/ Stars that died in 2023

Friday, August 5, 2011

Anthony Herrera, American actor (As the World Turns), died from cancer he was , 57.

Anthony Herrera  was an American actor died from cancer he was , 57..

(born January 19, 1944,Wiggins, Mississippi, died 21 June 2011)

Career

Among roles in various movies, he is most known—and most hated—for his role as the evil James Stenbeck on the soap opera As the World Turns, a role he has played off and on from 1980 to 1984, from 1986 to 1989, in 1996, from 1997 to 1999, in 2001 and 2002-2005. After a three year absence from the show, Herrera reprised the role of Stenbeck in August, 2008.
However, on September 28, 2008 Herrera left once again when Stenbeck fell to what appeared (as of 2009) to have been his final and real death. However, on May 22 of 2009 it was reported that Herrera would return to ATWT in August. Herrera returned to the role of Stenbeck on August 6, 2009 and remained a contract player as of April 2010. Herrera also played Mark Galloway in 1974 and 1975 on the same show. From the fall of 1975 to 1977, he played Jack Curtis, a college professor who cheated on his wife, driving her to obesity, on The Young and the Restless, and played Dane Hammond on Loving from 1984–1986 and again in 1990-1991.

Cancer

Herrera was declared in remission in 1999 from mantle cell lymphoma, an aggressive and normally lethal type of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He relapsed a year later, but by 2004 had been steadily improving, without treatment, when his immune system was renewed as a result of his receiving a bone-marrow transplant from his brother. In 2005, Herrera wrote a book about his experiences, which he titled The Cancer War. According to his official Facebook page and a tweet from former co-star Martha Byrne, he passed away in Buenos Aires on 21 June 2011. [1]

 

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Kothapalli Jayashankar, Indian educator and politician, died after a long illness he was , 76.

 Kothapalli Jayashankar popularly known as Professor Jayashankar (Telugu: జయ శంకర్, was an Indian died after a long illness he was , 76. academic and politician. He was the ideologue of Telangana Movement.[1] He has been fighting for a separate state since 1952.He often stated that unequal distribution of river water was the root cause of separate Telangana movement. He was the former Vice Chancellor of Kakatiya University and an activist in the Separate Telangana Movement.
(6 August 1934 – 21 June 2011)

Early life

K. Jayashankar was born in Akkampet village, Atmakur mandal, Warangal in erstwhile Hyderabad state to Lakshmikantha Rao and Mahalakshmi in Vishwabrahmins community. He did his schooling in Hanamkonda, Warangal and his M.A. in Economics at Banaras Hindu University, M.A. in Economics at Aligarh University and Ph.D. in Economics at Osmania University, and B.Ed. at Osmania University.

Life

During the Nizam rule in Hyderabad state, it was mandatory for all schools to sing a song praising the Nizam, when the headmaster of the Markaji High School in Hanamkonda asked his students to sing the song, K. Jayashankar, then a Class VI student, defied the rule and sang Vandemataram.[5]

Telangana movement

As a young student of intermediatem he walked out of his class in protest against state reorganization in 1952. Then, in 1962, he was part of a campaign which rocked the region. He joined the movement for a separate Telangana state in 1952, when he was a student leader.
As a lecturer, in 1968, he participated in the revived the agitation. He carried out his struggle for Telangana through research and academic studies, and by educating people on the cause. He is known as the original Telangana ideologue. He led several agitations since 1962, transforming into a mass movement after 1969 agitation.
He was associated with the Telangana movement efforts to obtain statehood for Telangana since 1952, stating with Non-Mulki go back and Idli Sambar go back movement. He opposed Vishalandhra in 1954. Professor Jayashankar started Naxals Karmagara Samithi. In 1969 Jayashankar formed a team with ten members to fight for Telangana. He was the only survivor while the others were killed in police firing. He then started Telangana Janasabha. It was banned by the Indian government. He authored a large number of articles and research papers, in English and Telugu, on various aspects of the Telangana Problem.
He was instrumental in forming the Telangana Development Forum (TDF, U.S.A.) in 1999. He was invited by the American Telugu Association (ATA) U.S.A., to speak about the Problems of regional disparities in Andhra Pradesh in July 2000 and July 2002. He was invited by the Telangana Development Forum (TDF) U.S.A. to give a series of lectures on various facets of the Telangana Movement in ten major cities of the United States during July/August 2000.
At the time of his death, he was the Chairman of Centre for Telangana Studies which is engaged in research and publication relating to problems of Telangana. He is the founder member of Telangana Aikya Vedika and was on its Executive Committee.
It was Jayashankar who offered lime juice to the TRS president when the latter broke his famous fast for Telangana in December, 2009.

