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DAY MICHAEL JACKSON WON EIGHT AWARDS

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16th January 1984 – Michael Jackson won for the first time in the history of the American Music Awards 8 of the desirable trophies.

The accolades began with his sweep of the 11th annual American Music Awards on Monday night, January 16th, winning a total of eight awards, including a special merit award. Michael received a record-breaking ten nominations for the American Music Awards. THRILLER was nominated for Best Pop Album, and Best Soul Album. Billie Jean was nominated for Best Pop Single and Best Soul Single. Beat It and Billie Jean were both nominated for Best Pop Video and Best Soul Video. And finally, Michael was nominated for Best Pop Male Vocalist and Best Soul Male Vocalist.

Michael attended the award ceremony accompanied by Webster star Emmanuel Lewis and his date for the evening was Brooke Shields. He was dressed for the occasion in a red Sergeant Pepper-style military style jacket covered with red sequins, cropped tuxedo pants, black aviator glasses, with a single black sequin glove; an appropriate uniform for what, considering the scope of his popularity, equated to the showbiz variant of a coronation.

Michael approached the podium 8 times that night to accept awards, a new record. THRILLER was named Best Pop Album and Best Soul Album. Billie Jean won as Best Pop Single, and Beat It was named Best Pop Video and Best Soul Video. Michael took top honors as Best Pop Male Vocalist and Best Soul Male Vocalist.

For his first, which is the AMA for Favorite Pop Single – Beat It, he says the following: “I don’t what I [fans screaming] … would – I’m very thankful and I’m very honored for this award. I don’t wanna make a long speech, I’m just – thank you very much. Bye. [smiles]”

His second award that night is for Favorite Soul Album – Thriller, for which he states: “Thank you very much. I’m deeply moved again to – to win this award. I’d like to thank Quincy Jones who’s a wonderful producer, and my mother and father who are in the audience – which I love very much – who brought me into the world. And I also thank the American public. Thank you.”

For Favorite Pop Album – Thriller, he has this to say: “[…] Again I – I’d like to thank everybody… thank you [smiles]. I’m – I’m deeply moved by accepting this award. And it was so much fun doing the album, ‘Thriller’. And I’d like to thank again Quincy Jones, and Bruce Swedien who’s the greatest engineer in the world. And, also, Rod Temperton and James Ingram for writing ‘PYT’ with Quincy Jones – thank you. And again, my mother and father who… taught me so much. And again I’d like to thank the disc-jokeys who played the record, ‘cause if it wasn’t for them, we wouldn’t be here, so.. And I also would like to thank the public. Thank you very much.”

In addition to these awards Michael was honored for his lifetime career achievements as the year’s recipient of the Award of Merit. The Award of Merit was presented to Michael by Diana Ross and by the previous year’s winner, Kenny Rogers. Barry Manilow also took part in the tribute, singing Ben and a medley of Jackson 5ive hits. The presentation featured video taped messages from Michael’s closest friends, including Liza Minnelli, Katherine Hepburn, and Jane Fonda, who had this to say:

Michael, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve studied your tapes, trying to figure out what it is you do. I’ve decided you are a miracle. You have so much talent, the more you give of it, the more you seem to have. I’m so proud of you… and so proud to be your friend.

Winning the award at age 25, Michael is the youngest performer to ever receive the Award of Merit.

On receiving the special American Music Award Of Merit from singer/actress and long-time friend, Diana Ross, he declares: “Thank you. Thank you very much. I’m so deeply touched and deeply honored to receive this wonderful – Gosh, wonderful award… I thank you, American public; I thank Berry Gordy of Motown, who has been such an important part of my career and life. I thank again my mother and father who brought me into the world – Joseph Jackson and Katherine Jackson. I thank all my brothers – Tito, Jackie, Jermaine, Marlon and Randy, who I started with… and still am with. I thank Susanne de Passe who has been such an important influence in my life and has taught me so much. Thank you, Susanne. Quincy Jones is a wonderful person, not only is he an incredible producer, he is a wonderful man, he is such a family person, and I love him and we have made history together and I’m thankful. I thank one of my favorite people in the whole entire world, Miss Diana Ross and… she’s been such a special friend to me and taught me so many incredible, important things… and I’m so honored that she came here… I just hope I didn’t leave anybody out, I just – boy, the American public and I thank all the disc-jokeys and everybody, I love you so much and thank you.”

