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Obituaries
Bettye Ashworth
After
a long fight with lung cancer, Bettye wife of Grand Ole Opry
Star Ernie Ashworth's passed away saturday morning 3 Nov
Robert Goulet.
Robert
Goulet remembered for his magnificent voice and his role in
Camelot, died 1st Nov awaiting a lung transplant.
Porter Wagoner died
Porter
Wagoner, an Opry member since 1957 and Country Music Hall of Famer died
at age 80 tonight (28 Oct 2007), as dignitaries and stars gathered
at the Country Music Hall of Fame to induct its three newest
members. Mr. Wagoner was admitted to the hospital on Monday, Oct.
15 and had been under doctors’ care since then. Porter. Wagoner
was released to hospice care on Friday, days after the
announcement of a lung cancer diagnosis.
Lee Hazlewood died
Lee
Hazlewood, best known for writing and producing "These Boots Are
Made for Walkin'" for Nancy Sinatra, has died. He was 78.
Barton Lee Hazlewood died at his home in Henderson of kidney
cancer on Saturday evening. Hazlewood was most famous for his work
with the daughter of Frank Sinatra, including writing and
producing hits including "Sugartown". He also produced "Something
Stupid," a duet Nancy recorded with
her father in 1967.
Boots Randolph
Saxophone player Boots Randolph passed away after suffering a
subdural hematoma . The
man who
appeared on the 1963 hit "Yaketty Sax" (The Benny Hill theme) is
80 years old. If any country
act wanted
sax on their music Boots was the man they called. His playing has
been heard
on hundreds of hits and even Elvis Presley had him on his records.
He was a
regular performer in Nashville up until the 1990s. He has just had
his
latest CD released, a 14-track jazz instrumental album.
Glenn Sutton
One of the
country musics' most prolific songwriters, Glenn Sutton has died
of a heart attack on 17 April 2007. Glenn was married to Lynn
Anderson and Produced "Rose Garden" and wrote many, many super
hit songs. Joe South Wrote "Rose Garden".
Frankie
Laine Died Age 93
The
wonderful Frankie Laine has died at the age of 93. Frankie was
best
known for hits like "Rawhide" and "I Believe"
and although he crossed over
to the mainstream he was played a lot on country radio with
many cowboy
songs to his credit, including "Cool Water" and "Don't
Fence Me In".
Tom
Morrell
Tommy Morrell passed
away on 30 January 2007 of emphysema at home in East Dallas. He was 68.
. For over 50 years this touring sideman
and session player delivered western swing, jazz and country with artful
skill on motion picture sound tracks and on the recordings of
innumerable artists, including Bob Wills' Texas Playboys. Later as
a bandleader, he arranged and produced dozens of albums. During the
1990s he proved to be a major force in the resurgence of non-pedal steel
through touring, arranging and recording besides his brands of Morrell
and the Morrell-shields steels. He was one of the founders and designers
of MSA pedal guitars.
"Sneaky"
Pete Kleinow
Legendary
pedal steel guitarist, "Sneaky" Pete Kleinow, passed away on
Saturday, January 6, according to Paige Cofrin, President of Luna Chica
Records, and Brenda Cline, of NashRock Entertainment, Kleinow's former
record label head, and manager, respectively. Kleinow's death was
apparently due to complications from Alzheimer's. He was diagnosed with
the disease in 2006, and had been living in a convalescent home in
Petaluma, California, for the past few months.
Doyle Holly
Died
January 13th after along battle with cancer. He was a member of Buck
Owens’ Buckaroos from 1963-1970. He also placed seven songs on the
country charts from 1972 -1974.
Del
Reeves
Veteran country music entertainer Del Reeves, best known for his edgy,
Bakersfield-fuelled hits Looking at the World Through A Windshield, The
Girl on
the Billboard and Goodtime Charlie’s passed away on January 1 in his
Centerville, Tennessee home after lengthy battles with emphysema and
other ailment
Dennis
Linde
Dennis
Linde (pronounced LIN-dee) Nashville Songwriters Hall of Famer and
former BMI Songwriter of the Year died aged 63 on 22 Dec 2006 of
idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. A
brilliant songwriter with a quick wit and fast mind who artfully blended
quirky, original lyrics with up-tempo melodies.