Teaching career

Professor Jayashankar was Registrar of the then Central Institute of English and Foreign Languages (CIEFL) before being appointed Vice-chancellor of Kakatiya University in 1991.[6][7]
(i) Taught Economics and supervised research at Doctoral Level.
(ii) Made in-depth studies on the problems emanating from regional disparities in the levels of development with special reference to A.P.
(iii)Has to his credit a large number of papers published in the areas of Economic Development and Educational Economics.

Death

He died on 21 June 2011 11.15 AM after battling throat cancer. He did not marry and remained a bachelor all his life. He sacrificed his life in pursuit of a separate Telangana State. He did not marry for the cause of Telangana State. He has an adopted son.

Positions held

(i)Vice Chancellor of Kakatiya University, Warangal (1991–94)
(ii) Registrar of Central Institute of English & Foreign Languages (CIEFL), Hyderabad (1982–91)
(iii)Registrar of Kakatiya University, Warangal (1979–81)
(iv) Principal of CKM College, Warangal (1975–79)
(v)Board of Governors: Central Institute of English & Foreign Languages (CIEFL), Hyderabad
(vi)Board of Governors: Regional Engineering College, Warangal
(vii)Planning Board: Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala
(viii)Andhra Pradesh State Council of Higher Education
(ix)Search Committee: For appointing the Vice Chancellor of Central Institute of English & Foreign Languages (CIEFL), Hyderabad.
(x)Several Working Groups: Constituted by the University Grants Commission
(xi)Senate: Osmania University, Hyderabad
(xii)Academic Council: Osmania University, Hyderabad
(xiii)Senate: Kakatiya University, Warangal
(xiv) Academic Council: Kakatiya University, Warangal
(xv) Academic Senate: Kakatiya University, Warangal
(xvi)Governing Body: SLNS College, Bhongir (also was its Chairman)
(xvii)Governing Body: Lal Bahadur College, Warangal
(xviii)Governing Body: Sardar patel College, Secunderabad
(xix) Advisory Board: Life Insurance Corporation of India
c) Organisational: Served as –
i)President, and also General Secretary: Government College Teachers’ Association, A.P.
ii)General Secretary: Telangana Government College Teachers’ Association
iii)Member of the National Executive: All India Federation of University and College Teachers’ Organisations

 

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Robert Kroetsch, Canadian novelist and poet, died from a car crash he was , 83

Robert Kroetsch, OC was a Canadian novelist, poet and non-fiction writer. In his fiction and critical essays, as well as in the journal he co-founded, Boundary 2, he was the single most influential figure in Canada in introducing ideas about postmodernism died from a car crash he was , 83.

