The 50 Most Awesomely Dead Rock Stars - Yeah, Vids!

August 19th, 2008 Posted By drillanwr.

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Okay … Loads of heavy political and punk-ass Russians news … It’s “Hump Day”, here’s one that won’t chew at your stress level.

LONG list so I’ll just throw ya the first half to Number One. You can hit the link for the rest of the list.

BTW, LBA is co-posting this one with me … and you know how we loves our music.

OH! And regarding my Joe Strummer selection … One of his last songs and I love it … I know it ain’t classic CLASH, but live a little, eh?

Yeah, it’s a 2006 list, but I doubt it’s changed much in 2.5 yrs … wondering where Amy Winehouse will be listed— Never mind … sorry.

(Blender, March 2006)

For many musicians, death is not a final reckoning — it’s the best career move they ever made. So which immortal souls are raising the most hell in 2006? From Joey Ramone to the Notorious B.I.G. to Johnny Cash, the dearly departed are just dying to get on Blender’s first annual corpsetastic power list!

25. DEATH AND GLORY
Joe Strummer 1952-2002
Eco-friendly Clash frontman

Cause of Death: Heart attack
Bad Timing: Strummer expired in the middle of a comeback — his new band, the Mescaleros, had great buzz, and with the Hall of Fame induction and the 25th-anniversary reissue of the Clash’s London Calling on the calendar, a reunion was rumored. Since his death, his reputation has only grown.
Rebel Sell: By 2005, three Stummer documentaries and four biographies had joined the tide of Clash homages (Julien Temple us reportedly making another doc now). Astralwerks also reissued two obscurities — the soundtrack to the 1987 film Walker, and Elgin Avenue Breakdown, from Strummer’s pre-Clash band the 101′ers — which were both well-received.
Still a Do-Gooder: Strummer still kicks ass as a social activist. His commitment to “carbon neutral” living (planting trees to compensate for greenhouse gases) inspired the memorial Rebel’s Wood, a fan-funded seedling forest on the Isle of Skye. Meanwhile, his widow Lucinda established a memorial foundation to build affordable workspaces for musicians, although its first hoped-for renovation lost out to a Georgian mansion on the BBC’s home-makeover show “Restoration.”

24. THE NAKED AND THE DEAD
Michael Hutchence 1960-1997
Priapic INXS singer

Cause of Death: Autoerotic asphyxiation
Leave Fast, Die Young, Leave a Pantsless Corpse? Hutchence died while he was still young and good-looking, but the circumstances of his end — found hanging naked on the back of a hotel room door, having inadvertently strangled himself while masturbating — hardly burnished his Dionysion sex-god image. Later still, more sordid details of his demise were provided in a TV documentary by his girlfriend Paula Yates.
Life After Death: INXS’s polished dance-pop aged poorly in the post-grunge years, and Hutchence’s death didn’t help. His self-titled solo debut was posthumously released in 1999, to little fanfare.
Mystify: His family will never see any of his money, as most of the $14 million fortune he left as his death was irretrievably lost in a collection of secret companies and trust funds set up to protect it.
Harsh reality: Hutchence’s bandmates carried on as INXS without him, enlisting a series of replacements culminating in last year’s reality show Rock Star: INXS, selecting J.D. Fortune, a 32-year-old Canadian former Elvis impersonator, as permanent vocalist.

23. DARK HORSE
George Harrison 1943-2001
Quiet Beatle and Hare Krishna

Cause of Death: Cancer
All Things Must Pass: Never the most fiscally prudent Beatle — his mismanaged film company, HandMade Films, once left him $23 million in debt — Harrison was still worth $245 million at his death; despite reports that half his fortune was left to the Hare Krishnas, it all went to wife Olivia and song Dhani.
Life After Death: While less aggressively marketed than John Lennon, there has been a steady stream of posthumous Harrison product: a release for his final album, Brainwashed, his late-’70s back catalogue digitally remastered and, most recently, a digital sprucing-up for the 1971 Concert for Bangladesh.
In the Vault: In death as in life, Harrison’s solo achievements are dwarfed by the Beatles’. Their company, Apple, prides itself on being a model of English good taste — eschewing talk of a Beatle “brand” — but still has a packed release schedule. Since Harrison died, there have been DVD issues of the Anthology, A Hard Day’s Night, The First U.S. Visit, Let It Be…Naked and the box set The Capitol Albums. While Harrison’s solo vault may be empty, there are plenty of Beatles projects on the way.

