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bmusic
Newsletter No.272
December 17th 2007 - January 2008

Merry Christmas Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Our sincere wishes for a very merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year to all our customers, subscribers and friends. We'd like to thank each and every one of you for supporting bmusic.com.au and bmusic in general this past year. Whether it is through your custom, your suggestions, your feedback, or simply your patronage of our weekly publication, each of you has contributed to the success of bmusic in the past year.
We also send Season's Greetings to our suppliers and their staff and thank them for all their hard work for us this year. The sales reps who visit us regularly, their assistance and support NEVER goes unnoticed and we wish them a fantastic festive season.
Now to our competitors who regularly receive our newsletter under some form of alias, you know who you are and so do we :) Have a great Christmas break and we'll see you in the New Year.
Finally, our sincere wishes for a fantastic Christmas to all the families and friends of everyone we've mentioned.
Everybody stay safe and enjoy this wonderful time of year.

We'll be taking a few weeks of from the newsletter as is customary this time of year before getting back to work with Issue Number 273. There's plenty to talk about in the New Year, not the least of which being a whole host of new brands and new releases from our existing brands. Just as 2008 gets going the Winter NAMM Show will be on in America (around the last week of January) and is sure to deliver some real hot stuff for the coming year. Negotiations have already begun for some new brands for us which, as is the case with many of our brands, will be very exclusive with some involving as little as four dealers Australia wide. Looks like an exciting year ahead.

We were contacted during the week by a Canadian gentleman who was around in the earliest of days of what was to become widely considered a "one hit wonder" group outside their native French Canada but have a very different story to tell at home. We have updated the feature with his information.

Regulars including Feature Article, The Weeks Ahead in Music History, Featured Artist and more are all inside Issue 272 of the bmusic Newsletter.
Links in the Table of contents below will launch your browser, so you'll need to be online to view the newsletter. If you are unable to receive html format e-mails then copy and paste the following link into your browser's address bar to view the newsletter:
http://www.bmusic.com.au/links/whatsnew/newsletters/archives/newsno272.html

Thanks to everyone for reading, we'll see you next issue!

TABLE OF CONTENTS (You will need to be online to use the Table of Contents to jump through sections)
  • Where Are They Now? - Men Without Hats (Updated)
  • This week's Music Quote
  • Featured Guitar - Eclipse-I CTM FT bmusic Special Order
  • This week's Specials
  • This week's Feature Article - Five Paths To $100,000 Per Year Part 4 - Randy's Way
  • This week's Feature Artist - Danni Stefanetti
  • Musicians Wanted
  • Gear Wanted
  • Band Links
  • The Weeks Ahead In Music History
               Events
               Births
               Deaths
  • Give us your suggestions
  • Don't want the bmusic Newsletter?
  • Privacy Statement
  • See you next time

  • WHERE ARE THEY NOW? - MEN WITHOUT HATS (UPDATED)

    Putting together this feature orginally turned out to be more difficult than I'd anticipated, going into it perceiving Men Without Hats as one of those "one hit wonders". In Australia, and much of the rest of the world, that's how the majority of music fans would see the band. But in their homeland of Canada, and more specifically Montreal, the band were far from that. So to the quandary raised by this. Heading into it the idea, and what would have proven very easy, was to write a simple abridged biography of the group's history and simply tracking down the movements of the two brothers who seemed to be the main basis of the band, with maybe the odd drummer to recap on, and that would be it. But after reading more and more about the band and it's history it seemed as though that would be insufficient, indeed disrespectful, to the guys. Even more so considering the wonderful historical account of Men Without Hats that main man Ivan Doroschuk put together a few years ago for MenWithoutHats.com (It also includes the complete promo extract put together for their release "Sideways"). It's an exhaustive look at the band from go to woe and far better than any biography I could put together.

    So the decision was made to let you guys check out the official story here in full (taken from MenWithoutHats.com) just as it was written and then give a basic run down of the movements of some of the former band mates (of which there were many), again with thanks for the information, for the most part, from MenWithoutHats.com. It really is a good read and a refreshing way to look at the history of a group. So here goes, the "official" story. We'll let you know what some of these guys have been up to lately at the end of the feature:

    Once upon a time, in a land far, far north, there lived three brothers who never wore any hats. It was their motto, as Brother Colin so aptly put it, "style before comfort" that led them into the nether-regions of early cyberspace, the world of primitive sequencers, samplers and drumboxes, populated by such classic hardware as the Pro 5, Dr Click and the LinnDrum. Where conformity was a banned word, along with things like "drummer" and "bass player", there came to flourish a whole community of electropop artists, whose goal was to bring something new and completely different to the music scene of the day. This is the story of Men Without Hats.

    The saga starts in 1976. Before there ever was MWH, the three brothers were attending the French high school Stanislas in Montreal. This is where Ivan met up with Jeremy Arrobas. During this year, at the school's annual student concert, Ivan, Colin, Stefan and Jeremy (+ a drummer named Igor), played their first concert together under the name "Wave 21". The concept was that Jeremy recited his poetry over the music.

    In the early days, there were a lot a different formations, some of which never played any shows aside from parties:

    In 1977, the first version of MWH is formed. It comprised Ivan, Dave Hill, John Gurin and Pete Seabrooke.

    Between 1978 and early 1980, there were several line-ups. They are:

    Ivan, Colin, Stefan and Paul Miscala. They did the first real shows of MWH opening up for 4 shows of Alan Lord at the Hotel Nelson in old Montreal. This was at the height of the punk era (circa 1977), when the Hotel Nelson was not much more than a flop house.

    Ivan, Dave Hill, Pierre Paquet and Jeremy. This was the line-up formed for the legendary party of Mia and Alex McClean. There is actually a cassette of this show.

    Ivan, Jeremie and Colin. Although they never did any shows, they shot some great pictures.

    Ivan, Jeremy and John Gurin. A bizarre yet interesting combination of music and art noise by John during the pauses between songs. In those days, Ivan played keyboards, bass and melody, and sang, while jerry played drums. At times, Ivan would play guitar and bass keyboard at the same time.

    Ivan, Jeremy, Stefan and Lysanne Thibodeau. This was the band that was heading into studio to record the first EP. Unfortunately, Lysanne had a bad case of stage fright and resigned.