(June 26, 1927 – June 21, 2011)

He was born in Heisler, Alberta.He began his academic career at Binghamton University; after returning to Canada in the mid-1970s he taught at the University of Manitoba. Kroetsch spent several years in Vancouver, British Columbia, before returning to Winnipeg, then to retirement in Alberta, where he continued to write. In 2004 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Bibliography

Novels

  • But We Are Exiles - 1965
  • The Words of My Roaring - 1966
  • The Studhorse Man - 1969 (winner of the 1969 Governor General's Award for Fiction)
  • Gone Indian - 1973
  • Badlands - 1975
  • What the Crow Said - 1978
  • Alibi - 1983
  • The Puppeteer - 1992
  • The Man from the Creeks - 1998

Poetry

  • The Stone Hammer Poems - 1975
  • The Ledger - 1975
  • Seed Catalogue - 1977
  • The Sad Phoenician - 1979
  • The Criminal Intensities of Love as Paradise - 1981
  • Field Notes: Collected Poems - 1981
  • Advice to My Friends - 1985
  • Excerpts from the Real Worlds: A Prose Poem in Ten Parts - 1986
  • Completed Field Notes: The Long Poems of Robert Kroetsch - 1989
  • The Hornbooks of Rita K - 2001 (nominated for a Governor General's Award)
  • The Snowbird Poems - 2004
  • Too Bad: Sketches Toward a Self-Portrait - 2010
  • I'm Getting Old Now- unknown

Other

  • Alberta - 1968
  • The Crow Journals - 1980
  • Labyrinths of Voice: Conversations with Robert Kroetsch - 1982
  • Letter to Salonika - 1983
  • The Lovely Treachery of Words: Essays Selected and New - 1989
  • A Likely Story: The Writing Life - 1995
  • Abundance: The Mackie House Conversations about the Writing Life - 2007 (with John Lent)

 

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Suresh Tendulkar, Indian economist, died from a cardiac arrest he was , 72.

Suresh D. Tendulkar was an Indian economist and former chief of National Statistical Commission. Tendulkar was a member of the Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC) from 2004 to 2008 and as its Chairman from 2008 to 2009 when C. Rangarajan vacated the post to enter the Rajya Sabha  died from a cardiac arrest he was , 72.. He died on 21 June 2011, as a result of cardiac arrest at Aditya Birla Memorial Hospital (ABMH), Pune (India).





(8 May 1939 – 21 June 2011)

Early life

Suresh Tendulkar did his B.Com. from Pune University and came first. He then did M.A. from Delhi School of Economics again coming first. He went on to do his Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University.[3]

Career

Suresh Tendulkar headed committee named as Suresh Tendulkar Committee to look into the people living under poverty line in India.[4] He also served as member of the Reserve Bank of India’s central board of directors. Prof. Tendulkar was known for his extensive work on "Credit and Privatisation policies" and "Indian development issues and policies", including liberalisation and globalisation. He was also a part-time member of the National Statistical Commission (2000-01), the first "Disinvestment Commission" (1996-99), and the Fifth "Central Pay Commission" (1994-97).
Prof. Tendulkar's pioneering contribution was his extensive work on poverty and estimation of people below poverty line (BPL). A committee was formed by government of India in 2009, with Tendulkar as Chairman to 'report on methodology of estimation of poverty'. In 2009, this committee came out with a new method to calculate poverty. According to this method, the number of the poor in India in 2004-05 rose from 27.5 per cent of the total population to 37.2 per cent. [5]
In past, poverty is estimated by measuring calorie intake by individuals. But the Tendulkar committee moved to a wider definition, including spending on food as well as education, health, light(electricity), clothing and footwear.
He was a, visiting fellow, was professor of economics at the Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi, India. To his credit he authored several books like ‘Reintegrating India with the World Economy’ and ‘Understanding Reforms’.

 

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Maria Gomes Valentim, Brazilian supercentenarian, world's oldest person died she was , 114.

Maria Gomes Valentim  was a Brazilian supercentenarian who died at the age of 114 years 347 days. She was the oldest verified living person in the world from the time her age was validated on 18 May 2011 until her death a little more than a month later.[3][2] Valentim was also the only validated supercentenarian from Brazil, and was one of the 30 verified oldest people in history at the time of her death.