22. DARK VICTORY
Ian Curtis 1956-1980
Joy Division’s voice from beyond

Cause of Death: Hanged himself on a clothing rack
Ice Age: Curtis checked out after watching Werner Herzog’s extra-depressing movie Stroszek, immediately dignifying his group’s statuesque dirges with a scary seal of authenticity. A month later, psthumous single “Love Will Tear Us Apart” became Joy Divison’s biggest-ever U.K. hit, but his bereft bandmates (by then trading as New Order) resisted Curtis’s transformation into tortured postpunk poster boy, painting the epileptic singer as a “silly bastard” who dug beer and girls.
New Dawn: Joy Division’s 45 recorded songs didn’t make anyone rich: not the surviving band members — whose royalties were funneled into the unsuccessful Hacienda nightclub until it went bust in 1997 — nor the Curtis estate (widow Deborah and daughter Natalie). But the ’90s saw a resurgence of the group as an influence on the Smashing Pumpkins, Hole, Nine Inch Nails, and Moby. Deborah’s weepy ‘95 memoir, Touching From a Distance, provides the basis for a Curtis biopic (provisionally titled Control) to be directed by Anton Corbijn this spring, while in the U.K. last year, “Love Will Tear Us Apart” was topped for the title of Best Song of the Last 25 Years only by British pop star Robbie Williams’s “Angels.”

21. CRACK OF DOOM
Ol’ Dirty Bastard 1968-2004
Wu-Tang wild man

Cause of Death: Heart failure brought on by drug overdose
Rusty’s Wild Years: Ol’ Dirty Bastard remains one of hip-hop’s most original — and best-loved — talents, both for his music and for his outlaw lifestyle. Yet his death came just as he as starting to piece his career back together after years lost to drugs and prison. Work on a TV reality show and a new album had begun, but most of the material is now in limbo. Even the Wu-Tang Clan’s much-anticipated tribute to Dirty, “I Go Through Life,” has yet to be released, while there’s an ongoing dispute over control of his estate between his mother and his widow, Icelene Jones.
Peer Plaudits: Aware the world is a less vivid place without him, hundreds attended ODB’s funeral in Brooklyn, including a black-clad Mariah Carey. But efforts to turn public affection into album sales have stalled, with Damon Dash not only bungling the release of A Son Unique, the record ODB was working on at the time of his death, but also provoking the ire of his widow with plans to put ODB’s initials on a new line sneakers.

20. STAYIN’ ALIVE
Maurice Gibb 1949-2003
One-third of the Bee Gees

Cause of Death: Heart attack during surgery
Life After Death: The youngest Bee Gee left an estate valued at over $60 million after his unexpected death, a figure due to be bumped up significantly in 2006. A Bee Gees stage musical, You Win Again, is scheduled to open simultaneously in London and New York. In addition, the Bee Gees’ back catalogue reverts to their ownership in 2006: Expect to be lavished with reissues. There’s also talk of a $30 million Hollywood remake of Saturday Night Fever — a successful stage version is still running in London. Meanwhile, Gibb’s paintball store, Commander Mo’s, continues to do brisk business in Miami.
Fraternal Disharmony: It briefly seemed as if Maurice Gibb would be the recipient of two separate tribute events: Brother Barry claimed that he had been “deliberately disinvolved” in brother Robin’s plans for a concert and a tribute album featuring Paul McCartney, Snoop Dogg, and Beyoncé, and was planning his own separate homage. However, in December, Robin claimed that reports of the feud were untrue and that Barry would be included in any tributes.

19. PEARLY GATES
Janis Joplin 1943-1970
Southern Comfort-soaked blues shouter

Cause of Death: Heroin overdose
Pearl Jams: The tortured 28-year-old was still working on her solo debut, Pearl, when she OD’d in Hollywood’s Landmark hotel. Her will left her estate to her family and $2,500 for her friends to “have a ball.” Released four months later, Pearl topped the charts for nine weeks and yielded her biggest hit “Me and Bobby McGee.” Since Joplin’s death, her music has been remastered and collected on numerous greatest-hits collections and a couple of box sets; she received a Lifetime Achievement Award Grammy in 2005.
The Show Must Go On: Two biopics are currently in production. One has Pink as Janis; the other, more improbably, stars Reneé Zelwegger.
Like the ’60s Never Happened: Joplin’s back catalogue is no great money-spinner, but the throwaway anti-consumerism song “Mercedes Benz”was licensed to Mercedes for a 1995 commericial (”A hoot,” said Janis’s sister). Early last year, Joplin’s estate announced plans for The Search for the Pearl, an unappealing-sounding reality TV show casting for a modern Janis along the lines of INXS’s Rock Star, but since then things have been quiet.