    Ivan:" The first sequencer we had was the korg sq-10 which was a 10 or maybe 12 step analog sequencer that went with the ms-20 , it looked like the ms-20 without a keyboard. since it was analog it was really imprecise to program so we just used it triggering the first step over and over , pulse bass , and jerry played along live with it.if there was any sequencing done like arpeggios or whatever, i did it live manually.when jerry switched from drums to keyboards , after the e.p. , we used a variety of sequencing devices , the cr-78 and another korg rhythm box i forget the number for the pulse bass stuff , a roland sequencer that we used for patterns like things in my life , but they were all triggering the sh-2. i was using the cs-50 at that time and doing a few songs with my left hand , mostly the faster stuff, china,walls..."

    1980, 10"EP Folk of the 80's, Ivan, Stefan, Jeremy Arrobas & Roman Martin

    This EP was recorded at Marco Studio in Old Montreal and its original pressing was of 3000 copies in 10 inch form (I think that there might have been a second pressing of 3000). It was subsequently picked up by Stiff Records (US) and a further 16,000 records were pressed for the US market. The only difference between the two pressings is that the US pressing was a 12" record. Now raise your hand everyone who knew that Tracy Howe also never played on this or any other MWH album. The folks who have this on their album means that they have a second pressing copy because Tracy's name was added because he had just joined the band!

    '80 to '82, various people came and went as the band (without Roman) was looking for itself, such as, Jean-Marc Pizzapia (later to be "the Box"), Tracy Howe (went on to form "Rational Youth") and Mike Gabriel. Here are the line-ups: I,S,J and Jean-Marc Pisapia. Then JM left and was replaced by Mike Gabriel, who as Ivan likes to tell the story, "was booted out of the band along with Stefan", to become a three piece: I, J and Tracy Howe. Tracy lasted enough time for a few cups of coffee and went on to form Rational Youth. At which point Stefan and Mike are brought back in.

    Just prior to recording "Rhythm of Youth" and the smash single "Safety Dance", Jerry and Mike leave MWH of their own free will to form Checkpoint Charlie (with Jean-Marc) and then Isinglass (without J-M who goes on to form the Box). Good move guys! Now there's a "where are they now question"!

    After being rejected by every record label of note in Canada, we got a deal with Statik records in the UK. Probably the only band in Canadian History to secure a deal in the UK before securing a deal in Canada! "A Canadian Invasion of Britain"!!!!

    '82, release "Rhythm of Youth", Ivan, Stefan and Allan McCarthy (he died a couple of years ago), plus a few guest musicians: Colin, Anne Dussault, Dan Vermette and Michel Jérome.

    This was recorded at Listen Audio in Old Montreal back in '82. It was subsequently picked up by Warner in Canada and MCA in the US. '84, release Folk of the 80's part III, same lineup as previous record.

    At the end of the record, if you let it keep playing, Mother's Opinion will come back with a stereo flange on it. Problem was, no one bothered to tell the printing pressers that there were in fact 10 songs, not 9. So some of the early copies are missing this piece!

    The weird guitar solo thing in Where do the boys go was done with the first completely programmable guitar effects rack made by Sequential Circuits, the people who brought us the Prophet 5, otherwise know as the Pro 5.

    '85, release Freeways EP, Ivan & Stefan, (plus a few session musicians).

    85 live band, Ivan, Stefan, Alain "Al Gunn" "le Pif" Lefebvre, Denis "Trop Plein" Toupin, Lenny "the Pinster" Pinkas & Colin

    '87, release "Pop goes the world", Ivan, Stefan and Lenny, (plus a few session musicians). It was recorded in London, England at Eden Studio and mixed with Paul Northfield at Morin Heights Studio in Canada, which is not very far from where the latest album was recorded and mixed. Supplemented on the road by Bruce Murphy, Heidi Garcia, Marika Tjelios and Dick "Donut" Duff.

    '89, release "the adventures of men and women without hate" with all the touring band for "Pop".

    Recorded at the Hit Factory in New York with Mike Scott, or as they called it while we were there, the Hat Factory! They have box seats at Yankee Stadium and we were supposed to go see Nolan Ryan pitch (limo, the whole deal!), but it was rained out and we never went. In his next game, the Ryan Express threw his 5000th strike-out! What a bummer!

    '91, release "Sideways", Ivan, Stefan, Michel "Mick Mustang" Langevin (from Voïvod) and Felix "El Gato" Matte (Ideés Noires). Jimmy Souranis joined for touring. Recorded in upstate New York at a very excellent studio called Hudson Studio (we named it!) run by one of the coolest and most knowledgable guys in the biz, Mike Scott (he engineered the previous record), his techchie Chris Muth and we won't forget Bo, our friend and driver, he turned me on to Howard Stern! Mixed in Rhode Island and mastered by Howie Weinberg.

    "MEN WITHOUT HATS ARE GIVING IT TO POP ENTHUSIASTS ... "SIDEWAYS"

    "Everyone focuses on going forwards or backwards. There are other directions to go in as well." --- Ivan Doroschuk (Music Express)
    Men Without Hats' latest fearlessly lunges forth into rock's core, adding scars to pop's sometimes-too-perfect face. Featuring Montreal's finest in the hard rock scene, Michel Langevin (Away from Voivod), Felix Matte (Idees Noires), and John Kastner (The Doughboys), "Sideways" remains true to the band's powerful pop fables, yet delivers their message in pure guitar sound.

    "People's lives are very linear," said frontman Ivan Doroschuk. "We don't really take the time to look beside ourselves. We are always so worried about going ahead and progressing. 'Sideways' is an attempt to see directions other than forward and backward."

    As the title indicates, "Sideways," follow-up to the gold-plus "(Adventures Of Women And Men Without Hate) In The 21st Century," marks an intriguing change in musical direction for the hatless. A harder edge, guitar-based and vigorous album, it cuts melody with exacting precision, and bleeds rock in its fullest glory. Recorded last fall in upstate New York, and mixed in Rhode Island, the album was produced by Stefan Doroschuk, co-produced and engineered by Mike Scott, mixed by Tom Soares (24-7 SPYS, CroMagnons) and also features a guest appearance from Greg Martin of the Kentucky Headhunters on three tracks.

    "It was the most fun record I've made so far," said Doroschuk. "I haven't felt that I was in a band for a long time. It was good to work with real musicians as opposed to machines."

