/ Stars that died in 2023

Monday, October 31, 2011

Rob Grill, American singer and songwriter (The Grass Roots) died he was , 67.

 Robert Frank "Rob" Grill was an American lead singer, songwriter and bass guitarist of the rock and roll band, The Grass Roots died he was , 67.

(November 30, 1943 – July 11, 2011)

Career

Rob was a native of Hollywood, California where he attended Hollywood High School. Soon after graduation, Rob began working at American Recording Studios with musician friends Cory Wells and John Kay (who later formed Three Dog Night and Steppenwolf, respectively). Inspired to become a member of a successful band, Grill eventually was asked to join The Grass Roots.
The Grass Roots grew out of a project originating from Dunhill Records. Writer/producers P. F. Sloan and Steve Barri (The Mamas & the Papas, Tommy Roe, Four Tops and Dusty Springfield) were asked by Dunhill to write songs that would capitalize on the growing interest in the folk-rock movement.
When their song “Where Were You When I Needed You”, recorded as a demo with P.F. Sloan as lead singer and released under the name “The Grass Roots” started to get airplay in San Francisco Bay area, they searched for an existing band to become The Grass Roots. They enlisted a San Francisco group, "The Bedouins", who recorded the first Grass Roots album, titled “Where Were You When I Needed You” with Willie Fulton singing lead on a re-recorded version of the title song. After several months, the Bedouins’ partnership with Sloan and Barri broke up as the band was more interested in performing their own more blues rock-oriented material (which Sloan and Barri were not willing to allow them to do).
Subsequently, a Los Angeles band, The 13th Floor (not to be confused with the 13th Floor Elevators), composed of Creed Bratton, Rick Coonce, Warren Entner, and Kenny Fukomoto, was recruited to become the new Grass Roots. When Kenny Fukumoto was drafted into the army, Rob Grill was brought in as his replacement. With Grill as lead singer, they recorded a third version of "Where Were You When I Needed You." Grill became the band’s longest serving member, appearing with them for more than four decades. The Grass Roots went on to chart twenty nine singles, thirteen of which went gold followed by two gold albums and two platinum albums.[2]

The Grass Roots played at the Fantasy Fair and Magic Mountain Music Festival on Sunday June 11, 1967 in the "summer of love" as their top ten hit "Let's Live For Today" was hitting the airwaves. This music festival is important because it occurred before the Monterey Pop Festival but did not have a movie to document it for the ages (see List of electronic music festivals). On Sunday October 27, 1968 they played at the San Francisco Pop Festival and then played at the Los Angeles Pop Festival and Miami Pop Festival in December of that year as their top ten hit "Midnight Confessions" was hitting the airwaves.
The Grass Roots played at Newport Pop Festival 1969 at Devonshire Downs which was a racetrack at the time but now is part of the North Campus for California State University at Northridge. They played on Sunday June 22 which was the final day of the festival as their top twenty hit "Wait A Million Years" was hitting the airwaves. In Canada, they played at the Vancouver Pop Festival at the Paradise Valley Resort in British Columbia in August 1969 (see List of electronic music festivals).
Grill launched a solo career in 1979, assisted on his solo album by several members of Fleetwood Mac. Responding to 60s nostalgia, Grill then reformed The Grass Roots (billed "The Grass Roots Starring Rob Grill") and had toured the United States with the reunited outfit since the 1980s.
In 2006, former manager Marty Angelo published a book entitled, Once Life Matters: A New Beginning which has numerous stories about his life on the road with Rob Grill and the Grass Roots back in the early 1970s.
In 2008, The Grass Roots Starring Rob Grill released a live album chronicling their 14 top forty Billboard hits titled Live Gold.

Compositions and musical release performance

Grill composed sixteen songs for The Grass Roots and his solo album. One of these appeared as a single "A" side. It is "Come On And Say It". His other fifteen compositions appeared on single "B" sides and albums. He wrote frequently with Warren Entner and they were considered a songwriting team. Grill played with The Grass Roots on sixteen albums, seven of which charted. He took part in thirty two Grass Roots singles released, twenty one of which charted.[3]

Death

Grill died July 11, 2011 in an Orlando, Florida hospital. He had been in a coma since sustaining a head injury several weeks earlier when he fell after suffering a stroke in Lake County, FL. He was 67.[1][4]

