Died On This Date (November 5, 2009) Stacy Rowles / L.A. Jazz Musician

Stacy Rowles
September 11, 1955 – November 5, 2009

stacyrowlesStacy Rowles was a respected trumpet and flugelhorn player and a singer, who made a name for herself throughout the Los Angeles jazz scene.  The daughter or noted composer and pianist, Jimmy Rowles, she started playing the piano at age six, but eventually moved over to the trumpet.  Throughout her career, Rowles played with Maiden Voyage, Jazz Tap Ensemble and the Jazz Birds.  She made a handful of her own albums for Concord and Delos Records, including 1984’s Tell it Like it Is, which some consider to be her best.  Stacy Rowles, 54, died on November 5, 2009 of injuries sustained in an earlier car accident.



Died On This Date (November 5, 1986) Bobby Nunn / The Coasters

Ulysses “Bobby” Nunn
September 20, 1925 – November 5, 1986

bobbynunnBobby Nunn was an R&B singer who first came to some prominence as a singer in the ’50s vocal group, the Coasters.  During those early years, Nunn also made a handful of recordings with Little Esther Phillips.  In 1955, Nunn joined up with Billy Guy, Carl Gardner, and Leon Hughes in the Coasters, another vocal group that went on the become one of the most renowned from the era.  With hits like “Yakety Yak” and “Charlie Brown,” The Coasters were one of the few vocal groups that were considered as much rock ‘n roll as they were R&B.  In fact, when the inaugural group of inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame were announced in 1987, the Coasters were included on that list.  Nunn continued to record and perform well into the ’70s, including with a revamped version of the Coasters.  Bobby Nunn was 61 when he passed away on November 5, 1986.

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The Coasters

Died On This Date (November 5, 2002) Billy Guy / The Coasters

Billy Guy
June 20, 1936 – November 5, 2002

billy-guyBilly Guy is best remembered as the bass vocalist in the 1950s R&B vocal group, the Coasters.  It is he who sang lead on “Searchin,” “Run Red Run,” and numerous others.  The Coasters were one of the few vocal groups that were considered as much rock ‘n roll as they were R&B.  In fact, when the inaugural group of inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame were announced in 1987, the Coasters were included on that list.  Guy was also respected for his comedic abilities, as evident on a handful of comedy records he made outside of the Coasters.  In later years, Guy worked as a producer, working on several albums between the late ’60s and early ’70s.  Billy Guy, 66, died of cardiovascular disease in his Las Vegas home on November 5, 2002.

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The Coasters

Died On This Date (November 5, 1960) Johnny Horton / Country Music Great

Johnny Horton
April 30, 1925 – November 5, 1960

Johnny-HortonJohnny Horton was a popular country singer, musician and songwriter who came to prominence during the 1950s.  His main contribution to popular music was that it was he who ushered in the so-called historical ballad craze of the late ’50s.  His 1959 single “The Ballad of New Orleans” was one of the most popular songs of the decade and earned him a Best Country Record Grammy.  Other songs like “Sink the Bismarck” and “North to Alaska” were popular with country music fans and history buffs alike.  On November 5, 1960 while driving home from an Austin, Texas performance, Johnny Horton, 35, was killed when his car was hit head-on by a drunk driver.

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Honky Tonk Man: The Essential Johnny Horton, 1956-1960 - Johnny Horton

Died On This Date (November 4, 1998) Eugene Powell aka Sonny Boy Nelson

Eugene Powell
December 23, 1908 – November 4, 1998

Eugene PowellEugene Powell was a Mississippi born Delta blues musician who, like so many of his peers, picked up the guitar while still a child.  During his early career, Powell, who was also proficient on the banjo, violin and harmonica, occasionally performed and recorded with the Mississippi Sheiks.  Sometimes performing under the name of Sonny Boy Nelson, Powell built a strong regional following throughout the ’30s and ’40s.  But as rock ‘n roll and R&B began to take root, his music began to fall out of favor with young audiences so he was all but retired during the ’50s.  He experienced a bit of a comeback during the folk revival of the ’60s, and was encouraged to record and tour the festival circuit.  He signed to Adelphi Records in the early ’70s and recorded such sides as “Street Walkin’,” “Suitcase Full of Trouble,” “44 Blues,” and “Meet Me in the Bottoms.”    By the ’90s, Powell’s health began to ail so he was living in a nursing facility.  He passed away on November 4, 1998.