    "Find what was real in the world and touch it, that was what a man ought to do," once wrote American author Harry Crews in a story called "The Hawk Is Dying." Despite the fact that an instrumental on the album is titled "Harry Crews," the links between "Sideways" and the author run even deeper. Like Crews, the album is characterized by this search for what is real and meaningful, and is bound to real places, people and memory, offering a new perspective to those who think they know Men Without Hats. "The last two albums were very sociologically, ecologically and equality concerned," said Doroschuk. "I think one of the main things I'm thinking about lately, for instance, is the difference between sexist and sexy." The rich and intriguing artwork for "Sideways" explores this idea, and delivers the message that the band has become a lot more personal in their approach to human issues. "You develop the rhetoric first, you live with it for awhile, then you make changes when you apply it to the real world. It takes on a different form." From the soaring ballad "Everybody Wants To Know," to the driving power of the title track and first single "Sideways," the album invites you to discover the band all over again. The country-core romp of "Fall Down Gently," and the streetwise "Kenbarbielove," combined with the intensity of instrumentals such as "Life At Diamond Head" and "The Van Der Graaf Generation Blues," is launching Men Without Hats into a whole new era. "My experience has been that the more records you make the easier it gets, just because I realize that it's just a record and not all that important in the big scheme of things," said Doroschuk to Canadian Composer. "But it's also a learning process. You get better at it and one thing I've learned is going for emotion over precision, going for feeling, not trying to get it right on key. I'm just trying to make it sound good." More importantly, it's got to feel right - and it does. The brainchild of many nights spent with local musicians in a Montreal institution - Le Biftechque - which eventually lead to more elaborate affairs - such as jamming with other natives like The Doughboys, The Nils and Voivod at Ivan's loft in St Henri, "Sideways" is a testament to a way of life championed by the Bukowskis and the Crews of the world - that is , the idea of living life and music by the moment. "We have taken the attitude that we've changed our sound so much that we don't have to play it by radio rules," said Doroschuk. "I think it's totally ludicrous to do that anyway because you get caught up in it and by the time you have written a song, recorded it and put it out, years have gone by and radio has changed. People are actually trying to write songs that won't come out for two years, trying to anticipate what people will listen to. It just slows the whole process down. We're not really paying attention to what radio is doing. We're just writing songs." The musical relationship of melody and raunch is what ties the twelve tracks on "Sideways" into one cohesive whole. It ignites with the lead track and first single "Sideways" - the theme song of the album.

    "It's the whole notion of there being another way of looking at things," said Doroschuk. "There are other directions that people can go into." "Fall Down Gently," the next track and one of the songs that features Greg Martin, is a progression of that same theme. "I'd rather learn about life a little bit at a time then go through the thing blind. Life is not always rosy and so I'm prepared to take little setbacks now and then, than have one major fall down in my life." The experience working with Martin, who just dropped by during the recording of the project, made it even more enjoyable. "It was great," said Doroschuk. "I'm not wary of that type of situation. I'm a big fan of his and he's a big fan of ours."

    "In The Meadow" is the classic Men Without Hats pop song. "'In The Meadow' comes from a dream," said Doroschuk. "It's just the meadow where there are no worries and there is no pain. You just sit in the sun and have fun."

    "The Van Der Graaf Generation Blues", one of the instrumentals on the album, is a song for the band's generation. "We're not the flower children and we're not the yuppies, we're somewhere in between - The Van Der Graaf Generation."

    "Nadine" is your basic Men Without Hats love song, according to Ivan, and features once again the singer's female side, yet taking on a different form. "She's becoming a lot stronger."

    "Everybody Wants To Know" is Ivan's reflections on what people want from life. "Everybody wants to know what it's all about and I'm sure everybody wants to be loved. But not everybody wants the same things. Life has been sort of forcing everybody into wanting the same things & it ties in with the 'sideways' perspective."

    Next up is the band's cover of the Beatles' classic "I Am The Walrus" - inspired by a Grateful Dead cover band. "I forget which band did it," said Doroschuk. "They were opening up for a band called 'Phish' in New York. I figured it would be a good-off-the-wall tune to do."

    "Kenbarbielove" is the song on the album about relationships. The title has as its source, a story about Voivod's Michel Langevin growing up in Quebec and when hearing the Beatles sing "Can't Buy Me Love", for the first time, he thought they were singing 'Kenbarbielove'.
    (Now that's funny - Ed.)

    "Lost Forever" is a song about love in today's society. "It's a development on the theme of love and how we're living in a one-on-one society where we're forced to love one person, and we can't express our views to anyone else. It's like a weird love prison."

    "Life after Diamond Head" is another instrumental on the album --and was inspired by Ivan's love for the "rock Eno-era of Roxy Music. Phil Manzanera of Roxy Music put out an album called "Diamond Head" and it was at that period for me when music changed," said Doroschuk. "I was trying to get back that old Roxy sound when Eno was playing keyboards."
    "Love (All Over The World)" is, as Ivan puts it, Men Without Hats' message for 1991, a bid for peace and happiness - 21st Century style.

    "Harry Crews" was inspired by the author himself. "He's really real," said Doroschuk about his writing style. "He wrote a lot of things for Playboy magazine and Esquire and he's just real - like Bukowski's Barfly."

    The album art, photographed by Roy Pike and designed by Lumbago Inc., breaks from the anti-sexist rhetoric of old -- a differentiation between sexy and sexist. "A woman's body is a beautiful thing," said Doroschuk. "I'm not trying to sell records with it, I'm just trying to appreciate it." However intriguing the cover is, Ivan prefers to concentrate on the music as opposed to image. "The visual aspect of the band has become very secondary," said Doroschuk. "It's funny, too, because this is supposed to be an era where the image is so important. I guess it is for some bands very important, but for fans it isn't. They just get very calculated images thrown at them and it has nothing to do with music. One of the reasons I got into music was because of the magic that was going on with record covers."

    Men Without Hats also plan to taste the reality of life on the road in Canada with a tour, slotted for late spring, early summer. "We haven't done a tour in Canada for over five years," said Doroschuk. "It's going to be great. I love to travel and to get around and meet people. I don't care where we play as long as it's fun -- and there's a remote control and a colour TV in the hotel room."

