/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Jim Northrup, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers, Montreal Expos, Baltimore Orioles), died from a seizure he was , 71.

James Thomas Northrup nicknamed the “Silver Fox” due to his prematurely graying hair, was a Major League Baseball outfielder and left-handed batter who played for the Detroit Tigers (1964–1974), Montreal Expos (1974) and Baltimore Orioles (1974–75).




(November 24, 1939 – June 8, 2011),

Career overview

Northrup was a good outfielder who played significant percentages of his time in all three outfield positions. Northrup was also the Detroit Tigers' center fielder in the 1968 World Series, as then-manager Mayo Smith famously moved regular center fielder Mickey Stanley to shortstop to replace the weak-hitting Ray Oyler.
An excellent streak hitter and catalyst for Detroit during the 1960s, Northrup was a power hitter who had good strike-zone judgment and a short, quick stroke. In the field, he had a decent arm, a quick release and good accuracy.
Northrup is best remembered for his contributions to the 1968 Detroit Tigers World Series Championship team. Northrup led the 1968 Tigers in hits and RBIs, hit five grand slams, broke up three no-hitters, and had the game-winning triple off Bob Gibson in Game 7 of the 1968 World Series.
In his 12-year major league career Northrup batted .267, with 153 home runs, 610 RBIs, 603 runs, 218 doubles, 42 triples, and 39 stolen bases in 1392 games.[2]

Early years

Northrup was born in Breckenridge, Michigan, a small farm town 25 miles west of Saginaw. Northrup grew up on his grandfather’s farm. Even after the family moved six miles away to St. Louis, Northrup spent his summers and weekends during the winter at his grandparents' farm.[3]
Once a year, Northrup and his father would make a seven-hour drive (before the expressways) to Detroit when the Boston Red Sox came to town. Ted Williams was Northrup’s idol, the “only idol I’ve ever had.”[4] Northrup, however, never saw a complete game as a boy. Rather than pay full price, his father would “wait until the sixth or seventh inning, because then you could give the guy outside a buck or two and you could go out there and watch Ted play.”[4]
After graduating from the St. Louis High School, Northrup stayed close to home for college, attending Alma College, five miles from St. Louis. At Alma College, Northrup was a five-sport star. He was quarterback of the football team, and was named a small college All-American. He was a forward on the basketball team, ran track, and golfed, but Northrup’s great love was baseball. “I was born to play baseball,” said Northrup.
Northrup reportedly turned down offers from the Chicago Bears and the New York Titans and signed with the Tigers in 1961. Northrup spent four years in the minor leagues (1961–1964), playing for the Duluth-Superior Dukes, Decatur, Iowa, Tennessee Smokies, and the Syracuse Chiefs. He was the International League Rookie of the Year in 1964, as he hit .312 with 18 home runs and 92 RBIs.

Detroit Tigers (1964-1967)

Northrup was called up to the Tigers during the last week of the 1964 season, getting one hit in 12 at bats. In 1965, Northrup had a .205 batting average as he appeared in 54 games in the Detroit outfield,[2] competing for playing time with Al Kaline, Don Demeter, Gates Brown, and fellow rookie Willie Horton. In 1966, Northrup won a spot as the Tigers’ starting right fielder, as Kaline moved to center field. Northrup finally showed his abilities as a batter, as he hit 24 doubles, 16 home runs, and ended the season with a .465 slugging percentage.[2] In 1967, competition for a spot in the Detroit outfield intensified as Mickey Stanley proved to be an exceptional defensive player. Northrup played 143 games in the outfield, playing 65 games in left, 94 games in center, and 39 games in right.

