Jason and the Scorchers — 402, 401, 400

ALBUMS: Fervor (1983); Lost and Found (1985); Still Standing (1986)

MVC Rating: Fervor,4.5/$$$; Lost 4.0/$$$; Standing 4.0/$$$.

When I think back to Jason in the 1980s, I think Sloss, the steel refinery turned venue near downtown Birmingham.

Jason and the Scorchers ‘Still Standing.”

I think of Jason climbing up into the rafters (or whatever the ceiling’s infrastructure was called), until he was sitting dozens upon dozens of feet in the air. Still singing. I was hoping he didn’t take to swinging.

The band was a high energy rock band that some called country punk, or punk-a-billy music. They played fast and hard and were really quite the thing, a contrast to synthesizer driven bands popular at the time such as Depeche Mode, the Cure and Ultravox.

I think. Jason crazy!

Colleague and longtime AL.com writer Bob Carlton once called lead singer Jason Ringenberg and guitarist Warner Hodges the “Mick and Keith of cowpunk.”

But like all good things, they eventually ran out of steam. I think it was in a way the usual story: Pressure to be more commercial resulted in higher production, which hurt, not helped, this band. Jason and the Scorchers scorched and climbed up into the rafters. Tamping down on that took the essence away, whether overt or not. J&S was a shot of Wild Turkey, not fancy brandy.

For the above reasons I recommend the first album, Fervor, as a first buy. The Dylan cover, Absolutely Sweet Marie, is excellent and sets the tone. ‘Help There’s a Fire‘ puts the punk in Billy.

But all of the albums (at least these three are excellent). I think it’s pretty hard to find some of these used. But still not super expensive if you search online. (As always check with the locals first).

Other bands around that time playing similar music included the Beat Farmers, Rank and File, Rubber Rodeo, Webb Wilder, and perhaps you could throw in Lone Justice and the very excellent Long Ryders.

Songs that should have been hits; More found in MVC (continued)

Please feel free to email me or post in comments if you have any suggestions. I’ve received about 5 or 10 suggestions which I will check out and post some here. They can come from your record collection or anywhere you might have them, even if it’s in memory. Keep checking back here as I may add even more.

I’m starting out with a few I overlooked on the blog and AL.com posting .

The blog version is slightly different with a couple of different song selections. But the artists are the same. Here I’m posting a whole new round with different artists (except for one case). Though not designed for this — could make a good song playlist for the BIG GAME tonight. Add the 12 from the first list, the 8 from the second post and you have a 20-song cool list. Put it on Random Play.

Here’s a few:

Don’t Wait Up” — the Beat, a power-pop group that never got too far though they had Peter Case, members of the PlimSouls and the Nerves.

Dover Beach by the Bangles.

The Bangles had plenty of hits, Eternal Flame, Hero Takes a Fall, Manic Monday, Walk Like an Egyptian and more.

But Dover Beach was not one of them.

It for me ranked up and above many of their hits. That’s saying something because they had some good ones with their slightly retro-60s sound.

Doctor Doctor by UFO — Schenker brother on guitar. We had brother Rudolph with Scorpions on other list. Great head bobbing tune. Cool album cover. (This has taken on kind of new meaning for me).

29 Palms by Robert Plant — I kind of grew away from Led Zeppelin as we all aged but Robert Plant’s fourth solo album, Now and Zen, I bought after hearing ‘Ship of Fools.’ If anybody can name the other three songs I’m thinking of also named “Ship of Fools,” they win a prize TBD. — All by pretty well- known artists. Ok back to 29 Palms which came after Now and Zen, I believe in the 1990s. But I was more attuned to BOLA for Plant songs.But it was his next album that had 29 Palms, which I thought would be a surefire hit. DIsclaimer: On Billboard this peaked on the charts at 111. However, in a newer narrowed-down tracking chart called Mainstream, it went to No. 4. (I’m leaving it up.) Almost insulting to be called Mainstream, right Plant? I just like the way the song kicks into this nice lilting melody in its second parts. Have no idea what it’s about other than that the title is the name of a town in SoCal, wealthy.