(9 July 1896 – 21 June 2011)

Biography

Maria Gomes da Silva was born in Carangola, Minas Gerais, Brazil and lived there her entire life.[2] In 1913, she married João Valentim, who died in 1946.[4][2] Valentim had 1 child, a son, who died at 75, and furthermore had 4 grandchildren, 7 great-grandchildren and 5 great-great-grandchildren. [5][2] She used a wheelchair and was cared for by her granddaughter.[6][7] She died of multiple organ failure on 21 June 2011, at the age of 114 years 347 days; 18 days shy of her 115th birthday.[1][2]

Longevity records

  • On 4 November 2010 Eugénie Blanchard died, Maria Gomes Valentim aged 114 years 118 days became the oldest living person in the world. Prior to Valentim's validation as the world's oldest living person by Guinness World Records, it was thought that Besse Cooper and Eunice Sanborn had been the oldest living people since the death of Blanchard.

 

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Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Ryan Dunn, American reality television star (Jackass, Viva La Bam), died from a car accident.he was , 34

Ryan Matthew Dunn was an American reality television personality and daredevil best known for being a member of the Jackass and Viva La Bam crew. He hosted Homewrecker and Proving Ground. A member of the CKY Crew, Dunn played the main character in Bam Margera's 2003 film Haggard: The Movie, which was based on a failed relationship Dunn had experienced. He died, aged 34, in a car crash in West Goshen Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania.

(June 11, 1977 – June 20, 2011) 


Early years

Dunn was born in Medina, Ohio, the son of Linda and Ronald Dunn. He grew up in Williamsville, New York, before moving to West Chester, Pennsylvania, with his parents in his early teens. He first came to public attention while appearing in four videos alongside his friends in the CKY Crew, which stood for "Camp Kill Yourself".[2]

Career

Dunn took part in the characteristic stunts that made Jackass famous. While taping a skit for Jackass: The Movie, Dunn was driving a golf cart with Johnny Knoxville as his passenger. The idea was that he would launch the golf cart over a sandtrap and into a plastic statue of a giant pig, and the statue would be crushed. However, the statue did not crush, but instead forced the golf cart into the air and it landed upside down. Dunn was thrown from the cart, and Knoxville landed on his neck with the cart on top of him. In the commentary for the movie, Bam Margera noted Dunn's bad driving. Another skit in Jackass: The Movie featured Dunn placing a toy car into his rectum. The car was placed inside a condom and was covered in lubricant. He then visited a doctor and complained of pain in his tailbone. An x-ray session revealed that a small car was lodged in his body bringing surprise to the doctor. Dunn was featured in Jackass Number Two.[citation needed]
In 2006, Dunn and Bam Margera participated in the Gumball 3000 road rally in Margera's Lamborghini Gallardo.[3] He later went on a tour with Don Vito called "The Dunn and Vito Rock Tour" for which the DVD was released on March 20, 2007.[4] Dunn and Margera again participated in the rally in 2008.
Bam Margera stated during a December 2, 2008, radio interview with Big O and Dukes of 106.7 WJFK-FM, that he and Dunn would be going to Italy to film Where the F*%# are my Ancestors.[5] That same month, Dunn appeared on the episode "Smut" of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit in December 2008. He is also featured in a movie called Street Dreams which was released in spring 2009. He co-starred along with Rob Dyrdek and Paul Rodriguez Jr.
Dunn was also working on a show with fellow Jackass star Bam Margera about them traveling the world in ten episodes of a Viva la Bam-like show called Bam's World Domination for Spike. He appeared in Jackass 3D, which was released on October 15, 2010.[6] Dunn hosted G4's Proving Ground along with Jessica Chobot, which made its premiere on June 14, 2011, six days before his death.[7] However, according to a G4 spokesperson, the channel has decided to not to air any further episodes. The spokesperson also added, "The show is off the schedule as of today until we discuss next steps".[8]
On June 27, G4 announced they will air the remaining episodes. The show will resume on July 19, 2011.[9][10]

