/ Stars that died in 2023

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Frisner Augustin, Haitian Vodou drummer died he was 63.

Frisner Augustin  was a major performer and composer of Haitian Vodou drumming  died he was 63. and the first and only citizen of Haiti to win a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in the United States, where he resided for forty years.
A youth prodigy on the traditional drums of Haitian Vodou in ritual context, Augustin took his genre to the modern stage, often exploring its common roots with various jazz styles. From his initial forays in Haiti with Lina Mathon Blanchet, Jacky Duroseau, and Jazz des Jeunes, he went on to work in the United States and Europe with Kip Hanrahan, Edy Brisseaux, and Andrew Cyrille. He also recorded for the late filmmaker Jonathan Demme.
Augustin led his own ensemble, La Troupe Makandal, from 1981 until his death. He used the group not only to make music but also to change popular misconceptions in the public mind regarding Vodou, a poorly understood but richly developed Afro-Haitian spiritual discipline.

(March 1, 1948 – February 28, 2012)

Frisner Augustin was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on March 1, 1948.[1][2] His mother, a poor retailer named Andrea Laguerre, gave birth to Frisner, her first child, under a tree outside the city's General [2][3] The child's father, a carpenter named Julien Augustin, left their home not long after the birth of his second child, a girl. Growing up without the presence of a father in the home, the boy decided it was up to him to support his mother and sister.[4] Since the family had no means to put him in school, and since his passion was music, he began to follow in the footsteps of his uncle Catelus Laguerre, a drummer in the oral tradition, at the age of seven.[1][2][3][4][5] He earned the nickname Ti Kelep (Tee Kay-lep), which means "Little Kelep", the second word referring to a pattern unique to the third drum of the Vodou ensemble. By the time Augustin had reached his early teens, the Vodou houses of his community had recognized his genius for drumming, and one house initiated him as its ountògi (oo-taw-gee; sacred drummer).[6]
Hospital while waiting for a room that never became available. Andrea took her son to the dirt-floor shack that was their home in the capital's Portail Léogane district, specifically, a community called "behind the cemetery" because of its location along the west side of the major burial ground at the south end of the city.
Julien Augustin returned to the family and placed his now adolescent son in a welding school at about the same time that André Germain, a director of Haiti's La Troupe Folklorique Nationale (National Dance Troupe), discovered him playing at a Vodou ceremony just outside Port-au-Prince.[4] To his father's consternation, Augustin dropped out of the welding school when Germain introduced him to Lina Mathon Blanchet,[7][8] a classical pianist who had organized Haiti Chante et Danse (Haiti Sings and Dances), one of the country's first companies performing folklore,[9]a word used in Haiti to denote both traditional culture and a genre that represents traditional culture on the modern stage.[10] Blanchet also taught piano and guided the career of Jacky Duroseau,[11] who went on to develop a unique style of Vodou jazz.[7] Augustin soon found work with a small jazz combo featuring Duroseau, with Haiti Chante et Danse, and later with the folklore companies of African-American dancer Lavinia Williams and Haitian dance professor and choreographer Viviane Gauthier. While continuing to play in Vodou temples and in a Mardi Gras band of his own creation, he entertained tourists in theaters and hotels, inside and outside Haiti.
In 1972, one year into the tenure of dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier, Augustin accepted an engagement in New York with Jazz des Jeunes,[4] the orchestra that accompanied La Troupe Folklorique Nationale.[12] Like all other members of the company, he used the opportunity to emigrate from Haiti and settle in the burgeoning Haitian diaspora of New York City.