    Last summer, Men Without Hats, (Stefan Doroschuk on bass, Colin Doroschuk on keyboards and Ivan on vocals, along with Matte, Kastner and Langevin), delivered their new material to a packed house at hometown Les Foufounes Electriques and at Toronto's Nathan Phillips Square for 5,000 people, on a bill including the Pursuit Of Happiness. "One of the strangest - and arguably best - concerts in Montreal last year was Men Without Hats playing at the punk club Les Foufonnes Electrique," wrote Alastair Sutherland from Music Express. "A packed house witnessed a complete revamping of the Hats' repertoire ("Safety Dance," "Pop Goes The World," "Hey Men"...), courtesy of a band whose lineup read like a cross section of the local music scene ... And, making a special appearance for a hard rock version of "Bye Bye Mon Cowboy," there was pop chanteuse Mitsou, resplendent in full go-go girl regalia. Even people who knew the Hats and had followed the twists and turns in Ivan's mindset had to shake their heads and wonder what was next."

    Ivan once said that he always considered the Hats to be an electronic hardcore band - and with every album, the band seem to be getting closer to the core of what propels them further and further in music. The band have come a long way since their sonic experiments in the basement of their home in 1977. Their first single "Safety Dance", released in 1983, went top ten in twenty countries, getting the band a nomination for a Grammy in the process as well as worldwide acclaim. The swiftness of their success lead to the band's three-year search, culminating to 1988's "Pop Goes The World" and then last year's "(Adventures Of Women And Men Without Hate) In The 21st Century." The gold-single "Pop Goes The World," went top three in Canada, and top twenty in the U.S. The album surpassed platinum (100,000 units) in Canada, and won a Felix award (Quebec's annual music industry awards) for English pop/rock album of the year, while the single won a nomination for a Juno (as single of the year) and was honoured by PROCAN as the most played English language Canadian single at radio here in 1988. During the US tour in support of that album, in the early spring of 1988, Ivan began writing some of the songs for "...In The 21st Century," which was recorded at The Hit Factory in New York with Stefan Doroschuk as the sole producer and Mike Scott as engineer.

    "...In The 2lst Century," which shipped gold upon release, produced a top 15 CHR single in Canada with "Hey Men" (the video for this album also went to #1 at Musique Plus and #3 at MuchMusic), but more importantly, was an easy transition to the heavy sound the band have been flirting with until now.
    "Singer Ivan Doroschuk of Men Without Hats burst out of Montreal in 1979 with a popping electronic sound that was the antithesis of no-frills noise guitar," wrote Mark LePage of The Montreal Gazette, "now, after more than a decade on the pop music highway, Ivan is wheeling into a U-turn." With "Sideways," Men Without Hats venture inside themselves to deliver an album, that in any which side you look at it, successfully rides the threshold of pop core.

    [ PolyGram National Promotion/Publicity, 1991 ] "

    An honorable mention has to go to two of the best roadies who ever lived: "Disco" Danny Giguere & Sergio "Seeze" Barreca. And the Ironman Award goes to our soundman Paul "La Plage" Lepage who, as rumour has it, has not slept since 1982. And of course the picture wouldn't be complete without mentioning our manager and good friend, Denis Wolff.

    Between "Sideways" and "No hats beyond this point", Ivan and Stefan took some time away from MWH to record other albums, some more of which may appear in the coming years. So it's with a renewed sense of hatlessness that Men Without Hats are proud to present to you there latest opus, "No Hats beyond this point".

    To get a better historical point of view with respect to the recordings mentioned in the above account check out the complete Men Without Hats Discography

    "No Hats Beyond This Point" was essentially an independent release brought out around early 2002. The album was recorded in Stefan's studio in the Laurentian mountains above Quebec, with Stefan engineering and producing. Ivan and Stefan played all the music and did all vocals, excepting some female vocals which were provided by Stefan's partner and their two daughters. A real family affair. But it seems the album was more for the brothers than anything else as they continue to go about their daily lives which, these days, are pretty much "regular people's" lives.

    The brothers all live in Canada with Ivan Doroschuk living in Montreal, Stefan in the mountains where his studio is located, and Colin lives in Victoria, Vancouver where he teaches voice and sings with the Victoria Opera Company.

    Other former "Hatters" lead even more "regular" existences. Here's a few with thanks to MenWithoutHats.com:

    Lenny Pinkas lives in Montreal and works in computers.
    Marika Tjelios lives in southern California, Heidi lives in New Jersey.
    Allan McCarthy died of AIDS about 6 years ago (mid-90's).
    Jerry Arrobas is in telemarketing and living in Montreal.
    John Gurin is a university professor.
    Jean-Marc Pizzapia writes jingles in Montreal.
    Bruce Murphy's a dentist in Ottawa.
    Tracy Howe lives in Ontario and recently retired from music.
    Alain Lefebvre (otherwise known as Al Gunn) lives in Montreal and hasn't moved since finishing the MWH tour there in 1985. I'm sure there's something more to Alain's movements but my French is not so hot. Maybe he's related to Sebastien Lefebvre, young guitarist for Canadian pop-punk band Simple Plan. I spoke with Sebastien some time ago regarding some of the specs for his ESP Custom Shop Eclipse so we could put together a Custom Shop Quote for one of his French fans but I've not been back in touch with him to ask about any possible connection with Men Without Hats. Not sure how he'd take it so I'll leave it alone I think, the language barrier could get me into trouble.

    UPDATE 14th DECEMBER, 2007
    We heard from the original Wave21 drummer this week, Igor Krichevsky, who was kind enough to drop us an e-mail and fill us in on his movements of late.

    Howdy,

    I read with great interest your article about "Where are they now.. Man without Hats".. I am the drummer from the first concert.. as Wave21 in 1976.. my name is Igor Krichevsky, I was the drummer with "Wave21" and participated in the first concert in 1976". I still leave in Montreal, married with 2 kids and work for a software company in Business Development.

    Cheers,

    Igor Krichevsky

    Was very cool of Igor to drop us a line and he was nice to chat with.

    Drop us an e-mail if you'd like us to track down some of stars of the past for you and feature them in Where Are They Now? or if you have anything to add or correct from one of our features.