Death

On June 20, 2011, at around 3:30 a.m. EDT, Dunn and Zachary Hartwell, a production assistant on Jackass Number Two,[11] died when Dunn's Porsche 911 GT3 came off the road and hit a tree in West Goshen Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania.[12][13] Hours before the accident, Dunn had posted a photo to his Twitter account of himself and Hartwell drinking at a West Chester bar.[14] Dunn was identified in the police report as the vehicle's driver,[15] and a subsequent toxicology report showed Dunn had a blood alcohol level of 0.196% — more than twice the state's legal limit of 0.08%.[16] Police stated that speed may have been a factor in the accident,[15] and preliminary investigations suggested that the car had been traveling between 132 and 140 miles per hour (212 and 230 km/h) in a 55 miles per hour (89 km/h) zone.[17][18]
The Tuesday after Dunn's death, Bam Margera visited the crash site for the first time and broke down crying.[19] The following day, Dunn's Jackass co-stars Johnny Knoxville and Bam Margera, along with Phil Margera, April Margera, Jeff Tremaine and Bam's wife Missy Margera attended a private memorial service held in West Chester, Pennsylvania.[20]


Works

Television
DVDs and videos
Films
Music

 

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Ottilie Patterson Irish singer. died she was , 79.

Ottilie Patterson was a Northern Irish blues singer best known for her performances and recordings with the Chris Barber Jazz Band in the late 1950s and early 1960s died she was , 79..

(31 January 1932 – 20 June 2011)

Biography

Anna Ottilie Patterson was born in Comber, County Down, Northern Ireland on 31 January 1932 and died on 20 June 2011. She was the youngest child of four. Her father, Joseph Patterson, was from Northern Ireland, and her mother, Jūlija Jēgers, was from Latvia. Both sides of the family were musical, and Ottilie trained as a classical pianist from the age of eleven, but never received any formal training as a singer. [1]
In 1949 Ottilie went to study art at Belfast College of Technology, where a fellow student introduced her to the music of Bessie Smith, Jelly Roll Morton, and Meade Lux Lewis. [2] In 1951 she began singing with Jimmy Compton's Jazz Band, and in August 1952 she formed the Muskrat Ramblers with Al Watt and Derek Martin.
In the summer of 1954 while holidaying in London Ottilie met Beryl Bryden, who introduced her to the Chris Barber Jazz Band.[3]
She joined the Barber band full-time on January 1, 1955 and her first public appearance was at the Royal Festival Hall on January 9, 1955. Between 1955 and 1962 Ottilie toured extensively with the Chris Barber Jazz Band and issued many recordings: those featuring her on every track include the EPs Blues (1955), That Patterson Girl (1955), That Patterson Girl Volume 2 (1956), Ottilie (1959), and the LP Chris Barber's Blues Book (1961); she also appeared on numerous Chris Barber records.
From 1963 or so she began to suffer throat problems and ceased to appear and record regularly with Chris Barber, officially retiring from the band in 1973. During this period she recorded some non-jazz/blues material such as settings of Shakespeare (with Chris Barber) and in 1969 issued a solo LP 3000 years with Ottilie which is now much sought by collectors.
In early 1983 Ottilie and Chris Barber gave a series of concerts around London, which were recorded for the LP Madame Blues and Doctor Jazz (1984). This is her most recently issued recording.

Discography

Dates below are issue dates - if the recording date is very different it is noted. Deleted CDs have the catalogue number
struck through.
The principal source for this discography is Bielderman and Purser's Chris Barber discography.[4]