This This song by The The is fantastic, sad but true and in a good way. This This really could be the day, your life will surely change.

Borderline – Thin Lizzy

He’s dead, Phil Lynott bi-racial lead singer of Irish band. He once joked that he escaped being picked on for being the “only black person” in Ireland by playing in a band. Lot of great music The Boys are Back in Town, Jailbreak, Cowboy song to name a few of their biggest. This sad drinking song often gets overlooked.

Borderline:

Life in the Foodchain/Funky Western Civilization — Tonio K.

A reader emailed me several suggestions for Tonio K. I had Cinderella’s Baby on the original blog posting. But David, the emailer made me think. Tonio K. had at least five other hit songs from his work, hell in my opinion his entire works are great.  It’s kind of like carving the  turkey; it’s kind of like mowing the lawn; everything gets to  this certain dimension winds up on the customer’s plate and is gone.

So here’s a couple, turn this up:

Owen up to it boys and girls.

Dementia: Expect the Best

But be prepared for the worst.

Sure, it’s a cliche’. But you know what they say about cliches’ — it became a cliche’ for a reason. The phrase sums up what I’m about to say about dementia.

The hardest thing about living with Lewy body dementia or any fatal disease is the unknown and dealing with that psychologically.

Will my brain damage progress slowly with controllable symptoms until I die peacefully (if that’s a thing) in my sleep?

Or will I shout, scream, accuse my wife of seeing other men or trying to poison me? All stories I’ve heard from caregivers and patients.

Will I be incontinent, impolite, and insulting, one who wanders out the front door and disappears? As Bob Dylan wrote,”No direction home, a complete unknown.” Will I be a heartbreaking shell of the man who was a father, son and husband?

When the word got out through my columns, I began hearing lots of stories. I have heard stories from friends, neighbors, in online support groups, emails from strangers. Some people run down in explicit detail how their loved one was at the end.

“He was in extreme pain,” one person wrote me. Another said she wouldn’t wish the disease on her worst enemy. I’m so sorry Mr. Oliver, another wrote.

I’m try to process this.

Many folks living with dementia or caring for a loved one with Lewy body, Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s want information. And this is where I see light.

Certainly everybody can decide for themselves how to handle this — until you can’t. I chose to come out in public early with my diagnosis in an effort to raise awareness of this little known form of dementia. But my advice works on a broader scale, I hope.

Learn what you can about the disease, what can happen from best to worst, from living a full, relatively long life to sitting in a nursing home blank faced and unresponsive, not even knowing your daughters’ names as they stand crying before you.

This is serious.

Don’t be afraid to do the research, to name the disease, to listen to people’s stories. But you are not obligated. OK, you might say at some point: I get it. My brain is dying which controls everything I am, my perceptions, my memories, my motor skills.’ That doesn’t sound good. Talk to your friends and loved ones openly and make a plan for the worst.

I was diagnosed at a relatively young age for Lewy body — age 57. Now 59, I have progressed slowly due, in part to medications which were developed for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s patients. (That there are no specific drugs developed for Lewy body dementia I see as a sign the disease is flying under the radar, and that’s a key reason I am trying to spread the news and keep up the pressure to find a cure for Lewy body dementia.)

Once you know how bad it can be, you can begin to expect the best.

When I was young I remember my parents had a book called ‘The Power of Positive Thinking,’ a title that kind of made me roll my eyes. But I’m thinking there may be something there.

“Stand up to an obstacle,’ wrote Norman Vincent Peele decades ago. “Just stand up to it, that’s all, and don’t give way under it, and it will finally break. You will break it. Something has to break, and it won’t be you, it will be the obstacle.”

Exercise, treat yourself to healthy but delicious meals, go see something you haven’t seen, write about your life, engage in a community of fellow LBD patients, or just friends, family, faith-based groups.

And I’m no Norm Van Peale but I offer up another suggestion:

Lewy body is in your brain, right?

Have your brain tell Lewy to GTF out.

AL.com version here.

This is an opinion column by Mike Oliver who writes for AL.com about his fatal brain diagnosis and other life issues. See his Living With Lewy Body blog at www.myvinylcountdown.com

These songs should have been hits (Blog Version)

In going through my 678 records to bring awareness for my brain disease, Lewy body dementia, I’ve come across songs that I believed should have been big hits.