1968 Season

Northrup had his most satisfying season in 1968 as he played a key role in the Tigers’ World Series Championship. Northrup played 151 games at all three spots in the Detroit outfield in 1968, including 103 games in right field, many in place of the injured Al Kaline. Northrup had a range factor of 2.17 – well above the league average of 1.80.
But Northrup’s principal value was as a batter. Northrup led the 1968 Tigers in hits with 153 and in RBIs with 90. He was among the American League leaders with 90 RBIs (3rd in the AL), 57 extra base hits (4th in the AL), 259 total bases (5th in the AL), and 29 doubles (5th in the AL).[5]
Northrup played in a rotation of four players at the three outfield positions, with Willie Horton, Mickey Stanley, and Al Kaline being the others. However, for the World Series, the Detroit manager Mayo Smith decided to bring Stanley in from the outfield to play shortstop, giving the Tigers a firm outfield of Horton (left field), Northrup (center field), and Kaline (right field) in all seven of the games.
Northrup also hit five grand slams during the 1968 season, four in the regular season. The first came in May. Then, on June 24, 1968, Northrup hit grand slams in consecutive at bats in the 5th and 6th innings. This made him one of only 13 players (through July 28, 2009) to have hit 2 grand slams in one game, and the second to do so in consecutive at-bats (the first was Jim Gentile in 1961). Five days later, Northrup hit another grand slam, becoming the first major league player to hit three grand slams in a single week. (Larry Parrish later accomplished the feat in 1982.) Northrup’s fifth grand slam came in Game 6 of the 1968 World Series, fueling a 13-1 blowout win for Detroit.[6]
In addition to his grand slam in Game 6, Northrup had the key hit in Game 7 off St. Louis Cardinals’ ace Bob Gibson. After striking out 17 batters in Game 1, and pitching a complete game victory in Game 4, Gibson held the Tigers scoreless through the first six innings of Game 7. Northrup, who had a solo home run against Gibson in Game 4 to account for the Tigers only run off the ace thus far in the Series, came to bat with two men on and two outs in the 7th inning. Northrup hit a triple over center fielder Curt Flood’s head, as Norm Cash and Willie Horton both scored.[7] Bill Freehan followed with a double to score Northrup, and the Tigers won Game 7 and were World Series Champions.
Curt Flood, normally a superb defensive outfielder, was tagged a “goat” for having misplayed Northrup’s Game 7 triple. But Northrup defended Flood: “He slipped a little, but it still went 40 feet over his head. . . . He never had a chance to catch it.”[4]
Northrup played all 7 games of the 1968 World Series, with a .536 slugging percentage, 8 RBIs, 7 hits, 4 runs scored, and 2 home runs.[8] In a 2001 interview, Northrup concluded: “Winning the World Series had to be the highlight of my baseball career.”[9] Northrup placed 13th in the 1968 American League Most Valuable Player voting.

Detroit Tigers (1969-1973)

Northrup had another solid season for the Tigers in 1969, as he raised his batting average to .295 (9th in the AL) and had career highs with 25 home runs and 31 doubles (6th in the AL).[10] On August 28, 1969, Northrup became the first Tiger since Ty Cobb to hit 6-for-6, finishing the game with a 13th-inning game-winning home run over the Tiger Stadium roof.[11]
In 1970, the Tigers dropped to 4th place in their last season under manager Mayo Smith. The Tigers were an aging squad when Billy Martin took over, and Martin sought to light a fire under them. Though Martin turned the Tigers back into contenders in 1971 and 1972, Northrup chafed at Martin’s tactics. Northrup noted: “We got sick and tired of reading Martin say in the papers, ‘I manage good, and they play bad.’ ‘I’d like to bunt, but my players can’t do it.’ . . . It was all, ‘I, I, I,’ and ‘Me, me, me.’ I did not respect him in any way . . .”[3]
In the decisive 5th game of the 1972 American League Championship Series, the mutual dislike between Martin and Northrup may have affected Martin’s judgment. In the 9th inning, the Tigers were trailing 2-1, and Norm Cash was on base. Northrup had one hit already off Vida Blue, but Martin used Mickey Stanley to pinch-hit for Northrup. Stanley hit into a fielder’s choice, and the Tigers lost the ALCS. Northrup remained bitter about Martin’s decision: “Who knows why Martin did what he did? I will say this: Billy Martin put most of us in a frame of mind where he took the fun out of the game.”[3]
In 1973, a 33-year-old Northrup hit .307 –- the highest batting average of his career.[2] Despite his solid hitting, Martin kept Northup on the bench for part of the year. Northrup had played in at least 130 games for the Tigers for 7 straight years, but in 1973 he played in only 119 games. Martin was fired by the Tigers before the 1973 season was over, but Northrup’s time with the Tigers was also nearing an end.