Singles

  • St Louis Blues / The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise (Decca FJ 10724) (1955) (OP on first side only)
  • I Hate A Man Like You / Reckless Blues (Decca F 10472) (1955)
  • Weeping Willow Blues / Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out (Decca F 10621) (1955)
  • Kay-Cee Rider / I Love My Baby (Pye 7N 15109) (1957)
  • Jailhouse Blues / Beale Street Blues (Pye 7NJ 2015) (1958)
  • Trombone Cholly / Lawdy, Lawdy Blues (Pye 7NJ 2025) (1958)
  • There'll Be A Hot Time In The Old Town Tonight / Lonesome (Si Tu Vois Ma Mere) (Columbia DB 4333) (1959) (OP on first side only)
  • The Mountains Of Mourne / Real Old Mountain Dew (Columbia DB 4531) (1960)
  • Blueberry Hill / I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby (Columbia DB 4760) (1961)
  • Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean / Swipsy Cakewalk (Columbia SCD 2156) (1962) (OP on first side only)
  • Down By The Riverside / When The Saints Go Marching In (Columbia DB 4817) (1962)
  • I Hate Myself / Come On Baby (Columbia DB 4834) (1962)
  • Jealous Heart / Won't Be Long (Columbia DB 7140) (1963)
  • Baby Please Don't Go / I Feel So Good (Columbia DB 7208) (1964) (with Sonny Boy Williamson II)
  • Hello Dolly / I Shall Not Be Moved (Columbia DB 7297) (1964) (OP on first side only)
  • Tell Me Where Is Fancy Bred / Oh Me What Eyes Hath Love Put In My Head (Columbia DB 7332) (1964)
  • Spring Song / Sound Of The Door As It Closes (Marmalade 598 016) (1969)
  • Bitterness Of Death / Spring Song (Marmalade 598 020) (1969)
  • Careless Love / The Georgia Grind (Fat Hen FM 001) (1982)

EPs

  • That Patterson Girl (Jazz Today JTE 102) (1955)
  • Blues (Decca DFE 6303) (1956)
  • That Patterson Girl Volume 2 (Pye Jazz Today NJE 1023) (1956)
  • Ottilie (Columbia SEG 7915) (1960)
  • Ottilie Swings The Irish (Columbia SEG 7998) (1960)

Solo LPs

  • Ottilie's Irish Night (Pye NPL 18028) (1959)
  • 3000 years with Ottilie (Marmalade 608 011) (1969)
  • Spring Song (Polydor 2384 031) (1969)
  • Back In The Old Days (Timeless CBJBLP 4001) (1988) (recorded 1959-1962)

LPs with Chris Barber

  • Chris Barber Plays (Jazz Today JTL 3) (1955) (OP on 2 tracks)
  • Echoes Of Harlem (Pye Nixa NJL 1) (1955) (OP on 2 tracks)
  • Chris Barber In Concert (Pye Nixa NJL 6) (1957) (OP on 3 tracks)
  • Chris Barber Plays Volume Four (Pye Nixa NJT 508) (1957) (OP on 2 tracks)
  • Chris Barber In Concert Volume Two (Pye Nixa NJL 15) (1958) (OP on 2 tracks)
  • Chris Barber In Concert Volume Three (Pye Nixa NJL 17) (1958) (OP on 4 tracks)
  • Chris Barber Band Box Volume One (Columbia 33SX1158) (1959) (OP on 2 tracks)
  • Barber in Berlin (Columbia 33SX1189) (1960) (OP on 1 track)
  • Chris Barber's Blues Book Volume One (Columbia 33SX1333) (1961) (OP on all 12 tracks)
  • Chris Barber at the London Palladium (Columbia 33SX1346) (1961) (OP on 2 tracks)
  • Best Yet! Chris Barber Band Box - Volume Three (Columbia 33SX1401) (1962) (OP on 3 tracks)
  • Chris Barber Jazz Band (Qualiton LPX 7195) (1962) (OP on 3 tracks)
  • Chris Barber's Jazz Band In Prague (Supraphon ST 65101) (1963) (OP on 4 tracks)
  • Folk Barber Style (Decca LK 4742) (1965) (OP on 3 tracks)
  • Good Mornin' Blues (Columbia 33SX1657) (1965) (OP on 5 tracks)
  • Chris Barber V Praze (Panton 01 0273) (1971) (OP on 6 tracks)
  • The Chris Barber Jubilee Album 1 (Black Lion BLP 12124/5) (1975) (OP on 1 track, recorded 1958)
  • The Chris Barber Jubilee Album 2 (Black Lion BLP 12126/7) (1975) (OP on 4 tracks, recorded 1958-1964)
  • The Chris Barber Jubilee Album 3 (Black Lion BLP 12128/9) (1975) (OP on 4 tracks, recorded 1970)
  • Madame Blues & Doctor Jazz (Black Lion BLM 51101) (1984) (OP on all 9 tracks)

