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04-19-2012, 04:30 PM
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Loyal Opposition
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Johnson County, Kansas
Posts: 14,401
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Sounds like Carl got his wish for mercy for Levon - an end to the suffering. My prayers with his family - and it sounds like his extended family spreads far and wide.
Regards,
D-Ray
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Then I'll get on my knees and pray,
We won't get fooled again; Don't get fooled again
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04-19-2012, 05:28 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: San Diego California
Posts: 3,272
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Quote:
Originally Posted by d-ray657
Sounds like Carl got his wish for mercy for Levon - an end to the suffering. My prayers with his family - and it sounds like his extended family spreads far and wide.
Regards,
D-Ray
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Levon even had tour dates set up for this month. Talk about doing what you love until the end. I suspect he's been suffering for a while, but just kept on doing what he enjoyed. A great musician and perhaps even a greater person.
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Dear Optimist: Unless life gives you water and sugar too, your lemonade will suck.
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04-19-2012, 05:34 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 5,237
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I remember seeing the Band, Grace Slick and Jefferson airplane together at the Fillmore in SF years ago.... Good times!
Sad to hear this news....
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04-19-2012, 06:20 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,252
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My father in law was Levon's lawyer for many years. I met Levon in the 70's. He will be missed by many.
My wife was shocked when I told her about Levon's death. He was here, in Fayetteville a few moths ago. He told us his throat cancer was in remission and his singing voice was getting stronger.
RIP Levon
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04-19-2012, 06:26 PM
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Admin
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Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Behind the Orange Curtain in California
Posts: 38,330
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bhunter
Sad here too. I am listening to Electric Dirt's "When I Go Away." Someone over at AK posted the lyrics. That song lifted my spirits wrt Levon's death.
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I'll have to take a look. Listening to Rock Of Ages, pretty good stuff there.
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04-19-2012, 10:53 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Derby City U.S.A.
Posts: 8,935
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The radio station been playing deep cuts all evening, been nice considering. Plus a few old interviews thrown in to boot!
Barney
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04-22-2012, 02:41 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: San Diego California
Posts: 3,272
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Quote:
Levon Helm 1940-2012
The first time I heard Levon Helm’s voice was in a small record shop on Berwick Street in Soho London sometime around 1969. What was it like? Paul on the road to Damascus!
Oh, I guess I just want to say all these things about the earth and granite of his being, the raw Appalachian timber of his voice and the powerful sway of his backbeat. The throb of his tom-toms the first time I heard “Tears Of Rage” and that wicked, knowing smile recounting tales of Carney barkers and backwater medicine shows. I’m thinking about him behind that economical kit, the way he hunched his shoulders and turned into the mike like a coiled spring when he sang.
He was one of three great singers in The Band, three of the greatest singers in any band, and the last of those three to leave us. What other band under God’s great Heaven gave us a trio of such eloquent and awesome sonic tools? Richard Manuel had an otherworldly voice, ethereal and legitimately spooky in the best way possible. Rick Danko, with whom I spent some questionably manic moments and cerebral hours and whom I loved dearly, sang like an unfettered young buck, all tremulous beauty and with poignant longing. Anyone doubting this just listen to his vocal on “It Makes No Difference” from the “The Last Waltz” soundtrack, one of the best live vocal performances I’ve ever heard.
Then there was Levon: a voice that seemed as it was birthed from the land from which he sprung. Rich as Arkansas soil and raw as a plug of tobacco, gnarly as knotted pine and so expressive it seemed like he was chewing on the words before they left his mouth. Now he’s gone and our anemic musical horizon has one less icon to cling to and one more legacy to embrace.
We’re blessed that he battled his illness and conquered it for a spell, pushed back the inevitable, stuck up his hand and like some hard scrabble farmer in a gothic Southern novel said “Whoa boy, I ain’t done ploughin’.”
He participated in some of the greatest music I’ve ever heard and because of him and the boys in The Band, my soul is clearer of musical debris and tuned into the lyrical soul of the American heartland and the soul of Appalachia.
If I’m any good at what I do, it’s because he inspired me to be better.
Sleep with angels, Levon. Say hi to the boys, and see you in church.
Bernie Taupin
http://www.berniejtaupin.com/index.p...og&b_id=459670
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I thought that this was spot on.
__________________
Dear Optimist: Unless life gives you water and sugar too, your lemonade will suck.
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