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    THIS WEEK'S MUSIC QUOTE

    "Learning to perform on stage is really learning to live comfortably with fear."
    - Isaac Stern


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    FEATURED GUITARS - ESP ECLIPSE-I CTM FT BMUSIC SPECIAL ORDER

    We ordered these gloss black and snow white Eclipse-I CTM Full Thickness models as a special of just two of each earlier this year. The standard colour is Vintage Black but we thought gloss black and snow white would suit this guitar as it has done over the decades with another not disimilar guitar from a certain US maker. Three of the four sold within hours of arriving to some discerning ESP customers who knew of their existence through our Discussion Forum.

    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order

    More Snow White Pics
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order
    Eclipse-I CTM FT Special Order

    More Gloss Black Pics

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    SPECIALS AT bmusic

    Check out our Specials page for info on the regular specials or our forum Buy & Sell HERE for One Day Super Specials and/or special sales items such as Stocktake Specials.

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    THIS WEEK'S FEATURE ARTICLE - FIVE PATHS TO $100,000 PER YEAR PART 4 - RANDY'S WAY

    We are now on Part 4 of a 5 part series by Sean Farrington of BandProfit.com exploring the lives of five fictional characters who are all racing to a six-figure income with very different styles. Though the cast of characters in this moc-umentary are indeed fictional, the techniques are not. These are the same skills that artists - just like you - use day in and day out to survive and thrive as independents.

    In this episode Sean Farrington visits Randy who is a self-proclaimed recording nut. He records 2 CDs a year, plus all his live performances, music videos and even behind the scenes documentaries. We’ll see how Randy’s recording ready attitude pushes his income to the six-figure mark…

    Click HERE to check out Five Paths To $100,000 Per Year Part 4 - Randy's Way. To see the previous three articles in the series click HERE.

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    FEATURED ARTIST - DANNI STEFANETTI

    Perth born singer/songwriter and guitarist Danni Stefanetti was described by Glenn Shorrock when she took out the Glenn Shorrock Music Scholarship Award in 2007: "She's going places! At 18 mature beyond her years, great style and versatile voice".

    Danni writes in her bio:

    My musical journey began when introduced to the guitar age 8. Almost immediately I naturally started writing songs. I devote all my spare time to developing my guitar skills & my main goal is to be a respected musician! I strive for excellence and love performing LIVE!!The best experience for me is when I get the opportunity to perform with a great band and an appreciative crowd.

    I’m inspired by artists like; Stevie Ray Vaughan, Hendrix, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne and Eric Clapton. I love the timeless melodies, catchy riffs and meaningful lyrics. Even though I love performing and writing with the electric guitar, I find the best songs are the ones that just stand out on the acoustic guitar and voice alone.

    To hear Danni's music and learn more about this very busy 2007 Telstra Road to Tamworth Grand Finalist check out her Official Website or here MySpace Page.

    Each week's Feature Artist is selected from the Band Links page, so get on and list your favourite group at the Band Link page and they could be the Feature Artist at bmusic.com.au.

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    MUSICIANS WANTED

    Our 'Musicians Wanted' pages are getting more and more listings every week with musicians from across the country (and the globe) looking for singers and instrumentalists of all types.
    Get on over to Musicians Wanted to see all the new listings. Check back regularly as new listings are received almost every day.

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    GEAR WANTED

  • Guitar promo catalogues:
    A good friend of ours here at bmusic is after any old catalogues from days gone by. At the moment he's particularly keen to get a hold of any Washburn catalogues from the late '70's. Those that feature the Washburn Wing Series of basses and guitars would be of particular interest.

  • Second-hand saxes, clarinets and flutes. We are looking for good quality, good condition, saxophones, clarinets and flutes to help out those parents who are a little dubious about their child's level of commitment to their chosen instrument and, subsequently, don't want to spend a bomb on what might turn out to be a fad. If you or your kids have taken up the horn but chucked it in, don't take it to Cashies. Brands like Yamaha, Yanigasawa, Selmer, Buescher etc. are always welcome at bmusic.


  • Marshall JCM800's. That's right, we STILL want 'em. JCM800 2203 and 2204 models.


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    BAND LINKS

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    THE WEEK AHEAD IN MUSIC

  • Events
  • On Christmas Day, 1818, the Christmas carol "Silent Night" was performed for the first time, at the Church of St. Nikolaus in Oberndorff, Austria. Written by Father Joseph Mohr, and set to music by the village organist, Franz Gruber, the carol was originally known as "Song From Heaven." The song eventually reached the ears of the King and Queen of Saxony, who were much taken with its message of peace. And the word was spread.

    In 1942, Frank Sinatra, backed by the Benny Goodman Orchestra, performed his first solo concert at the Paramount Theatre in New York.

    In 1953, 20,000 people attended the funeral of country star Hank Williams in Montgomery, Alabama. Williams had died three days earlier at age 29 in the back seat of his limousine.

    In 1957, Elvis Presley received his U.S. army draft notice.

    On Christmas Day, 1959, future Beatle Ringo Starr, who was then 19-year-old Richard Starkey, received his first drum set for Christmas. He was working as an apprentice engineer at the time.

    In 1961, the Beach Boys played their first concert under that name at the Richie Valens Memorial Centre in Long Beach, California.
    The group was previously known under several names -- the Pendletones, Kenny and the Cadets or Carl and the Passions.

    On Christmas Day, 1964, George Harrison's then girlfriend, Patti Boyd, was attacked by jealous female fans at a Beatles' show in London.

    On Christmas Day, 1967, Paul McCartney and Jane Asher became engaged. They never married.

    In 1967, guitarist and vocalist Dave Mason made the first of his two departures from the group Traffic. Mason disagreed with leader Steve Winwood over the direction the group should take, with Mason favoring a pop approach while Winwood leaned toward jazz. Mason returned briefly in 1968 to help record Traffic's second album but was gone again within months.

    In 1967, two recently departed members of the John Evans Blues Band, vocalist Ian Anderson and bassist Glenn Cornick, formed Jethro Tull in Blackpool, England. The group was named after the 18th century inventor of a number of farm implements. John Evans later joined the band as it's keyboard player.

    In 1967, the Hollies' "He Ain't Heavy (He's My Brother)" was released.

    In 1969, Jimi Hendrix's Band of Gypsies, with Billy Cox on bass and Buddy Miles on drums, made their debut at the Fillmore East in New York City. The Band of Gypsies was the successor to the guitarist's first group, the Jimi Hendrix Experience.