I’m sure you’ve done this before. Like how could that song not be a hit single? I’m going to pull a list of 12 songs from my 678 albums that should be hits. The artists, if they read this, should reissue these songs, pump them up and make some money.

Actually that’s easier said than done. Everything is out there. Yet there’s opportunity here for a band to be rediscovered. Or maybe score a car commercial, like Nick Drake’s ‘Pink Moon’ did years ago.. Of course he never saw the benefit of that: He died by suicide years before it was a commercial.

Actually what might be a hit today will likely fall on dead ears in regards to my 59-year-old self. My idea of a hit will sound more like what II grew up with in the 60s, 70s and 80s. I’ll provide links and/or videos to those I can find. Maybe you’ll agree these should have been hits. Or, maybe not. But let me issue a challenge. Put these 12 songs on a playlist. Six you will say naaaah! Three you will like or find interesting. Two you will love and keep forever. And one will enter your Top 10 list of all-time great songs. The challenge begins as I rank in descending order of my picks.

12. One Day Tomorrow — Edgar Winter. Winter, taking a break from the straight-ahead rock of Free Ride and Frankenstien, goes solo with a mostly mellow album called Jasmine Nightdreams. Mellow except for the song Shuffle Low, which features searing guitar and ‘Keep on Burning” in which Edgar shows where Steven Tyler picked up that cat hairball scream.

11. Feel Like Calling Home — Mr. Big

This obscure British group, not to be confused with a slightly lesser obscure American group of the same name had a lead singer who went to the Geddy Lee school of high scream you scream. Check it out (the song is nothing like a Rush song FYI). For an encore, the lead singer will put glass bottles on his fingers, clack them together, and say ” Warriors, come out and play-ay.”

10. Jesus Came Down — Lake

Moving from obscurity to more obscurity, let’s go to Germany where a band named Lake put out a few albums , sometimes sounding like Yes. Of Lake songs there are several that could make the shoulda coulda woulda list: ‘TIme Bomb,’ ‘On the Run’ or ‘Jesus Came Down.’

I’m going with Jesus. But you gotta be worried about that guitarist who unleashes a firestorm of guitar licks that almost had me running with the devil.

Live version of Jesus Came Down. Studio version is in link in story.

9. Catch Your Train — Scorpions

Back in the day (and night) we listened to this new genre called ‘heavy metal.’ If it was commercial, it sucked. The Scorpions and UFO, two German bands (speaking of German bands) were a pretty good bet not to be commercial. That changed some 5 or 10 years after I was a little metal head for about 20 minutes. The Scorpions, though could still play metal, they started to do power ballads that topped the charts. Little cash money you know. ‘Catch Your Train’ is not even on the Scorpions greatest hits album. But I always thought it would go worldwide if released as a single. Listen up. There’s a hardcore metal singer and a guitarist, one of the Schenker brothers. (The other is/was in UFO). Put your cotton balls in your ears and crank it all the way to 6. (Just to be safe).

8. Ballad of El Goodo — Big Star

It’s certainly fits the storyline that Big Star would have all sorts of calamities that kept their great music from the masses. But this song, especially, seemed to be an automatic hit.. But no. When you first hear it you say, I know that song, but then you can’t figure out where. It’s a rock and roll template song with soul.

7. Summer Eyes — Nite City

After Jim Morrison, frontman of the Doors, died, the brain behind the mega group, Ray Manzarek, had to do something. So he hooked up with a few LA-based musicians and formed a short-lived group called Nite City. The resulting record isn’t too bad. But it’s highlight ‘Summer Eyes” is kind of like the El Goodo song. In that it instantly sounds like it was a big hit sometime in the past — in the listeners’ minds. Although it did get some radio play — that’s how I first found it in Athens, Ga., while was in high school. Fittingly, the song is anchored by a strong Manzarek organ riff.

