Died On This Date (July 18, 2011) Richard “Big Stiff” Konwinski / Florida Punk Pioneer; Founder Of Stiff Pole Records
Richard “Big Stiff” Konwinski
January 17, 1961 – July 18, 2010
Richard Konwinski was a longtime champion of the Tampa, Florida area punk scene. After growing up in Michigan, Konwinski uprooted in 1981 and moved to Florida. He quickly became entrenched in the local punk scene, which actually stretched down to the southern tip of the state. After spending much of his time at concerts by local acts as well as by the bigger acts who toured through the area, Konwinski decided to start his own label, Stiff Pole Records with childhood friend, Tim Hubbard. Over the next decade the label built a following by releasing records by such acts as Pink Lincolns, GoToHells, and No Fraud. Konwinski all but shuttered the label by the end of the ’90s, only to revive it during the latter part of the 2000s. Bands recently signed to the label include Last Great Hope and the Doll Parts. Richard Konsinski’s health was reportedly ailing during his final years. He was 49 when he ultimately passed away on July 18, 2010. Cause of death was not immediately released.

Billie Holiday was one of the of the most influential singers popular music has ever known, but sadly, she was also one of its most tragic figures. After a childhood that included the abandonment of a father, tremendous poverty, Catholic reform school, at least one rape, and time served for prostitution, Holiday began singing in local clubs for tips in order to survive. It was reportedly at one of these clubs in 1933, that she was discovered by ace talent scout, 

Although his professional career was cut short after just twelve years, John Coltrane’s output was legendary. Coltrane is considered one of the greatest saxophonists of all time and helped popularize the free jazz idiom. Besides recording over fifty sides, he supported countless others, including 
Gordon Waller and Peter Asher were the popular ’60s duo, Peter and Gordon. Since Asher’s sister, Jane Asher dated Paul McCartney at the time, Peter and Gordon were lucky enough secure unrecorded Lennon-McCartney songs for their own use. One of those songs, “A World Without Love” became their biggest hit. They broke up in 1968 after which Waller recorded a handful of solo albums and appeared in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Peter and Gordon reunited a few times in later years. Gordon Waller went into cardiac arrest on July 16, 2009 and died the next day.

