/ Stars that died in 2023

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Joe Lee Wilson, American jazz singer died he was , 75


 Joe Lee Wilson was an American gospel-influenced jazz singer, originally from Bristow, Oklahoma died he was , 75. His voice is best recognized from several Archie Shepp albums recorded for Impulse! Records.



(December 22, 1935 - July 17, 2011)

Biography

Wilson was born to farming parents in Bristow. He was part African American and part Creek Native American.
As his band's name, Joy of Jazz, suggests, Wilson's baritone personified the life-affirming nature of jazz and blues. Seeing Billie Holiday perform in 1951 began his interest in a career in music industry. He studied in Los Angeles before touring the West Coast, where he sat in with Sarah Vaughan, and down to Mexico. In New York in the 1960s, he worked with Sonny Rollins, Lee Morgan, Miles Davis, Pharoah Sanders and Jackie McLean; during the 1970s, he operated a jazz performance loft in New York's NoHo district known as the Ladies' Fort at 2 Bond Street. His regular band, Joe Lee Wilson Plus 5, featured the alto saxophonist Monty Waters (from Modesto, California) and for several years the Japanese guitarist, Ryo Kawasaki, before the latter left to lead his own group. Archie Shepp, and Eddie Jefferson were frequent collaborators at these sessions.
He also sang with Eddie Jefferson, Freddie Hubbard, and Kenny Dorham. He recorded a live radio program at WKCR-FM, Columbia University, on July 16, 1972, which was released as an album, Livin' High Off Nickels & Dimes, on the short-lived Oblivion Records in New York. Wilson's rendition of "Jazz Ain't Nothing But Soul" was a radio hit on New York jazz radio in 1975.
While based in Paris, Tokyo and the United Kingdom, he recorded regularly with the American pianist Kirk Lightsey, including the Candid recording Feelin’ Good. One of his last albums was an Italian recording with Riccardo Arrighini and Gianni Basso, Ballads for Trane (Philology W707.2).
Wilson was inducted into the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame in November of 2010, where he gave his last public performance.

Discography

As leader

  • 1969: Without a Song (Inner City)
  • 1974: Livin' High Off Nickels & Dimes (Oblivion)
  • 1976: Shout For Trane (Whynot)
  • 1977: Secrets from the Sun (Sun)
  • 1992: Acid Rain (with Kirk Lightsey (p), Jack Gregg (b), Sangoma Everett (dr))
  • 2008: Ballads for Trane (Philology)
  • 2008: I Believe (Philology)

As sideman

With Archie Shepp

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Milo Anstadt, Dutch journalist and writer died he was , 91.


 Samuel Marek (Milo) Anstadt was a Dutch Jewish writer and journalist died he was , 91.

(July 10, 1920 - July 16, 2011),

Biography

Andstadt was born and lived in Lwów (Poland, nowadays Lviv in Ukraine) until 1930. At the age of 10, Milo, his parents and sister Sera emigrated to Holland.[1] In Holland, he completed primary school but did not go to secondary school.[2]
When Anstadt was fourteen years old, he worked for the Transformatorfabriek Besra in Amsterdam, he often went to ANSKI a cultural club for mostly Jewish eastern European immigrants where you could assist at political and other lectures and all kind of performances, where he also received mentoring and was helped to become more spiritually developed. Later, he received a masters degree in law from the University of Amsterdam, specializing in criminology.
In 1941, he married Lydia Bleiberg, and they had a daughter Irka in March 1942. After a warning in the evening of the 9th of July 1942, they had to go immediately into hiding. Their daughter was taken afterwards to a foster family in Beverwijk by the Resistance.
From 1945 to 1950, he was an editor of the magazine Vrij Nederland. Next, he worked as a journalist with the Dutch Radio Union, and wrote the spoken parts of 1955 documentary programs for television such as In, Televisierechtbank, Spiegel der Kunsten ("Mirror of Arts") and Bezetting ("Occupation"). For the latter two, he received the 1960 Television Award of the Prince Bernhard Foundation. In 1960, he was commissioned by Wereldvenster Publishing to write a book about Poland. It was published in 1962 under the title Polen, land, volk, cultuur.
As an employee of NRC Handelsblad, Anstadt wrote a large number of opinion articles. In 1994, he was appointed as a knight in the Order of Orange Nassau. He died in Amsterdam.

