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DEATHS ; Notable Passings; The Thread to Pay Last Respects

LizzieMaine

Bartender
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33,055
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Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Veteran television personality Hugh Downs -- and he was the kind of television personality where the mention of that phrase didn't induce a scowl -- has died at the age of 99. He did everything you could do on television over a career dating back to the 1940s, including a memorable turn as Jack Paar's announcer/straight man, a long run hosting the Today show, and of course nearly forty years on "20/20". But he was a very personal favorite of mine for his run as host of the puzzle-solving game show "Concentration," a program that absolutely obsessed me as a two-year old, and which I continued to follow for as long as it was on the air. Always a genial, pleasant figure in whatever sort of format he appeared, he lived long enough to see television devolve into something entirely unworthy of his sort of talent.
 

Lean'n'mean

I'll Lock Up
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4,077
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Cloud-cuckoo-land
Ciao Maestro, grazie mille. Ennio Morricone has popped his clogs but will live on in his music. He was 91. What a thrill it has been.
Ennio-Morricone.jpg


 
Last edited:
Messages
10,392
Location
vancouver, canada
Peter Green, virtuoso guitar player and co-founder of the popular Fleetwood Mac, at home in his sleep, at 73.

https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-53540860

Green never attained the superstar status of his contemporaries, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck, partly because of mental illness, but he was regarded as a "musician's musician."
Saw him with the original line up of Fleetwood Mac at Filmore West in 1969. They were on a bill with John Hammond w/ a 3 piece back up band, The Byrds, and Mac. It was a great show. He deserves to be listed with Clapton, Page and Beck. The Green Manoleeshee..(sp?)
 
Messages
10,392
Location
vancouver, canada
Saw him with the original line up of Fleetwood Mac at Filmore West in 1969. They were on a bill with John Hammond w/ a 3 piece back up band, The Byrds, and Mac. It was a great show. He deserves to be listed with Clapton, Page and Beck. The Green Manoleeshee..(sp?)
I don't know the economics of the rock music biz back then but it was cheap to get in....had to be cheap as I was broke living in a $20 a WEEK hotel room in the Filmore district cooking in the room on a hot plate.....Rice a Roni...a SanFrancisco treat....apparently . I am thinking it might have been $5 to get in.
 

OldStrummer

Practically Family
Messages
550
Location
Ashburn, Virginia USA
Actor John Saxon has died in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, at the age of 83. Saxon's wife Gloria told the Hollywood Reporter that her husband died from pneumonia. Bummer. Mr. Saxon has been one of my favorite character actors since I was very young.
The "trifecta" is complete. Saxon was a very versatile actor, appearing in "Enter the Dragon" with Bruce Lee, but appearing often in "heavy" roles. He only achieved "A" status when he starred in the television series The Bold Ones, just before his appearance with Lee. R. I. P., Mr. Saxon.
 
Messages
19,128
Location
Funkytown, USA
Peter Green, virtuoso guitar player and co-founder of the popular Fleetwood Mac, at home in his sleep, at 73.

https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-53540860

Green never attained the superstar status of his contemporaries, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck, partly because of mental illness, but he was regarded as a "musician's musician."

He was indeed a great musician and excellent guitarist. I have a few of his solo efforts and much prefer his version of Mac.

Saw him with the original line up of Fleetwood Mac at Filmore West in 1969. They were on a bill with John Hammond w/ a 3 piece back up band, The Byrds, and Mac. It was a great show. He deserves to be listed with Clapton, Page and Beck. The Green Manoleeshee..(sp?)

Funnily enough, I was listening to "Unleashed in the East" yesterday while running errands. I think it's Manalishi?

I don't know the economics of the rock music biz back then but it was cheap to get in....had to be cheap as I was broke living in a $20 a WEEK hotel room in the Filmore district cooking in the room on a hot plate.....Rice a Roni...a SanFrancisco treat....apparently . I am thinking it might have been $5 to get in.

When I started going to shows in '73 it was $4.50 in advance, $5.50 day of show (general admission, natch). In those days, the tours often lost money to sell the album. Now tours are money-making machines.
 

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