Died On This Date (December 11, 1964) Sam Cooke / Soul Great

Sam Cooke
January 22, 1931 – December 11, 1964

sam-cookeSam Cooke was one of soul music’s most respected and influential artists.  Over a career that spanned just seven years, he placed almost thirty songs on the Top 40 charts.  More than that, Cooke was a savvy businessman and was a visible participant in the Civil Rights movement.  His hits included “A Change is Gonna Come,” “You Send Me,” “Twistin’ the Night Away,” and “Chain Gang.”  Cooke first came to prominence in 1950 as the singer for the influential gospel group, the Soul Stirrers.  By the mid ’50s, he began releasing crossover pop records, and in 1961, he started his own record company, SAR Records, which soon signed the likes of Johnnie Taylor and Bobby Womack.  Shortly thereafter, he formed his own publishing and management companies.  On December 11, 1964, Sam Cooke, age 33 was shot and killed.  That much we know.  Official reports concluded that the manager of a motel shot him in self-defense during an altercation in which she felt threatened by Cooke, who was acting deranged and was wearing just a jacket and shoe.    What officials finally surmised was that Cooke was at the motel with a woman who may or may not have been a hooker.  And after the woman ran off with his clothes and money to either rob him or escape an attempted rape, Cooke went into a rage which lead to the altercation with the hotel manager.  Although the case was closed as a “justifiable homicide,” many close to Cooke strongly believe that the reported events of the evening were fabricated to cover up his murder.

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30 Greatest Hits - Sam Cooke Portrait of a Legend 1951-1964 (Remastered) - Sam Cooke

Died On This Date (December 11, 1998) Lynn Strait & His Dog, Dobbs / Snot

Lynn Strait
August 7, 1968 – December 11, 1998
Dobbs
DOB Unknown – December 11, 1998

lynn-strait
Lynn Strait & Dobbs

Lynn Strait was the lead singer of alternative rock band, Snot.  Formed in 1995, Snot quickly built a sizable following due to their seamless blend of punk, funk and metal.  The band was soon signed to Geffen Records who released their debut album, Get Some in 1997.  On December 11, 1998, Strait was driving along a Southern California highway with his dog, Dobbs who had appeared in the band’s video and on their album cover.  While exiting the freeway, Strait found himself in the middle of a six-car accident.  A truck crashed into Strait’s vehicle, killing him and Dobbs at the scene.  Lynn Strait was just 30 years old when he died.

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Get Some - Snot

Died On This Date (December 11, 2008) Wayne Yates / Played With Del McCoury

Wayne Yates
DOB Unknown – December 11, 2008

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Wayne Yates on left

Wayne Yates was a respect bluegrass mandolin player who played with his brother, former Country Gentlemen picker , Bill Yates, as well as with Del McCoury and Red Allen.   During the late ’50s, the Yates brothers formed the Clinch Mountain Ramblers who eventually added Allen who then took over the band and changed its name to the Kentuckians.  Wayne went off on his own after recording two albums with the group.  He was 75 when he passed away on December 11, 2008.



Died On This Date (December 10, 1999) Rick Danko / The Band

Rick Danko
December 29, 1942 – December 10, 1999

rick-danko

Rick Danko was a rock musician, singer and songwriter best known for his time spent in The Band, arguably Canada’s most celebrated band.   Around 1960, Danko found himself opening a show for Ronnie Hawkins, whose back up band, the Hawks included Robbie Robertson and Levon Helm.  Hawkins was impressed enough after hearing Danko to invite him to join his band on rhythm guitar, later switching to bass.  The Hawks eventually added Richard Manuel and Garth Hudson and split from Hawkins in 1963.  They continued on touring throughout Canada and the northern U.S. until they got a call from Bob Dylan asking them to support him on the road.   Going simply as the Band by the late ’60s, they secured a deal with Capitol Records and delivered their debut, Music From Big Pink, one of rock music’s true masterpieces.  That was followed by albums like The Band, Stage Fright, and Cahoots which only added more songs to one of rock’s finest catalogs.  Danko sang lead on many of the groups best songs.  On Thanksgiving night of 1976, the Band performed what would be their final show as that unit at San Francisco’s Winterland.  To the surprise of the audience, the Band proved to be the greatest backing band of all times as a cavalcade of the era’s most respected performers showed their own respect by joining them on stage throughout the evening.  That list included Neil Young, Van Morrison, Joni Mitchell, Eric Clapton, Neil Diamond, and Dylan, each arguably giving the single greatest live performance of their careers.  Fortunately, the evening was captured on film by Martin Scorsese, who released it theatrically as The Last Waltz, often noted as one of popular music’s greatest concert films.  Following the break up of the Band, Danko recorded a handful of albums that sold moderately at best.  In later years he participated in re-formed, but not complete, versions of the Band.  By the late ’90s, he was suffering from drug and alcohol addictions possibly attributed to injuries sustained in a car accident, as well as weight issues that put him in the obese range.  On December 10, 1999, Rick Danko, age 56, died in his sleep.

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The Last Waltz - The Band

Died On This Date (December 10, 1967) Otis Redding / The King Of Soul

Otis Redding
September 9, 1941 – December 10, 1967

otis-reddingOtis Redding was rightfully called, the King of Soul partly due to his ability to inject power and emotion in most any song he sang. Redding began singing as a child in his church choir, and as he grew into his teens, he began to fall under the musical influence of another once-local singer, Little Richard.  He spent the early years of his professional career touring around the southern states singing for blues guitarist, Johnny Jenkins.  In 1962, Redding was in the studio with Jenkins when some spare studio time presented itself.  He took the opportunity to record his “These Arms of Mine,” which was released on a Stax subsidiary label and became a minor hit.  Over the next four years, Redding continued to release such hits as “I Can’t Turn You Loose,” “Satisfaction,” “Change Gonna Come,” “Mr. Pitiful,” and of course, “Respect,” which would later become Aretha Franklin’s signature song.   Redding’s powerful stage presence and charisma made him a popular concert draw as well.  His 1967 Monterey Pop Festival set was fortunately captured on film and still knocks viewers out to this day.   Unfortunately, Redding’s life came to a tragic end just as he was at what would likely have been just his first peak of popularity.  On December 10, 1967, the small aircraft that was carrying him and four members of his backing band, the Bar-Kays, crashed into a Madison, Wisconsin lake.  Otis Redding, age 26, Jimmy King, Ronnie Caldwell, Phalon Jones and Carl Cunningham were all killed.  Only Ben Cauley of the band survived the crash, while James Alexander stayed behind.  Redding’s “Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay,” released shortly after his death, became his only #1 single and the first ever #1 ever by an artist who had recently passed away.

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Otis Redding