Montreal Expos and Baltimore Orioles (1974-1975)

In August 1974, the Tigers sold Northrup to the Montreal Expos. Northrup played in only 21 games for the Expos before being traded to the Baltimore Orioles in September. Northrup finished his career hitting .274 in 84 games for the Orioles. Northrup retired after the 1974 season. He later noted: “I’d had enough. I’d been away from home too much, and I wasn’t with my kids enough. So that was the end of it.”[3]
Northrup earned $76,000 a year with the Tigers in 1973. Northrup calculated that he earned $418,000 in his 12-year career in the major leagues.

Life after the Major Leagues

After retiring from baseball, Northrup signed with the Detroit Caesars, a professional softball team and played two seasons (1977–1978). The Caesars played in the American Professional Slow Pitch Softball League (APSPL), winning leagues titles in both seasons with Northrup. The team was owned by Mike Ilitch who would later become the owner of the Detroit Tigers. The Caesars had extensive talent from the amateur softball leagues, and both Northrup and fellow former-Tiger Norm Cash played part-time roles.
From 1985-1994, Northrup was a color analyst for the Tigers on the PASS Sports cable television service. He was the CEO of Jim Northrup and Associates, a manufacturer's representative firm in Southfield, Michigan. He was inducted in the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame (2000), and also has been a supporter of many college activities.

Death

Northrup died on June 8, 2011 from a seizure. Longtime friend Bill Wischman said Northrup had been recently admitted to an assisted living facility in Holly, Michigan, 20 miles from his home in Highland. Northrup had been in poor health for some time and had been at the home for about a month because of Alzheimer's disease. In addition to having Alzheimer's, Northrup also battled rheumatoid arthritis for many years, Wischman said. "As ill as he was, he never complained," the friend said. Northrup is survived by his wife Patty; children Kamil, Azaria, Jim, Paige and Kate; and seven grandchildren. [12][13]

 

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Steve Popovich, American record executive, founder of Cleveland International Records died he was , 68.

Steve Popovich was an American record company executive died he was , 68..

(July 6, 1942 – June 8, 2011)