Other LPs featuring Ottilie Patterson

  • 12th International Jazz Festival Ljubljana 71 (Suzy LP 303) (1971) (OP on 1 track)
  • Muddy Waters In Concert 1958 (Krazy Kat KK 7405) (1982) (with Muddy Waters, OP on 1 track, recorded 1958)

CDs

  • Ottilie Patterson with Chris Barber's Jazzband 1955-1958 (Lake LACD30) (1993) (OP on all 18 tracks, recorded 1955-1958)
  • Madame Blues & Doctor Jazz (Black Lion BLCD760506) (1994) (OP on all 9 tracks, recorded 1983)
  • 40 Years Jubilee (Timeless CD TTD 586) (1994) (OP on 9 tracks, recorded 1955-1956)
  • The Chris Barber Concerts (Lake LACD55/56) (1995) (OP on 9 tracks, recorded 1956-1958)
  • Chris Barber's Blues Book Volume One / Good Mornin' Blues (BGO BGOCD380) (1997) (OP on 17 tracks, 12 recorded 1960, 5 recorded 1964)
  • Echoes of Harlem / Sonny, Brownie and Chris (Lake LACD87) (1997) (OP on 2 tracks, recorded 1955)
  • Back In The Old Days (Timeless CBJBCD 4001 or CBJCCD 4001) (1999) (OP on all 18 tracks, recorded 1959-1962)
  • Ottilie Patterson with Chris Barber (Jazz Colours 874742-2) (2000) (OP on all 12 tracks, 9 recorded 1983, 1 recorded 1958, 1 recorded 1964, 1 recorded 1970)
  • Chris Barber at the BBC (Upbeat URCD158) (2000) (OP on 4 tracks, recorded 1963)
  • Chris Barber's Jazz Band With Special Guest Sister Rosetta Tharpe (Lake LACD130) (2000) (with Sister Rosetta Tharpe, OP on 1 track, recorded 1957)
  • Irish Favourites (Pulse PLS CD 166) (2001) (OP on 8 tracks, recorded 1958)
  • The Best Of Chris Barber's Jazz Band (EMI 7243 5 40181 2 1) (2002) (OP on 5 tracks, recorded 1964)
  • In Barber's Chair (Lake LACD185) (2003) (OP on 3 tracks, recorded 1960-1962)
  • Bandbox No. 1 (Lake LACD194) (2004) (OP on 5 tracks, recorded 1959-1960)
  • The Nixa Jazz Today Albums (Sanctuary CMBXBX 981) (2004) (OP on 15 tracks, recorded 1955-1958)
  • International Concerts: Berlin, Copenhagen, London (Lake LACD210D) (2005) (OP on 3 tracks, recorded 1959-1961)
  • Best Yet! (Lake LACD219) (2005) (OP on 7 tracks, recorded 1961-1962)
  • The Complete Decca Sessions 1954/55 (Lake LACD141D) (2006) (OP on 5 tracks, recorded 1955)
  • Chris Barber 1955 (Lake LACB235) (2006) (OP on 2 tracks, recorded 1955)
  • Folk Barber Style (Vocalion CDLF 8118) (2006) (OP on 3 tracks, recorded 1964)
  • That Patterson Girl (Lake LACD244) (2007) (OP on all 23 tracks, recorded 1955-1963)
  • Chris Barber 1956 (Lake LACD246) (2007) (OP on 3 tracks, recorded 1956)

 

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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...