Bibliography

Anstadt's works include:
  • Op zoek naar een mentaliteit
  • Met de rede der wanhoop
  • Kind in Polen
  • Polen en Joden
  • Jonge jaren
  • De verdachte oorboog
  • Servië en het westen
  • En de romans De opdracht
His novels include:
  • Niets gaat voorbij
  • De wankele rechtsgang van Albert Kranenburg

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Bertalan Bicskei, Hungarian footballer and coach died he was , 66


Bertalan Bicskei was a football goalkeeper and coach.

(17 September 1944 – 16 July 2011)

Active career

As a youth player, he played for the most famous Hungarian club side, Ferencvaros, and he also honed his skills in Honved and MTK Budapest, both Premier Division Hungarian sides. As a goalkeeper of great talent, he played many games for the National Youth Team of Hungary, as well as the 13 and A senior National teams. After his playing days were over, he devoted much of his time to coaching and teaching young soccer players on the highest level.

Team manager

From 1977 to 1982, he worked as the coaching director for the MTK Budapest's youth programme, and from 1982 to 1986 he was the Youth Coach Director for the Hungarian national football team. As one of his greatest achievements on that level, under his coaching and guidance, the Under-18 National Team of Hungary, captured the European Youth Championship in Moscow, in 1984.
Before moving on to the senior level, Bicskei successfully completed the, work, and graduated at the world renowned soccer academy in Cologne, Germany in 1986. He is one of just a few Hungarian-born coaches who was able to earn one of the most respected coaching diplomas in the world. While in Germany, he also studied philosophy, and learned to speak excellent German.
In 1987/88 Bicskei become head coach of Honved Budapest, (that year, Honved won the National title and the Hungarian cup) and his professional career was off to a flying start. In 1999/90 he, was selected to coach the senior national team of Hungary. In 1991 he could not refuse a challenging offer from South Korea and he become head coach of Daewoo Royals. Under his direction, the club won the national title, national cup, and he was voted, coach of the year in South Korea. From 1992 to 1994 he coached club FC Luzern[1] in Switzerland. In the 1995/96 he returned home briefly to coach MTK Budapest.
Bicskei packed his suitcase again in 1995, this time to Saudi Arabia where he coached the Al-Riyadh club in the 1995/96 seasons. During his stay in Saudi Arabia, he started working on his book, "Preparation of Young Footballs", a soccer achievement that not only complements, but also challenges everything that was written thus far on teaching young soccer players to achieve the highest level. After returning home, he coached Honved Budapest once again, 1996/97 seasons, and he was technical director at RABA ETO Gyor in the 1998/99 seasons.
Between 1998 and 2001 he served his second stint as the national coach of Hungary,[2] later becoming the technical director of the Hungarian Football Federation between 2006 and mid-2008.
In the second half of 2004, the Football Association of Malaysia selected Bertalan Bicskei, to succeed Allan Harris. Bicskei led the national side to third place at the regional Tiger Cup competition, but was demoted to youth development duties by FAM for his actions during a friendly against Singapore in Penang on 8 June 2005. Bicskei, disgusted by the standard of officiating, threw a bottle onto the pitch before confronting a Singapore player. In September 2005 the contract was terminated after mutual agreement.
Bicksei was given the job of Liberia's national coach in July 2010 on a four-year contract, but had to take a leave of absence in February 2011 after being poisoned in Liberia.[3]
He has an adopted son called Wilson.

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Rouhollah Dadashi Iranian powerlifter and bodybuilder, was stabbed and died he was , 30.

Rouhollah Dadashi was an Iranian Powerlifter, Bodybuilder and Strongman, competing for Iran in international strongman competitions was stabbed and died he was , 30. 

(January 24, 1982 - July 16, 2011)


He participated five times in Iran's Strongest Man competition,[8] reaching the final round each time, and becoming the champion twice (2009 and 2010). [9]
Dadashi was stabbed and killed on 16 July 2011, 11:45 p.m in a fight which started as an argument with another driver and his passengers.[10][11] On 17 July 2011, two of the killers were arrested by the police in the city of Karaj. The third and main murderer was arrested the next day while trying to escape the city.
Thousands of people attended Dadashi's burial ceremony. He was buried in Imamzadeh Mohammad in Karaj on 18 July 2011.[12]

 

To see more of who died in 2010 click here

Cesare Mazzolari, Italian-born South Sudanese Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Rumbek (since 1998) died he was , 74.