Popovich was born in Nemacolin, Pennsylvania, and in 1962 started in the warehouse at Columbia Records Cleveland
1962-1969 Columbia Records Cleveland - Inventory control, sales desk, local Cleveland sales and radio and TV promotion. Main artists promoted were The Buckinghams, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Billy Joe Royal, Johnny Cash, Paul Revere & the Raiders, Simon & Garfunkel, etc.
1969-1972 Assistant to Ron Alexenburg, Director of Promotion Columbia Records.
1972-1974 at age 26 First VP of Columbia Records promotion and youngest VP at CBS. Appointed by Clive Davis. As VP Promotion his local and regional staff worked to maximize the careers of The Buckinghams, Loggins & Messina, Jerry Vale, O.C. Smith, Dr. Hook & Medicine Show, Shel Silverstein, Boz Scaggs, Paul Revere & the Raiders, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Santana, Janis Joplin, Johnny Cash, Marty Robbins, Lynn Anderson, Tom Rush, David Bromberg, New York Rock Ensemble, Dave Mason, West Bruce Laing, Mahavishnu Orchestra, It's A Beautiful Day, New Riders of the Purple Sage, Johnny Mathis, Chicago, Percy Faith, Tony Bennett, Peter Nero, Earth, Wind & Fire, Taj Mahal, The Manhattans, The Wombles, Mark Lindsay, Tony Bennett, Eric Andersen, Andy Williams, Ray Coniff, David Essex, Chambers Brothers, Miles Davis, Mott the Hoople, Johnny Winter and others.
Promotion Awards: National Promotion Man of the Year 1972-1973 Billboard Magazine as voted by radio.
Clive Davis Award presented to Steve Popovich and Ron Alexenburg for Promotion Excellence.
1974-1976 VP A&R Epic Records working with Epic head, Ron Alexenburg
1974-1976 Epic A&R – Popovich and Alexenburg, and their A&R staff consisting of Greg Geller, Tom Werman, John Boylan, Becky Mancuso-Winding, etc. were instrumental in signing and launching the careers of: Jaco Pastorious, Boston, Cheap Trick, Ted Nugent, Wild Cherry, Suzy and the Red Stripes, Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes, Betty LaVette, ke, Doc Severensen, Joe Tex, Dave Loggins, Michael Murphy, Charlie Rich, The Soul Children and others.
1977-1982 Founder and President of Cleveland International Records whose greatest claim to fame was Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell currently at 40 million records worldwide.[1] The label also found worldwide success with Jim Steinman’s solo album Bad for Good, Ellen Foley Night Out album, BJ Thomas, The Rovers, Michael Kamen/Dick Wagner, Slim Whitman, the Boyzz Too Wild to Tame, Eddie Middleton. Management and/production of Ian Hunter/Mick Ronson and production of Tom Jones, The Iron City Houserockers, Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes and Ronnie Spector. The company’s first single was in 1977 featuring "Say Goodbye to Hollywood", Ronnie Spector & The E Street Band produced by Miami Steve Van Zandt.
1986 SR Vice President Polygram Nashville working with Statler Brothers, Tom T. Hall, and Kathy Mattea and signing Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson, Johnny Paycheck, Frank Yankovic (winner of First Polka Grammy 1986), Wayne Toups & Zydecajun, Donna Fargo, David Lynn Jones, Everly Brothers, and special projects like The Class of ’55 Album featuring Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins.
1995–2011: Cleveland International Records: David Allan Coe, Frank Yankovic, Brave Combo, Eddie Blazonczyk, Singing Nuns, Chas & Dave, Michael Learns to Rock, and Roger Martin.
Popovich has been involved as co-producer and/or label in six Grammy nominations and winner[2] of two.
In 1997 Popovich was inducted into the National Cleveland-Style polka Hall of Fame.[2]
Steve Popovich is also a founding member of the Hit Parade Hall of Fame.

 

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Alan Rubin, American trumpeter (The Blues Brothers), died from lung cancer he was , 68.

Alan Rubin also known as Mr. Fabulous, was an American musician. He played trumpet, flugelhorn, and piccolo trumpet.

(February 11, 1943 – June 8, 2011)


Rubin was a graduate of the Juilliard School of Music. He was a member of the Saturday Night Live Band, with whom he played at the Closing Ceremony of the 1996 Olympic Games. As a member of The Blues Brothers, he portrayed Mr. Fabulous in the 1980 film, the 1998 sequel and was a member of the touring band.

Rubin played with an array of artists, such as Frank Sinatra, Frank Zappa, Duke Ellington, Blood, Sweat and Tears, Eumir Deodato, Sting, Aerosmith, The Rolling Stones, Paul Simon, James Taylor, Frankie Valli, Eric Clapton, Billy Joel, B.B. King, Miles Davis, Yoko Ono, Peggy Lee, Aretha Franklin, James Brown, Ray Charles and Dr. John.

 

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Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Roy Skelton, British actor (Rainbow, Doctor Who), died from a stroke he was , 79..