18. BAD AIR DAY
Ronnie Van Zant 1948-1977
Lynard Skynard leader

Cause of Death: Plane crash
Life After Death: The success of the kings of Southern rock was barely interrupted by the plane crash that killed Van Zant and devasted his band three days after the release of their sixth album. Dozens of releases followed, ranging from an excellent box set to a screed of shoddy compilations; 26 million albums have been sold and “Freebird” has been played on the radio more than two million times; this year, Skynard will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Double Trouble: Skynard re-formed in 1987 with Van Zant’s younger brother, Johnny, on vocals. This incarnation’s albums are middling at best, but fans remain keen to hear the Ronnie-era hits live, reported to the tune of $100,000 — of which Van Zant’s estate receives a cut. Despitea legal agreement with the widows of Ronnie and guitarist Steve Gains that the band must have a least three original members in order to use the name, after bassist Leon Wilkeson died in 2001 they continued with just two from the classic lineup.
Peer Plaudits: Van Zant’s life was the basis of the Drive-By Truckers’ 2001 concept album Southern Rock Opera.

17. BOHEMIAN EULOGY
Freddie Mercury 1946-1991
Theatrical Queen frontman

Cause of Death: Pneumonia excacerbated by AIDS
Get Rich or Die Trying: In 1990, Queen’s worth stood at $25.9 million; in the wake of the publicity following Mercury’s widely mourned demise, that figure rose to $44 million for 1993.
The Show Must Go On: In 2002, the Queen musical We Will Rock You debuted in London and grossed $60 million in its first two years, with subsequent productions following in Australia, Russia, Germany, Spain and Las Vegas. That success prompted the release of “new” Queen product, as have the live activities of the current Paul Rodgers-fronted version of the band. While the latter diminishes Queen’s brand value, the personal reputation of Mercury has been enhanced, with critical opinion generally agreeing that Rodgers is unfit to wear his predecessor’s crown, metaphorical or otherwise.
Peer Plaudits:
Playing a Queen cover is a surefire way to please a crowd while allowing them a moment of unabashed stadium-rock flamboyance — Green Day routinely encore with “We Are the Champions”; a 2005 tribute album, Killer Queen, featured Sum 41 and Flaming Lips. Finally, without Freddy Mercury, the Darkness’s Justin Hawkins would probably be working as a plumber.

16. ONE-TWO-THREE DOWN
The Ramones
New York punk’s original pinheads

Causes of Death: Jeffery “Joey Ramone” Hyman, vocalist (1951-2001): lymphoma; Doug “Dee Dee Ramone” Colvin, bassist (1952-2002): fatal heroin OD; John “Johnny Ramone” Cummings’ guitarist (1948-2004): prostate cancer
We’re a Happy Family: Death came as blessed relief for the Ramones, cursed to tour forever thanks to perennially poor album sales and Johnny’s bullying drive. Even as Da Brudders were being feted at a Thirtieth Anniversary Tribute at L.A.’s Avalon ballroom in 2004, rockdoc End of the Century was exposing the squabbling reality of life in the band.
Hey Ho! Let’s Grow! Their debute album cost only $6,200 to make, but the three-CD box set Weird Tales of the Ramones has sold 10,000 copies at $65 a pop. The money now accrues to widows Barbara Zampini and Linda Cummings and to the estate of Joey Ramone, while surviving drummers Tommy Erdelyi and Marc “Marky Ramone” Bell earn a smattering of royalties.
Peer Plaudits: A 10-foot Johnny statue unveiled by celebrity friends Lisa Marie Presley and Vincent Gallo looms over Dee Dee’s remains at Hollywood Forever Cemetery; Joey was honored when the corner of Bowery and Second Street in Mnhattan was renamed Joey Ramone Place.

15. THE FINAL CURTAIN
Frank Sinatra 1915-1998
Leader of the Rat Pack

Cause of Death: Heart attack
His Way: Death only enhanced the appeal of a man who had been a household name throughout his career. Most of his estimated $200 million estate is held in private trust funds, but the rights to his music and image are split between the children of his first marriage and his fourth wife, Barbara, a former model and dancer who took issue with some of the children’s sanctioned merchandising, such as the “singing” souvenir plate.
Life After Death: A seemingly endless stream of reisses has kept interest in Sinatra’s music alive, but his name can sell anything: Sinatra, and $8.7 million production featuring video projections of Frank in action accompanied by a 24-piece orchestra, is due to open in London in spring 2006, while an Oris Frank Sinatra watch retails at $2,850.
Peer Plaudits: The aura of suited cool that Sinatra perfected in the early ’60s continues to endure — through HBO’s The Rat Pack: Live From Las Vegas — regardless of recent, legend-tarnishing Sinatra books, including former valet George Jacobs’s sex-and-Mafiosi tell-all Mr. S and 2005’s unflattering Sinatra: The Life.

