Died On This Date (October 25, 2004) John Peel / Influential English Disc Jockey

John Peel (born John Ravenscroft)
August 30, 1939 – October 25, 2004

John Peel was an extremely influential British disc jockey and journalist.  For nearly 40 years, he hosted a program on BBC Radio that featured an eclectic mix of psychedelic rock, punk, reggae, pop, alternative rock, hip-hop and death metal.  It was the first place many listeners heard future superstars.  He was also a frequent host of BBC Television’s popular Top of the Pops program during the ’80s.  A popular segment in Peel’s radio show was the John Peel Sessions during which artists would perform a handful of songs live in the studio.  Over the course of his career, over 2000 acts recorded over 4000 sessions.  Many have been made available on album or CD.  A thorough list of artists who have been featured on the John Peel Sessions can be found here.  John Peel, 65, died of a heart attack on October 25, 2004.



Died On This Date (October 25, 2009) Dee Anthony / Managed Peter Frampton, Tony Bennett

Dee Anthony
April 9, 1926 – October 25, 2009

Dee Anthony was a legendary artist manager who helped develop the young careers of such artists as Traffic, J. Geils Band, Ten Years After, Jethro Tull, Joe Cocker, Devo and Peter Allen.  His career started in the mid ’40s when he began representing his friend, Jerry Vale.  In 1954, he picked up Tony Bennett who he managed for over ten years.  During the ’70s, he managed Humble Pie, and when Peter Frampton went solo, it was Anthony that helped guide him through the massive success of his Frampton Comes Alive era.  Anthony retired from the music business during the ’90s.  He was 83 when he died of pneumonia on October 25, 2009.



Died On This Date (Otober 25, 2009) Banjo Fred Starner / The Hobo Minstrel

George “Banjo Fred” Starner
August 6, 1937 – October 25, 2009

banjofredBanjo Fred Starner was a banjoist and folk singer who helped document the hobo culture of America.  Taking a cue from Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie, Starner not only set out to be a voice of the unheard, but also helped raise money for various humanitarian causes along the way.  Starner taught himself to play the guitar and banjo while in college during the ’50s and was soon playing the folk festival circuit.  He later became a college professor, and in 1969, found himself performing and working as a deck hand on the Clearwater, a boat launched by Seeger in New York’s Hudson River to educate people about the environment.  By the late ’80s, Starner was living in Los Angeles where he continued to teach, write songs, and perform.  It was while in Southern California that he began putting more focus on the hobo culture in both his songs, and his studies.  From time to time he even performed at modern hobo encampments and for events sponsored by the American Hobo Association.  Starner passed away of pneumonia and sarcoidosis in a medical facility at the age of 72.



Died On This Date (October 24, 2008) Merl Saunders / Played With The Grateful Dead

Merl Saunders
February 14, 1934 – October 24, 2008

With Jerry Garcia
With Jerry Garcia

Merle Saunders was an exceptionally talented keyboard player who was a familiar face along the jamband scene beginning in the early ’70s.  He first teamed up with the Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia in 1971, and together they made several albums throughout the years.  Saunders also sat in with the Dead on many occasions.  He also fronted his own band with whom he recorded as well.  Over the years, Saunders has collaborated with Bonnie Raitt, Miles Davis, Widespread Panic, and Phish.  In 2002, Saunders suffered a serious stroke which eventually lead to his death in 2008.  He was 74.

What You Should Own

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Live At Keystone, Vol. 1 - Bill Vitt, Jerry Garcia, John Kahn & Merl Saunders