    In 1970, Paul McCartney filed suit in London seeking the legal dissolution of the Beatles' partnership. The move came six months after the release of the "Let It Be" album.

    In 1972, police in Miami, Florida, enforcing a curfew, cut short a concert by Mannfred Mann and his Earth Band. Fans rioted for nearly two hours, while the band hid in the dressing room.

    In 1973, Kiss, whose flash-and-thrash stage shows would influence two decades of heavy metal bands, made their debut at the Academy of Music in New York. They shared the bill with Blue Oyster Cult, Iggy Pop and Teenage Lust.

    In 1974, Mick Fleetwood telephoned Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham and invited them to join Fleetwood Mac. Fleetwood became interested in the duo after producer Keith Olsen played him an album that Nicks and Buckingham had recorded at Olsen's studio. Nicks and Buckingham completed the lineup that would record the four-million-selling "Fleetwood Mac" album in 1975 and the 15-million-selling "Rumours" two years later.

    In 1975, Paul Kantner and Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane split after seven years of marriage.

    In 1975, guitarist Joe Walsh joined the Eagles, replacing original member Bernie Leadon who had departed for a solo career.

    In 1976, singer and songwriter Isaac Hayes declared bankruptcy, citing six-million dollars in debts. Nowadays Isaac Hayes is as well known as the voice of South Park's "Chef" as he is as a soul singer.

    In 1979, Emerson, Lake and Palmer announced they were splitting up. The trio regrouped in 1986, at first with drummer Cozy Powell substituting for Palmer. But Palmer himself later rejoined Emerson and Lake.

    In 1980, John McVie of Fleetwood Mac and his wife, Julie, were arrested for cocaine possession in Honolulu after a police dog sniffed out the drug in their mail.

    In 1981, the father of Spanish singer Julio Iglesias was kidnapped by Basque terrorists from a Madrid hospital. He was rescued three weeks later in a raid by 150 anti-terrorist troops and police on a house in north-eastern Spain. No ransom was paid, although the singer was reported to have withdrawn about US$1,000,000 from a U.S. bank and transferred it to Spain.

    In 1984, Rick Allen, the drummer for English hard-rock group Def Leppard, lost an arm in a car crash. He rejoined the band after his recovery, playing a specially designed electronic/traditional drum kit.

    In 1985, one person was shot and several were stabbed at a rap concert featuring L.L. Cool J, Doug E. Fresh and Kurtis Blow at Madison Square Garden in New York. Eighteen people were arrested. Four days earlier, three people had been shot at an L.L. Cool J show in Baltimore.

    In 1987, Elton John announced he was cancelling all performances for a year to undergo throat surgery at a private hospital in Sydney, Australia. The exploratory operation five days later revealed a non-malignant lesion.

    In 1989, Sebastian Bach, lead singer of Skid Row, was charged with assault and mayhem after allegedly hitting a female fan in the face with a beer bottle during a concert in Springfield, Massachusetts. The woman suffered a broken nose and skull. Authorities say Bach then leaped from the stage and kicked another person in the head. He returned to the stage after the scuffle and finished the gig.

    In 1992, B.B. King performed in Gainesville, Florida, for a prison audience that included his daughter. Patty King was serving three years for drug trafficking.

    In 1992, singer Courtney Love sued her doctor and a Los Angeles hospital for around US$1,000,000. She accused them of leaking word of the heroin treatment she underwent while pregnant with her and Cobain's daughter, Francis, who was born healthy four months earlier.

    In 1994, Courtney Love, in an interview published in "Spin" magazine, said husband Kurt Cobain's drug problems and constant threats to kill himself nearly drove her to suicide. Love said she put a revolver to her head but Cobain grabbed it from her. The incident occurred only weeks before Cobain killed himself with a shotgun at their Seattle-area home in April 1994.

    In 1996, Motley Crue bassist Nikki Sixx wed "Baywatch" actress Donna D'Errico in a private ceremony in Beverly Hills, California.

    In 1998, singer Ronnie Hammond of the Atlanta Rhythm Section was shot in the chest by Macon police after allegedly lunging at an officer with a broken guitar neck and a hammer. Police were responding to reports that the singer was trying to commit suicide. Hammond made a full recovery. It was the second incident with the police for Hammond. On December 9, 1998, police responded to an alleged suicide attempt.

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  • Births In 1858, Giacomo Puccini, composer of some of the world's most popular operas, was born in Italy. It was said that when Puccini was a child, his music teacher used to kick him in the shins if he made a mistake. As an adult, every time Puccini hit a wrong note, he would automatically jerk his legs.

    On Christmas Day, 1907, singer and bandleader Cab Calloway was born in Rochester, New York.

    In 1915, bluesman Brownie McGhee.

    In 1926, record producer George Martin was born in London. He joined EMI Records in 1950, producing hits by pop singers Matt Munro and Shirley Bassey. Martin signed the Beatles in 1962, and produced all of their records until 1969.

    In 1928, rhythm-and-blues superstar Bo Diddley, whose real name is Ellas McDaniels, was born in McComb, Mississippi.

    In 1931, Scotty Moore, guitarist on Elvis Presley's early records.

    In 1933, Scottish singer Andy Stewart.

    In 1940, folk singer and songwriter Tim Hardin, in Eugene, Oregon. Despite his ability as a performer, his greatest impact was as a writer of songs that proved great successes for other artists. Hardin's best-known composition is "If I Were a Carpenter", which provided Bobby Darin with a hit in the early '60s, and a gold-record single for Johnny Cash and June Carter later in the decade. In 1980, Tim Hardin was found dead of a heroin overdose in his Hollywood apartment.

    In 1940, Jorma Kaukonen, guitarist with Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna.

    In 1940, guitarist/composer/artist Frank Zappa, regarded by many as genius, was born.

    In 1942, Les Maguire, pianist and vocalist with Gerry and the Pacemakers.

    In 1942, guitarist Andy Summers, formerly of the Police.

    In 1942, British jazz-rock guitarist John McLaughlin was born. He first gained recognition for his work on Miles Davis's "Bitches' Brew" album, and later formed the Mahavishnu Orchestra. This group did much in the 1970's to promote the idea of fusing jazz and rock music.

    In 1944, Barry Jenkins, drummer with Eric Burdon's second edition of the Animals, was born. The original Animals split in 1967 and Burdon formed a new group, which included guitarist Andy Summers, who went on to greater fame with the Police.