Discography

Singles

Release date
Title
Flip side
Record Label
Chart Positions
US Cashbox
UK

1967
Depressed Feeling
Dunhill
8
5


Things I Should Have Said
Tip Of My Tongue
Dunhill
23
36


Wake Up, Wake Up
No Exit
Dunhill
68
61


1968
Melody For You
Hey Friend
Dunhill
123



Feelings
Here's Where You Belong
Dunhill




Who Will You Be Tomorrow
Dunhill
5
5


1969
Bella Linda+++
Hot Bright Lights
Dunhill
28
20


Melody For You
All Good Things Come To An End
Dunhill




Lovin' Things
You And Love Are The Same
Dunhill
49
35


River Is Wide, The
(You Gotta) Live For Love
Dunhill
31
16


I'd Wait A Million Years
Fly Me To Havana
Dunhill
15
12


Heaven Knows
Don't Remind Me
Dunhill
24
13


1970
Walking Through The Country
Truck Drivin' Man
Dunhill
44
30


Baby Hold On
Get It Together
Dunhill
35
25


Come On And Say It
Something's Comin' Over Me
Dunhill
61
39


Temptation Eyes
Keepin' Me Down
Dunhill
15
16


1971
Sooner Or Later
I Can Turn Off The Rain
Dunhill
9
12


Two Divided By Love
Let It Go
Dunhill
16
8


1972
Glory Bound
Only One
Dunhill
34
22


Runway, The
Move Along
Dunhill
39
29


Anyway The Wind Blows
Monday Love
Dunhill
107



1973
Love Is What You Make It
Someone To Love
Dunhill
55



Where There's Smoke There's Fire
Look But Don't Touch
Dunhill




We Can't Dance To Your Music
Look But Don't Touch
Dunhill




Stealin' Love (In The Night)
We Almost Made It Together
Dunhill




1975
Mamacita
Last Time Around, The
Haven
71



Naked Man
Nothing Good Comes Easy
Haven




1976
Out In The Open
Optical Illusion
Haven




1979
Rock Sugar
Have Mercy
Mercury




1982
Here Comes That Feeling Again
Temptation Eye
MCA




Keep On Burning
MCA




Powers Of The Night
Powers Of The Night
MCA




++ - Gold Record - RIAA Certification
+++ - Composed by Italian superstar Lucio Battisti)

Albums

(All albums are with the Grass Roots, unless otherwise noted)
Release date
Title
Record Label
Chart Positions
US Cashbox
UK

1967
Dunhill
75



1968
Feelings
Dunhill




Golden Grass ++
Dunhill
25



1969
Lovin' Things
Dunhill
73



Leavin' It All Behind
Dunhill
36



1970
More Golden Grass
Dunhill
152



1971
Dunhill
58



1972
Move Along
Dunhill
86



1973
Alotta' Mileage
Dunhill




1976
The ABC Collection
ABC




1978
14 Greatest
Gusto




1979
Uprooted (solo album)
Mercury




1982
Powers Of The Night
MCA




2000
Live At Last
RFG




2001
Symphonic Hits
Cleopatra




2008
Live Gold
RFG




++ - Gold Record - RIAA Certification

 

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Jaroslav Jiřík, Czech hockey player (St. Louis Blues), died from a plane crash he was , 71


Jaroslav Jiřík was a Czech former professional ice hockey right winger died from a plane crash he was , 71. He became the first player that an Eastern Bloc country released to play in the National Hockey League when he appeared in three games with the St. Louis Blues in the 1969–70 season.
Jiřík played seventeen seasons in the Czechoslovak Extraliga, scoring 300 goals in 450 games.[3] Jiřík was named an all-star at the 1965 World Ice Hockey Championships,[6] and he was a member of the Czechoslovak national team that won the bronze medal at the 1964 Winter Olympics and the silver medal at the 1968 Winter Olympics.[5][7] He scored 83 goals in 134 international games for Czechoslovakia.[5]

(December 10, 1939 - July 11, 2011)

Jiřík was first noticed by St. Louis Blues assistant general manager Cliff Fletcher in 1969. Fletcher actually signed three Czechoslovak players: Jiřík, Jan Havel, and Josef Horešovský, all of whom were given permission to transfer to North America by the Czechoslovak government. However, the government changed its mind about Havel and Horesovský, because they were still in their twenties. Jiřík, 30 at the time, was the only player allowed to go.[4]
Jiřík spent most of the 1969–70 season with St. Louis's minor-league affiliate, the Kansas City Blues of the Central Hockey League.[5] He played well in Kansas City, scoring 35 points in 53 games.[1] St. Louis called him up late in the season, and he played three games with the club, going scoreless. He was invited to remain with the organization for the 1970–71 season; however, Jiřík decided to return to Czechoslovakia instead.[4]
On 11 July, 2011, Jiřík, an experienced pilot, died in a plane crash near Medlánky Airfield at the notrthern suburb of Brno.[5][2] Prior to his death Jaroslav Jirik was the last prominent Czech expartriate in the United states.