14. SPINNING IN HIS GRAVE
DJ Screw 1971-2000
Innovative Houston mixer

Cause of Death: Heart attack induced by codeine OD
That’s a Nasty Cough: Screw, a.k.a. Robert Earl Davis Jr., pioneered Houston’s slo-mo “screwed” productione style, tailor-made for the Houston rap scene’s high of preference: chugging codiene. These days, every Dirty South record comes in a “chopped and screwed” version — and so did the last Transplants album, too …
Nix on the Mix: Incredibly prolific, Screw created hundreds of mixtapes, which he sold out of both his record store and home. These highly influential recordings provided the DNA for the current Houston rap explosion — Mike Jones? Paul Wall? They’d be nowhere wihout his woozy, downtuned experiments. His cousins continue to sell his music through the record store, Screwed Up Records and Tapes, on the city’s south side.
Fame Without Fortune: While Screw’s bank account may be static, his legend nevertheless continuesto grow: Protégés like Big Moe, Big Pokey and Lil’ Flip continually sing his praisesm and several of them participated in the tribute album Forever and a Day, while the DVD documentaries Soldiers United for Cash and The DJ Screw Legacy have brought in a little income for his family.

13. TROUBLE MAN
Marvin Gaye 1939-1984
Suffering soul icon

Cause of Death: Shot dead by his father
From the Vault: Gaye’s 23-year, velve-coived legacy was well-served by his death — coming in the early days of the CD revolution, it gave both Motown and CBS/Columbia all the more reason to launch a complete remaster program; in 1995, Motown followed this with the box set The Master 1961-1984.
Debts Get It On: Gaye’s sudden, shocking murder threw his laready diey finances into further disarray. No only did he not have a will at the time of his death but he also stil owed ex-wife Anna Gordy $293,000 from their divorce settlement, and was $2 million in arrears for back taxes — later repaid from royalties. In 2000, Gaye’s three children issued bonds against his future recording royalties, generating an eight-figure payday for the estate.
Peer Plaudits: 10,000 attended a funeral that featured Stevie Wonder singing and a reading from Smokey Robinson; many sonfs have been dedicated to Gaye, including Diana Ross’s “Missing You” and the Commodores’ “Night Shift.” With no fewer thatn six Gaye biographies and a recent Hennessy campagn using Gaye’s image from “What’s Going On” as an imprimatur of urban sophistication, he remains as iconic as ever.

12. LATINA LEGACY
Selena 1971-1995
Spanish-language superstar

Cause of Death: Shot by No. 1 fan
Life After Death: More than a decade after being gunned down by her fan club president, Yolanda Saldivar, Selena’s global sales and celebrityhave been eclipsed by anoher Latino singer-cum-film star — Jennifer Lopez, whose big break came when she played the slain singer in the biopic Selena. But she remains a major figure in Latin music.
The Show Must Go On: This year, 50,000 fans attended the Selena Vive! tribute concert in Houston, Texas, featuring Gloria Estefan and Paulina Rubio. At more than three hours long, it became the highest-rated and most-viewed Spanish-language show in U.S. television history, adding a substantial boost to sales of her back catalogue (around 20 posthumous collections have been released to date) and other merchandise, which includes a Selena doll, Selena perfume and Selena baseball caps in rhinestone and leopard-print.
Mas Selena: There are plans for a Selena stage musical to open in Mexico City, and while the Selena boutique in San Antonio has closed and plans to open another in Monterray were shelved, the branch in her Texas hometown of Corpus Christi — and the Selena museum there — continue to do business.

11. THIS ISN’T THE END
Jim Morrison 1943-1971
Doors singer; Lizard King

Cause of Death: Suspected heroin overdose
Wallow in the Mire: Morrison’s memory has sustained considerable abuse since his interment in Paris’s Pére Lachaise cemetery. Nonetheless, Doors drummer John Densmore has refused multimillion-dollar offers for use of Doors music in ads — against the protests from keyboardist Ray Manzarek and guitarist Robby Krieger, who enlisted ex-Cult signer Ian Ashbury to fill Morrison’s leather trousers in a 2002 tour known as Doors of the 21st Century. A suit from Densmore and Morrison’s estate (the parents of Morrison and of his late wife Pamela Courson) forced a name change — to “D21C.”
Touch Me, Jay-Z: The Doors didn’t become massive until 1979, when “The End” was featured in Apocalypse Now. After 1980, Morrison bio No One Here Gets Out Alive became a bestseller, and a greatest hits album sold 2 million copies. Interest remained steady until spiking at Oliver Stone’s Val Kilmer-starring The Doors, which dealt a near-lethal blow to Morrison’s draw aura by co-starring Meg Ryan. Redemption came in 2001, when Jay-Z’s “Takeover” built its ominous momentum on a sample of the Doors’ “Five to One.”