Roy William Skelton  was an English actor and voice artist, whose voice was more familiar to television viewers than his name died from a stroke he was , 79... Born in Oldham,[1] Lancashire, he provided the voices for many characters on British television for nearly fifty years, most notably the characters of both Zippy and George on Rainbow, which the actor first joined in the early 1970s and performed on until it was axed in 1992.

(20 July 1931 – 8 June 2011)

As well as providing the iconic Rainbow voices, Skelton also voiced several Doctor Who villains including the Daleks, Cybermen and the Krotons.[3]
In 2002, he guest-starred in Sarah Jane Smith: Test Of Nerve, an audio drama produced by Big Finish Productions. In February 2008, he appeared as both Zippy and George in the first episode of the BBC One series Ashes to Ashes.
Skelton died at his home in Brighton, East Sussex, on 8 June 2011, after suffering a stroke.[4] He is survived by his wife Hilary and his two daughters.[1]

 

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Paul Dickson, American football player (St. Louis Rams, Dallas Cowboys, Minnesota Vikings), died from a blood infection he was , 74.



Paul Serafin Dickson was a former defensive tackle and coach in the National Football League died from a blood infection he was , 74.. Over his 12 year career, Dickson played for the Los Angeles Rams, Dallas Cowboys, Minnesota Vikings, and St. Louis Cardinals.

(February 26, 1937 – June 7, 2011)

Football Career

Originally playing as an offensive lineman, Dickson was a first round selection (ninth overall pick) in the 1959 NFL Draft by the Los Angeles Rams out of Baylor University.[1] After the 1959 season, he played the 1960 season for the Dallas Cowboys. Following the 1960 season, he was traded to the Cleveland Browns, but did not play a snap. Before the 1961 season, Dickson was acquired by the Minnesota Vikings along with five other players (including defensive lineman Jim Marshall) for two draft picks in the 1961 NFL Draft and thus became one of the original players in the team's inaugural season.[2] Following the trade, Dickson would be switched from right tackle to defensive tackle - a position he would play for the rest of his career.[3] In practice, Dickson was known for playing at full-speed, much to the irritation of his teammates on the offensive side of the ball.[4] Seven years later, he would help propel the team to Super Bowl IV at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana, losing to the Kansas City Chiefs. After 10 seasons and 129 games with the Vikings, Dickson was released after the 1970 season and played the 1971 season, his last, for the St. Louis Cardinals.
In January 1971, Dickson joined several ex-Viking teammates (including Marshall) and other Minnesota friends in snowmobile excursion that ended in tragedy. Traveling up to Montana's Bear Tooth Pass, a party of 16 became fragmented, and then stranded in a blizzard and had to spend a frigid night in the snow with few provisions. Dickson, Marshall and three others huddled together in a grove of trees, and lit all the cash they had on them -- "Hundreds, twenties, ones, they were all the same denomination: burnable," Marshall said -- in order to start a small fire to keep from freezing. Although everyone would be rescued the next day, Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Hugh Galusha died of hypothermia.[5]

Retirement

After his one season in St. Louis, Dickson, wife Maureen, and sons Scott and Slade returned to Minneapolis, MN to live where he worked in sales, marketing and customer relations for computer companies. He was also a member and president of the Minnesota chapter of the NFL Alumni Association. Dickson died on June 7, 2011 of a blood infection. [6]

 

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Angelino Fons, Spanish film director died he was , 75.

Angelino Fons Fernández was a Spanish film director and screenwriter died he was , 75..

