Showing posts with label Allman Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allman Brothers. Show all posts

11-11: Rev. Gary Davis Harlem Street Singer 1960 - Allman Brothers Idlewild South 1970 - Schoenberg Piano Music Steuermann 1957 - Ella Fitzgerald Jerome Kern Songbook 1963



1895 – Julius Tausch (German pianist, composer & conductor)
1901 – Antonio Zamara (Italian harpist & composer, active in Vienna)
1912 – Józef Wieniawski (Polish pianist, composer & conductor, younger brother of Henryk)
1929 – Mieczysław Soltys (Polish composer)
1936 – Edward German (English theatrical composer of Welsh descent)
1945 – Jerome Kern (American musical theater composer)
1964 – Edward Steuermann (Austrian-born American pianist & composer)
1967 – Harry Seymour (American actor & soundtrack composer)
1968 – Jeanne Demessieux (French organist, pianist, composer & teacher)
1972 – Berry Oakley (American rock bass guitarist, Allman Brothers Band)
1974 – Alfonso Leng (Chilean composer & dentist)
1977 – Greta Keller (Austrian cabaret singer & actress)
1979 – Dimitri Tiomkin [Дмитро Тьомкін] (Ukrainian-born American film composer, conductor & pianist)
1988 – William Ifor Jones (Welsh conductor & organist)
1993 – Erskine Hawkins (American jazz trumpeter & big band leader)
1994 – Dame Elizabeth Maconchy (English composer)
1995 – Kenneth S. Goldstein (American folklorist, record producer, ethnomusicologist & teacher)



10-29a: Allman Brothers Pittsburgh 1971 - William Kapell : Khachaturian Piano Concerto 1946 - Stravinsky Ebony Concerto : Woody Herman 1946





1829 – Maria Anna ""Nannerl" Mozart (Austrian keyboardist & composer, older sister of Wolfgang Amadeus)
1882 – Gustav Nottebohm (German pianist, teacher, music editor, composer & Beethoven scholar)
1922 – George August Lumbye (Danish composer & conductor)
1931 – Luciano Gallet (Brazilian composer, conductor & pianist)
1934 – Gustavo Emilio Campa (Mexican composer)
1953 – William Kapell (American pianist)
1962 – Naphtali Siegfried Salomon (Danish composer, cellist & violist)
1971 – Duane Allman (American rock guitarist & songwriter)
1981 – Georges Brassens (French singer-songwriter, guitarist & poet)
1987 – Woody Herman (American jazz clarinetist, saxophonist, singer & bandleader)


Late October has been a popular time for talented young musicians perishing in aircraft accidents, sometimes along with their musician relatives. Sometimes they were also from the Southern Rock genre.

You'll recall on the post for October 20th that Lynyrd Skynyrd's lead singer Ronnie van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines, and backup singer Cassie Gaines (Steve's older sister), all in their late 20s, died in just such a manner in 1977. Then you'll recall a couple days ago the passing of 30-year-old violin virtuoso Ginette Neveu, and her brother and piano accompanist Jean-Paul, when their plane went down in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean in 1949.

On October 29th, 1953, a plane carrying the brilliant pianist William Kapell, 31, crashed into King Mountain outside of San Francisco, during a deep fog, just as Kapell had nearly made it back home from a tour of Australia. 1953, in fact, saw the passings of some of the world's greatest musicians. Aside from Kapell, there were Sergei Prokofiev, Hank Williams, Arnold Bax, Kathleen Ferrier, and Django Reinhardt.

And then there was Duane Allman, just 24 years old. Now, I know what you're going to say. "Ha! Duane Allman died in a motorcycle accident, not an airplane accident!" Well, that's true. But he was definitely airborne just before the end.