Died On This Date (September 11, 1987) Peter Tosh / Reggae Icon

Peter Tosh (Born Winston McIntosh)
October 19, 1944 – September 11, 1987

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Peter Tosh was one of the true icons of reggae music.  Tosh is best remembered as a founding member of Bob Marley and the Wailers.   The group signed to Chris Blackwell’s Island Records who released their first two albums, Catch A Fire and Burnin’ in 1973.  Tosh left the Wailers in 1974 after a dispute with Blackwell.  He released his 1976 solo debut, Legalize It, on Columbia Records.  While Marley’s records focused more on love and peace, Tosh’s tended to speak out against “the system.”   In 1978, the Rolling Stones signed him to their own label, Rolling Stones Records where he released the critically acclaimed Bush Doctor, Mystic Man, and Wanted Dread Or Alive, the first one including the hit Tempations cover “Don’t Look Back,” a duet with Mick Jagger.  Tosh was also very active in the protest against apartheid in South Africa, performing at several benefit concerts and participating in benefit albums.   On September 11, 1987, after returning from the United States where he was won a Grammy for Best Reggae Performance for No Nuclear War, Tosh was in his house waiting for friends to come celebrate his arrival.  That party never happened though, as the 42-year-old Tosh was murdered execution-style during a botched home invasion robbery.

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Legalize It (Legacy Edition) - Peter Tosh

Died On This Date (September 11, 2007) Joe Zawinul / Weather Report

Joe Zawinul
July 7, 1932 – September 11, 2007

Joe Zawinul was a jazz keyboardist who co-founded Weather Report, a popular jazz fusion band, in the early ’70s.  During the early part of his career, Zawinul played with Maynard Ferguson, afterwhich he toured and recorded with Dinah Washington. In 1961, Zaminul went to work with Cannonball Adderley and by the end of the decade he was playing with Miles Davis with whom he helped create what would be called jazz fusion.  He played on Davis’ In A Silent Way and the monumental Bitches Brew.  In 1970, he helped form Weather Report with Wayne Shorter, going on to record such modern jazz records as the Zaminul penned “Birdland,” a Grammy-winning song that has been covered by the likes of Quincy Jones, Jefferson Starship and String Cheese Incident.  Joe Zawinul died of a rare skin cancer on September 11, 2007, approximately two months after a successful tour. He was 75 years old.

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Heavy Weather - Weather Report

Died On This Date (September 11, 1997) Ray “Raybeez” Barbieri / Warzone

Ray “Raybeez” Barbieri
1961 – September 11, 1997

After a stint as drummer for hardcore punk band Agnostic Front, Ray “Raybeez” Barbieri went on to help form New York cult favorites, Warzone.   The band formed in 1982, with Barbieri being the only original member to stay with the band until is untimely death in 1997.  A Navy veteran, he was admitted to a VA hospital where he died while being treated from pneumonia.  Fans and friends have claimed that the inadequate facility was to blame for his untimely death.

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The Victory Years - Warzone

Died On This Date (September 11, 2009) Bob Greenberg / Former Music Exec

Bob Greenberg
DOB Unknown – September 11, 2009

During a career that spanned over 50 years, Bob Greenberg held executive posts at Warner Bros., United Artists, Mirage and Atlantic Records.  While at these labels, he helped build the careeres of such legendary artists as Led Zeppelin, Whitesnake, AC/DC, Genesis, Aretha Franklin and the Rolling Stones.  Greenberg suffered a stroke on September 10, 2009 and died as a result the next day.