On winning the Favorite Soul Video award for Beat It: “This is wonderful. [To La Toya] Come here.. This is my sis.. oh, Bob Giraldi! [laughs] [who joins him on stage]. This is my sister, La Toya, I’m so honored she’s here, I didn’t know she was gonna bring this award. Working on ‘Beat It’ was a great experience. I had so much fun doing it, and this is my director, Bob Giraldi, whom I chose to be… I’ve put all my heart and my soul in my work and I’m so happy and honored that I won this wonderful award. Thank you.”, declares Jackson, more excited with each new award.

For Favorite Pop Video – Beat It, he is joined again on stage by director Bob Giraldi. “Again, I’d like to thank everybody. I’m so moved and so honored again… Thank you very much. I love you all. And one more – thank you, Michael Peters, you’re a wonderful person. Thank you.”, says Jackson.

On winning the American Music Award for Favorite Soul Male, the entertainer declares: “Again, I’m deeply moved and I really appreciate it, and the girls in the balcony, I love you, you’re wonderful. [laughs mildly] An important – an important chemistry in writing a song is inspiration and I’m holding one of inspirations – Emmanuel Lewis [best known for playing the title character in ‘Webster’].”.

For his last award that night, the Favorite Pop Male AMA, he smilingly concludes: “Thank you very much. It’s nothing more I can say, I love you all. Good-bye.”

Source: FB/Michael Jackson Fans Only

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TINA TURNER, SHOWSTOPPING POP-MUSIC SENSATION, DIES AT 83

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Her personal saga of struggle and revival was defiantly expressed in her 1984 hit song ‘What’s Love Got to Do With It’

She may have had second billing in her own group, but everyone knew who the star of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue was.

It was Tina Turner the world came to see when she and her husband, Ike, toured with the Rolling Stones in the 1960s and scored a Grammy-winning hit with “Proud Mary” in 1971.

It was Tina Turner who ignited the stage with her raw voice and her frenzied, sweat-soaked dancing, as she became one of the most dynamic and influential performers in popular music.

And it was Tina Turner who, after walking away from the spotlight and her volatile, abusive husband, remade herself as a solo artist, selling more than 100 million records, winning eight Grammy Awards and becoming a brighter star in her 40s and 50s than she had been in her youth. Her overtly sexual costumes, dance moves and persona were imitated by performers across generations, from Mick Jagger to Beyoncé to Cardi B.

Tina Turner, the queen of rock ‘n’ roll, known for songs including “What’s Love Got to Do With It” and “Proud Mary,” died May 24. She was 83. (Video: Reuters)

Ms. Turner, whose saga of struggle and revival was defiantly expressed in her 1984 hit song “What’s Love Got to Do With It” and a best-selling autobiography, “I, Tina,” died May 24 at her home in Küsnacht, Switzerland, near Zurich. She was 83 and, in recent years, she had a stroke, kidney disease and other ailments. Bernard Doherty, her longtime publicist, confirmed the death but did not provide an immediate cause.

Ms. Turner, who grew up as Anna Mae Bullock in rural Nutbush, Tenn., was living in St. Louis in the late 1950s, when her older sister arranged an introduction to Ike Turner, who was performing at a local club.

He was already an established musician at 26 and had co-written a 1951 rhythm-and-blues hit, “Rocket 88,” featuring his hard-driving piano, that is sometimes called the first rock-and-roll record. At first, Ms. Turner, then 18, was put off by Ike’s gaunt, unsmiling appearance.