He emerged on the songwriting scene in 1970 after Roger
Miller released his song, "Tom Green County Fair," and Roy
Drusky cut "Long Long Texas Road." Two years later, Presley
recorded "Burning Love." "He was the quintessential
mystery man of Nashville because he didn't go to all the
functions," said Scott Siman, an artist manager who had known Mr.
Linde since the 1970s. "It wasn't like he was seen up and down
Music Row. He had his own way of writing and conducting himself. If you
ever saw Dennis Linde it was amazing, because you didn't get that
opportunity very often."
Buddy
Killen
Music publisher, songwriter, record producer and musician
"Buddy" Killen
became one of the most influential figures in the Nashvill
entertainment business, died at the age of 73. He was recently
diagnosed with liver and pancreatic cancer.
Freddy
Fender
Country music icon Freddy Fender died at the age of 69 on 15
October after a long fight with cancer.
The funeral takes place at San Benito City Cemetery on 18
Oct.
Josh
Graves
Dobro
player Josh Graves died 30 September at age 81.
Don
Walser
Texas
country singer Don Walser died on September 20th 2006, following a
long illness from. He was 72 and retired from the music
business in 2003 after being diagnosed with neuropathy, a disease
of the nervous system in 2001.
Johnny
Duncan
Country
music singer Johnny Duncan, known for songs like "She Can Put
Her Shoes Under My Bed Anytime" and "It Couldn't Have
Been Any Better," has died. He was 67.
Duncan died 14 Aug of a heart attack at a Fort Worth hospital.
Obituaries
Billy
Walker and wife killed
Veteran
Grand Ole Opry star Billy Walker, whose hits included
"Charlie's Shoes" and "Cross the Brazos at
Waco," died in a car wreck on Sunday May 21. He was 77.
Walker was killed along with his wife Bettie, 61 and two of his
band members Charles Lilly Jr. and Daniel Patton Sr. when a van
they were riding in ran off Interstate 65 south of Montgomery,
Alabama and overturned. Walker's grandson, Joshua Brooks, 21 was
critically injured in the accident. The group was on their way
back to the Nashville area after performing at a show near Gulf
Shores.
Bonnie Owens Died
76-year-old singer/songwriter Bonnie
Owens passed away on 24 April from complications of
Alzheimers. Her first marriage was to Buck Owens when he was an
orange picker and part-time entertainer.
Reports from Bakersfield say that her
Alzheimers was advanced to the point that she wasn't aware of Buck
Owens' death. A spokesman said she will be cremated and her ashes
laid next to Buck Owens in the family mausoleum.
Buck
Owens Passes
Legendary
country singer Buck Owens passed away on March 25. He was 76. One
of the main proponents of the Bakersfield Sound, in the early
1960s he spearheaded a new honky-tonk country styling that
utilised a heavy backbeat with electric lead guitar, pedal steel,
drums and bass and occasional use of fiddle. His impact was so
great that he crossed over to the pop charts and was a huge
influence on the Beatles (who covered his Act Naturally hit), Gram
Parsons, the Byrds, Emmylou Harris and numerous others. Among his
many hits are such classics as Together Again, I’ve Got A Tiger
By the Tail, Love’s Gonna Live Here, My Heart Skips
A Beat, and Streets of Bakersfield the latter a duet hit with
Dwight Yoakam.
Cindy
Walker
the legendary Central Texas country music songwriter whose work is
featured on a CD released this week by Willie Nelson, has died at
the age of 87. The prolific songwriter died Thursday night March
23 at Parkview Regional Hospital in Mexia.
During
her sixty-plus years as a songwriter, Cindy wrote such
classics as In the Misty Moonlight, Distant Drums, Dream Baby,
Cherokee Maiden, When My Blue Moon Turns To Gold Again, Blue
Canadian Rockies, China Doll, You Don’t Know Me, Warm, Red Wine
and dozens more.