10. NO LONGER HITTING THE ROAD, JACK
Ray Charles 1930-2004
Pioneering legend of soul, gospel, country, blues, jazz and most points in between

Cause of Death: Complications from liver disease
Charles in Charge: Charles’s posthumous plaudits were both lengthened and amplifiedby the release four months after his death, of the highly successful biopic Ray, which reminded audiences worldwide of the singer’s genre-hopping talent, amazing rags-to-riches story — and also of his womanizing, heroin-injectingways.
Ray Charles on Their Mind: Last year, residents of Tampa, Florida, objected to plan to rename a street after Charles, suggesting that, since the neighborhood was already rife with drug dealers, associating it with a former smack addict probably wasn’t going to help much.

9. MARLEY’S GHOST
Bob Marley 1945-1981
The first Third World superstar

Cause of Death: Brain, lung and liver cancer
Print the Legend: Reggae’s heavyweight champion had to wait for death to make him a U.S. superstar. The week he was diagnosed with cancer, he played Madison Square Garden — opening for the Commodores. But the posthumous collection Legend has sold more than 17 million copies worldwide; his estate, controlled by his widow, Rita, and his 11 children, earns some $6 million a year; and his catalogue has been assessed at a value of $100 million.
No Woman, No Cry: Shortly after Marley’s death, widow Rita unknowlingly signed away numerous rights to his $30 million estate and had to spend millions in lawsuits to establish herself and Marley’s children as sole controllers of his name and likeness. But Rita now controls a record company, museum, guided tours, a music festival and several foundations.
Life After Death: Universal, which owns Marley’s work on Island, has recently purchased his earlier Jamaican catalogue, and a new edition of the definitive biography, Catch a Fire, is about to be published. Yet projects intended to introduce Marley to new listeners have been duds.

8. HE DID HAVE A GUN
Kurt Cobain 1967-1994
Reluctant spokesman for a generation

Cause of Death: Suicide
Dough From Woe: Worth less than $1 million when he dies, Cobain’s future royalties were valued at $100 million
Smells Like Mean Spirit: Posthumous Nirvana releases have been dogged by undignified wrangling over Nirvana LLC, the partnership established by widow Courtney Love, drummer Dave Grohl and bassist Krist Novoselic to control the band’s musical legacy. While 1994’s Unplugged in New York and the live compilation From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah proved no problem, the band’s final studio track, “You Know You’re Right,” emerged on a 2002 greatest-hits set only in return for Love’s handing over some demos for use on the box set With the Lights Out.
Kurt on Camera: While documentary Kurt & Courtney investigated conspiracy theories surrounding Cobain’s death, Gus Van Sant’s Last Days — a meandering account of the death of a junkie rock idol called Blake, loosely based on Cobain — might have been more to Kurt’s taste.
Dear Diary: In 2002, Love received a reported $4 million for the rights to publish Cobain’s journals, even though one entry cites “the rape of my personal thoughts” as Cobain’s reason for his dislike of fame.

7. A LONG, STRANGE, TRIP
Jerry Garcia 1942-1995
Bearlike Grateful Dead leader

Cause of Death: Heart attack after years of heroin addiction
The Dead Bill Gates: Garcia’s estate, valued at $9.9 million at his death, generates millions more annually through recordings, artwork and licensed goods — from area rugs to Clos du Blois’s J. Garcia wine.
Celebrity Deathmatch: Garcia’s estate has been viciously contested by ex-wives, lovers and pals. Captain Trips was posthoumously sued by his personal trainer as well as by an acupuncturist, his office manager and a guy who said he babysat him during bad acid trips
Noodles Unite:Garcia inspired the entire jam band counterculture, which spawned Dave Matthews and Phish, as well as the worst band names ever, from String Cheese Incident to the Disco Biscuits.
Make It Stop: Beyond the usual icon’s legacy — three biographies, a new biopic project improbably produced by Malcom in the Middle actor Justin Berfield — the homegrown Garcia recording industry stands as an ideal for post-mortem stardom. The Dead recorded just about everything, with no concerts alike, and the stock of unreleased Dead recordings is valued as high as $400 million, including a catalogue of 500 Garcia solo concert recordings.