“I remember thinking that I had never seen anyone that skinny,” she told Rolling Stone magazine in 1986. “But when he walked out, he did have a great presence . . . boy, could he play that music. The place just started rocking. I wanted to get up there and sing sooooo bad.”

During an intermission, the band’s drummer — her sister’s boyfriend — set up a microphone, and Ms. Turner sang a song by B.B. King.

“Well, when Ike heard me,” she told Rolling Stone, “he rushed over to me and said, ‘Girl, I didn’t know you could sing!’ The band came back, and I kept singing.”

She began to work with Ike’s band, the Kings of Rhythm, but was not spotlighted until 1960, when a male singer didn’t show up for a studio recording session. Ms. Turner stepped up to the microphone to sing “A Fool in Love,” a song written by Ike.

It was meant to be just a demo recording, but Ms. Turner’s impassioned performance was released on a small label and credited to “Ike & Tina Turner” — a stage name bestowed by Ike. He chose the name because Tina rhymed with “Sheena, Queen of the Jungle,” a scantily clad, vine-swinging character in comic books and a 1950s TV series.

“A Fool in Love” sold 800,000 copies, became a No. 2 R&B hit and reached No. 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart. The group had a few other minor R&B hits but never quite reached nationwide fame.

Ms. Turner performs in London in 2009. That year, she retired from performing at age 70. (Stefan Wermuth/Reuters)

Offstage, Ms. Turner was raising four boys — two of her own, and two of Ike’s sons from another relationship. Her older son was from a relationship with Raymond Hill, a saxophonist in Ike Turner’s band; Ike was the father of her second son, born in 1960. She and Ike were married in 1962.

Working on the club circuit, Tina and the Ikettes — three women who were backup singers and dancers — developed a high-energy, dynamically choreographed stage act that made other groups look like statues.

Yet, behind the joyous dancing and music, Ms. Turner wrote in her 1986 memoir, “I, Tina,” Ike Turner controlled the group like “a sadistic little cult.” He carried a gun and allowed Ms. Turner no financial independence.

As the group’s profile began to rise with an appearance in a 1966 concert film “The Big T.N.T. Show,” Tina Turner caught the attention of music producer Phil Spector, who saw her as a potential star.

A major hitmaker of the early 1960s, Spector was known for his studio wizardry and “wall of sound” musical style. He co-wrote a song with Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich“River Deep, Mountain High,” that he asked Ms. Turner to record. Insisting on total artistic control, Spector agreed to credit the recording to “Ike and Tina Turner” if Ike stayed out of the studio.

At the long, nighttime recording sessions, Ms. Turner took off her sweat-drenched blouse and was wearing only her bra as she sang countless takes of the vocal track.

“River Deep” begins on a plaintive, introspective note — “When I was a little girl, I had a rag doll” — before building to a frenzied climax: “Do I love you, my oh my? Oh baby, river deep, mountain high!”

Rolling Stone later ranked “River Deep” No. 33 on the magazine’s list of the 500 greatest songs of the rock era. It became a hit in Europe but never caught on in the United States, reaching only No. 88 on the Billboard pop chart.

“It was too black for the pop stations, and too pop for the black stations,” Ms. Turner noted in her autobiography.

Still, it marked a turning point for Ms. Turner: She realized she didn’t need Ike Turner to make an important record — and that she was a singer with a voice of her own.

“You know why I will always love that song?” she told the Chicago Tribune. “People used to call me a dancer, not a singer. So when I got with Phil, I started charging ahead and he was like, ‘No, no, I just want you to sing.’ ”

In 1966, the Rolling Stones invited the Ike & Tina Turner Revue to join them for the first of several tours, introducing them to a wider audience.

Jagger came into the dressing room Ms. Turner shared with the Ikettes, she wrote in a 2018 memoir, “My Love Story,” “and said in his unmistakable voice: ‘I like how you girls dance.’

“We’d seen him strutting with his tambourine onstage, and he was a little awkward back then,” she continued. “We pulled him into our group and taught him how to do the Pony. Mick caught on fast. . . . Not that he ever gave me and the girls credit for his fancy new footwork. To this day, Mick likes to say, ‘My mother taught me how to dance.’ And I say, ‘Okay, that’s fine.’ But I know better.”