Terry Hadfield, lead
singer and frontman for many years with the British country band
Stroller died on Sunday 29th Jan 2006. "Terry's Last
Gig" was well attended and took place at Uppermill church (near Oldham) on Monday 20th Feb.
Several musicians paid tribute to Terry in song, giving him a
truly fitting
send-off. Terry may be gone, but he will not be forgotten!!!
Louise
Scruggs, 78, wife and manager of banjo legend Earl Scruggs;
February 2nd in Nashville from respiratory disease.
Charles K. Wolfe, 62, respected country music journalist
and historian, college professor, and three-time Grammy nominee;
February 9th in Murfreesboro, TN after a long battle with diabetes
and other health problems.
Wilson
Pickett, 64, member of The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame;
January 19th near Reston, VA from a heart attack.
Bob
Weinstock, 77, producer who recorded Miles Davis, Thelonious
Monk, John Coltrane, Stan Getz, the Modern Jazz Quartet and other
jazz artists for his Prestige label; January 21st in Boca Raton,
FL from complications of diabetes.
Janette
Carter, the last surviving child of members of the original Carter
Family, died 22 January 2006 at Holston Valley Medical Center in
Kingsport, Tennessee. She was 82 and had several chronic
illnesses, including Parkinson's disease. Ms. Carter's parents,
A.P. and Sara Carter, joined with Maybelle Carter to comprise what
is now known as "The First Family of Country Music."
Wife
Of Carl Perkins Has Died
Friends
are remembering Val Perkins as the woman the late
singer-songwriter Carl Perkins couldn’t live without. She died
at the age of 74. Perkins sister, Martha Bain, says Val’s death
was a shock. Bain says she’s the one who got the couple together
in high school, double dating with George Bain, who was to become
her husband. Carl Perkins died in 1998. The Rock and Roll Hall of
Famer is best known for his 1950’s hit Blue Suede Shoes. He also
wrote the Johnny Cash-June Carter smash, Jackson.
Wilson
‘Lit’ Waters Jr. of Fairfield Four dies
Wilson "Lit" Waters Jr., an integral member of
Grammy-winning gospel vocal group the Fairfield Four, died
Thursday Nov 24 at his home in Nashville. He was 74 and had been
diagnosed with cancer.
Mike
Storey
The British Country Music Association (BCMA) is saddened to
announce the death of one of its founding members, Mike Storey. He
died in his sleep, November 26, and had been diagnosed with Motor
Neurone Disease earlier in the year.
In the early 1970s Mike Storey launched the Mike &
Margaret Storey Entertainment Agency with his first wife Margaret
(who died in 1999).
A one time librarian at BBC Radio Leeds, Storey co-presented,
with Goff Greenwood, a weekly country music programme on the
station as well as running the highly successful Wakefield Country
Music Club during the 1970s.
Mike Storey, who was 68 years old years, is survived by his
second wife Jean, and children Catherine and James.
Baker
Knight dies at age 72....Stars ranging from Elvis Presley to
Ricky Nelson, Paul McCartney, Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin
recorded his hits. From the 1950s to the 1970s, Knight wrote
almost 1,000 songs. More than 40 singers recorded his tunes, which
include the 1970 Presley hit The Wonder of You and Martin's
Somewhere There's a Someone and That Old Time Feelin'. Nelson and
McCartney sang the same Knight hit, Lonesome Town, decades apart.
Perry Como, Jerry Lee Lewis, Sammy Davis Jr. and Mickey Gilley
also recorded some of Knight's songs.
Rufus
Thibodeaux. The name "Thibodeaux" is engraved
permanently in the history of Cajun music thanks to the song
"Thibodeaux & His Cajun Band". Rufus Thibodeaux was
a fiddle player in Jimmy C Newman's band and died aged 71
recently. Jimmy C Newman believed he was the greatest Cajun
fiddler of all time. He worked with Neil Young, Bob Wills and
Porter Wagoner in his varied career.
Hal
Rugg, Country Music Hall of Fame Steel Guitarist passed
away 10 August 2005 following a long illness of cancer.