6. ‘SCUSE ME WHILE I KISS THE SKY
Jimi Hendrix 1942-1970
Left-handed guitar genius

Cause of Death: Choked on own vomit after barbiturate OD
Life After Death: Hendrix’s recording career lasted less than four years, but it’s still among the zeniths of electric-guitar playing. But self-appointed “musical curator” Alan Douglas diluted his legacy by releasing album after album of outtakes, unfinished tapes and live recordings for several decades.
The Vault: In the ’90s, Hendrix’s late father, Al, and stepsister Janie, funded by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, successfully sued for control of the Hendrix archives. They formed the company Experience Hendrix and have kept a tight rein on the catalogue, raking in over $50 million from album sales, merchandise and ads from Pepsi and Audi. By 2001, Hendrix — worth only $500,00 when he died — was No. 5 on Forbes magazine’s list of the top-earning dead celebrities. He has since dropped out of the Top 10, and in 2004, Janie was unsuccessfully sued by Jimi’s younger brother Leon, who had been written out of their father’s will.
Lasting Legacy: His “Star Spangled Banner” has becoming audio shorthand for the ’60s, and there have been pile of Hendrix biographies, but Andre 3000’s planned Hendrix biopic seems to have fallen through.

5. FALLEN IDOL
John Lennon 1940-1980
Onetime Beatle; anthemic activist

Cause of Death: Murdered by stalker Mark Chapman
Shot You Down: Chapman said in 2004 that in killing Lennon he intended “to steal [his] fame.” But death proved the genesis of the Lennon myth, and the Lennon business: His estate earned $22 million in 2005 alone.
Oh, Yoko: Lennon’s profile is sustained both by continuing public fascination and the hands-on management of his musical legacy by his widow, Yoko Ono. Immediately after his death, the single “(Just Like) Starting Over” and the album it was taken from, Double Fantasy, reached No. 1 in the Billboard charts. His name has since been attached to everything from children’s toys (the “Real Love” range based on his sketches of animals) to Liverpool’s John Lennon Airport (slogan: “Above us only sky”).
Peer Plaudits: his violent death cemented Lennon’s status as a counterculture icon — in spite of biographies that depict his last years as a tangle of drug addiction, self-doubt and an obsession with numerology. Hollywood is now taking an interest with Chapter 27, starring Jared Leto as Mark Chapman. The producers might hope it fares better than Lennon, the Yoko-endorsed Broadway musical that closed in September 2005 after just six weeks.

4. MARKED FOR DEATH
Tupac Shakur 1971-1996
Original gangsta

Cause of Death: Murdered in a drive-by shooting
Life After Death: In death, Tupac became a T-shirt and poster icon — hip-hop’s answer to James Dean — and one of the biggest earners in music. In 2003 his etate brought in $12 million, a stark contrast to the $150,000 in his bank account when he was shot.
America’s Most Wanted: Tupac released just four albums in his lifetime — but at lest 14 have appeared since then. Before his death, he had recorded an estimated 200 unreleased tracks, which are now controlled by his mother, Afeni Shakur. Although many of these releases fall well below the standards Tupac himself set, recent Eminem-assisted albums Resurrection and Loyal to the Game sold more than 1 million copies each.
Peer Plaudits: Tupac looms large over the generation of rappers who followed him: Eminem says he’s “the greatest song writer who ever lived.” His mother has also sought to glorify his name, founding the Tupac Amaru Shakur Center for the Arts in Stone Mountain, Georgia. Currently offering dance, vocal and yoga classes, a seven-foot bronze statue of her son stands in the gardens.

3. THE WHOPPER
Elvis Presley 1935-1977
Singer, King of Rocker & Roll

Cause of Death: Heart attack
Get Dead and Start Earning: Culturally, the King’s real reign was a mere 18 months — from 1956 to ‘57. Dead, he earns 10 to 20 times more than he did alive: With licensing, merchandising and CD sales (including three recent box sets and a No. 1 hits CD), the Elvis industry is worth $45 million a year.
Life After Death: Gruesome narotic and dietary details of the King’s twilight years emerged around his demise, later followed by Albert Goldman’s muck-raking biography. But more recent critical reassessments like Peter Guralnick’s scholarly two-volume study have redeemed Elvis’s artistic legacy. Graceland draws 600,000 pilgrims a year;there are 500 active fan clubs and 35,000 professional imperonators; and several organized religions have formed around Elivs, including the First Presleyterian Church of Elvis the Divine.
King, Inc.: Elvis’s estate was managed by his sole heir, Lisa Marie Presley, but in 2004 she sold 85% of his assets to sports-and music-promoting kingpin Robert F.X. Sillerman. He plans to probe Europe, Australia and Japan to find new markets for Elvis, the blue-chop tock of dead rockers.