‘Nice . . . and rough’

During the late 1960s and early ’70s, Ike and Tina Turner began to record versions of songs by other artists, including the Stones’ “Honky Tonk Women,” Otis Redding’s “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long” and most memorably “Proud Mary,” written by John Fogerty of Creedence Clearwater Revival.

In the original recording and in every performance for the next three decades, Ms. Turner opened the song with a signature introduction that her audiences recited in unison with her: “We never, ever, do nothin’ nice . . . and easy. So we’re gonna do it nice . . . and rough!”

“Proud Mary” reached No. 4 on the pop charts in 1971, sold more than 1 million copies and won a Grammy Award for best R&B performance. The group had a minor hit in 1973 with “Nutbush City Limits,” a tune written by Ms. Turner about her Tennessee roots, and she released a pair of poorly received solo albums.

But her life in the 1970s was increasingly scarred by her worsening relationship with Ike Turner. He had a drug problem, flaunted his affairs with other women and sometimes beat Tina, leaving her with swollen eyes and, one time, a broken jaw. He used his fists, a folded wire hanger and a wooden shoe tree, or stretcher.

“I was trapped,” she told Rolling Stone. “The success and the fear came almost hand in hand. When I finally went to tell him that I didn’t want to go on . . . that’s when he got the shoe stretcher.”

In 1976, Ms. Turner slipped out of her hotel room and down an alley in Dallas, where the band was on tour. She had 36 cents, a gas station credit card and the clothes on her back. She found refuge with friends, in exchange for cleaning their houses, and lived on food stamps. She began to practice Buddhism, which she said gave a newfound inner peace.

After their divorce in 1978, Tina never saw Ike Turner again. Her financial settlement was not nearly enough to pay off hundreds of thousands of dollars in back taxes and broken concert contracts.

“It’s very difficult to explain to people why I stayed,” she later told The Washington Post. “I’d left Tennessee as a little country girl and stepped into a man’s life who was a producer and had money and was a star in his own right. And at one time, Ike Turner had been very nice to me. It was in the later years that he changed to become a horrible person.”

She began to appear on TV game shows and in Las Vegas lounges. In 1979, Ms. Turner found a new manager, Australian Roger Davies, who had helped guide Olivia Newton-John’s career. With Ms. Turner, he became the architect of one of the most remarkable comeback stories in show business.

Davies arranged for Ms. Turner to open for the Rolling Stones in 1981, and her cover version of Al Green’s “Let’s Stay Together” became a hit in England and in U.S. dance clubs. Yet, as late as 1983, she still didn’t have a recording contract with a major label.

That year, David Bowie told executives of Capitol Records that he had to skip a Manhattan party in his honor because his favorite performer was appearing at a nightclub.

“So they all came along and voilà’ — there I was onstage,” Ms. Turner told The Post. “They signed me simply because of David.”

Released to modest expectations in 1984, her album “Private Dancer” sold tens of millions of copies. Ms. Turner won three Grammy Awards, including Record of the Year, for the album’s top single, “What’s Love Got to Do With It,” which was her only No. 1 hit as a solo artist.

At first, she was reluctant to sing the tune, by two British songwriters, until she found the right vocal treatment, pitched somewhere between a snarl and leering come-on:

What’s love got to do, got to do with it

What’s love but a secondhand emotion

What’s love got to do, got to do with it

Who needs a heart when a heart can be broken?

Then in her mid-40s, Ms. Turner became an international superstar, acclaimed for the next 25 years for her breathtaking performances, in which she wore elaborate wigs and skimpy miniskirts that showed off her well-toned legs.

“Everything I’ve done for my act has really been so practical,” she told Rolling Stone in 1986. “The short dresses work for me onstage because I’ve got a short torso and because there’s a lot of dancing and sweating. . . . I never advertise myself for men. I always work to the women, because if you’ve got the girls on your side, you’ve got the guys.”

