 2008.

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Best Sellers - Mikey Dread

Died On This Date (March 15, 1929) Pinetop Smith / Influential Blues Pianist

Clarence “Pinetop” Smith
June 11, 1904 – March 15, 1929

Pinetop Smith was a blues pianist who blazed the trail for boogie-woogie players to follow.  He launched his career around 1920 when he found work as part of a traveling vaudeville act with whom he sang, told jokes, and played the piano.  It was during this time that he also played for Ma Rainey on occasion.  In 1928, Smith made his first record, “Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie” which was one of the first boogie woogie hits.  He was reportedly the first to use the phrase “shake that thing” on record.  On the eve of his second recording, 24-year-old Pinetop Smith was shot and killed by an unknown assailant and for reasons never known.  Since his death, Smith has been noted as an influence on the likes of Tommy Dorsey, Ray Charles, and of course, Pinetop Perkins.



Died On This Date (March 14, 2010) Cherie DeCastro / The DeCastro Sisters

Cherie DeCastro
September 1, 1922 – March 14, 2010

Cherie DeCastro was one-third of the original trio of singing siblings, the DeCastro Sisters.   Formed while still young schoolgirls, they liked to think of themselves as the Cuban Andrews Sisters.  In 1947, the trio sang on the premiere telecast of Los Angeles’ first television station, KTLA, and did it again to celebrate the station’s 50th anniversary in 1997.  Their 1947 performance was on the first television broadcast west of the Mississippi River.  That same year, the DeCastro Sisters made a memorable appearance in the popular film, Copacabana.  During the ’50s, the DeCastro Sisters began making records and became a popular concert draw in Las Vegas.  Their 1954 single, “Teach Me Tonight,” sold over 5 million copies.   Cherie DeCastro died of pneumonia on March 14, 2010.  She was 87 years old.

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