"Hal was one of the greatest steel guitar players of
all time, but most of all, he was a true gentlemen, a great
person, and a friend to all," said friend and country music
promoter Marty Martel. "I knew Hal for many years. He played
on several of my recording sessions. His fellow steel guitar
friends are in a state of sorrow and shock, although most of us
knew that Hal would be taken soon. He will be brought back to
Nashville to be buried."
Eddie
Shuler died in Lake Charles, Louisiana, at 92 year old.
He released 13 year old Dolly Parton’s first single ,”Puppy
Love,” on his Goldband Record label in 1959.
Long
John Baldry, 64, bluesman; July 21st in Vancouver, British
Columbia from complications of a chest infection.
Blue Barron, 91, big-band orchestra leader; July 16th in
Baltimore.
Peggy Bradley, 62, president of Bradley Music Management;
July 15th at Nashville's Vanderbilt University Hospital.
Myron Floren ("The Happy Norwegian"), 85,
featured accordion player on The Lawrence Welk Show; July
23rd in Rolling Hills Estates, CA from cancer.
John Herald, 65, songwriter ("Stewball" and "High
Muddy Water"), session musician and lead singer for the
Greenbriar Boys; July 18th in West Hurley, NY from an
apparent suicide.
Tracy Jones, 49, long-time Nashville booking agent; July
15th after a long battle with cancer.
Eugene Record, 64, songwriter ("Oh Girl") and
founder of the Chi-Lites; July 22nd from cancer.
Glynn Ross, 90, founding director of the Seattle Opera;
July 20th in Tucson from complications of a stroke.
Sol Saffian, 68, big-time booking agent; July 21st in
Nashville from cancer.
Tom Talbert, 80, jazz pianist; July 2nd at Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center in Los Angeles after a stroke.
Billy
Bauer, 89, jazz guitarist who played in groups led by Woody
Herman, Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, and Jack Teagarden; June 17th
from complications of pneumonia.
Renaldo "Obie" Benson, 69, member of the legendary
Motown and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame group The Four Tops; July
1st in Detroit from lung cancer.
Robert Byrne, 50, hit songwriter whose number one songs included
"Once In A Blue Moon" and "Two Dozen Roses"
and highly successful producer for Shenandoah; on or about June
25th in Nashville.
Big Al Downing, 65, member of the Rockabilly Hall of Fame; July
4th in Massachusetts from complications of leukaemia.
Clancy Eccles, 64, noted Jamaican reggae singer and producer; June
30th in Spanish Town, Jamaica after suffering a stroke.
Chris Griffin, 89, trumpeteer and former member of Benny Goodman's
orchestra; June 18th in Danbury, CT from melanoma.
Chet Helms, 62, west coast concert promoter who brought Janis
Joplin into the group he managed, Big Brother & The Holding
Company; June 25th in San Francisco from complications of a
stroke.
Carson Parks, 69, songwriter ("Somethin' Stupid");
June 22nd in St. Marys, GA from kidney failure.
Luther Vandross, 54, soul singer who won eight Grammys; July 1st
at JFK Medical Center in Edison, NJ from the long-term effects of
a stroke suffered in 2003.
Ronald Winans, 48, Grammy winner and member of the Winans gospel
music family; June 17th in Detroit from heart problems.
Johnny
Cash's First Wife Died
It
is with deep sadness that we bear the news of the passing of Johnny
Cash's first wife and Rosanne's mom, Vivian Liberto Cash Distin on
May 24, 2005.
Keith
Manifold Passed Away
It
is with regret we hear of the death of country performer Keith
Manifold who suffered a heart attack on 22nd May at a festival in
Suffolk . Derbyshire based Keith has been a stalwart of the
British country music scene for about 30 years as
singer/guitarist. In recent years he ran a booking agency
for country artists.
He will be much missed by fans and artists alike. His death
closes a chapter in British Country Music.
Jimmy
Martin Passes
Jimmy
Martin, the brash fireball whose electrifying stage presence and
soaring vocals made him one of bluegrass music's most
consequential and colourful artists, died on the morning of May
14, at a Nashville hospice from complications of bladder cancer.