Ms. Turner’s 1986 memoir (written with Kurt Loder) formed the basis of an Oscar-nominated 1993 film, “What’s Love Got to Do With It,” with Angela Bassett portraying Ms. Turner and Lawrence Fishburne as Ike Turner. Her life also inspired a hit jukebox musical, “Tina,” that opened on Broadway in 2019.

Ms. Turner collaborated with U2’s Bono on the theme song for the 1995 James Bond movie “GoldenEye” and appeared at the 2000 Super Bowl. She retired from performing in 2009, the year she turned 70.

‘I lived that story’

Anna Mae Bullock was born Nov. 26, 1939, in Brownsville, Tenn., and spent her childhood in nearby Nutbush. Her father was a farm overseer, and her mother was a beautician, among other jobs.

Her parents had a tempestuous relationship and often lived away from the family, leaving young Anna Mae with grandparents and other relatives on farms in western Tennessee. “I wasn’t sad about it,” she told Rolling Stone in 1986. “It was just a fact that my parents didn’t care that much for me.”

In the 1950s, Ms. Turner was reunited with her mother, who was working as a maid in St. Louis. After finishing high school, she worked in a hospital before launching her music career.

Ms. Turner had several acting roles in films, first playing the Acid Queen in Ken Russell’s 1975 production of the Who’s rock opera, “Tommy.” A decade later, she appeared opposite Mel Gibson in the dystopian film “Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome,” which featured her hit song “We Don’t Need Another Hero.”

She turned down a role in Steven Spielberg’s 1985 film “The Color Purple,” which featured abusive men in the rural South, saying “I lived that story. I don’t need to act it.”

Ms. Turner was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, along with Ike Turner, in 1991. (Ike was in prison at the time on drug charges. He died in 2007.) She received the Kennedy Center Honors in 2005 and was named to the hall a second time, as a solo performer, in 2021.

In 1986, Ms. Turner met German music executive Erwin Bach, who was 16 years younger. They lived together for years before marrying in 2013. Ms. Turner had several serious health problems, including a stroke and needing kidney dialysis, in her 70s. Bach donated one of his kidneys to Ms. Turner in 2017.

Survivors include her husband. Her oldest son, Craig Turner (originally Craig Hill), died by suicide in 2018. “I still don’t know what took him to the edge,” Ms. Turner told the BBC. Another son, Ronnie Turner, died in 2022.

Despite her sensuous stage persona, Ms. Turner said the person she admired most was the soft-spoken, well-coiffed former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

“My taste was high,” she told Rolling Stone. “So when it came to role models, I looked at presidents’ wives. Of course, you’re talking about a farm girl who stood in the fields, dreaming, years ago, wishing she was that kind of person. But if I had been that kind of person, do you think I could sing with the emotions I do? You sing with those emotions because you’ve had pain in your heart.”

The Washington Post

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20 PHOTOS: DON WILLIAMS OVER THE YEARS

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Country Music Hall of Famer Don Williams, whose heartfelt country ballads have touched many country fans’ hearts, is without a doubt one of the genre’s biggest stars. He enjoyed great success throughout his career with his warm, reassuring voice and by creating his own musical identity that earned him the nickname “The Gentle Giant.”


Don Williams plays during a interview at his record label on Music Row. Sept. 20, 1974.

Don Williams plays during an interview at his record label on Music Row. Sept. 20, 1974.

ROBERT JOHNSON / THE TENNESSEAN

ROBERT JOHNSON / THE TENNESSEANDon Williams plays during a interview at his record label on Music Row. Sept. 20, 1974.

Don Williams plays during an interview at his record label on Music Row. Sept. 20, 1974.

ROBERT JOHNSON / THE TENNESSEANDon Williams performs for the crowd during the ABC/Dot luncheon show during CMA week at the Municipal Auditorium. Oct. 17, 1975.

