Showing posts with label fave artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fave artists. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2011

It's Michael Jackson's Birthday

Today would have been the 53rd birthday of the King of Pop, who was born in Gary, IN on this date in 1958

He's gone, and his fans still love and miss him.  One thing is certain is that there won't be another artist like him to grace our lifetimes and his music will live on forever.  

But forgive me if I wished we could have gotten to see if MJ could have pulled off the 'This Is It' tour and what it would have done to revive his then stalled career.

That's all speculation now.  

Oh well, time to pull out the CD's.   Rest in peace King of Pop.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Nick Ashford Dies

Darn, another one of my fave artists is gone. 

Found out that Nickolas Ashford, half of the Ashford and Simpson songwriting and singing duo passed away in a New York hospital Monday at age 69 due to throat cancer.   

One of the other reasons I loved them so much besides being kick butt musicians was the fact that Nick and I share the same May 4 birthday.

Nick and Valerie had been married since 1974, and they were more famous for the songs they wrote for others that became hits than their own music.   The penned such hits as Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell's Your Precious Love, You're All I Need To Get By, Ain't No Mountain High Enough and Ain't Nothing Like The Real Thing along with songs for other Motown artists.  



They wrote I'm Every Woman for Chaka Khan that Whitney Houston later remade and wrote and produced some of Diana Ross' biggest solo hits including Reach Out And Touch (Somebody's Hand).

They wrote and produced four gold albums of their own and were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2002








Rest in peace Nick.  You and Valerie were the gold standard for R&B duet singers and you'll be missed.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Missing You, Gerald Levert

Today would have been the 45th birthday of Grammy award winning R&B singer Gerald Edward Levert, who was born on this day in 1966 in Canton, Ohio and died November 10, 2006.

For you younglings who are saying "who's he?",  Gerald along with his late brother Sean and friend Marc Gordon founded the award winning R&B group LeVert in 1984.  Four of LeVert's seven albums, I Get Hot in 1985, Bloodline in 1986, The Big Throwdown in 1987, and Just Coolin in 1988 went platinum.

Translation, the group had it goin' on.

So did Gerald.  He went solo in 1991 with the Private Line album that hit Number 1 on the R&B chart and did some memorable duets with his father, O'Jays lead singer Eddie Levert.    Gerald was also part of the supergroup LSG formed by himself, Keith Sweat and Johnny Gill.   Their debut album Levert-Sweat-Gill sold two million copies when it was released in 1997.

Gerald wrote and produced songs for artists such as the O'Jays, Stephanie Mills, Barry White and James Ingram just to name a few and was part of the 1994 Black Men United collaboration of 40 African American male artists with the song You Will Know, that was featured in the movie Jason's Lyric and in the movie soundtrack. 



Gerald is still missed by his family and fans, and even more so by those of us who love real music.

 

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Mothership Landing At The Smithsonian

Funkateers, raise your hands and give a P-Funk salute in the direction of Chocolate City, because the Mothership is about to land in DC.

The Smithsonian is setting up a National Museum of African American History and Culture, and when it opens its doors in 2015 will have The Mothership anchoring a permanent exhibit of African American music.

“I’m about to cry!” Parliament-Funkadelic's George Clinton told the AP from his home in Tallahassee recently. “They’re taking the Mothership! They’re shipping it out! . . . But I’m glad it’s going to have a nice home there.”


It's not the original one I and legions of Funkateers who attended their shows got to see in concert when it first took flight in 1976, it's a 1200 pound replica built in the mid 90's.   The original one got sold by Parliament-Funkadelic's Washington based tour management company to a Prince George's County scrap yard in 1982 to satisfy the mounting debts piled up by those extravagant P-Funk Earth Tours and the Funk Mob legally fighting each other.


What happened to the original Mothership is urban legend territory now, but if it's intact, it's worth a lot of money.


The replica Mothership was donated by Clinton and is now safely ensconced in storage until the 2015 opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. 

Also slated for display in the museum's collection are Louis Armstrong's trumpet, James Brown's stage costumes and Lena Horne's gowns.

The museum will be located and built on a five acre site adjacent to the Washington Monument that is bounded by Constitution Avenue, Madison Drive, and 14th and 15th streets N.W., with construction to begin in 2012.


But don't be surprised people when you see a long line of P-Funk fans like myself waiting for the opening of the museum and some of us are chanting P-funk slogans as we do so.

.