He was 77. Known as ''The King of Bluegrass'' and ''Mr. Good'n
Country,'' Martin became known as a master of American roots
music. In 1949, Mr. Martin successfully auditioned for Bill
Monroe's Blue Grass Boys and his vocal contributions ushered in
what is now known in bluegrass as the ''high, lonesome sound.''
Obituaries
Chris
Loses Battle With Cancer
Country
singer and former rodeo star
Chris
LeDoux died March 9, in Casper, Wyoming following a lengthy
battle with liver ailments. He was admitted to Wyoming
Medical Center in Casper on the Monday after experiencing
complications from cancer.
Chris LeDoux will be inducted into the ProRodeo Hall of Fame
in Colorado Springs, Colorado on July 16. LeDoux was the
1976 world bareback riding champion and will be inducted in
two categories – bareback and notables. The notable
category recognizes his contributions to the sport through
his music. Chris is one of six cowboys named to the ProRodeo
Hall of Fame this year.
Steel
Guitarist Dies
Jerry
Byrd, one of the most influential steel guitar players in
American music history, died Monday morning at Kaiser Hospital
in Honolulu. He was 85 years old and had been suffering from
Parkinson's disease.
Kathy
Kay Passed Away
Kathy
Kay died on 9 March in a nursing home in Largs on the west coast
of Scotland. British radio listeners from the 1950's will fondly
remember Kathy as a singer with the Billy Cotton Band show,
broadcast on Sunday afternoons.
Kathy was 86 and had been suffering from Alzheimer's for the
past 15 years
Joe
Carter Died
Joe
Carter, a member of the famous Carter Family, died of cancer
March 2 at his home. He was 78.
Carter was a cornerstone of the preservation of old-time
mountain music and helped build the Carter Family Fold in
Hiltons, Va., which presented shows of country and bluegrass
music every weekend.
Joe Carter, who performed at the Carter Family Fold, was the
last direct connection to anyone who was at that original
session, said his friend Tim White.
Joe Carter is survived by three daughters and seven
grandchildren.
Goldie
Hill Died
A
long-time member of the Grand Ole Opry has died. Goldie Hill
died 24 Feb night at Baptist Hospital of Cancer.
She began singing in her teens with her brothers in Texas
then joined Webb Pierce's band in the 50's. Once she arrived in
Nashville, she was dubbed "The Golden Hillbilly."
Her biggest hit came in 1953 with "I Let The Stars
Get in My Eyes." She retired from performing after marrying
fellow Opry Member Carl Smith in the late 50's.
Funeral services held 2pm Sunday 27 Feb at the Williamson
Memorial Funeral Chapel in Franklin.
Goldie Hill was 72 years old.
Pete
Sayers Passes
It is with much sadness that we report that Pete Sayers
passed away last Friday, February 11. He had battled cancer for
the past few years yet remained upbeat until the very end, and
though suffering, continued to perform whenever he could, either
solo or with the Radio Cowboys. A stalwart of the British
country music scene, the Somerset-born singer and
multi-instrumentalist enjoyed a somewhat colourful and eventful
career in country music. In a career that spanned more than 40
years, he hosted TV shows in Nashville and the UK, worked with
some of the legends of country music, including Hank Snow,
Norman Blake, George Hamilton IV, Kris Kristofferson and Porter
Wagoner, compered the legendary Wembley Country Music Festival,
toured the UK incessantly and released some of the most highly
original recordings ever made by a home-grown country performer.
Sammi
Smith Passed Away
Sad
to report that Jewel Fay "Sammi" Smith died in an
Oklahoma City hospital on Saturday February 12. She was 61
years old and has been ill for some time.
Funeral
services Wednesday, February 16.
Smith
won a Grammy in 1971 for her rendition of Kris Kristofferson's
Help Me Make It Through The Night. The song was also named
Single of the Year by the CMA that year.
Drifting
Cowboy Passes
Dean McNett, brother of Bob McNett, an original member of the
Drifting Cowboy Band, died peacefully in his sleep, at age 77,
on Saturday February12.