6. Oh My Love – Dave Olney

I saw Dave Olney several times in my several years at Auburn. Live music every Thursday night with $5 cover and 50 cents Budweiser long necks. Olney and his band the X-Rays played intermittently. Tight band. I bought the album at a record store and will review it in Myvinylcountdown.com soon. “Oh My Love” I believe did get local or regional airplay. Nothing fancy about it. Except that it will stay in your head forever. This is a very difficult song to find online. Finally found a geriatric Olney, doing well it looks like, still recording, writing books, etc. See video below and go to the 3 minute mark to get the song. It’s a great song and I’d love to see an older video with full backing band, that would bring back memories.

5. This Corrosion – The Sisters of Mercy

This little bit of Gothic darkness is a quite catchy if you ask me. And you can dance to it. Put it on the radio.

4. Gypsy Blood — Mason Ruffner

This song just needs to be on the radio. It’s a road song and will make you drive too fast. Listen to Ruffner on the guitar. Should have been a hit.

3. Sincerely — Dwight Twilley

This guy was severely under-recognied. I could put about five or six songs of his here — off the top of my head.

2. More Than One Heaven — The Swimming Pool Q’s

Blindfold me. And let me randomly pick a list of Swimming Pool Q songs. A majority could have been hits. ‘Pretty on the Inside,’ Celestion,’ ‘ Blue Tomorrow,’ ‘The Bells Ring’. Listen closely for guitar. Bob Elsey, I’ve said it before, is one of the more underrated guitarists in a pop band. He rarely jumps out front, mainly delivering song support with guitar in a way that you rarely see (hear?) In live concerts he steps forward a little. He leaves you wanting more. Jeff Calder is a fine guitarist as well and lyricist. Anne Richmond Boston has a distinct and wonderful tone on vocals. I saw the Q’s in 1978 (or 79) as they opened for the B-52’s at Memorial Hall on the UGA campus. I was in a dorm about 3 minutes walking distance. My introduction to the New Wave thing. I saw them later in Birmingham at the Nick.

  1. Cinderella’s Baby — Tonio K. This artist, I’ve talked about before. I’ll save writing about his work and songs until I get to him on the MVC Countdown. But know this: He is one of my favorites and his lyrics and rock sensibilities are in the upper realm of modern rock and roll. Notethis album’s cover is part of my home page. This song sounds radio ready even if the lyrics were not so great. But the lyrics are amazing –a blatant condemnation of the pressure that popular culture put on us to be who we are not, especially women and girls. It’s a culture that encourages women and girls to emulate someone’s sexualized vision of beauty to sell product. . “Don’t you believe it,’ Tonio sings. “when they tell you that your face won’t do and you got to make one up.”

Post Script. I welcome feedback. Let me know if my predictions about how many you like are spot on or waaaay miss the mark. In doing this I resisted to pull some lesser heard Beatles or Rolling Stones (‘Out of Time’ off of Metamorphosis was a Stones song considered. Remember also I was working out of the universe of my collection. That said, I’d love to hear your ‘Best songs that should have been hits.’


AL.com Version of this stoy Here.

Old man goes to rock show

The Olivers, the Archibalds and Brummies’ Jacob Bryant.

Alabama Theatre has seats. For that I’m thankful.

I saw three great acts back-to-back last night at the historic venue. We were tired and I couldn’t keep up with end of the concert standing and dancing but JA could. Our wives were even more wiped than I was. But there’s John shaking his, well, shaking everything.

The music. The local lads, The Brummies, opened and played many cuts off their album Eternal Reach, of which I am a big fan. They rocked harder than they did on the finely produced album. That was expected and they put on a great show.

SUSTO made me take notice. Off-kilter, enigmatic, lyrics, excellent musicianship. I will explore this Charleston-S.C. based group further.

Anderson East, my goodness, this kid could sing. He’s got the WW — Wilson and Womack (and Wilson I’m talking about Jackie but you can easily take your Pickett.)

After Midnight we talked to Brummies vocalist guitarist trumpet player co-founder Jacob Bryant. I told him I was a big fan. They are working on more songs and I can’t wait to hear them.

History of hurricanes and hisicanes (part 5)

SCENE: Shaking off the effects of the drugging, Prosby learns a little more about what his captors want.