(March 6, 1936, Madrid – June 7, 2011),

Career

Angelino Fons was born on March 6, 1936 in Madrid, just months before the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. He grew up in Murcia and Orihuela, where he moved with his family in 1940, there he studied at the Jesuit school of Santo Domingo in Orihuela, Alicante. He entered the University of Murcia to study Philosophy and Literature. Abandoning his studies at the University of Murcia, Fons returned to Madrid to be trained as a film director and entered the national film school (IIEC), graduating with a specialty in directing in 1960.[1] Closely associated with Carlos Saura during that director first decade as a professional filmmaker, Fons collaborated on a number of Saura’s scripts during the early 1960s, receiving screen credits for La Caza (1966), Peppermint Frappé (1967) and Stress es tres tres (1968), as well as Francisco Requeiros’ Amador (Lover) (1965).[1]
Fons made his own directorial debut in 1966 with La Busca (The Search), a modern day adaptation of a novel written by Pio Baroja, marked by a sense of critical realism reminiscent of Miguel Picazo’s La Tía Tula (Aunt Tula).[1] The Film was extremely well received and, as a result, Fons basked in critical adulation for a number of years as one of the most promising of the young filmmakers of the generation of New Spanish Cinema of the second half of the 1960s. The Search was followed two years later by the mediocre musical Cantando à la Vida (Singing to Life) (1968).[1]
In 1969, Fons began a collaboration with the producer, Emiliano Piedra, directing a weak adaptation of the Perez Galdós novel Fortunata y Jacinta (1969) with the producer’s wife Emma Penella, in the lead. [1] This was followed by La Primera Entrega (The First Delivery) (1971), with even less favorable critical results. Fons directed another Perez Galdós adaptation the following year, Marianella (1972), but it was becoming increasingly apparent to critics and audiences that the promise shown in his first film had largely dissipated.[1] Even a collaboration with Carmen Martí- Gaite, in an adaptation of one of her stories Emilia... parada y fonda (Emilia) (1976), scripted by the novelist herself, did little to alter the apparent downward course of Fon’s filmmaking career.[1] By the early 1980s, Fons was directing cheap comic sexploitation films such as The Cid cabreador (The Vexing Cid) (1983).[1] He retired as film director in the 1980s.

Filmography

 

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Walid Gholmieh, Lebanese musician, director of Conservatoire Libanais died he was , 73

Dr. Walid Georges Gholmieh  was the director of the Le Conservatoire libanais national supérieur de musique or The Lebanese National Higher Conservatory of Music died he was , 73. He was considered one of the most prominent Middle-Eastern conductors and composers.
(1938 – 7 June 2011)
Born in Marjeyoun, Lebanon, Gholmieh initially studied Mathematics at the American University of Beirut before dedicating his education and life to music.
He was the founder of both the Lebanese National Symphony Orchestra and the Lebanese National Arabic Oriental Orchestra.
Established in 2000, the Lebanese National Symphony Orchestra, under the leadership of Dr. Gholmieh, was able to prove itself both locally and regionally. In a period of 25 months, the Orchestra presented more than 60 performances in different cities, including a varied international repertoire by world-renowned classical music composers.
On August 2, 2002, Dr. Gholmieh led the Lebanese National Symphony Orchestra at the Baalbek International Festival.
On April 17, 2006, Dr. Gholmieh led the Lebanese National Orchestra for Oriental Arabic Music in a captivating evening of Arabic music classics at the Abu Dhabi Music & Arts Foundation annual festival.[3]
He has also headed the panel of judges on the Lebanese, television talent show, "Studio el Fan," which is credited for launching the careers of many Lebanese and Arab artists.
Dr. Gholmieh composed the Iraqi national anthem, "Ardulfurataini Watan" (Land of Two Rivers) that was in use from 1979 until 2003.[4]
Walid Gholmieh, was featured on the latest album by Damon Albarn's virtual band, Gorillaz. The album, 'Plastic Beach,' was released on March 9, 2010,With a track called White Flag
Walid Gholmieh died in Beirut, Lebanon, on 7 June 2011 after a long illness.[5]

Awards and prizes

  • Peter and Paul (Medal) (exclusive medal)
  • Chevalier de l’Ordre National du Cèdre (Lebanon)

Academic Record

  • MFA: Conducting
  • MFA: Composition
  • Doctorate: Musicology.

