Died On This Date (April 6, 1998) Wendy O. Williams / The Plasmatics

Wendy O. Williams
May 29, 1949 – April 6, 1998

Wendy O. Williams was the dynamic lead singer of shock-punk band, the Plasmatics. Williams was considered one of the most frighteningly controversial singers of her, and most generations due in part to her near nudity and simulated sexual antics on stage. If that got boring, you could always count on exploding gear and chain-sawing of guitars to heat things up. After a young life that included working as a macro-biotic cook, performing in a gypsy dance troupe, stripping, doing live sex shows, and then working in porn, Williams decided to clean up her act and moved to New York where she answered a casting call that lead to the formation of the Plasmatics.  The group exploded on to the New York underground scene in 1978.  The band’s following continued to grow as they toured the world, causing an uproar in most locales, sometimes leading to arrest on indecency charges. By 1984, Williams had gone solo, her first album, W.O.W being produced by Gene Simmons was virtually a KISS album with all members performing on it in one form or another. The album earned her a Grammy nomination for Best Rock Female Performance. A couple of B-movie bit parts followed, with Williams all but retiring by 1991.  In spite of her reckless persona, Williams was deeply devoted to her health, animals and vegetarianism. After her run in show business, she worked as an animal rehabilitator and natural foods activist.  On April 6, 1998, the 48 year-old Wendy O. Williams walked into the woods near her house and died of what authorities ruled a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

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New Hope for the Wretched / Metal Priestess - Plasmatics



Died On This Date (September 5, 2009) Mickie Jones / Bassist For Angel

Mickie Jones
December 17, 1952 – September 5, 2009

mickiejonesMickie Jones was the co-founder of and bassist for pioneering ’70s glam metal band, Angel.   Formed with guitarist, Punky Meadows in in 1975, Angel would be the link between Bowie and heavy metal.  It was Gene Simmons of Kiss who helped the band get signed to Casablanca Records, and in an ironic twist, the members of Angel chose to market themselves dressed in all white as sort of the “anti-Kiss.”  The band’s slick pop metal and androgynous image helped pave the way for such ’80s hair bands as Poison, Warrant and Motley Crue.  Even the band’s own keyboardist, Gregg Guiffria would go on to have ’80s metal hits of his own.  Even though Angel released some of the most memorable hard rock albums of the ’70s, (IE: Helluva Band and On Earth As It Is In Heaven), they never reached much beyond a cult status.  Outside of Angel, Jones played in BUX with Meadows and Joe Perry Project singer, Ralph Morman, and Empire with LA Guns drummer, Steve Riley.  It has also been reported that Jones was once asked to join the New York Dolls.  In recent years, he was working in the film industry.  Mickie Jones died of liver cancer on September 5, 2009.

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White Hot - Angel