Snooks Eaglin RIP (RR)

funky16cornersfunky16corners 7,175 Posts
edited February 2009 in Strut Central
Snooks Eaglin, R&B Singer and Guitarist, Dies at 72 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSNEW ORLEANS (AP) ??? The R&B singer and guitarist Snooks Eaglin, who counted platinum-selling rockers among his fans, died here Wednesday. He was 72.The cause was a heart attack he suffered after falling ill and being hospitalized last week, said John Blancher, a family friend. Mr. Eaglin learned he had prostate cancer last year.Musicians including Eric Clapton, Paul McCartney, Robert Plant and Bonnie Raitt would seek out Mr. Eaglin to watch him perform, Mr. Blancher said. But New Orleans musicians knew him best.???He played with a certain finger style that was highly unusual,??? said the pianist Allan Toussaint, who was 13 when he formed a band with Mr. Eaglin. ???He was unlimited on the guitar. Folks would assume, ???I can do this or I can do that,??? but Snooks wouldn???t. There was nothing he couldn???t do. It was extraordinary.???Mr. Eaglin was scheduled to perform this year at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, where he was a popular draw. Quint Davis, the event???s producer, said his death leaves a hole in the festival and also in the city???s music scene.???His death is like losing a Dizzy Gillespie, a Professor Longhair, a Johnny Adams or a Gatemouth Brown,??? Mr. Davis said. ???He???s one of those unique giants of New Orleans music.???Mr. Eaglin was known for picking strings with his thumb nail. He played and recorded with New Orleans musicians including Professor Longhair, the Wild Magnolias and others. Blind from the time he was a young child, Mr. Eaglin was a self-taught musician who learned to play the guitar by listening to the radio. Playing the guitar with his thumb nail allowed him to perform very fast, Mr. Davis said.One of Mr. Eaglin???s best-known songs was ???Funky Malaguena,??? a Latin song that he played with an unconventional funk and blues spin, Mr. Davis said.Mr. Eaglin is part of 50 years??? worth of New Orleans recordings, from early folk to R&B and jazz, Mr. Davis said. ???He played a six-string, a 12-string,??? he said. ???He could play anything with strings on it.???The jazz bassist Peter Badie, who played with Mr. Eaglin in the 1960s at clubs on Rampart Street, said that ???a lot of cats tried to copy him, the way he attacked the strings, but they couldn???t.??? Mr. Eaglin???s survivors include his wife of more than 30 years, Dorothea Eaglin, and a daughter

  Comments


  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    RIP

  • Blancher would often pick up Mr. Eaglin in St. Rose. During the drive, Mr. Eaglin regaled him with stories.

    Among the most infamous is the time Mr. Eaglin drove the Flamingos home following a Saturday night gig in Donaldsonville. The musicians were so intoxicated that they decided their blind guitarist was the most qualified driver.

    Mr. Eaglin claimed he navigated the curves of the road from memory. The crunch of gravel under the tires warned him when the '49 Studebaker strayed onto the shoulder. The story concludes with Mr. Eaglin pulling up to his house early Sunday morning and his mother suggesting the musicians proceed directly to church.


    Times-Picayune Obit

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Was just listening to some of his stuff with the Wild Magnolias last night. RIP to a GIANT!

  • Damn. Really wished I could have seen him live. R.I.P.
    "Young Boy Blues" is such a great song

  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    F16C

    you taking a live Obits feed from Reuters or something?

    You're often first up with this stuff

  • F16C

    you taking a live Obits feed from Reuters or something?

    You're often first up with this stuff

    Sometimes I get readers hitting me up on the blog with stuff like this. This one came from the New York Times obit page.
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