Compositions

Symphonies

  • 1st Symphony: C. Major (Al Qadissiya) “The Symphony of Faith”
  • 2nd Symphony: B.Flat Major (Al Mutanabbi) “The Symphony of Will”
  • 3rd Symphony: G. Major (Al Yarmouk) “The Symphony of Freedom”
  • 4th Symphony: E. Flat Major (Al Chahid- the martyr) “The Symphony of Devotion”
  • 5th Symphony: G. Major (Al Mawakeb- the processions) “dedicated to Jibran Khalil Jibran
  • 6th Symphony: “Al Fajr” (The Dawn).

Musical compositions for theater

  • “ Majdaloun” - Director Roger Assaf
  • “O’rob Ma Yali” - Director Yaacoub Chedraoui
  • “Al- Sitara” - Director Michel Nabaa
  • “Mikhael Neihmé” - Director Yaacoub Chedraoui
  • “Charbel” - Director Raymond Jebara
  • “Al-Tartour” - Director Yaacoub Chedraoui
  • “Bala laeb ya wlad” - Director Yaacoub Chedraoui
  • “Ya Iskandaria Bahrek Ajayeb”- Director Yaacoub Chedraoui
  • Caracalla Dance group. (Several programs).

Musical compositions for Cinema

  • “Secret of life” - documentary - Director Hikmat Saba
  • “The South” - documentary- Director Samir Nasri
  • “Kingdom of the poor” - feature - Director Phillip Akiki
  • “Passport to Oblivion” - feature - Director David Nevin- MGM.
  • “Mawal” - feature - Director Mohammed Salman
  • “Kafarqassem”- feature - Director Burhan Alawiyya.
  • “Beirut Ya Beirut” - feature - Director Maroun Baghdadi
  • “Al- Qadissiya”- feature - Director Salah Abu Seif
  • Educational films for the United Nations.

Program music

  • ”Marjeyoun”
  • “Beirut”
  • “Maraya El-Hanin” ( the life story of the well known writer Mikhael Naimi)
  • أنا الألف” (Ana Al Alifu) first pedagogical concerning the Arabic Alphabet.
  • Birthstone
  • Ethereal

Discography & Publications

  • Odessey “the green train” - 2 hours and 20 minutes- 1st canto - epic in the history of the Lebanese and Arabic music, published by Philips International company.
  • ”Marjeyoun” - published by Philips International company and Polydisc company
  • “Beirut”- published by Philips International company and Polydisc company
  • “Maraya El-Hanin” (the life story of the well known writer Mikhael Naimi)- published by Philips International company and Polydisc company.
  • أنا الألف” (Ana Al Alifu) first pedagogical concerning the Arabic Alphabet.
  • Birthstone- published by Polydisc.
  • Ethereal- published by Polydisc.
  • 1st Symphony: C. Major (Al Qadissiya) “The Symphony of Faith” published by Philips International company and Polydisc company
  • 2nd Symphony: B.Flat Major (Al Mutanabbi) “The Symphony of Will” published by Philips International company and Polydisc company
  • 3rd Symphony: G. Major (Al Yarmouk) “The Symphony of Freedom” published by Philips International company and Polydisc company.
  • 4th Symphony: E. Flat Major (Al Chahid- the martyr) “The Symphony of Devotion” published by Philips International company and Polydisc company.
  • 5th Symphony: G. Major (Al Mawakeb- the processions) “dedicated to Jibran Khalil Jibran” published by Philips Records company and Polydisc company.
  • 6th Symphony: “Al Fajr” (The Dawn).
The first five Symphonies were digitally recorded with the Ukraine National Symphony Orchestra under the BATON of Vladimir Cyrenko in the year 2005.

Research, Treateses

  • On the Lebanese music
  • On the Syrian music
  • On the Libyan music, (Ministry of Culture of Libya from 1965 to 1968)
  • On the Iraqi music, (Iraqi Ministry of Culture from 1975 to 1985).

 

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...