The frightening grinding gears noise he heard before he lost consciousness reminded him of Lou Reed’s vintage 1970s ‘Metal Machine Music,’ which was named the top album of all time during the Sinking Years in the 2200’s.

Prosby preferred other Lou Reed music, but then he never seemed to correlate with community tastes or standards. The music was inside his head anyway, the result of the rather harsh drug his water had been laced with.

He was  now waking up in the back of some kind of truck, hand and feet bound.

“I’m sorry Mr. Prosby, our water has quite  a kick, don’t you think.

It was Neon Lady again. Jim Prosby was starting to get angry, a very unusual emotion for him. Not that he didn’t  have anger. It was just corralled for use when needed.

Jumpsuit woman’s name was Dani and she said she would explain his mission. That it involved going to Orlando and bringing back Burnees

Prosby sat up straight. He knew Burnees. In fact he knew her well. He hadn’t seen her in years. He had been searching for her for years. She was once (and maybe still is) the love of his life. He just never understood why she went away. Sounds like he was about to get a step closer to finding out.

(To be continued … )

Joe Jackson — 404

ALBUM: Night and Day (1982)

MVC Rating: 3.5/$

Joe Jackson’s Night and Day

I’m pretty sure I bought this new as freshman in college at UGA. Maybe after all the Rolling Stones, Who and Allman Brothers blasting from my Reed Hall dorm room, I was trying for something a little more sophisticated. Joe Jackson was Elvis Costello with a piano.

Whereas Costello’s voice was tinged with irony and anger, Jackson’s voice had an undercurrent of irony and condescension. A little Steely Dan in there.

He had some hits, notably ‘Is She Really Going Out With Him’ (not on this album) and ‘Stepping Out’ and ‘Breaking Us in Two (both on this record). The album is jazzy. ‘Stepping Out’ is the sound of tinkling champagne toasts in Manhattan, which come with promise, but disappear after midnight.

“We are young but getting old before our time, we’ll leave the TV and radio behind,’ Jackson sings.

Nominated for a Grammy, this record’s another bargain in the used market. I saw it for $3 the other day.

Harry James — 405

ALBUM: Trumpet After Midnight (1954)

MVC Score: 4.0/$$

Harry James album

Interesting background here for a trumpet player.

He was a contortionist in the family circus at age 4. Based in Albany, Ga., he did fancy trick horseback riding up until some horses tried to trample him, only to be saved by his mother’s pony. All this on his Wikipedia page.

He went on to become a band leader and his band was the first to back a young singer named Frank Sinatra.

Musically he was well-respected for his technical prowess on the instrument. My album is great. I have to admit that when I play jazz it’s usually one of my Blue Notes or Chet Baker or even Teo Macero. But I’ve had my James record on the turntable for several days now, and it is fabulous. It is sweet sounding, transports you to another time without being maudlin. It’s the sound of tinkling glasses, a post-war giddiness and a Cold War caution.

The liner notes give an interesting history of the trumpet itself and its place in music.

The vinyl is rigid and thick and says “unbreakable” on it. It’s sort of in the mode of the heavier vinyl used in new pressings. For you old-timers who may remember, the circus he grew up with was called the Mighty Haag Circus.

Some songs: Autumn Leaves, Moanin’ Low, If I Loved You, How Deep is the Ocean.

This is not an expensive record and could probably be ordered online at $5 to $10 plus shipping,

Garland Jeffreys — 406

Garland Jeffreys

Albums; One-Eyed Jack (1978)

MVC Rating: 3.5/$$

I heard the song ’96 Tears’ for the first time as it was sung by Garland Jeffreys. It got my attention. I later I found out it was a cover by Jeffreys of the 1960’s song by ? and Mysterians (That’s Question Mark and the Mysterians.) Great song. By both.

But firmly planted in my head — that’s how it works — I had Jeffreys’ name, and when I saw a record of his in the cutout bin, I jumped.

Another good inexpensive purchase. Jeffreys, who used to hang out with Lou Reed, is more mainstream than Reed. He comfortably shifts from soul, pop and reggae. He addresses issues like race as in the title song: “Here comes the One-Eyed Jack, sometimes white and sometimes black.”