2. READY TO DIE
The Notorious B.I.G. 1972-1997
Heavyweight rap icon

Cause of Death: Shot in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles
Larger Than Life: He was hailed as the finest rapper of his generation thanks to his keen eye for detail and lyrical virtuosity, and even in death Biggie’s reputation matched his near-400-pound physical presence. The posthumous Life After Death entered the album charts at No. 1 and went on to sell more than 10 million copies.
Death Wish: While his rival Tupac achieved a kind of martyrdom, Biggie’s demise left only thoughts of what might been. He didn’t leave the comprehensive vault of unfinished tracks Tupac did, and while 1999’s Born Again sold almost 2 million copies, it didn’t approach his best work. But although the recent Duets collection is subtitled “The Final Chapter,” Bad Boy Records recently announced the extension of Biggie’s musical legacy — into a collection of specially created cellphone ringtones.
Peer Plaudits: Biggie was an inspiration to the next generation of New York rappers — Jay-Z paid due homage by sampling “Juicy” on The Blueprint 2’s “A Dream.” His mother has also fought almost single-handedly to keep his memory alive, settingup the charitable Christopher Wallace Memorial Foundation, publishing a memoir, Biggie, and — most intriguingly — announcing plans for a movie treatment of her son’s life by Training Day director Antoine Fuqua

1. BLACK CELEBRATION!
Johnny Cash 1932-2003
Country’s eternal outlaw

Cause of Death: Complications due to diabetes
Cashing In: The career resurgence that began in 1993 when Tom Petty told Rick Rubin that he should record Cash for his American Recodings label has been uninterrupted by the death of the Man in Black, his image now frozen forever as the noble sufferer in the award-winning video for “Hurt.” Rubin’s Unearthed box set surfed the immediate sympathy wave, but more than two years later the deceased Cash thrives as a touchstone of cool. The Oscar-catnip biopic Walk the Line does a good job of sexing up the craggy Cash and his late wife June while boosting a chart staple. Wisely, daughters Rosanne, Tara, Kathleen and Cindy and son John knocked back a 2004 idea from Preparation H, who wanted to use Cash’s 1963 hit “Ring of Fire” in their advertising — a business opportunity Cash might have grabbed at his mid-’80s Columbia nadir, when he thought nothing of recording songs like “The Chicken in Black.”
Cash Cow: Cash’s stock is now so high, Rubin can use the still-unreleased American V, the last volume of Cash-recorded material he has in the vault, as collateral against which to renegotiate American’s contract with Univeral. Now due sometime in 2006 after more than 12 months’ delay, tracks will likely include “First Corinthians 5:55″ and, aptly, “Ain’t a Grave Can Hold Me.” Expect a double.


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17 Responses

  1. drillanwr (Today I Am A Georgian)

    I purposely didn’t put up videos for some of the top ten because some of them had already been covered in tonight’s Deep Thoughts …

    Morrison

    Harrison

    Joplin

  2. Brian H

    Read the whole article. Not my musical tastes, in general, but lots of interesting material. The writing and editing is gawdawful sloppy, though. Kind of a bad indicator.

  3. sierrahome

    But wait!…There’s more!…

    …now you can have old rock stars perform at your graduation party!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ga3XGW95YVQ

  4. Dave M.

    I wish they were all still alive. I miss most of them.
    There is one really big miss here.
    Ruby Starr.
    Never heard of her?
    Get the first album. Try http://www.gemm.com Ruby Starr and Grey Ghost. You play it loud, real loud.
    She was a backing singer for Black Oak Arkansas,
    went solo, long before the PC brigade ever heard of Joss Stone.
    Talk about the hairs on the back of your neck standing up!
    She didn’t die of alcohol poisoning or a stupid heroin overdose.
    She had a brain tumor.
    I miss you Ruby.

  5. tpasenelli

    Selena, but no Buddy Holly..Need I say More? Please explain yourself!?

  6. Jarhead68

    No Stevie Ray Vaughn? Only the best guitarist EVAH! Even Clapton was in awe over his ability. And to put rappers on this list is blasphemy, I tell ya. That’s not music. It’s elementary poetry with a boring, repetitious back beat. Blech!!!

  7. Paslode

    IMO…That has got to be Johnny Cash’s best song of all time.

  8. Max

    What great “gods” they are/were: drug addicts, perverts, homosexuals, adulterers, blasphemers, etc.

    You follow these people at your eternal peril, because you know exactly where they ended up. Hint: it wasn’t Heaven. That much should be obvious.

  9. steadfast

    I’d like to mention Jeff Buckley who tragically drowned in the mid-90’s. He voice was a gift from God. Never heard anyone like him then, nor like him now. Seems to me too that Jesus Christ would feel differently about those drug addicts, perverts, etc.

    “Hurt” was originally done by Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails. Johnny Cash took it another level.

  10. Typical White Texas Mom

    Awesome - Thanks for posting, Drill.

    Buddy Holly and Stevie Ray Vaughn missing from the list - both from Texas . . . It is a conspiracy! - Wait Selena and Janis - both from Corpus. Nevermind. Is Stevie Ray Vaughn just huge in Texas? Sometimes down here, we forget there are 49 other states - seriously. Stevie Ray Vaugh lives on.