Soon after his emigration to New York City in 1972,[1][2][3][5] Augustin re-connected with childhood friend Oungan Emmanuel Cadet, who had established a Vodou society in the Bronx. In October 1973 Cadet performed a spiritual marriage between Augustin and Èzili Freda Dawomen,[13] a Vodou spirit with roots in West Africa who represents romantic love.[14][15] Such a marriage, according to Vodou practitioners, brings prosperity to the human partner in exchange for special devotion.[16]Augustin would also go on to a real-life marriage with one of Cadet's initiates, who helped him secure his permanent residency in the United States in 1976. As he became Cadet's lead drummer, word of mouth helped him to find work in other Vodou societies taking root throughout New York City.
Dancers and choreographers who had played with companies in Port-au-Prince since the 1940s were leaving Haiti during the 1960s and '70s and re-forming in New York.[17] Augustin found work drumming for Jean-Léon Destiné, Louinès Louinis, Troupe Shango of Arnold Elie, and the Ibo Dancers of Paulette St. Lot; however, throughout the 1970s, he aspired to leadership of his own group even though dancers typically led folklore companies.[18] In 1981 La Troupe Makandal, a company established in the Port-au-Prince neighborhood of Upper Belair and named after the eighteenth-century revolutionary and messiah François Makandal, arrived in New York and sought Augustin out for help in establishing itself in the diaspora.[19] He took the group under his wing and introduced it to the Haitian community in a Thanksgiving festival at Brooklyn College.[20] The company immediately and thereafter distinguished itself for its raw authenticity and bold presentation of the sacred gesture.[21][22][23] Together with his drumming student, musicologist Lois Wilcken, Augustin established the company as a not-for-profit organization incorporated in New York State.[24]
Directing his own company gave Augustin the opportunity to develop a singularly powerful style of Vodou drumming and to train an ensemble in his own manner.[18] He and the company soon attracted the attention of entrepreneurs, particularly with staged representations of Vodou rites that balanced the mystical with a mission to re-educate the public about Vodou and Haiti itself.[22][23] Augustin carried this mission forward from the 1980s on, both in performances on YouTube and in workshops on YouTuberesidencies on YouTube, and lecture-demonstrations on YouTube. He took Makandal across the United States and abroad; venues included Lincoln Center, the American Museum of Natural History, New York's Town Hall, the Festival International de Louisiane, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, the 1995 Bouyon Rasin Festival in Port-au-Prince, Banlieues Bleues in France, and the Tokyo Summer Festival.[25] Throughout his performing and teaching career, he continued to drum for Vodou houses both in and out of New York.[26] In his own analysis, he placed greatest value on drumming directly for the spirits in a consecrated space.[27]
Recognition arrived in 1998 when the cultural center City Lore inducted Augustin into its People's Hall of Fame.[28][29] Filmmaker Jonathan Demme, whose film Beloved included Makandal on its soundtrack,[30] presented the award and dubbed Augustin "the Arnold Schwarzenegger of transcendental music".[1] One year later the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) awarded him its National Heritage Fellowship, the highest honor the United States confers in folk and traditional arts.[31][32] He was the first Haitian artist to earn this distinction. A Certificate of Achievement from the National Coalition for Haitian Rights[33] followed on the heels of the NEA award; Tonèl Lakay, a children's troupe, gave him a plaque of honor;[34]and in 2011 dancer/choreographer Peniel Guerrier paid tribute to Augustin with his annual Kriye Bòdè award.[35][36] Augustin's company, La Troupe Makandal, has received awards from New York's Caribbean Cultural Center[37] and from the Haitian Studies Association.[38]

Through frequent visits back home during his residency in New York, Augustin maintained his ties not only to Haiti but also to the community in which he grew up. When the Haiti earthquake of 2010 destroyed much of Port-au-Prince, he and Dr. Wilcken raised funds and brought relief to his neighborhood on YouTube.[39] In the next two years, his company organized a Haitian Carnival for children in the community on YouTube.[39] During his visit in the winter of 2012, he made plans with the École Nationale des Arts (ENARTS) of Port-au-Prince for a drumming course beginning in the fall of 2012.[40] ENARTS also presented him in concerton YouTube at the Institut Français in Port-au-Prince as part of a collaborative series of the two organizations. Augustin met at that time with organizers of the annual International Jazz Festival of Port-au-Prince, and they were considering his participation in the Festival.[41]
During the same 2012 visit to Haiti, on the night of February 23–24, Augustin suffered a massive brain hemorrhage and died in the Bernard Mevs Hospital in Port-au-Prince on February 28.[42] He was buried in the Grand Cemetery in his family mausoleum on YouTube. The night before the funeral a local mambo conducted the traditional Vodou desounen,[39] rites that formally separate the spirit of the dead from the body and send it beneath the cosmic waters.[43] One year and one day later, as per tradition, a Vodou priest near Jacmel, a city in the south of Haiti and the source of Augustin's maternal line,[4]reclaimed his soul and installed it in a place of honor.[44] In June 2012 Makandal, together with Ayiti Fasafas, the Center for Traditional Music and Dance, and the Haiti Cultural Exchange, presented a memorial performance to Augustin in Brooklyn, New York.[45] Other memorial projects in process include an annotated online archive (NEA 2013 Spring Grant Announcements, page 111) of his life and work, a biography, and ongoing performances and workshops that promote his style and aesthetic.
Frisner Augustin was married and divorced once. Seven children, five grandchildren, his father, and his sister survived him.[1]