Cesare Mazzolari (or: Caesar Mazzolari,) was the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rumbek, in the newly-independent Republic of South Sudan died he was , 74..

(9 February 1937–16 July 2011)

Bishop Mazzolari was born Feb. 9, 1937 in Brescia, Italy. He joined the Comboni Missionaries, and on 17 March 1962 was ordained a priest in San Diego, USA. His mission brought him to Cincinnati, in the United States, where he worked among African American and Mexican American miners.
In 1981, in response to the invitation of Bishop Joseph Gasi, he was appointed by his Comboni Congregation to the Diocese of Tombura-Yambio then the south-central Archdiocese of Juba, Southern Sudan. He was then aged 44. In that diocese, he worked in Nzara parish as curate and he was a sought-after Spiritual Director at St. Joseph’s Minor Seminary at Rimenze, Yambio. From there, he went to Juba to serve as Comboni Provincial of Southern Sudan for six years.
In 1990, he was appointed Apostolic Administrator of the war-torn Diocese of Rumbek (Southern Sudan). He zealously set to work, re-opening missions and negotiating humanitarian assistance and the freedom of very young slaves. That same year, he helped free 150 child slaves.
He rebuilt the Diocese of Rumbek almost from scrap, as the two Southern Sudanese Secession Wars (1955-1973 and 1083-2005) had devastated the country and the Government of Khartoum had expelled all foreign missionaries from the country in the 1960ies. In 1991, he reopened the mission of Yirol, the first of many, some of which subsequently had to be abandoned during the protracted Second Sudanese Civil War. In 1994 he was captured and held hostage for 24 hours by guerrillas of the SPLA (Sudan People's Liberation Army), the separatist armed group fighting against the Khartoum government. On 6 January 1999 he was ordained a bishop by Pope John Paul II. [1][2][3]
He took to heart the mandate given to him on that day by the Holy Father, John Paul II, namely, to relieve “a people who have suffered too much for too long” from “the anguish of an unjust war” and “to help them to restore the dignity of their human rights.” And indeed, his years as Bishop of Rumbek reflect his faithfulness to this extraordinary and challenging mission.
Bishop Mazzolari promoted formal and informal education through the establishment of learning institutions. He coordinated the provision of health services. He passionately responded to human need at every level. And to answer the educational, health, pastoral and humanitarian needs of the geographically vast diocese, he went beyond the borders of Sudan to seek help from religious congregations worldwide. Today every continent is represented in the Diocesan personnel of Rumbek Diocese. He also worked tirelessly to promote reconciliation among our people, always optimistic and courageous in the face of often apparently insurmountable obstacles.
On Saturday, July 9, 2011, Bishop Mazzolari joyfully witnessed the birth of the Republic of South Sudan when he presided over the official opening prayer during the Independence Day celebration at Freedom Square in Rumbek. This event was also a culmination of his unique pastoral initiative, Ten Steps to Unity in South Sudan.
Bishop Mazzolari died a week after those events on 16 July 2011, at the age of 74, while concelebrating a Mass; he abruptly gasped for air and clutched at his chest and fell back, leading many to believe his death was from cardiopulmonary disease-related causes. He was widely mourned and appreciated for having seen the region and the country through the war, to the cessation of much of the hostilities, and finally to independence.[4]

     

    To see more of who died in 2010 click here

    John Crook, British ethnologist died he was , 80.

    John Hurrell Crook, BSc, PhD, DSc was a British ethologist who filled a pivotal role in British primatology died he was , 80.

