Top 10 Rock Tragedies

Flower

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Ricky Nelson

Nelson signed with Epic Records in 1976, producing one album, "Intakes" (1977) and the charting single "Dream Lover" 1979), but the union was unsuccessful. His brief stay with Capitol, 1980-83, was similarly unhappy, with one album release "Playing to Win" (1981), and the single "Give 'Em My Number" (1982). Despite this, he maintained a busy touring schedule, keeping him on the road roughly 200 dates a year. Nelson and his band were a top attraction at state fairs and showcase clubs, even without hit records. His final album release, "All My Best", consisted of re-recordings of his hits, along with one new song featured in his concerts, "You Know What I Mean". In 1985, Nelson joined a nostalgia rock tour of England. After returning home, he began a tour of the South. Nelson and his band boarded a plane after a show at a small club in Guntersville, Alabama headed to the KLUV-FM New Year's Eve Sock-Hop concert in Dallas, Texas. The plane crashed northeast of Dallas in De Kalb, Texas killing Nelson; his fiancée, Helen Blair; bassist Patrick Woodward, drummer Rick Intveld, keyboardist Andy Chapin and two others. Nelson was buried in the Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles, California.

The NTSB investigation stated that the crash was probably due to mechanical problems. The pilots attempted to land in a field after smoke filled the cabin. An examination indicated that a fire had originated in the righthand side of the aft cabin area at or near the floor line. The passengers were killed when the aircraft struck obstacles during the forced landing; the pilots were able to escape through the cockpit windows and survived. The ignition and fuel sources of the fire could not be determined, although many believe that the most likely cause was a defective cabin heater. The pilot indicated that the crew tried to turn on the gasoline cabin heater repeatedly shortly before the fire occurred, but that it failed to respond. After the fire, the access panel to the heater compartment was found unlatched. The theory is supported by records that showed that DC-3s in general, and this aircraft in particular, had had a previous history of problems with the cabin heaters.

 

Flower

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I'm sneaking Charles Caldwell in here.

The story of Charles Caldwell is that of too many bluesmen -- discovered too late. At least the Fat Possum label did find and record him before he died of cancer in September 2003. And there was no doubt this guy could play, whether on his own or accompanied by a drummer. You want raw Mississippi blues? This is it, as electric as R.L. Burnside or Junior Kimbrough, full of fire and relating tales of life, as on "Old Buck." There's a wonderful crispness to his guitar playing; to some it will sound basic, but there's plenty going on inside it, complemented by as powerful a voice as Caldwell's own singing. In songs like "I Know I Done You Wrong" you can hear echoes of Robert Johnson and Charley Patton through the ages, and even early Muddy Waters. "I Got Something to Tell You" rocks all the way to Chicago and back, while "Alone for a Long Time" hammers a beat home, strong enough to shake any house party. It all ends, somewhat poignantly, with "Remember Me." Bluesmen like this are, literally and unfortunately, a dying breed. It's too late now for Charles Caldwell. But this, the sum total of his recordings, made late in life, stands as an eloquent testament that it wasn't all in vain. ~ Chris Nickson



Just ten or twelve years ago, you could go into a town of 800 and find at least three old guys who could play some guitar. Now it's hard to find anyone who plays at all, much less anyone really good. And the good players still living lose half their ability as a result of strokes and other illnesses or having been scared into joining the church. Everythin in this buisness is in short supply: our budget, the number of good artists, the time they have left.

But seeing Charles Caldwell play changed everything for me. He still enjoyed playing; he was charismatic; he had a presence. In my view, Charles would be the next bomb, a last, undiscovered bastion of a dying breed. Did he want to make a record? Hell yes.

I remember the last time I saw him. Charles didn't know how to just sit around and be sick, he was a horrible patient. During chemotherapy he had built a shed for his four-wheeler and had painted the sheet metal on his tractor. He had something he wanted to show me. I followed him around to the backyard, where next to a chicken coop, and out of reach of the surviving coon dogs, stood a small cage holding a red fox. It had been destroying his garden, so he'd trapped it. I bent down to look, and it was barking and hissing. "You need it?" he asked.

In my truck I had a pair of welding gloves that were thick enough to handle the animal, but that didn't seem reason enough.

"Well, do you want it then?"

-Matthew Johnson


 

Odysseus

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[QUOTE The rest of mine have already been mentioned and documented in this thread :)[/QUOTE]

Most of the ones mentioned already would be my choices as well. I agree that there can be self inflicted destruction (either immediate or slow) or tragedies not of their own doing.

Roy Orbison suffered living tragedy as well. His wife was killed in a motorcycle accident followed by a house fire a couple years later in which two of his kids died. A bit crippling for Roy.

Some additional ones, no less tragic.

Minnie Ripperton
Felix Pappalardi
Berry Oakley. Motorcycle accident, eerily only a few blocks away from where Duane died one year previous.
Tammi Terrell
Ronnie Lane
Patsy Cline
 

Sweaty

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Buddy Holly
John Lennon
Kirsty Maccoll
Stevie Ray Vaughan
Jeff Healey
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Marc Bolan
Ian Curtis
Alex Harvey
Jeff Buckley
 

Sox

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John Lennon
John Bonham
Jimi Hendrix
Duane Allman
Buddy Holly
Eddie Cochran
Brian Jones
Jim Morrison
Marc Bolan
Janis Joplin
 

ecisgod

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John Lennon has to be the most tragic...he was assassinated...murdered in cold blood in front of his wife by a maniac.

And I'm not just saying this because Lennon was a Beatle.

This was and is the saddest rock tragedy by far.



Agreed Groovy....especially today...R.I.P. John!
 

architect

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Syd Barrett
John Lennon
Mama Cass Elliot
Jimi Hendrix
Buddy Holly/Richie Valens/The Big Bopper
Robert Wyatt(fell out a fourth story window at his birthday party and was paralyzed from the waist down)
Felix Pappalardi
Stevie Ray Vaughn
Randy Rhoads
Keith Moon
 

Death on Credit

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Do they have to be dead? I think that Roky Erickson's story is pretty tragic, despite still being alive.

At any rate...

1. Joe Strummer (quite frankly, we're lucky that we had him around as long as we did...his condition was such that he could have dropped dead at any moment over the course of his life)
2. John Lennon
3. Johnny Thunders
4. Jimi Hendrix
5. Joey Ramone
6. Syd Barrett
7. Gram Parsons
8. Phil Ochs
9. Brian Jones
10. Buddy Holly

I can't help but thinking that there's someone I'm forgetting.
 

Syd

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1.- Syd Barrett
2.- John Lennon
3.- Jimi Hendrix
4.- Kurt Cobain
5.- Duane Allman
6.- Marc Bolan
7.- Keith Moon
8.- Skip Spence
9.- Ian Curtis
10.- Cliff Burton
 

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