Dean played with the Drifting Cowboys after Hank's death
and was a long time member of Doc & Chickie Williams' show
on WWVA, Wheeling West Virginia.
Merle
Kilgore Died
Had
Merle Kilgore only been a bit player in country music history
— had he never co-written Ring of Fire with June Carter or
managed Hank Williams Jr. to great career heights — he would
still have been one of Nashville's great characters.
A remarkable teller of stories and writer of songs,
Mr. Kilgore died last night of congestive heart failure in
Mexico, where he had been undergoing cancer treatments. He was
70.
Born Wyatt Merle Kilgore in Chickasha, Okla., Mr.
Kilgore grew up in Shreveport, La. He often hung around the
Louisiana Hayride radio show, where he introduced himself to
numerous performers including Hank Williams.
Light
Crust Doughboys Bill Simmons Died
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Veteran Western swing musician Bill
Simmons, keyboardist with the Grammy-award winning Light Crust
Doughboys, died 24 January, said former bandmate Art Greenhaw.
He was 80.
Greenhaw said Simmons, who had played with the band since 1954,
was a creative musician and "a good, honourable man whose
word was his bond."
The Doughboys, with Simmons on keyboard, have been
nominated for Grammies seven times. The Greenhaw-produced
"We Called Him Mr. Gospel Music: The James Blackwood
Tribute Album," featuring The Jordanaires, Larry Ford and
the Light Crust Doughboys, won "Best Southern, Country or
Bluegrass Gospel Album of the Year" in 2003.
Simmons had been inducted to the Texas Cowboy Hall
of Fame, Texas Western Swing Hall of Fame, Rockabilly Hall of
Fame, International Country Gospel Hall of Fame and the Texas
International Music Association.
Jimmy
Griffin, of Bread and the Remingtons Dies at 61
Singer
and songwriter Jimmy Griffin, the Bread alumnus who made his
biggest impact on country music as a member of the Remingtons,
died on 11th January at his home in Nashville of complications from cancer. He was
61 and had been undergoing treatment for the past several
months. As a songwriter, he had cuts by Rudy Vallee, Ed Ames,
Lesley Gore, Bobby Vee, the Carpenters and many others. During
the late 1970s he pursued a solo career as a singer-songwriter,
then in the late ‘80s, Griffin teamed up with Randy Meisner
(of the Eagles and Poco) and Billy Swan to form Black Tie, a
country music trio. In 1991, Griffin, Richard Mainegra and Rick
Yancey (the latter two from the group Cymarron) formed the
Remingtons and signed to the newly established RCA sublabel, BNA
Records. The group’s first single, "A Long Time
Ago," was its most successful record, rising to No. 10 in
early 1992.
Obituaries
Mr
Tambourine Man Dies
Hit
producer Terry Melcher has died aged 62. The son of Doris
Day, he co-wrote "Kokomo" with the Beach Boys and
produced "Mr Tambourine Man" (#1 on the charts June
1965) and "Turn, Turn,Turn" (#26 Nov 65) for the Byrds.
Melcher died on Friday 19 November 2004 at his home in Beverly
Hills, California after a long battle with skin cancer. He
also produced the Doris Day Show for his mother and wrote some
of her songs.
Colin
Bruton Passed Away
Colin
Bruton, drummer with Britain's trio Left Hand Drive sadly passed
away on Sunday 7 November. With an ever smiling and
friendly outlook, Colin was a highly respected drummer on the
British Country Music circuit. Colin suffered a massive heart
attack on Saturday 6 Nov and went into a comma. He passed away
on the Sunday afternoon. Colin will be greatly missed by
his partner Cath, family, friends and the many people connected
with British Country.
Roy
Drusky Passes Away
Country singer and songwriter Roy Drusky,
who had several hits in the 1960s, penned hits for others,
appeared at the Wembley Country Music Festival and toured the UK
successfully in the 1970s and 1980s, died on Thursday after a
lengthy illness. He was 74. A member of the Grand Ole Opry for
45 years, he was a crooner with a smooth, mellow baritone.
