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The Day(s) the Music Died
ListVerse ^
| 1/9/2008
| Listverse Writers
Posted on 07/18/2021 12:59:46 PM PDT by sodpoodle
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To: Dr. Sivana
Time In A Bottle is still a beautiful song.
John Denver’s Annie’s Song is another.
Worlds apart from the dreck out there today.
21
posted on
07/18/2021 3:26:55 PM PDT
by
TheWriterTX
(Trust not in earthly princes....)
To: sodpoodle
Glenn Miller, whose plane disappeared over the English Channel late in the year 1944 belongs on that list, as does Sakamoto Kyu, whose 1961 recording
Ue O Muite Arukō (I look up as I walk) was a smash hit all around the globe and topped the charts in this country. He was one of 524 passengers and crew killed in the crash of Japan Airlines Flight 123 in 1985.
To: NobleFree
IMO Patsy Cline should rank higher than Jim Croce. I would agree. Not sure how Aaliyah, Ronnie Van Zandt or Steve & Cassie Gaines would rate because I have never heard of them.
To: chronicles
The first concert I ever attended was Patsy Cline, Jerry Lee Lewis and Ferlin Huskey. San Antonio TX in March of 1962. My husband was a new 2nd Lt., and was stationed as a training officer at Lackland AFB TX. You were lucky to see all of those hitmakers in the same concert.
To: dainbramaged
Not on the list, but country singer Jim Reeves died while flying his own small plane due to a thunderstorm and the bane of many pilots, Spatial Disorientation.
He was a fine singer, low and slow. His voice was, indeed, unique.
Am I Losing You?--Jim Reeves (1960)
To: Fiji Hill
Not sure how Aaliyah, Ronnie Van Zandt or Steve & Cassie Gaines would rate because I have never heard of them.The latter three were members of Lynyrd Skynyrd - if that helps.
26
posted on
07/18/2021 3:47:19 PM PDT
by
NobleFree
("law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual")
To: Monterrosa-24
His dad was also a great musician. The music video below features pictures of Ozzie, Harriet and the kids, chronologically arranged, during their lifetime.
Dream a Little Dream of Me--Ozzie Nelson & His Orchestra (1931)
To: Monterrosa-24
Ozzie Nelson was also a graduate of Yale law school. Ricky Nelson was talented unlike some of the boy bands like Dino, Desi and Billy.
To: sodpoodle
Ping for later read.........
29
posted on
07/18/2021 5:51:57 PM PDT
by
octex
To: sodpoodle
November 3, 2020.
The day the Republic died.
I wonder who will write that Song?
30
posted on
07/18/2021 5:53:50 PM PDT
by
Kickass Conservative
(Trump - Make America Great Again / Biden - Make American Grovel Again...)
To: Dr. Sivana
“Jim Croce had a LOT more than “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown”.”
He was a musical genius. Who knows what music we have missed out on.
31
posted on
07/18/2021 6:18:01 PM PDT
by
willk
To: willk
He was a musical genius. Who knows what music we have missed out on.
He was. He made hummable tunes you get the first time without a lot of reliance on hooks.
He also had flair for lyrics. A song like "Working at the Car Wash Blues" reminds us of someone we have all known. But he can go up-tempo ("One Less Set of Footsteps", "Roller Derby Queen", "Rapid Roy") or dialing it down ("Time In a Bottle", "Operator") as needed.
He also had a LOT of confidence in a simple arrangement with guitar (often acoustic) and voice dominating, without turning into a long-form Harry Chapin type. (His tragedy was in a car, not a plane)
32
posted on
07/18/2021 6:24:10 PM PDT
by
Dr. Sivana
(“At first you go bankrupt slowly, then all at once.” -- Hemingway)
To: sodpoodle
Also Harry Chapin was killed in a plane crash. Also Classical Pianist William Kapell was killed in a commercial plane crash in 1953 at the age of 31.
33
posted on
07/19/2021 11:23:57 AM PDT
by
Geostorm
To: Geostorm
I stand corrected, Harry Chapin did die in an auto accident not a plane crash.
34
posted on
07/19/2021 11:29:42 AM PDT
by
Geostorm
To: Geostorm
It was a pretty grisly car accident too involving trucks.
It happened on the Long Island Expressway near Exit 40 in Jericho (westbound).
I always steer clear of the LIE as it's so unpredictable. Sometimes you can be sailing along, other times you are stuck in a massive traffic jam for hours. Instead, I stick to the Northern or Southern Parkways (where no trucks are allowed), but you need to be on your toes there as well as the cars tend to zip in and out of lanes with little warning.
I actually try to avoid Long Island in general. Way too many cars and not enough roads. Plus everybody seems to own a boat.
35
posted on
07/19/2021 11:35:47 AM PDT
by
SamAdams76
(Give me a Pigfoot and a Bottle of Beer)
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