Died On This Date (February 18, 2009) Snooks Eaglin / New Orleans R&B Legend

Fird “Snooks” Eaglin
January 21, 1936 – February 18, 2009

Snooks Eaglin was a popular New Orleans R&B performer who, due to a set list that drew from upwards of 2500 songs, was sometimes called “the human jukebox.”  And to the dismay of his backing band, in most cases he performed without a written set list, preferring to just play what felt right in the moment.  Even though he was blind since infancy, Eaglin learned to play the guitar at a very young age.  When he was just 11, he won a local radio talent competition and within three years, he left school to make his living as a musician.  By the mid ’50s, he was playing in the great Allen Toussaint’s band, the Flamingos.  In 1958, Eaglin became the subject of several recordings by musicologist, Dr. Harry Oster.  Many of these sides were later released on the Folkways label.  Eaglin signed with Imperial Records in 1960 and released a series of records that were more in the tradition of New Orleans R&B than the more blues styled Oster recordings.  He continued recording through the ’90s and was a common fixture at the New Orleans Jazzfest for many years.  Snooks Eaglin was 73 when he suffered a fatal heart attack on February 18, 2009.

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Teasin' You - Snooks Eaglin

Died On This Date (February 17, 1982) Thelonious Monk / Jazz Legend

Thelonious Monk
October 10, 1917 – February 17, 1982

thelonious-monk

Thelonious Monk was a highly influential jazz pianist and composer who was one of bebop’s earliest practitioners.  Monk was just six years old when he first took to the piano, and for the most part, taught himself to play.  As a teen, he hit the road playing the organ for a traveling evangelist.  He made his recording debut with  Coleman Hawkins in 1944, leading Hawkins to champion Monk throughout the jazz world.  Over the next three decades, Monk worked with the biggest names in jazz while recording some of the genre’s most celebrated recordings.  That list includes “Round Midnight,” “Straight No Chaser,” and “Blue Monk.”  Monk all but retired from music during the mid ’70s, possibly due to his struggles with mental illness.  He reportedly suffered from schizophrenia and manic depression.  He may have also suffered brain damage after being misdiagnosed and prescribed the wrong medication.  Either way, his physical health began to deteriorate during the final decade of his life.  Thelonious Monk ultimately died of a stroke at he age of 61.

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Monk's Dream - Thelonious Monk Quartet

Died On This Date (February 17, 2010) Mickey Granberg / Exec At National Assoc. Of Recording Merchandisers

Mickey Granberg
DOB Unknown – February 17, 2010

Mickey Granberg was a longtime executive at the American trade group, National Association of Recording Merchandisers (NARM).  Beginning in 1961, Granberg and her husband were invaluable leaders of the organization.  During her early years, she was an English professor at Temple University while she worked at NARM in the evenings.  She eventually ran the group, making her one of the highest ranking women in the music industry for many years.  In 1989, Granberg retired after nearly 40 years, but continued on as an adviser for another ten years.   Mickey Granberg was 83 when she passed away on February 17, 2010.



Died On This Date (February 17, 2010) Kathryn Grayson / Star Of ’40s & ’50s Musicals

Kathryn Grayson (Born Zelma Hedrick)
February 9, 1922 – February 17, 2010

Kathryn Grayson was an MGM contract performer who starred in several of their musical films during their golden age of the ’40s and ’50s.  Due to her beautiful soprano, she was a featured singer in such films as Show Boat, Kiss Me Kate, and Anchors Aweigh.  Grayson also performed in several operas such as La Boheme and Madama Butterfly.   She also played Queen Guenevere in the 1962 Broadway version of Camelot, replacing Julie Andrews and then going on the successful U.S. tour of the production.  Kathryn Grayson was 88 when she died of natural causes on February 17, 2010.



Died On This Date (February 16, 1996) Brownie McGhee / Blues Legend

Walter “Brownie” McGhee
November 30, 1915 – February 16, 1996

Brownie McGhee was a blues singer and guitarist who came to prominence during the post WWII years.  McGhee first learned to play on a “guitar” fashioned together out of an old tin box and a piece of wood by his uncle.  While still a child, he sang in a local gospel group.  By the late ’30s, McGhee was earning his living as a traveling musician, often working with Blind Boy Fuller, who taught him the ropes.  Within a few years, McGhee was making his first recordings for the legendary Okeh Records.  Throughout the ’60s and ’70s, McGhee mostly recorded and performed as a due with harmonica great, Sonny Terry.  They made several significant recordings together and were featured performers at the storied Newport Folk Festival and other high profile venues.  In 1979, they performed in the Steve Martin film The Jerk.  Brownie McGhee was 80 when he died of stomach cancer on February 16, 1996.

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The Folkways Years, 1945-1959 - Brownie McGhee