    Just visited Graceland. Was so touched by the memory of Elvis - more than I thought I would be! My 15-year-old couldn’t understand why all these people were crying at the grave site. First Presleyterian Church of Elvis the Divine - that is hillarious. I can’t believe Lisa Marie sold out. That is just sad.

    Van Zant rocks - still.

  11. the gunslinger

    :evil: THIS LIST SUX. First off, when talking about Lynard Skynard you forgot to mention that not only did the Ronnie die but most of the band. How is Biggie before 2Pac but even worse how is he before Elvis???? Yeah Johnny Cash is cool but he died a relatively normal death. Jimi Hendrix should be first or at least second behind Elvis. Where the hell is Layne Staley of Alice in Chains???? What about John Bonham from Zepplin???? What about Randy Rhodes from Ozzy???? What about Dimebag Darrell from Pantera???? What about Shannon Hoon of Blind Melon???? You should’ve named this most Awesomely Dead Singers. I hate how singers get all the credit. It reminds me of when an officer takes the credit for all the grunt work! :twisted:

  12. drillanwr (Today I Am A Georgian)

    1. I only posted the top half of the list (for the sake of space) … you need to click on the link for (Blender, March 2006) before the article starts.

    2. I (and LBA) did NOT have anything to do with compling the list. Wouldn’t be our choices on some of these too. It’s an article LBA stumbled across while looking for music selections for the Deep Thoughts thread last night.

    3. The post was meant to spark music conversation … not to promote the life-styles of these people. There is no ‘godly’ worship going on here, so lighten up …

    4. We just thought a thread outside nuke-building, nation invading, and Hussein worshiping might be a welcome change for a few moments …

  13. Lftbhndagn (К аду с Россия)

    :arrow: Max

    What great “gods” they are/were: drug addicts, perverts, homosexuals, adulterers, blasphemers, etc.

    You follow these people at your eternal peril, because you know exactly where they ended up. Hint: it wasn’t Heaven. That much should be obvious.

    ————————————

    Max - ALthough I get the point of what your saying I do want to say that I have never worshiped any of them. I liked a lot of them, very much for their talent. Their music brought me some joy in times that I needed it.

    As far as them all rotting in hell? Who’s to say?

    Matthew 7 Max. No one knows if they repented but God. No one knows the sorrow they felt but God and God only can be the judge of their souls.

    I did not know any of them personally. I have never met any of them but that doesn’t stop me for saying a prayer to God to have mercy on them for the lives that they led. Isn’t it best just to pray for them rather then chastise them for the way you perceived them to be?

  14. rightangle

    Yeah, it is loosely titled “Rock Stars” and drugs/alcohol/depression-(lead singer from Boston) took many of their lives. But Plane wrecks took some of them too.

    Make it into a list not just limited to R/R of who died in plane wrecks and you’ve got (to name a few):

    Jim Croce, Patsy Cline, Ricky Nelson, and perhaps the most tragic since he was serving his country and entertaining the troops in a time of war, Glenn Miller.

  15. Unbreakable

    :arrow: the 50 most awesomely dead rock stars

    Uh, some of those weren’t exactly “rock” stars. More like “delusional-thuglike-black-liberation-theology-believing-would-have-been-Obama-voters-if-they-hadn’t-died-when-they-did-stars”. Other than that, good list, I liked it! :smile:

  16. Steven D

    I’ve got to agree on Buddy Holly, and especially Stevie Ray Vaughan. Man, that guy could smoke a guitar!

    Also remember that Big Bopper and Ritchie Valens both died in the plane with Buddy Holly.

  17. rightangle

    :arrow: Steven D. , TW Texas Mom, tpasenelli. I Left a post very late on yesterdays Deep Thoughts listing Buddy as #26 (forgot it was originally 50)… Just remembered John Denver died as well flying his own plane.

    Of the first 25 on the above list and to the best of my knowledge, Jimi Hendrix, Elvis, Johnny Cash, and Marvin Gaye had all served at least one year in the military. I only mention that because whether that helped them artistically or not, like Ted Williams serving in WWII and then Korea, it had to have impacted budding a music career(perhaps for the better?)

    Some others that died of medical problems albeit influenced by the lifestyle:

    Lowell George of “The Little Feat” heart attack age 34.

    Doug Bennett of “Doug and the Slugs” Slipped into a coma and died one week later at the age of 52.

    Buddy Blue of “Beat Farmers” died at the age of 48? while on stage from a heart attack (had known heart problems) carrying on the flame in the absence of his band mate and drummer “Country” Dick Montana who died a few years earlier from a heart attack.

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