An homage to his hero Jackie Robinson. Good record that has big production but didn’t do so well. Maybe there is a bit of a strain to be commercial here that backfired. I see Phoebe Snow, of the multi-octave voice, and my man David Lasley, among the back-up vocalists. Dr. John is on keys.

Look for it in record stores, it’s a good, overlooked record.

Newer music from Jeffreys in the form of a 2011 album called the ‘King of In-Between’ was given an ‘A’ by critic Robert Christgau, who does not grade on a curve.

People who died (blog version)

Jimi Hendrix died at 27, one of many rock stars whose lives ended at that sweet young age.

Big Chief Ellis, a blues piano player of the highest talent, died in Birmingham on this date — Dec. 20, 1977.

He was 63.

Not many folks know today his the anniversary of his death. He was a self-taught piano player, professional gambler and ‘rolling stone.’

As he sings in the attached recording:
“I do love to drink and gamble but I stay broke all the time .”

His piano playing is effortless, rolling and rocking.

I definitely want to learn more about this blues great. I found Ellis on a spreadsheet posted online. It is Wikipedia’s “List of deaths in rock and roll.”

There’s a bigger story here. In our culture of celebrity worship, where Elvis is king, and thousands pack Graceland on that Aug. 16 anniversary, there are a lot of great musicians who die in obscurity. For every Jimi Hendrix and John Lennon who lived and died with millions of fans there are those that played great music, died too often it seems, tragically.

Elvis was 42 when he died in 1977, of heart failure due to years of prescription drug abuse.

Other examples:

On the night before Christmas in 1985, Tommy Blake, a rockabilly pioneer, was shot to death by his third wife, according to the Wikipedia list. (Steve’s Dead Rock Stars and thedeadrockstarclub are also resources.} Blake was 54.

On Christmas Day in 1954, Johnny Ace (real name John Marshall Alexander Jr.) accidentally shot himself in the face while goofing around. Blues legend Big Mama Thornton saw the whole thing. At 25, with hits on the charts, Ace’s life was cut short. Witnesses said he was drunk.

I am writing this as I listen to Big Chief Ellis play some tasty blues. Ellis is now singing.

“I do love to drink and gamble but I stay broke all the time.” He sings the line twice in the blues tradition.

He sings more: “You know my life has been just like a rolling stone, until I find someone who loves me I just keep on moving on.”

He was born in Birmingham taught himself piano and traveled extensively in the 1920s and 1930s, according to an Allmusic.com bio. He settled in New York City and was known in blues circles for years there and later in Washington D.C. He came home to Birmingham and died at 63 in 1977.

The title of this post comes from poet, basketball player and former heroin addict Jim Carroll, who with his rock band wrote and released’ People who Died’ in 1980. (The writings that inspired the book, The Basketball Diaries, also was made into a movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio.) The Jim Carroll Band’s ‘Catholic Boy is coming up quick on MyVinylCountdown.com

‘All the people who died,” Carroll sings in the punky-pop song which is built around a list of friends who died. “They were friends of mine.” 

That led me to the Wikipedia list, and I was struck by the number of rock stars who died tragically or prematurely.

Jim Carroll’s Basketball Diaries was made into a movie featuring Leonardo DiCaprio.

I was also struck by how many of these deaths I had either forgotten about or never heard before.

There is what appears an outsized number of tragic deaths associated with the show business industry, especially rock stars. If true, maybe it’s because they put so many  hours on the road that the law of percentages kicks in.

Plane crashes have taken out some of our biggest stars. Several members of Lynyrd Skynyrd, including key writer and leader Ronnie Van Zant, crashed in Mississippi. Buddy Holly, Big Bopper, and Richie Valens died in a plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa. Otis Redding and four members of the Bar-Kays died in a crash in a Wisconsin lake flying from Cleveland to another gig.

And there was Stevie Ray Vaughn, one of the all time great guitarists, who died in a plane crash near East Troy, Wisconsin. And Patsy Cline died March 5, 1963, in a plane crash outside Nashville. Jim Croce at age 30 died in a plane crash in Louisiana on Sept. 20, 1973.