    In 1944, Henry Vestine, guitarist for the blues-rock band Canned Heat, was born in Washington, D-C. Vestine joined Canned Heat in 1966 after playing with the Mothers of Invention. "On the Road Again" in 1968 and "Going Up the Country" in 1969 were Canned Heat's two biggest hits. Vestine left Canned Heat in mid-1969 to form a new band but returned the following year after the death of group member Al Wilson. Vestine departed Canned Heat for good in 1975. He died in Paris in October of 1997.

    In 1944, Mick Jones, lead guitarist with Spooky Tooth and Foreigner.

    In 1944, guitarist and vocalist for Ten Years After, Alvin Lee.

    In 1945, Motorhead bassist and singer, Lemmy Kilmister.

    In 1945, Ronald Bushy, drummer with Iron Butterfly.

    On Christmas Day, 1945, Noel Redding, bass player with the Jimi Hendrix Experience.

    In 1945, singer Stephen Stills of Crosby, Stills and Nash.

    In 1946, singer Marianne Faithful was born in London.

    In 1946, Davy Jones, lead vocalist of the Monkees, was born in Manchester, England. The Monkees' guitarist, Mike Nesmsith, was born on the same day in 1942.

    In 1946, singer Patti Smith.

    In 1946, John Paul Jones, bassist with the Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin.

    On Christmas Day, 1946, singer Jimmy Buffett.

    In 1946, Beach Boys guitarist Carl Wilson.

    In 1947, sax and flute player Ray Thomas of the Moody Blues was born in Stourport-on-Severn, England.
    Thomas, along with lead singer Denny Laine, keyboard player Michael Pinder, bassist Clint Warwick and drummer Graeme Edge, began the Moody Blues as a rhythm-and-blues band in 1964 in Birmingham.
    After their first major hit, "Go Now," Justin Hayward replaced Warwick as lead vocalist and the group turned to a more full-bodied orchestral sound. "Nights in White Satin," in 1972, was the biggest of their dozen hit singles.

    In 1947, KISS drummer Peter Criss.

    In 1947, Dick Diamonde of the Easybeats.

    In 1947, drummer Cozy Powell of Whitesnake.

    In 1947, Jeff Lynne, one of the founding members of the Electric Light Orchestra, was born in Birmingham, England. The other original members of the group were Bev Bevan and Roy Wood -- all three had performed together as members of a group called the Move.
    After ELO Lynne concentrated on record production, and in 1988 became a member of the Traveling Wilburys with Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan and Tom Petty.

    On Christmas Day, 1948, Barbara Mandrell, one of the top female vocalists in contemporary country music, was born in Houston, Texas. By the age of 11, she was performing in Las Vegas, and two years later toured with Johnny Cash.

    In 1948, disco star Donna Summer.

    In 1949, Robin and Maurice Gibb of the Bee Gees were born on the Isle of Man. The Gibb family moved to Australia in 1958, and the twins, along with brother Barry, began performing together. The family returned to England in 1966, where the Gibb brothers were signed by producer Robert Stigwood. A hit single, "New York Mining Disaster 1941," and a hit album followed within a year. The teenaged stars were unprepared for their sudden success, and the Bee Gees fell apart in the early 1970s. But in 1977, they contributed several songs to the soundtrack of "Saturday Night Fever". "How Deep is Your Love," "Stayin' Alive" and "Night Fever" all became number-one hits. And the "Saturday Night Fever" album was the biggest-selling LP of all time, until Michael Jackson's "Thriller" came along.

    In 1949, guitarist Adrian Belew.

    In 1951, Johnny Contardo of the rock 'n' roll revival band Sha Na Na.

    In 1951, Aerosmith bassist Tom Hamilton.

    In 1953, pianist Richard Clayderman.

    On Christmas Day, 1955, Eurythmics singer Annie Lennox.

    In 1956, Iron Maiden guitarist Dave Murray.

    In 1958, rapper Grandmaster Flash, whose real name is Joseph Saddler.

    In 1963, Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian.

    In 1972, Joey McIntyre of New Kids on the Block.

    In 1989, Carlos Santana's wife Debbie gave birth to their daughter Angelica Faith.

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  • Deaths In 1939, Gertrude (Ma) Rainey, one of the classic blues singers of the 1920's, died in Columbus, Georgia. During her heyday, she often traveled in her own railway car, and was the biggest-selling artist for Paramount Records, one of the so-called race labels that targeted their records to a black audience.

    In 1953, one of the most charismatic figures in country music, Hank Williams, died of a heart attack brought on by excessive drinking. He and his band, the Drifting Cowboys, had been booked to play in Canton, Ohio, and Williams hired a limousine to take him to the gig. Williams is said to have fallen asleep during the trip from Knoxville, Tennessee, and when the driver tried to wake him at Oak Hill, Virginia, the singer was dead.
    But some researchers believe Williams was already dead when he was put in the Cadillac by two hotel workers on New Year's Eve. The controversy was fuelled by the hasty autopsy performed at a funeral home in Oak Hill.

    Though he was an alcoholic for most of his working life, Williams nonetheless became the most influential figure in modern country music. A star on both the Louisiana Hayride and the Grand Ole Opry, he was fired from the Opry in 1952 because of his drinking. Many of his compositions, such as "Your Cheatin' Heart", "Jambalaya" and "Cold, Cold Heart", have been recorded by rock, folk and rhythm-and-blues acts. Hank Williams was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1961.

    On Christmas Day, 1954, rhythm-and-blues balladeer Johnny Ace died after shooting himself while playing Russian roulette backstage at the City Auditorium in Houston on Christmas Eve.

    On Boxing Day, 1957, country singer Jimmie Osborne committed suicide at age 34. This now-forgotten performer had three Top-10 hits from 1948 to '50 -- "My Heart Echoes," "The Death of Little Kathy Fiscus" and "God Please Protect America".

    In 1967, Paul Whiteman, the most popular bandleader of the pre-swing era, died in Doylestown, Pennsylvania at age 77. He had more than 30 number-one hits from 1920 to 1934, including "Whispering", "Hot Lips", "Three O'Clock in the Morning" and "Ol' Man River". Whiteman was billed as the "King of Jazz", but he specialized in sentimental songs and novelty tunes. However, his band did include, at various times, such sidemen as cornetist Bix Beiderbecke, trombonists Jack Teagarden and Tommy Dorsey and trumpeters Henry Busse and Red Nichols.
    Singer Bing Crosby made his professional debut with Whiteman in 1926.