Amongst his best-known hits are Another, Anymore, Three Hearts
in A Tangle, Second Hand Rose, If the Whole World Stopped
Lovin’ (covered in the UK by Val Doonican), the novelty song
Peel Me a Nanner and his only No. 1 Yes Mr. Peters, a duet with
Priscilla Mitchell (Mrs Jerry Reed) in 1965. He was also one of
the first to record a Kris Kristofferson song, with an
impeccable rendition of Jody & The Kid in 1967, plus later
hits Such A Fool, Long, Long Texas Road, All My Heard Times and
a great country version of Elton John’s Dixie Lily.
Skeeter
Davis has passed away...
Country music singer Skeeter Davis, a veteran of
Nashville
's Grand Ole Opry, died on 19 Sept, according to a family
friend.
Davis, 73, had battled breast cancer since 1988. She died at
St. Thomas
Hospital
, said friend Linda Palmer.
In a 43-year career, she performed around the world, including
at
New York
's Carnegie Hall and
London
's Royal Albert Hall. She earned five Grammy nominations,
including one for the song "Set Him Free" in 1959,
the year she joined the Opry.
Other hits were "I Forgot More Than You'll Ever
Know," "The End of the World," and "Gonna
Get Along Without You Now."
Davis was born Mary Frances Penick in Dry Ridge, Kentucky, and
started performing early with singer Betty Jack Davis as The
Davis
Sisters. She went solo after
Davis
was killed in a car crash.
.
Niki
Sullivan Passed Away
Funeral services were held April 9th in
Independence
,
Mo.
, for Niki M. Sullivan, former rhythm guitarist for Buddy Holly
& the Crickets. Sullivan, 66, joined Holly's band in 1957 and
played on 27 records, including "That'll Be the Day,"
"Oh Boy," "Not Fade Away" and "Maybe
Baby." He left the group later in 1957 following Holly's
debut appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show
Patsy Montana’s Husband Passed Away
Paul Rose, Patsy Montana's Husband passed away on February 19
in Montgomery Alabama at the home of his Grandson Michael Losey.
His daughter Beverly was by his side.
Beginning in the 1930's, Paul Rose was the manager and booking
agent in the 1930's for many of the WLS artists including Mac and
Bob and Patsy Montana and the Prairie Ramblers.
Legendary Songwriter Max D. Barnes dies
The writer of masterful country music ballads including
Chiseled In Stone, Look At Us and Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes,
Max Duane Barnes died early Monday morning January 12 at Baptist
Hospital of complications from pneumonia. He was 67. ''Max was one
of the greats,'' said Merle Haggard, who recorded and co-wrote
numerous songs with Mr. Barnes. ''He's in that category with Hank
Cochran and Harlan Howard. I guess everybody else moves up a notch
now. If there's any hereafter - any justice about it - we can rest
assured that he's among friends.'' Mr. Barnes' simply structured,
deeply empathetic songs landed him in the Nashville Songwriters
Association International Hall of Fame in 1992. He won song of the
year awards from the Country Music Association for Chiselled In
Stone and Look At Us, and Chiselled In Stone was nominated for a
Grammy. A special tribute feature will be published in the March
issue of Maverick
June
Cash’s daughter died
Rosey Nix Adams and Jimmy Campbell.
Adams, 45, the daughter of the late June Carter school bus on Oct.
24 near Clarksville, Tenn. Propane
heaters in the bus were the cause of the carb
Cash and stepdaughter of the late Johnny Cash, and Campbell,
40, were found dead in a converted on monoxide poisoning, Dr.
Bruce Levy ruled.
Campbell was a well-known bluegrass fiddler, who had played with
the late father of bluegrass, Bill Monroe. He had also been a
regular with The Sidemen, the group that plays weekly shows at
Nashville's
Station Inn.
Adams was the daughter of Carter Cash and her second husband,
Nashville police officer Edwin "Rip" Nix. Her siblings
in the Carter- Cash family are Rosanne, Kathy, Cindy, Tara, John
Carter and Carlene. Adams often sang with her mother and was a
background vocalist On. on her 1999 album Press
Obituaries
Legendary record producer Sam Phillips died 30
July 2003 from respiratory failure.
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