The list also raises the question of whether being an entertainer or rock/poet may put you at greater risk for depression and substance abuse. It certainly seems that way anyway.

Or is that just a fallacy built on highly publicized overdose deaths of rock and rollers such as Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin,  and Jim Morrison to name just a few

We aren’t going to prove that the rock and roll  life significantly affects your lifespan here today. But I would like to look at this list and pluck out some musicians who died an untimely death, that is drug or alcohol abuse, plane crash, car crash or something else that would be considered tragic or premature.

Here are some deaths you may not have  known about or may have forgotten.:

Danny Cedrone with Bill Haley and the Comets (of Rock Around the Clock fame) died  June 17, 1954,from a broken neck after falling down the stairs.

Sam Cooke, along with Otis Redding, was among the vocal greats of all time, was shot to death in Los Angeles on Dec. 11, 1964.

Bobby Fuller, of ‘I Fought the Law’ fame, died under mysterious circumstances July 18, 1966. He was found dead in his car and the coroner cited suicide in his report but put question marks beside it. He was 23.

Brian Epstein, the manager/agent who ‘discovered’ the Beatles died of an accidental overdose at 32 on Aug. 27, 1967.

Brian Jones, the Rolling Stones guitarist, drowned in a swimming pool on July 3, 1969 at 27.

King Curtis, Grammy award winning saxophonist, was stabbed to death during an argument in New York City on Aug. 13, 1971.

Duane Allman, one of the most promising guitarists in his day with the Allman Brothers and Derek and the Dominos, died in a motorcycle accident at 24 on Oct. 29, 1971 in Macon, Ga.

Berry Oakley, also with the Allman Brothers, died in a traffic accident Nov. 11, 1972.

Leslie Harvey, with rock band Stone the Crows, was electrocuted by a live microphone while on stage in Wales on May 3, 1972.

Gram Parsons, member of the Byrds and pioneering alt-country artist, died of a drug overdose Sept. 19, 1973 in Joshua Tree, California.

Nick Drake, influential singer-songwriter-guitarist, died at 26 by suicide in England on Nov. 25, 1974.

Keith Relf, a member of the pioneering band the Yardbirds, was electrocuted by his guitar on May 14, 1976 in London. He was 33.

Marc Bolan, front man for T-Rex, died in a traffic accident, Sept. 16, 1977, in London.

Sandy Denny, folk-rock singer with Fairport Convention, died April 21, 1978 of a brain hemorrhage after an accidental fall.

Sid Vicious, key member of pioneering punksters, the Sex Pistols, died of drug overdose or suicide, Feb. 2, 1979.

Chris Bell, member of Big Star, died Dec. 27, 1978, in a traffic accident near Memphis.

Lowell George, Little Feat leader, died June 29, 1979, of a heart attack at 34. He had drug and alcohol problems in addition to being obese.

John Bonham, drummer for Led Zeppelin, died by asphyxiation on vomit (same cause as Hendrix, drug/alcohol related). He was 32.

John Lennon, of the Beatles, died by gunshot, on Dec. 8, 1980, at the age of 40.

Tim Hardin, died of a drug overdose, Dec. 29, 1980 in Los Angeles.

Bob Marley, reggae legend, died at 36 of Acral lentiginous melanoma on May 11, 1981.

Roy Buchanan, virtuoso guitarist, hung himself in jail after being picked up on a drunk and disorderly charge in Virginia on Aug. 14, 1988.

There are many more on this document who died untimely deaths: Karen Carpenter, Quiet Riot’s Randy Rhoads, Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys, Ricky Wilson of the B-52’s, Phil Lynott of Thin Lizzy, Ricky Nelson, Liberace, Cliff Burton of Metallica, Richard Manuel of the Band, Peter Tosh, Jaco Pastorius, Kurt Cobain of Nirvana,

Check out the spreadsheet yourself here.

 

Mike Oliver is counting down his vinyl record collection on his blog MyVinylCountdown which was created to raise awareness of Lewy body dementia. From that blog  and other sources he culls material for weekly columns at AL.com.