Singer

Died On This Date (February 26, 1995) Frank O’Keefe / The Outlaws

Frank O’Keefe
March 18, 1950 – February 26, 1995

frank-o'keefeFrank O’Keefe was and early bassist for southern rock band, the Outlaws.  Although the band was riding high on a string of what would eventually become classic rock staples, O’Keefe decided to leave the band after suffering a broken neck from a fall in July, 1976.  The trials of a hectic life on the road also helped in that decision.  That neck injury lead to his reliance on pain medication for the rest of his life.  On February 26, 1995, O’Keefe’s lifeless body was found by his roommate in his Clearwater, FL home.  He apparently died as a result of drug and alcohol abuse.

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Outlaws - The Outlaws

Died On This Date (February 26, 1990) Cornell Gunter / The Platters

Cornelius Gunter
November 14, 1936 – February 26, 1990

cornell-70s1Cornell Gunter was a founding member of the Platters, one of R&B/rock ‘n roll’s most successful vocal groups.  He was ALSO a member of another popular group, the Coasters.  With the Platters, which he helped form in 1953, Gunter sang lead on such hits as “You Send Me,” and “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes.”  He left the group in 1960.  With the Coasters, he sang on “Yakety Yak,” “Charlie Brown,” and “Poison Ivy.”  Gunter made several solo recordings throughout his career as well.  Cornell Gunter was in the process of launching a comeback in Las Vegas when he was gunned down by an unknown assailant on February 26, 2009.  The crime was never solved.



Died On This Date (February 24, 1991) Webb Pierce / Country Music Legend

Webb Pierce
August 8, 1921 – February 24, 1991

webbWebb Pierce was a popular country singer whose career spanned the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s.  Based on chart success, he was the most popular country performer of the 1950s.  His biggest hit, “There Stands The Glass” is considered one country music’s greatest songs and has been recorded by the likes of Willie Nelson, Wanda Jackson, Van Morrison, and Jerry Lee Lewis.  Up until his retirement in 1982, Pierce charted 96 singles.  Besides, “There Stands The Glass,” his most popular were “In The Jailhouse Now,” and “Why Baby Why.”  Pierce was just as well-known for his lavish lifestyle as he was for his music.  He drove two Cadillacs that were lined with silver dollars, wore elaborate Nudie suits, and had a $30,000 swimming pool fashioned after a guitar.  Webb Pierce was 69 when he died of pancreatic cancer on February 24, 1991.

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20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Webb Pierce - Webb Pierce

Died On This Date (February 24, 1988) Memphis Slim / Blues Legend

Memphis Slim (Born John Chatman)
September 3, 1915 – February 24, 1988

Photo By Raeburn Flerlage
Photo By Raeburn Flerlage

Memphis Slim was a jump blues pianist and prolific composer who could count over 500 recordings as his own.  He got his start during the early ’30s by playing honky-tonks and dance halls throughout Arkansas and Missouri.  In 1939, he migrated up to Chicago where he started out playing gigs with Big Bill Broonzy.  In 1940, Slim began making his own records.  One of those recordings, “Nobody Loves Me” has been covered (as “Every Day I Have The Blues”) by the likes of Eric Clapton, B.B. King, Ray Charles, Jimi Hendrix, Carlos Santana, Ella Fitzgerald, and Natalie Cole, to name just a few.   Like so many of the blues greats of the first part of the 20th century, Slim made a nice comeback during the folk and blues revival of the early ’60s.  He was so respected around the world, that the U.S. Senate once named him an Ambassador-At-Large of Good Will.  Memphis Slim was 72 when he died of renal failure on February 24, 1988.

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The Folkways Years, 1959-1973 - Memphis Slim

Died On This Date (February 24, 2005) Goldie Hill / Country Star

Argolda “Goldie” Hill
January 11, 1933 – February 24, 2005

Goldie Hill was one of country music’s first generation of women.  Along with Kitty Wells, she would influence the next generation’s Dolly Parton, Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn.   Hill got her first break when she was invited to perform on the popular Louisiana Hayride program in 1952.  Later that year, she released her first single, followed by “I Let the Stars Get in My Eyes” which quickly went to the top of the charts.  It was the first by a woman to do so.  Almost as quickly as she became famous, Hill walked away from the music business.  In 1957, she married Carl “Mr. Country” Smith, the former husband of June Carter, and retired to start and raise a family.  She attempted a small comeback during the late ’60s, but nothing of commercial significance came from it.  She soon retired again to show horses.  Goldie Hill passed away from cancer on February 24, 2005.  She was 72.

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Goldie Hill