Don Williams performs for the crowd during the ABC/Dot luncheon show during CMA week at the Municipal Auditorium. Oct. 17, 1975.

ROBERT JOHNSON / THE TENNESSEANDon Williams performs for the crowd during the ABC/Dot luncheon show during CMA week at the Municipal Auditorium. Oct. 17, 1975.

Don Williams performs for the crowd during the ABC/Dot luncheon show during CMA week at the Municipal Auditorium. Oct. 17, 1975.

ROBERT JOHNSON / THE TENNESSEANDon Williams waves to the crowd after his song during the ABC/Dot luncheon show during CMA week at the Municipal Auditorium. Oct. 17, 1975.

Don Williams waves to the crowd after his song during the ABC/Dot luncheon show during CMA week at the Municipal Auditorium. Oct. 17, 1975.

ROBERT JOHNSON / THE TENNESSEAN

Don Williams, left, and Jeanne Pruett greets each other during on of the shows at the Grand Ole Opry. April 23, 1976.

DAN LOFTIN / THE TENNESSEANAs Don Williams, right, accepts the Male Vocalist of the Year award at the 12th annual CMA Awards show at the Grand Ole Opry, his wife openly wept in the audience. Looking on is presenter Dolly Parton. Oct. 9, 1978.

As Don Williams, right, accepts the Male Vocalist of the Year award at the 12th annual CMA Awards show at the Grand Ole Opry, his wife openly wept in the audience. Looking on is presenter Dolly Parton. Oct. 9, 1978.

78cmaawards14...As Don Williams, right, accepts the Male Vocalist of the Year award at the 12th annual CMA Awards show at the Grand Ole Opry, his wife openly wept in the audience. Oct. 9, 1978.

As Don Williams, right, accepts the Male Vocalist of the Year award at the 12th annual CMA Awards show at the Grand Ole Opry, his wife openly wept in the audience. Oct. 9, 1978.

BILL WELCH / THE TENNESSEANDon Williams is performing for the crowd at the MCA Records show during Fan Fair at the State Fairground June 10, 1982.

Don Williams is performing for the crowd at the MCA Records show during Fan Fair at the State Fairground June 10, 1982.

RICKY ROGERS / THE TENNESSEAN82fanfair062...Don Williams performs for the crowd at the MCA Records show during Fan Fair at the State Fairground. June 10, 1982.

Don Williams performs for the crowd at the MCA Records show during Fan Fair at the State Fairground. June 10, 1982.

Don Williams sings for the crowd during one of the shows at the Grand Ole Opry June 24, 2000.

Don Williams sings for the crowd during one of the shows at the Grand Ole Opry June 24, 2000.

LARRY MCCORMACK / THE TENNESSEANAlison Krauss performs a tribute to Don Williams during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville,Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

Alison Krauss performs a tribute to Don Williams during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

SANFORD MYERS / THE TENNESSEANChris Young performs a tribute to Don Williams during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville,Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

Chris Young performs a tribute to Don Williams during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville,Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

SANFORD MYERS / THE TENNESSEANJim Foglesong inducts Don Williams during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville,Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

Jim Foglesong inducts Don Williams during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

SANFORD MYERS / THE TENNESSEANManager Robert Pratt accepts Don Williams medallion during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville,Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

Manager Robert Pratt accepts Don Williams medallion during the Country Music Hall of Fame Medallion Ceremony at the Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tenn. Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010.

SANFORD MYERS / THE TENNESSEANDon Williams sings "Livin on Tulsa Time"  during the ASCAP Country Awards. He was also the Golden Note Award winner.

Don Williams sings “Livin on Tulsa Time” during the ASCAP Country Awards. He was also the Golden Note Award winner.

THE TENNESSEANDon Williams, country music's "gentle giant," 78.

Don Williams, country music’s “gentle giant,” 78.

GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEANKeith Urban and Don Williams embrace after they performed together during the We're All for the Hall Concert benefiting the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum at the Bridgestone Arena Tuesday, April 10, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn.