Frisner Augustin distinguished himself for his powerful, precise, and complex style of Vodou drumming and composition. Understanding his singularity calls for a brief discussion of the stylistic elements of the tradition. The following background supplements Haitian Vodou drumming.
Dozens of different styles of drumming have evolved from the repertories of the West African and Congo nations that came to Haiti through the Middle Passage, but they share certain organizational principles. Most utilize three drums, an iron idiophone, a rattle, and a frame drum,[46] and all work with song and dance.[47][48][49] A slow pulse, visible in the dance and audible in the drumming, marks measures or phrases.[50] Drummers draw from a wide palette of tone to articulate points on and between the pulses;[51][52] the strokes render a sense of off-beat phrasing, or the interplay of duple and triple time.[50][53] The lead drummer, also called "master drummer" because he qualifies to play the manman tanbou (mother, or lead drum),[54] may launch into a kase (kah-say; in English, break), a pattern that musically opposes the main pattern, for example, it sets up a counter-pulse or emphasizes a contrasting sonority.[55] Apart from the kase, the drumming seemingly consists of repeated ensemble patterns, but a discerning ear will note that the cycles vary according to song phrasing and ritual action.[56] In other words, each instrument draws from a considerable set of patterns available in each of the multiple styles, and further variation and invention arise from dialogues among the musicians and dancers. Haitian Vodou drumming is not formulaic, and a master drummer works on the same levels as arrangers and composers in other traditions.
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Frisner Augustin and Makandal drumming for a Haitian Vodou dance in Queens, New York, December 5, 2009
Frisner Augustin's drumming style featured a refined balance of aesthetic cool and volatile energy. Critic Robert Palmer noted after a performance in Manhattan, "...Augustin embroidered explosive improvisations...over the ensemble's deftly layered rhythmic conversations while always keeping an eye on dancers and singers and guiding the ebb and flow of relaxation and intensity".[22] Dancers recognized him for his intimate terpsichorean exchanges: "He lays luscious melodies like flowers at your feet, almost within reach, then yanks them away just as you are about to grab them".[57] He exploited the full tonal/timbral palette of the drum and often insisted, "The drum is a piano". Equally accomplished in hand and stick technique (both used in Vodou drumming), he delivered crisp, clear articulations of open and closed mid-range tones, bass tones, portamento glides, rimshots, etc. When a student failed to render the strokes properly, he admonished him or her to "clean it." On the temporal side, Augustin broke new ground with his kase, which tested the limits of how far one can travel from the principal rhythmic framework without losing it: "More so than any traditional drummer, Augustin has the ability to drop out of the rhythm completely...riffing brilliantly in stunning jazz-like improvisations for carefully calculated intervals, then coming back in, skeletally at first, and finally resuming full melody".[57]
Augustin made several recordings, some of which featured his compositions for La Troupe Makandal. The Troupe will publish a comprehensive annotated online archive of recorded documentation of his performances and workshops. The company projects late 2017 for the archive's official launch.


  • A Trip to Vodou. 1982. CD. La Troupe Makandal.
  • The Drums of Vodou. 1992. CD. Produced by White Cliffs Media Company, distributed by Pathway Book Service.
  • Èzili. 1986. CD. La Troupe Makandal.
  • Prepare. 2004. CD. La Troupe Makandal.


  • Ban'm Mizik, Vol. II. 1997. CD. Edy Brisseaux + Bazilik, with Frisner Augustin on selected tracks. Bazilik Productions.
  • Beloved. 1998. Original motion picture soundtrack. Featuring Frisner Augustin and La Troupe Makandal on tracks 3 and 19. epic/Sony Music Soundtrax EK 69656.
  • Conjure, Music for the Texts of Ishmael Reed. 1984 and 1995. CD. Kip Hanrahan, with Frisner Augustin on tracks 2, 7, and 9. American Clave AMCL 1006.
  • Desire Develops an Edge. 1983. CD. Kip Hanrahan, with Frisner Augustin on tracks 2, 11, and 14.
  • New York City, Global Beat of the Boroughs. 2001. 2-CD set. Featuring Frisner Augustin and La Troupe Makandal on Disc II, track 9, “Rara Processional.” Smithsonian Folkways SFW 40493.
  • Rhythms of Rapture, Sacred Musics of Haitian Vodou. 1995. Featuring Frisner Augustin and La Troupe Makandal on track 7, “Simbi Dlo.” Smithsonian Folkways SF CD 40464.
  • Route des Frères. 2011. CD. Featuring Andrew Cyrille and Haitian Fascination (Hamiet Bluiett, Alix Pascal, Lisle Atkinson, Andrew Cyrille, Frisner Augustin). TUM Records 027.
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Helga Vlahović, Croatian journalist, producer and television personality,died from uterine cancer she was 67

Helga Vlahović  was a Croatianjournalist, producer, and television personality, whose career spanned five decades in both SFR Yugoslavia and later Croatia. She was one of the most popular television presenters in the 1980s.[1]
Throughout her career, she was also credited as Helga Vlahović Pea and Helga Vlahović Brnobić during the times she was married.
(28 January 1945 – 27 February 2012)
Born in Zagreb to Hungarian father Kalman Vlahovics and Austrian mother Vera, Helga grew up speaking German with her mother while also learning English.[2]


