September 13, 1982 ~ Avant-garde, black metal bassist, guitarist, producer Colin Marston born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA ~ As a musician has worked with acts such as Byla, Dysrhytmia, Sailors With Wax Wings, So Is The Tongue, Gorguts. Also an in-demand producer, engineer, mixer for the likes of Imperial Triumphant, Kayo Dot, Jarboe, Panopticon, Pyrrhon and Orthrelm
September 13, 1980 ~ Michelle Nolan, commonly known as indie rock, alternative rock singer, guitarist, pianist, songwriter Michelle DaRosa, born ~ Married to the Dropkick Murphys-bassist, singer Jeff Darosa. Best known as member of Straylight Run through 2008, departing the band to pursue a solo career. Has also sung backup for Taking Back Sunday and Coheed & Cambria
September 13, 1979 ~ Singer Geike Arnaert born in Poperinge, Belgium ~ Best known as member of Hooverphonic from 1997 through 2008, rejoining the band in 2020. Formed the duo Dorleac with Spinvis, known among others for the 2010 Adem soundtrack. Collaborated with BLØF on the 2018 hit Zoutelande
September 13, 1978 ~ Kasseem Dean, commonly known as DJ, producer Swizz Beatz, born in the Bronx, New York, USA ~ Member of the Ruff Ryders. Best known as producer, working with artists such as DMX (Party Up (Up In Here)), Eve (Gotta Man), Jay-Z, Beyoncé (Upgrade U), Styles P (Good Times), TI, Cassidy, Busta Rhymes (Touch It), Kanye West, and others
September 13, 1977 ~ Singer, pianist, songwriter Fiona Apple, full name Fiona Apple McAfee Maggart, born in New York, New York, USA ~ Classically trained pianist. Began writing songs at age 8. Debuted in 1996 with the album Tidal, of which the single Criminal earned her a Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. Has been releasing records to both critical acclaim and steady fanbase since. Known for songs such as Shadowboxer, Never Is A Promise, Fast As You Can, and Everey Single Night
September 13, 1975 ~ Guitarist, singer Joe Don Rooney born in Baxter Springs, Kansas, USA ~ Influenced by Chet Atkins, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck. Lead guitarist of country pop trio Rascal Flatts from 1999 through 2021. The group has sold over 25 million albums and is known for Billboard Country No.1 hits such as These Days, Mayberry, Bless The Broken Road, What Hurts The Most, My Wish, Stand, Take Me There, Here Comes Goodbye, Why Wait and Banjo
September 13, 1973 ~ Singer, songwriter, actor Aaron Benward, full name Aaron Jeoffrey Benward, born ~ Formed the CCM duo Aaron & Jeoffrey with his father Jeoffrey Benward, best known for songs such as I Go To The Rock and He Is. Released his Imagine solo debut album in 2000, spawning the hit Captured. Formed the country duo Blue County with Scott Reeves, known for songs such as Good Little Girls and That's Cool
September 13, 1970 ~ Rock, alternative rock, hip-hop, electronica bassist, keyboardist, singer Ben Ely, full name Benjamin Ely, born in Brisbane, Australia ~ Cites Metallica and Black Sabbath as main influences. Best known as member of alternative rock band Regurgitator, with whom he recorded over half a dozen albums since the mid-1990s including the acclaimed Art released in 2000. Ely has also been involved in several side projects, and with Decoder Ring co-wrote the soundtrack to the 2004 Somersault film
September 13, 1969 ~ Alternative rock, psychedelic rock drummer, keyboardist David Francolini, full name David Thomas Giuseppe Francolini, born in Hamilton, Bermuda ~ Co-founded Levitation with Terry Bickers and its successor Dark Star alongside Bic Hayes and Laurence O'Keefe. Founded Dragons in the mid-2000s. Toured with the Pet Shop Boys. Served as guitar tech for the likes of My Bloody Valentine and David Cassidy
September 13, 1968 ~ Country, CCM singer, songwriter Melodie Crittenden born ~ Released two albums as a solo artist, the eponymous Melodie Crittenden released in 1998 and Dream With Me Tonight (Lullabies For The Ages) in 2001. Best known for her 1998 single Broken Road. She would rerecord the song with Selah as Bless The Broken Road in 2006
September 13, 1961 ~ Phyllis Cryner, commonly known as singer. songwriter Bobbie Cryner, born in Woodland, California, USA ~ Known for singles such as Daddy Laid The Blues On Me, He Feels Guilty, You Could Steal Me, and the Dwight Yoakam duet I Don't Care. Cryner has also written for other artists including Trisha Yearwood (Real Live Woman), Suzy Bogguss (Nobody Love Nobody Gets Hurt), and Lee Ann Womack (Stronger Than I Am)