    (27 November 1930 – 15 July 2011)

    As Reader in Ethology (animal behaviour) in the Psychology Department, Bristol University, he led a research group studying social and reproductive behaviour in birds and primates throughout the 1970s-80s, turning to the socio-psychological anthropology of Himalayan peoples in the 1990s.[2] In his later years he was the Teacher of the Western Chan Fellowship.[3]

    Early life

    He was educated at Oakmount School, Southampton and Sherborne School, Dorset.
    He completed his National Service in Hong Kong, where he first encountered Chinese Zen (Chan) Buddhism.[4]

    Academic career

    Crook was a pioneer in the early development of socio-ecology, adding this dimension to ethology which was then dominated by the ideas of Niko Tinbergen and Konrad Lorenz. His student paper on the gulls of Southampton Water[5] while at University College, Southampton, led to his doctoral study at Jesus College, Cambridge[6] of the weaver birds (Ploceinae) of West Africa, supervised by William Thorpe and Robert Hinde. This was followed by further research in India, the Seychelles Islands and East Africa. His theoretical interpretation subsequently contributed to David Lack’s discussion of the behavioural component in avian population research.[7] His fieldwork was further supported by laboratory experimentation on the endocrinal basis for the behaviour observed in the field.[8]
    After moving to Bristol University, he collaborated with Professor K.R.L. Hall in establishing a centre for primate studies, extending socio-ecological principles to primates,[9] supervising doctoral projects and leading field research in Ethiopia on the Gelada Baboon and in Morocco on the Barbary Macaque, subsequently developed by Robin Dunbar and John Deag respectively.
    His year[10] as Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University in California introduced him to the new techniques of humanistic psychotherapy. On return to Bristol, his students requested him to demonstrate these methods, leading to the creation of the Bristol Encounter Centre and to his teaching of the subject widely in the UK, especially based on workshops run at his retreat centre in mid Wales.
    In 1977 Crook led an expedition to Zanskar in the Ladakh Himalayas, a pilot study focussing on polyandrous marriage.[11] For several years, he and colleagues led further expeditions studying the geology, agriculture, social and family life and monastic practices in this remote, high-altitude region.[12] He later returned with James Low, a Tibetologist fluent in the texts and language, to study the lives of Buddhist hermits in the mountains.[13]
    Retiring early, he began practicing Zen Buddhism in intensive retreats taught in New York by Chan Master Sheng Yen of Dharma Drum Monastery, Taiwan, who in 1993 transmitted to him the authority to teach Chinese Zen.[14] Forming the Western Chan Fellowship with colleagues, Crook developed a programme of retreats adapted to Western Zen practitioners.
    Crook published around a hundred scientific papers in ornithology, ethology and evolutionary psychology, and several books focussing on consciousness[15] and Zen practice.[16] His last work was World Crisis and Buddhist Humanism (New Age Books, Delhi 2009).
    He died on 15 July 2011, shortly after a gathering of many former students and colleagues in Somerset to celebrate his life. Dr Innes Cuthill, Professor of Behavioural Ecology at Bristol University, described him as "a pivotal figure in the rise of British primatology and socio-ecology".[1]

    Honours


     

    To see more of who died in 2010 click here

    Cuddly Dudley, British rock and roll singer, died from natural causes he was , 87.

    Cuddly Dudley (born Dudley Heslop in Kingston, Jamaica) was an English rock & roll singer, and actor, who came to fame on the Oh Boy! TV series, and is noted for being “Britain's first black rock & roller” died from natural causes he was , 87..

    Early career

    Born in Kingston, Jamaica, probably in 1929[2] (although Allmusic[3] says the 1930s) he started performing when very young with a "native song and dance act" for tourists. In 1947 he went to Britain where he spent a year in the play Sauce Tartare at the Cambridge Theatre in the West End, before singing in clubs for 6 months. He then played in Folies Bergeres at the Hippodrome, London and toured Australia in Cole Porter's Kiss Me, Kate, before joining Sid Milward's Comedy orchestra, The Nit Wits, supporting Max Bygraves.[2]
    By the mid-1950s Dudley was recording for Oriole Records,[3] as part of the Charles Ross Orchestra, and adopted the nickname Cuddly Dudley,[4] playing on his slightly round figure. He toured New Zealand and Switzerland with Charles Ross, then joined Mambo bandleader Perez Prado to tour Italy, before returning to the West End with Plaisirs de Paris at the Prince of Wales Theatre.[2]
    Dudley was influenced by early rock 'n' roll and, being black, with a strong voice, decided to change musical style. His manager, Guy Robinson, promoted him as "Bristol's answer to The Big Bopper"[4] and he adopted a big grin, flashy suits and snazzy ties. He was also a co-founder of The Dominoes, with pianist Iggy Quail and vocalist Boysie Grant. [5]
    Although he was little known outside Afro-Caribbean circles, within this community he was as popular as any other rock & roll performer, which led to his manager persuading Jack Good to give him a residency on Good's new TV series Oh Boy!.[1]

    Oh Boy!