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs




Team
League
GP
GP
G
A
Pts
PIM
1957–58










1958–59
HC Kladno
CZE
22
16








1959–60
HC Kladno
CZE










1960–61
HC Kladno
CZE










1961–62
CZE
32
28








1962–63
ZKL Brno
CZE
32
23








1963–64
ZKL Brno
CZE










1964–65
ZKL Brno
CZE
32
23








1965–66
ZKL Brno
CZE










1966–67
ZKL Brno
CZE










1967–68
ZKL Brno
CZE
32
25
12
37






1968–69
ZKL Brno
CZE
36
36
7
43






1969–70
53
19
16
35
11
3
0
0
0
0
1970–71
ZKL Brno
CZE
36
26
12
28






1971–72
ZKL Brno
CZE










1972–73
ZKL Brno
CZE










1973–74
ZKL Brno
CZE

8
7
15






1974–75
ZKL Brno
CZE










NHL totals
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

International

Year
Team
Comp

GP
G
A
Pts
PIM
8
6
2
8

Czechoslovakia
5
1
3
4
2
Czechoslovakia
WC
7
4
3
7
9
Czechoslovakia
7
3
1
4
6
Czechoslovakia
WC
7
8
4
12
5
Czechoslovakia
WC
7
4
1
5
2
Czechoslovakia
WC
6
5
3
8
2
Czechoslovakia
4
3
3
6
0
Czechoslovakia
WC
5
2
3
5
0
Note: Statistics are incomplete. Jiřík scored 300 goals in 450 Czechoslovak league games, and 83 goals in 134 international games.

 

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George Lascelles, 7th Earl of Harewood, British aristocrat, magazine editor and arts administrator, first cousin of Queen Elizabeth II died he was , 88.



George Henry Hubert Lascelles, 7th Earl of Harewood, KBE AM, styled The Hon. George Lascelles before 1929 and Viscount Lascelles between 1929 and 1947, was the elder son of the 6th Earl of Harewood (1882–1947), and Princess Mary, Princess Royal, the only daughter of King George V of the United Kingdom and Queen Mary. He had a younger brother, The Honourable Gerald Lascelles died he was , 88.. Lord Harewood was the eldest nephew of King George VI and was a first cousin of Queen Elizabeth II. He succeeded to his father's earldom on 23 May 1947.

(7 February 1923 – 11 July 2011[2])

Early life

George Lascelles was born at his parents' London home of Chesterfield House on 7 February 1923, the first child of Henry Lascelles, Viscount Lascelles and Princess Mary, Viscountess Lascelles, and first grandchild of King George V and Queen Mary, who stood as sponsors at his christening. His christening took place on 25 March 1923 at St Mary's Church in the village of Goldsborough, near Knaresborough adjoining the family home Goldsborough Hall. He served as a Page of Honour at the coronation of his uncle, King George VI, in May 1937. He was educated at Ludgrove School, Eton College and King's College, Cambridge, after which he was commissioned into the Grenadier Guards. He rose to the rank of captain. During World War II, he fought in Italy. The Germans captured and held him as a prisoner of war in Oflag IV-C (Colditz) from 1944 to May 1945. In March 1945 Adolf Hitler signed his death warrant; the SS general commanding the camp, Gottlob Berger, realizing the war was lost, refused to carry out the sentence and released the future earl to the Swiss.[3] In 1945–46, he served as aide-de-camp to his great uncle, Lord Athlone, who was then Governor General of Canada. Lord Harewood served as a Counsellor of State in 1947, 1953–54, and 1956. On 7 February 1956 he took his seat in the House of Lords.[4]

