Mingus was a pimp in LA before moving to New York, writing amazing music all the while.
Bird, who died at 35, was proclaimed to be at least 50 due to his various drug addictions. (conflicting accounts)
Lee Morgan was shot by his common-law wife at age 34 while playing at the peak of his career.
Coltrane, having kicked his addictions and working on his music 10 hours a day, died of liver ailments. (41)
Wes Montgomery, who began playing around age 19, developed his signature thumb style because he had to practice at night and his many kids were asleep. He learned to play by copying Charlie Christian recordings, and performed them exclusively at first.
Wes Montgomery, who began playing around age 19,** later** developed his signature thumb style because he had to practice at night and his many kids were asleep. He learned to play by copying Charlie Christian recordings, and performed them exclusively at first.
Sorry, but I don’t even understand what this means. Are you saying that Montgomery had kids that he never later acknowledged? Why? How many? Do you realize what you’re saying about him? What do you mean by first hand accounts? People who knew him in 1943? Why does every other source on the Internet refer to him developing his technique because he didn’t want to disturb his neighbors?
I also don’t understand why asking for verification is looking for a fight. I don’t in fact believe you - I think you’re simply mistaken - but you were the one who brought it up. You may be a guest, but you’ve also participated enough to know that bringing up an unsourced claim and saying, you’ll just have to trust me, is not how anything works around here.
Even in this one thread there have been many refutations of posters’ claims. Not one fight has been spotted.
And no fight is being started now. Just a question being asked, but not answered.
A number of years ago, I watched a documentary about the rise of Cajun and Zydeco music in the New Orleans area, with many wonderful passages from old recordings.
A section of the film emphasized how Cajun and C&W cross-influenced each other for a time. The played, among other snippets, a few bars of some Cajun songs featuring the antics of two unsavory characters named Hip and Thaio, who were apparently very popular subjects for songs for a time.
Several of the songs began with the singer (in the part of one of their victims) saying their names as he began to describe what they had done to him. Wailed out in French (“Hip et Thaio”) on a high note, it sounded like: “Eeep -eh-Tye-oooooohhhh…”
Although the filmmakers didn’t call attention to it, I realized this must have been the origin of the nonsense exclamation “Yippie-tie-yo!” that has become a cliche in old cowboy songs.
Legendary composer Harry Warren wrote the melody for “You’ll Never Know How Much I Love You” after hearing the Call to the Post at Santa Anita racetrack.
Smokey Robinson wrote “Tears of a Clown” after hearing a caliope.
Apparently Jimi was, and might well have joined a band that woulda been known now as Emerson, Hendrix, Lake and Palmer. But instead he died of a heroin overdose.
Of choking on his own vomit after a combination of alcohol and sleeping pills, actually.
And as long as we’re talking deaths, although I now see there’s no cite for it, Wikipedia says that REM’s Automatic for the People was probably the last thing Kurt Cobain listened to before killing himself. So maybe it’s not true, but after buying the album I found that very plausible.
So many Pauls mentioned, here is my favorite Paul trivia:
Regarding It’s Raining Men by The Weather Girls.
That song from the 80’s giving thanks for men raining down, got me to do a double and triple take when I found it was written and produced by Paul Shaffer! * Yes, the same one from The Late Show.
Hank Williams never sang what was to become his most beloved song, *“Your Cheating Heart” *, in front of a live audience. In fact the only two times he ever sang it were in a demo recording he made and when he cut it. He died before it was released.