ROCKS OFF - The Rolling Stones Message Board
A Bigger Bang Tour 2006

Olympiastadion, Berlin- 21st July 2006
© Johannes Eisele with thanks to Gypsy!
[ ROCKSOFF.ORG ] [ IORR NEWS ] [ SETLISTS 1962-2006 ] [ FORO EN ESPAÑOL ] [ BIT TORRENT TRACKER ] [ BIT TORRENT HELP ] [ BIRTHDAY'S LIST ] [ MICK JAGGER ] [ KEITHFUCIUS ] [ CHARLIE WATTS ] [ RONNIE WOOD ] [ BRIAN JONES ] [ MICK TAYLOR ] [ BILL WYMAN ] [ IAN "STU" STEWART ] [ NICKY HOPKINS ] [ MERRY CLAYTON ] [ IAN 'MAC' McLAGAN ] [ LINKS ] [ PHOTOS ] [ JIMI HENDRIX ] [ TEMPLE ] [ GUESTBOOK ] [ ADMIN ]
CHAT ROOM aka The Fun HOUSE Rest rooms last days
ROCKS OFF - The Rolling Stones Message Board
Register | Update Profile | F.A.Q. | Admin Control Panel

Topic: Sam Myers RIP Return to archive
21st July 2006 01:02 PM
Ten Thousand Motels Bluesman Sam Myers dies at 70
Posted: 2006-07-19
Jazz News

DALLAS - Legendary bluesman Sam Myers died Monday of throat cancer at his Dallas home, according to his sister, Eula Jones. He was 70.

Myers was diagnosed with cancer in February 2005, and had been unable to perform with his band, Anson Funderburgh & The Rockets, since December 2004.

Jones said Monday that she had not talked to her brother in several months.

”He couldn't talk, you know. He had friends who stayed with him and took care of him,” Jones told The Associated Press.

Jones said memorial services were being planned for Dallas and Jackson, Miss. She said Myers would be brought back to Mississippi for burial in a small family cemetery, which she declined to identify.

Myers, best known as a blues vocalist and harmonica player, had been with The Rockets as their featured vocalist since 1986. Myers, along with The Rockets, collectively won nine W.C. Handy awards, the blues community's equivalent to the Grammy awards.

The Laurel, Miss., native had performed since his late teens dating back to the early 1950s. He moved to Dallas in the 1980s.

Myers was a former drummer with blues great Elmore James from 1952 to 1963 and had performed with countless others.

Myers got started in music while living in Jackson. He became skilled enough at playing the trumpet and drums that he received a non-degree scholarship from the American Conservatory School of Music in Chicago. Myers attended school by day and at night frequented the nightclubs of Chicago's South Side, meeting and sitting in with Jimmy Rogers, Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf, Little Walter and James.

In 1956, Myers wrote and recorded what was to be his most famous single, “Sleeping In The Ground,” a song that has been performed by Eric Clapton, Robert Cray and others.

From the early 1960s until 1986, Myers worked the clubs in Mississippi. He toured Europe with Sylvia Embrey and the Mississippi All-Stars Blues Band. In 1986, Sam met Anson Funderburgh, from Plano, Texas, and joined Funderburgh's band, The Rockets. Their last album was 2003's “Which Way is Texas?”

Myers' final release was his 2004 solo album, “Coming from the Old School.”

His last appearance in Mississippi came in February when he was presented the blues ambassador award by Gov. Haley Barbour.

Other survivors includes a son; a brother; and two grandchildren.

-- Associated Press
21st July 2006 01:04 PM
RollingstonesUSA R.I.P.
21st July 2006 01:20 PM
Ten Thousand Motels July 18, 2006

Autobiography of late Miss. bluesman Sam Myers to be published

By Carey Miller
[email protected]


The University Press of Mississippi has announced that it will publish the autobiography of late Mississippi bluesman Sam Myers in October.

Myers, 70, died Monday at his home in Dallas from complications from throat cancer.
The autobiography, Sam Myers: The Blues is My Story, is co-authored by Myers and Jeff Horton, a blues musician and journalist active in the Texas scene whose work has been published in Southwest Blues magazine.

The book tells Myers’ story — from attending the state school for the blind in Piney Woods to his W.C. Handy Award-winning collaboration with Texas blues guitarist Anson Funderburgh that lasted until his death. It also includes contributions from Myers’ father, a boyhood friend, as well as musical friends and collaborators, including a chapter of recollections by Funderburgh.

For more information, visit the University Press of Mississippi’s Web site at www.upress.state.ms.us.


[Edited by Ten Thousand Motels]
21st July 2006 01:21 PM
glencar RIP Sam...
Search for information in the wet page, the archives and this board:

PicoSearch
The Rolling Stones World Tour 2005 Rolling Stones Bigger Bang Tour 2005 2006 Rolling Stones Forum - Rolling Stones Message Board - Mick Jagger - Keith Richards - Brian Jones - Charlie Watts - Ian Stewart - Stu - Bill Wyman - Mick Taylor - Ronnie Wood - Ron Wood - Rolling Stones 2005 Tour - Farewell Tour - Rolling Stones: Onstage World Tour A Bigger Bang US Tour

NEW: SEARCH ZONE:
Search for goods, you'll find the impossible collector's item!!!
Enter artist an start searching using "Power Search" (RECOMMENDED)