September 13, 1959 ~ R&B, funk, smooth jazz singer, guitarist Sheldon Reynolds, full name Sheldon Maurice Reynolds, born in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA ~ Toured with Millie Jackson. Member of Sun, present on the early-1980s albums Sun Over The Universe, Force Of Nature, and Let There Be Sun. Worked with the Commodores, first appearing with the band as a backing singer on the 1985 Nightshift album. Worked with Earth Wind & Fire, starting on the 1987 Touch The World album. Also present on albums by Maurice White, Philip Bailey, Debbie Allen, Club Nouveau, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Joey Lawrence, the Pointer Sisters, Take 6, Rahsaan Patterson, the Urban Jazz Network, and others ~ Reynolds passed away in 2023
September 13, 1956 ~ Guitarist, violinist, fiddler David Mansfield born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA ~ Son of classical violinist Newton Mansfield. Member of Quacky Duck & his Barnyard Friends. Toured with Bob Dylan from the mid- through the late-1970s, including on the 1975 Rolling Thunder Revue tour. Co-founded the Alpha Band with T-Bone Burnett and Steve Soles, known for the acclaimed albums The Alpha Band, Spark In The Dark and The Statue Makers Of Hollywood. Briefly a member of Bruce Hornsby & the Range, present on the early hit Mandolin Rain. In-demand session musician, appearing on records by Johnny Cash, Nanci Griffith, Roger McGuinn, Edie Brickell, Lucinda Williams, Dwight Yoakam, Loudon Wainwright III, Guam, and others
September 13, 1956 ~ Composer Jürgen Bräuninger born in Stuttgart, West Germany ~ Had his works performed by the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Stockholm Saxophone Quartet, the SUDPOOL Ensemble, and the Stuttgarter Kammerorchester. Perhaps best known for contributing to the soundtracks of the 1989 horror film The Dead Pit and the 1992 science-fiction film The Lawnmower Man ~ Bräuninger passed away in 2019
September 13, 1955 ~ Guitarist Joe Morris born in New Haven, Connecticut, USA ~ Prolific jazz guitarist with over 50 albums to his name as a leader starting in the early-1980s. Influenced by Cecil Taylor, Eric Dolphy, Jimi Hendrix, John McLaughlin. Regular collaborators include Sebastian Steinberg, Matthew Shipp, Mat Maneri, Barre Phillips, Jamie Saft, Jerome Deupree. In-demand sideman, appearing on records by Whit Dickey, Hamid Drake, Noah K, Daniel Levin, Ivo Perelman, and others
September 13, 1954 ~ Denis Hegarty, commonly known as rock & roll, doo-wop, a capella singer, TV personality Den Hegarty, born in Dublin, Ireland ~ Member of Rocky Sharpe & the Razors. Subsequently a member of the Darts, serving as bass singer, arranger, songwriter and music director. After departing the band in 1978 released a solo single, Voodoo Voodoo, which peaked in the 70s on the UK charts. Guested on the Clash-album Sandinista released in 1980
September 13, 1952 ~ Don Edward Fagenson, commonly known as producer, multi-instrumentalist, label executive Don Was born in Detroit, Michigan, USA ~ Best known for co-founding funk-rock outfit Was (Not Was), known for songs such as Walk The Dinosaur. Worked prolifically as a producer, serving artists such as Bonnie Raitt (Nick Of Time, Luck Of The Draw), Ziggy Marley, Elton John, the Rolling Stones (Voodoo Lounge, Bridges To Babylon, Blue & Lonesome), Iggy Pop, Bob Dylan (Under The Red Sky), Bob Seger (The Fire Inside), Floy Joy, Carly Simon, Ringo Starr (Time Take Time), Michelle Shocked, Delbert McClinton (Never Been Rocked Enough), Richie Sambora, Glenn Frey (Strange Weather), Amos Lee, Jessi Colter (Out Of The Ashes), Kris Kristofferson, Zucchero (Chocabeck), Kurt Elling, Lucinda Williams, John Mayer, Van Morrison, and others. Also a label executive, appointed President of Blue Note Records in 2012
September 13, 1952 ~ Singer Randy Jones born in Raleigh, North Carolina, USA ~ Best known as the cowboy in the Village People, known for disco hits such as In The Navy and YMCA. Married his boyfriend in 2004 though at the time the marriage was not legally binding. Released a solo pop, disco album, Ticket To The World, in 2007
September 13, 1948 ~ R&B, pop, jazz singer, songwriter Susaye Greene born in Houston, Texas, USA ~ Briefly a member of the Supremes, joining the band in 1976 replacing Cindy Birdsong, and appearing on the band's last two albums High Energy and Mary Scherrie & Susaye. Co-wrote Free, recorded by Deniece Williams for her 1976 This Is Niecy debut album. Sang backup on Stevie Wonder's seminal Songs In The Key Of Life album. Co-wrote I Can't Help It with Wonder, recorded by Michael Jackson for his Off The Wall album. Sang lead on saxophonist Courtney Pine's 1986 single Children Of The Ghetto