Keith Urban and Don Williams embrace after they performed together during the We’re All for the Hall Concert benefiting the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum at the Bridgestone Arena Tuesday, April 10, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn.

GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEANVince Gill performs with Don Williams during the We're All for the Hall Concert benefiting the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum at the Bridgestone Arena Tuesday, April 10, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn.

Vince Gill performs with Don Williams during the We’re All for the Hall Concert benefiting the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum at the Bridgestone Arena Tuesday, April 10, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn.

GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEANDon Williams waves to the crowd after performing at the We're All for the Hall Concert benefiting the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum at the Bridgestone Arena Tuesday, April 10, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn.

Don Williams waves to the crowd after performing at the We’re All for the Hall Concert benefiting the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum at the Bridgestone Arena Tuesday, April 10, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn.

GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEAN

Here are some of the most important facts about Dom Williams.

1. He’s a native of Floydada, Texas, United States. 

Born on May 27, 1939, Donald Ray Williams was the youngest of three sons. His father was a mechanic whose job took Williams to other regions. Meanwhile, his mother became the biggest musical influence in Williams’ life. She was the one who taught Williams how to play the guitar at a young age and encouraged him to listen to country music growing up.

2. He worked various odd jobs to support himself and his family. 

After serving with the United States Army Security Agency for two years, Williams worked on different odd jobs around Corpus Christi, Texas – where he worked in the oil fields, as well as a truck driver and a bill collector.

3. His music career started in a duo. 

Williams initially began performing in a duo called Strangers Two together with Lofton Kline. And then, with the addition of Susan Taylor, they became the folk-pop trio Pozo-Seco Singers and achieved major pop hits in the United States. However, following Kline’s departure, the trio suffered from a lack of musical direction and later disbanded.

4. He also tried his hand at acting in some films of Burt Reynolds. 

Williams played the role of a band member in the 1975 comedy film W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings and had a small role in the 1980 action-comedy film Smokey and the Bandit II. Meanwhile, Reynolds made sure Don Williams songs were also on the soundtrack.

5. He’s a father of two. 

In 1960, Williams married Joy Janene Bucher. The couple has two sons together, Gary and Timmy. 

6. He’s indeed the Gentle Giant

With an imposing height of six feet one and a gentle touch that paired well with his warm baritone, Williams earned him the nickname of country’s Gentle Giant.

7. He retired twice. 

In 2006, Williams retired after his official farewell concert. However, four years later, he came out of retirement and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. He continued to perform and even released quite a few albums. 

But after a career that has spanned six decades, Williams has finally decided, “It’s time to hang my hat up and enjoy some quiet time at home.”

In 2017, Williams died in Mobile, Alabama, after a brief struggle with emphysema. It may have been many years, but one thing is for sure, the Gentle Giant that once warmed our hearts will never be forgotten. 

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AFROBEAT MUSICIAN, SEUN KUTI SPEAKS AFTER REGAINING FREEDOM FROM POLICE DETENTION

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Afrobeat musician, Seun Kuti has appreciated his family members, friends and legal advisers for their support after his release from police custody where he had been held for more than a week.

SaharaReporters on Tuesday reported that the afrobeat musician was released on bail from detention having met his bail conditions.

His lawyers, Adeyinka Olumide-Fusika (SAN) and Kunle Adegoke (SAN), in a statement earlier on Tuesday, said Seun’s release was only waiting for administrative approval.

However, after his freedom, Seun took to his official Instagram page to thank his family, lawyers and everyone, who showed him love and support during his trying time.

He wrote, “I want to say a profound thanks to everyone who showed me all this love. All my friends that showed up. Thanks most especially to my beautiful wife, @chefyeidekuti.”

“Last but not least. The legal team. Uncle Femi Falana (SAN) Uncle Olumide Fisika (SAN) Uncle Kayode Adegoke (SAN) Barrister Ogunlana. Ade Ademiluyi. And everyone on the team. I owe you my freedom and my sanity. Let’s go,” he added.

Saharareporters

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