News & Updates — rock

John Martyn / Sept 11, 1948 - Jan 29, 2009

John Martyn / Sept 11, 1948 - Jan 29, 2009

British singer/songwriter John Martyn was my favorite kind of folkie: a guy who took in a lot of different influences (jazz, folk, rock, Caribbean, Middle Eastern, blues) and tried new things with them. From his funky rock-inspired stuff to the dub-washed material from his time hanging at Lee Perry's Black Ark to the later trip-hop material, you could always count on Martyn for some of the most experimental ideas of the Brit-folkers. Born to opera singing parents, his birth name was Iain David McGeachy. He was part of the fertile Brit-folk scene of the mid-'60s, along with Nick Drake, Bert Jansch,...

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Roy Brown / Sept 10, 1925 - May 25, 1981

Roy Brown / Sept 10, 1925 - May 25, 1981

Happy birthday to the jump-blues icon Roy Brown, one of the foundational artists of rock & roll and the composer of the massive 1948 hit "Good Rocking Tonight", which was successful for both Brown and Wynonie Harris that same year. From New Orleans, he went to Los Angeles in the '40s to be a pro boxer and work in the sugarcane fields. He moved to Texas in '46, where he wrote and started performing "Good Rocking Tonight". "Hard Luck Blues" was another big one for him in 1950. After defeating King Records in court in 1952 for unpaid royalties, the...

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Bruce Palmer / Sept 9, 1946 - Oct 1, 2004

Bruce Palmer / Sept 9, 1946 - Oct 1, 2004

One of the great left-field albums came from former Buffalo Springfield bassist Bruce Palmer, with his seemingly unmarketable (at the time) Eastern-tinged folk-jazz oddity The Cycle Is Complete, released in 1970 on Verve to little fanfare and nearly no promotion. Palmer's only album as a leader, he was given complete artistic control only for him to come up with an unexpected psychedelic improvisational (almost in the realm of "spiritual-jazz" a la Pharoah Sanders) spacey folk record with members of Kaleidoscope, Caribbean percussionist Big Black and young Rick James (billed as "Rick Matthews"). Verve had no idea what to do with...

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Little Milton / Sept 7, 1934 - Aug 4, 2005

Little Milton / Sept 7, 1934 - Aug 4, 2005

Happy birthday to the soulful blues guitarist and singer Little Milton, most famous for his hit version of "Grits Ain't Groceries" and his fine albums on Chess, Stax and Malaco. He is generally known to fit into the BB King/Albert King style of brassy, soulful blues with strings and such. It's a formula that found Milton some hits songs in the '60s & '70s. From the Mississippi Delta, his father Big Milton was a blues musician and Little Milton got into country music and jump blues, with T-Bone Walker a particularly big influence. He started his career with the Rhythm...

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Buddy Holly / Sept 7, 1936 - Feb 3, 1959

Buddy Holly / Sept 7, 1936 - Feb 3, 1959

It's hard to believe that this guy never lived to see 23. One of my favorite of the early rockers, had he lived he was eyeing collaborations with Ray Charles and Mahalia Jackson. Happy birthday to Buddy Holly!

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