    In 1973, former teen idol Bobby Darin died of heart failure during his second open-heart surgery in two years. He was 37.

    In 1977, jazz pianist and composer Erroll Garner died at the age of 53. Garner was a self-taught musician who couldn't read music. But that didn't stop him from composing timeless music, such as the familiar "Misty".

    In 1979, composer and lyricist Richard Rodgers died in New York City at the age of 77. Collaborating with Lorenz Hart and later with Oscar Hammerstein the Second, Rodgers wrote Broadway musicals, many of which were made into movies, for more than 55 years. Among his greatest successes were "The Sound of Music", "The King and I", "South Pacific", "Carousel" and "Oklahoma".

    In 1980, folk singer and songwriter Tim Hardin died of a heroin overdose in Los Angeles at the age of 40. He composed such well-known songs as "Reason to Believe" and "If I Were a Carpenter", which provided a hit for both Bobby Darin and the duo of Johnny Cash and June Carter. Ironically, Hardin's only successful single came when he recorded Darin's "Simple Song of Freedom", which made the US top 50 in 1969.

    In 1980, New Orleans-born rhythm-and-blues singer Larry Williams, despondent over his fading popularity, committed suicide. Williams began as a valet for singer Lloyd Price, before playing in Price's band. By 1956, he was recording on his own, and the following year had two million-sellers with the humorous novelty songs "Bony Moronie" and "Short, Fat Fannie." The Beatles were great admirers of Williams' music, and recorded several of his songs, including "Slow Down", "Bad Boy" and "Dizzy Miss Lizzy".

    In 1983, Beach Boy Dennis Wilson drowned in Marina Del Rey. He was 39.

    In 1985, two teenage fans of Judas Priest, after listening to the band's "Stained Class" album for six hours, took a shotgun to a churchyard in Sparks, Nevada and shot themselves. Raymond Belknap died immediately and the other youth, James Vance, was wounded. Vance died on November 29th, 1988 after lapsing into a coma while in hospital for treatment of depression. A drug overdose was blamed.
    The estate and parents of the young men filed suit against Judas Priest, seeking US 4 million dollars in damages. A judge dismissed the action in 1990, ruling there were no subliminal messages on the Judas Priest album, as the plaintiffs had claimed.

    In 1985, singer Rick Nelson, his fiance and five members of his Stone Canyon band were killed when their private plane crashed near Dekalb in northeastern Texas. They were on their way to perform at a New Year's Eve concert in Dallas.
    Nelson gained teen-idol status in the 1950s after appearing with his parents and brother David on U.S. television's "Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet".

    In 1986, Phil Lynott, former lead singer of the group Thin Lizzy, died in a London hospital of heart failure and pneumonia brought on by drug and alcohol abuse. He was 35. The Irish-born singer was being treated for an infection of the kidneys and liver.
    Lynott is also recognised as a prolific poet.

    On Christmas Day, 1991, Willie Nelson's son, Billy Nelson, hanged himself in his home near Nashville. He was 33.

    In 1991, nine people died in a crush to get into a charity basketball game featuring rap stars at City College in New York. Twenty-eight others were injured. Police estimated five-thousand people went to the gymnasium, which had a capacity of 2,730. Most of the victims were crushed in a stairwell leading to the basement gym. The Heavy D and Puff Daddy Celebrity Charity Basketball Game was supposed to raise money for AIDS education, but a city report issued the following month said the promoter had not been able to make arrangements for anyone to accept the funds. The report also said nearly everyone involved in the event showed an "abysmal failure of responsibility," including police, college officials, organizers, student groups and the crowd itself.

    In 1992, bluesman Albert King, a major influence on rock guitarists like Eric Clapton, died in Memphis, Tennessee, after suffering a heart attack. He was 69. King, who claimed to be a distant cousin of B.B. King, recorded as early as 1953 but his career didn't take off until he signed with Stax Records in 1966. There, backed by the likes of Booker T. and the MG's and the Memphis Horns, he recorded classics like "Born Under a Bad Sign", "Crosscut Saw" and "Laundromat Blues".

    In 1993, original Byrds drummer Michael Clarke died of liver failure. He was 49.

    On Christmas Day, 1995, singer and actor Dean Martin died of respiratory failure at his Beverly Hills, California home. He was 78.

    In 1996, British saxophonist and jazz club owner Ronnie Scott was found dead at his London home. He was 69. There were widespread reports that he had committed suicide but a coroner recorded a verdict of misadventure, saying "an incautious overdose of barbiturates" had led to Scott's death. He opened Ronnie Scott's Club in London's Soho district in 1959. It became Britain's leading showcase for modern jazz, and among those who played there were Dizzy Gillespie, Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald and Jimi Hendrix.

    In 1997, Randy California, guitarist for the 1960s rock band Spirit, drowned while swimming with his 12-year-old son off Molokai, Hawaii. He was 45. California was apparently caught in a riptide after pushing his son to shore.
    Spirit did have a Top-25 single in 1968, "I Got a Line on You", but they were known primarily for their critically-acclaimed albums, which blended hard rock, blues, country, folk and jazz.

    In 2002, Joe Strummer, guitarist and vocalist for British band, The Clash, died of a heart attack at his home in Somerset, England. Strummer was 50 years old.

    In 2002, Armand Zildjian, president and chairman of the Zildjian Company, the world’s largest cymbal manufacturer and one of the oldest companies in America, died of cancer at the age of 81.

    In 2002, guitarist/songwriter Kevin Macmichael, a former member of Canadian bands Cutting Crew and Chalice, died from lung cancer. Cutting Crew had a huge international hit with "I Just Died In Your Arms Tonight" in the 1980's.

    In 2004, Drummer John Payne Gueri) died aged 64 after heart failure brought about as a complication of the flu. Guerin's career spanned playing with The Byrds, Roger McGuinn, Gram Parsons, Skip Battin, Joni Mitchell, Cass Elliot, Frank Zappa, Todd Rundgren, Thelonious Monk, Peggy Lee, Bobby McFerrin, Lou Rawls, Jean-Luc Ponty, George Harrison, Elvis Presley, Kenny Rogers and many, many others.

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