Marriages

On 29 September 1949, Lord Harewood married Marion Stein (originally called Maria Donata Stein when she was born 18 October 1926), a concert pianist and the daughter of the Viennese music publisher Erwin Stein. Their marriage produced three sons:
This marriage ended in divorce in 1967, considered a scandal at the time. Marion went on to marry politician Jeremy Thorpe.
Lord Harewood was married a second time on 31 July 1967 to Patricia "Bambi" Tuckwell (born 24 November 1926), an Australian violinist and sister of the musician Barry Tuckwell. The wedding took place at Waveny Park in New Canaan, Connecticut. A Time magazine article published at the time suggested that the choice of a wedding location outside of England was due to the Church of England's views on divorce.[5] They had one son:
  • Mark Hubert Lascelles (born 4 July 1964 in Marylebone, London). Because he was not born in wedlock, he is ineligible to inherit his father's earldom and not in the line of succession to the throne. He married Andrea Kershaw (born 16 June 1964 in Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire) on 8 August 1992 in Harewood;[6] they have three children:
    • Charlotte Patricia Lascelles (born 24 January 1996 in Westminster, London)
    • Imogen Mary Lascelles (born 23 January 1998 in Leeds, West Yorkshire)
    • Miranda Rose Lascelles (born 15 July 2000 in Leeds, West Yorkshire)
The Queen gave her consent to the marriage of Mark Lascelles and Judith Anne Kilburn on 10 May 2011, and the two were married 16 July 2011.[7]

Opera and football

A music enthusiast, Lord Harewood devoted most of his career to opera. He served as editor of Opera magazine from 1950 to 1953 and as director of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden from 1951 to 1953 and again from 1969 to 1972. He served as chairman of the board of the English National Opera (ENO) from 1986 to 1995; Managing Director of the ENO from 1972 to 1985; artistic director of the Edinburgh, Adelaide and Leeds Festivals; Managing Director of the ENO offshoot English National Opera North from 1978 to 1981. Lord Harewood served as a governor of the BBC from 1985 to 1987 and as the president of the British Board of Film Classification from 1985 to 1996. He was the author or editor of three books, Kobbé's Complete Opera Book (ed. 1954, now The New Kobbé's Opera Book, edited with Antony Peattie, latest ed. 1997), The Tongs and the Bones (an autobiography, 1981), and Kobbé's Illustrated Opera Book (ed. 1989).
His other interests included football: he served as president of Leeds United Football Club from 1961 until his death and was president of the Football Association from 1963 to 1972.

Official honours

Queen Elizabeth II created him a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) in 1986. On 1 July 2010 he was appointed an honorary Member of the Order of Australia, "for service to the arts in Australia and to supporting Australia's artists in the United Kingdom".[8]

Further information



  • At the time of his birth he was 6th in line to the British throne. At his death, he was 46th.
  • He was the first of nine grandchildren of George V and Queen Mary. He was 21 years older than the youngest grandchild (Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester). He outlived his two royal cousins Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, Prince William of Gloucester, and his brother Gerald.
  • He was the oldest cousin of Queen Elizabeth II on George VI's side, but The Hon. John Patrick Bowes-Lyon, Master of Glamis, was the Queen's oldest cousin.
  • He was the only person to serve as Counsellor of State without being a Prince of the United Kingdom, serving from 1945 to 1951, then 1952 to 1956.
  • According to the book "God Save The Queen", written by Alan Michie in 1952, "with the possible exception of Princess Margaret and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, he was probably the only member of the present royal family who could have won recognition in a competitive society where brains count more than breeding". (page 297)
  • He served as chancellor of the University of York from 1962 to 1967.
  • He was a noted friend and colleague of the late opera diva Maria Callas and is featured in the 1968 EMI documentary The Callas Conversations Vol. I, during which he interviewed Callas at length concerning her career and ideas about opera.
  • He was ranked #1355 in the Sunday Times Rich List 2008 with an estimated wealth of £55m—his magnificent art treasures, held in trust and valued at more than £50m, and a 3,000 acres (12 km2) estate outside Leeds. The estate and house, Harewood House, are held by a charity with £9m of assets, and were not counted as part of his wealth.
  • He was the origin of the nickname of the Colditz escaper Dominic Bruce, who for a joke persuaded Lascelles that the average height of Homo sapiens was five feet three inches (Bruce's own height). When Lascelles repeated this he was teased by the other Colditz inmates for his naïveté and Bruce was thenceforth always known as 'The Medium Sized Man'.[citation needed]

Titles

  • The Hon. George Lascelles (7 February 1923 – 6 October 1929)
  • Viscount Lascelles (6 October 1929 – 24 May 1947)
  • The Rt Hon. The Earl of Harewood (24 May 1947–1986)
  • The Rt Hon. The Earl of Harewood, KBE (1986 – 1 July 2010)
  • The Rt Hon. The Earl of Harewood, KBE AM (1 July 2010 – 11 July 2011)

 

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

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