Died On This Date (January 21, 2012) Ronnie Smith / K.C. & The Sunshine Band

Ronnie Smith
April 12, 1952 – January 21, 2012

Ronnie Smith was a trumpet player and songwriter who is perhaps best remembered as an original member of one of the disco era’s biggest and most enduring bands, KC & the Sunshine Band.  Thanks to contributions from Smith, the group created the blueprint for the upbeat and horn-driven “Miami sound” that acts like the Miami Sound Machine and Gloria Estefan would later follow.  A dynamic performer on stage, Smith was often the horn section’s focal point and choreographed its funky dance moves.  Prior to his tenure in the Sunshine Band, Smith formed the Ocean Liner Band who backed R&B great, Betty Wright, and played on countless recordings released by the legendary Miami label, TK Records.  He also wrote “Spank,” which became a big disco hit by Jimmie “Bo” Horne in 1978.  That same year, Smith released his one an only album, Party Freaks (Come On) as Ron Louis Smith.  In 2004, he was attacked during a car-jacking that left him in a coma and hospitalized ever since. An arrest was never made.  Ronnie Smith ultimately died of his injuries on January 21, 2012.  He was 59.



Died On This Date (April 27, 2000) Vicki Sue Robinson / Disco Great

Vicki Sue Robinson
May 31, 1954 – April 27, 2000

Vicki Sue Robinson had many accomplishments in music, theater and film, but it would be her smash it “Turn The Beat Around” that would forever make her a disco queen. Her life as an entertainer began at age six when she joined her mother on stage at the storied Philadelphia Folk Festival. At sixteen she was on Broadway as a cast member of Hair. She landed a couple of film roles, most notably Going Home and To Find A Man and by 1973, she was performing in the Broadway production of Jesus Christ Superstar. Then in 1975, while singing backing vocals on a friend’s album, she was offered a contract with RCA Records. 1976 saw the release of her debut, Never Gonna Let You Go, that included the smash hit, “Turn The Beat Around.” The album went to number one on the Billboard pop charts and earned Robinson a Grammy nomination. Robinson’s career continued to flourish through early 2000, but she never matched the success of that first album. Besides making her own records, her later years found her doing plenty of session work as well as acting on film and stage.  And of course, “Turn The Beat Around” continued to find new audiences thanks to a popular cover by Gloria Estefan and from Robinson’s live appearances on the disco revival circuit. Robinson died from cancer on April 27, 2000 at just 46.

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