    Dudley appeared on both pilot recordings of Oh Boy! (T1 & T2) as Dudley Heslop, but changed back to Cuddley Dudley, before the main series started.[6] He was usually backed by the house band, Lord Rockingham's XI and appeared in a total of 21 episodes, the most appearances by any artist, one more than Cliff Richard, whilst The Drifters (who became The Shadows) and Marty Wilde appeared on 17 shows each.[6] His first recordings as Cuddly Dudley were on the TV spin-off album Oh Boy! (Parlophone 1958), where he sang "Hey Hey Hey Hey" (later covered by The Beatles) and "Lets Rock While the Rocking's Good".[4] A solo single "Later" b/w "Lots More Love" was released in 1959, and in 1960 he appeared, as himself, in the film Girls of the Latin Quarter, directed by Alfred Travers and starring Jill Ireland, which was filmed in the London branch of the nightclub Latin Quarter. He also deputised for Cliff Richard, appearing at several concerts when Cliff was ill.[4]

    Later career

    After the demise of Oh Boy! in May 1959, he began touring with his own all-black band, The Embraceable Four, with whom he supported The Platters on their 1960 UK tour, and released a second single, a cover of Chuck Berry's "Too Pooped To Pop".
    In 1961 he became the lead singer with “The Redcaps”, with whom he released a single "Sitting On A Train". Originally known as "Red-E-Lewis And The Redcaps" (named after Gene Vincent's The Blue Caps) original lead singer Reddy Lewis (Edward Stubbs) had left to form the Red Cats, with Jimmy Page on guitar. The Redcaps comprised Mick Green, Vic Cooper, Frank Farley, Johnny Patto and Johnny Spence, and from May–July 1961 Reddy Lewis returned, but Dudley remained lead vocalist.[7] Farley, Patto and Spence left to become The Pirates backing Johnny Kidd (who had the same manager as Dudley),[8] when the original Pirates “jumped ship”. Green, The Redcaps other guitarist, joined the Pirates later when Patto left.[9]
    By 1963/64 Dudley had rejoined pianist Iggy Quail and recorded some of the first bluebeat and ska tracks outside Jamaica. Dudley and Quail formed a trio with Clyde Davies (bass), who accompanied comedians such as Tommy Trinder and Bob Monkhouse and had a residency at the Kingfisher Club.[5] Dudley released several singles on Piccadilly as well as some more for Oriole. He retired from the music business in the mid-1960s. He died on 15 July 2011 aged 87[10]

    Discography

    Singles
    • "Later" / "Lots More Love" - (1959) - HMV (Pop 586)
    • "Too Pooped to Pop" / "Miss In-Between" - (1960) - HMV (POP 725)
    • "Sitting in a Train" / "The One That I Like" - (1961) - Ember (S136)
    • "Blarney Blues" / "Peace On Earth" - 1964 - Oriole (ICB9)
    • "Way of Life" / "When Will You Say You'll Be Mine" - 1964 - Oriole (ICB10)
    Compilations
    • Oh Boy! (1958) Parlophone - 2 tracks:- "Hey Hey Hey Hey" and "Lets Rock While the Rocking's Good" CD (2009) Highnote (GVC1008)
    • That British Sound Vol 10 - CD (2010) No Hit Records BLC 89 - 2 tracks:- "Sitting in a Train" & "Later"
    • From Calypso to Disco: The Roots of Black Britain - 1 Track:- "The Ferryboat Ride"
    • The Piccadilly Story - (1994) & (2006) - Castle (72386) - 1 Track:- "The Ferryboat Ride"
    • British Rock'n'Roll 1955~1960 CD (1986) See For Miles (SEE38) "Later" & "Lots More Love"

     

    To see more of who died in 2010 click here

    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...