Vlahović started working at Zagreb Radio and Television (part of  Yugoslav Radio Television network) in 1964, while studying German, English, and art history at the University of Zagreb; with her newfound job, she left the studies and ended up not completing her degrees.[2] By 1966, she became an anchorwoman of various entertainment and musical TV shows, putting her in charge of such popular programs as TV Magazin and musical television shows.[2]
the
In 1968, she was selected to run the Sopot International Song Festival in Poland, and in 1971 she ran the song festival in Scheveningen, Netherlands.[2] She was then placed in charge of the morning talk show Good Day, Yugoslavia (which she hosted) in 1972,[2] as well as the music variety show Svjetla pozornice (Stage Lights) in 1977 and 1978.[2] From 1978 to 1980, she organized the Jadranski susreti (Adriatic Reunion, a Yugoslav version of Jeux Sans Frontières).[2]
In 1984 and 1988, Vlahović organized the programs Beč pozdravlja Zagreb, Zagreb pozdravlja Beč (Vienna Salutes Zagreb, Zagreb Salutes Vienna) and Dubrovnik-Stuttgart, which were musical and travelogue series broadcast between JRT, ORF, and ARD, respectively, geared at Yugoslav guest workers who wanted to "see home" but could not afford to make a trip there.[2] Due to her extensive musical programming experience, as well as her proficiency in English, she was picked, along with Oliver Mlakar, to host the Eurovision Song Contest 1990 in Zagreb following Yugoslavia's win in 1989.[3][4][5]
With the fall of Yugoslavia in 1991 and the onset of the Croatian War of Independence, Vlahović was quickly put in charge of informational television series relating to the war on the newly formed HRT channel for the independent nation of Croatia.[2] She was head of "war information programming" until the end of war in 1995. In 1996, she started her own television series, Govorimo o zdravlju (We Talk About Health), which covered many health and wellness topics.[2] After 42 years of working at JRT and HRT, Vlahović retired in 2006.[2]

Vlahović had two daughters, Renee Pea (born 1975), from her ten-year marriage to Franc Pea, and Karla Brnobić (born 1982), from her marriage to neurosurgeon Miljenko Brnobić, who died in 1997.[2] It was his influence which inspired her to start the program Govorimo o zdravlju.
In 2009 Vlahović was diagnosed with melanoma. In early 2012 it was reported her condition has worsened and she was hospitalised. She died on 27 February 2012.
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Tina Strobos, Dutch psychiatrist and humanitarian, protected Jewish refugees during World War II, died from cancer she was 91

Tina Strobos ) was a Dutch physician and child psychiatrist who, while a medical student during World War II living in Amsterdam, helped shelter more than 100 Jewish refugees as part of the Dutch resistance during the Nazioccupation of The Netherlands died from cancer she was  91. In 2009, Strobos was honored for her work by the Holocaust and Human Rights Education Center of New York City.[1]

(19 May 1920 – 27 February 2012

Background

Born Tineke Buchter, she came from a family of socialist atheists who took in Belgianand Austrian refugees during and after World War I. Strobos was well-educated and fluent in  Abraham Pais, whom she did not marry and who went on to become a particle physicist.[2]
German, French, and English, with proficiency in Hebrew and Greek. At one time she had a Jewish fiance,

Holocaust

Strobos, together with her mother and grandmother, sheltered over 100 Jewish refugees—four or five at a time—at their boarding house at 282 Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal, only a ten-minute walk from Anne Frank's house at 263 Prinsengracht, Amsterdam. The refugees stayed on the upper floors and attic of the family's boarding house, where there was also a secret compartment for hiding two or three people.[3]
She hid an Orthodox Jewish couple with five children, and helped others, including artist Martin Monnickendam (1874–1943)[4] She carried news and ration stamps to Jews hiding on farms outside the city, as well as radios and firearms for the Dutch resistance. She was seized or questioned nine times by the Gestapo.[1]
Her grandmother had a radio transmitter hidden in the house which was used to send clandestine messages from the underground to Britain. After the war, she emigrated to the United States.[5] Strobos said of her grandmother, "She is the only person I know who scared the Gestapo."[6]
In a 2009 interview Strobos said "It's just the right thing to do. I believe in heroism, and when you're young, you want to do dangerous things." In recent decades, she has spoken out against the torture of terrorists, which she said was ineffective as well as cruel.[1]
She and her mother, Marie Schotte, were awarded the Righteous Among the Nations Award by Yad Vashem in 1989.[7]
Tina Strobos died in Rye, New York of cancer, aged 91, on 27 February 2012. She was surrounded by her three children.[2]
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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...