September 13, 1944 ~ Rock guitarist Leslie Harvey, full name Leslie Cameron Harvey, born in Glasgow, UK ~ Offered a spot in the Animals by Alan Price but declined, preferring to stay with his brother Alex Harvey in the Alex Harvey Soul Band. Member of the short-lived the Blues Council, known for their sole album Baby Don't Look Down before a traffic accident killed two band members effectively ending the band. Member of Cartoone. Co-founding member of Stone The Crows, known for for a number of early-1970s albums ~ Harvey passed away in 1972
September 13, 1944 ~ Singer, bassist, songwriter Peter Cetera born in Chicago, Illinois, USA ~ Original member of Chicago writing or co-writing such as Wishing You Were Here, Happy Man and If You Leave Me Now, the latter becoming the band's first US charttopper. As a solo artist best known for The Glory Of Love and The Next Time I Fall. Has collaborated with David Foster, Amy Grant, the Beach Boys, Billy Joel, Karen Carpenter, Paul Anka, Agnetha Fältskog (producing Fältskog's 1987 LP I Stand Alone), Richard Sterban, Bonnie Raitt, Madonna, David Gilmour, AZ Yet, Cher, Chaka Khan, Crystal Bernard, Ronna Reeves, Alison Krauss, and others
September 13, 1943 ~ Singer, composer, film director Luis Eduardo Aute, full name Luis Eduardo Aute Gutiérrez, born in Manila, Philippines ~ Initially aimed to become an architect but left school to pursue a career in music, art and film. As a songwriter gained wider attention when Massiel recorded his Alelya No.1 in 1967. It would become a hit in America, later notably covered by Ed Ames translated to English as Who Will Answer. Aute would go on to record well over two dozen albums as a solo artist, starting with Dialogos De Rodrigo Y Gimena released in 1968 ~ Aute passed away in 2020
September 13, 1940 ~ Jazz drummer Alex Riel, full name Alex Poul Riel, born in Copenhagen, Denmark ~ Active since his teens, starting with local traditional jazz bands, and serving as the house drummer at the Montmatre Jazzhus, Copenhagen, Denmark, by the early-1960s. Recorded over a dozen albums as leader or co-leader, starting with Alex Riel Trio in 1965 featuring Kenny Drew and Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen. Closely associated with Jackie McLean and Dexter Gordon, recording several acclaimed albums with each. An in-demand sideman and collaborator, Riel has also appeared on albums by Brew Moore (Danish Brew), Archie Shepp, Kenny Dorham, Sahib Shihab (Conversations), Ben Webster (There Is No Greater Love), Stuff Smith, Savage Rose, Karin Krog, Hank Jones (Bluesette), and Thomas Clausen ~ Riel passed away in 2024
September 13, 1940 ~ Michael James, commonly known as soul, funk, R&B, reggae, ska singer Jimmy James, born in Jamaica ~ Lead singer and eponym of Jimmy James & the Vagabonds, first enjoying popularity in their native UK during the 1960s, opening for acts such as the Who and Steampacket. The band initially disbanded in 1970, but would be reformed with an all-new line-up three years later by James, the group's constant member. They are best known for their 1976 UK top 10 hit Now Is The Time. Other charting singles included I Can't Get Back Home To My Baby, Red Red Wine, and I'll Go Where Your Music Takes Me ~ James passed away in 2024
September 13, 1939 ~ Colaratura soprano Arleen Auger, full name Joyce Arleen Auger, born in South Gate, California, USA ~ Associated with the Vienna State Opera, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the New York City Opera, and the Metropolitan Opera ~ Auger passed away in 1993
September 13, 1939 ~ Conductor, arranger, producer Gene Page, full name Eugene Edgar Page Jr, born in Los Angeles, California, California ~ Emerged from the 1960s to become one of the most in-demand and recognizable pop, funk, and disco conductors, arrangers of the 1970s, 1980s. Early on in his career, Page drew attention arranging for hits such as the Righteous Brothers' You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin', Solomon Burke's Got To Get You Off My Mind, and Dobie Gray's The In-Crowd, the latter penned by his brother Billy Page. Page would rise to fame as go-to collaborator of Barry White, including for White's side project Love Unlimited, and Johnny Mathis. Page released over half a dozen albums, including the acclaimed Blacula soundtrack, and has worked in one capacity or another on albums by the Supremes, Ike & Tina Turner, Al Wilson, Big Joe Turner, the Four Tops, Barbra Streisand (Stoney End), the Jackson 5, Cher, Marvin Gaye (Let's Get It On), Smokey Robinson, Stanley Turrentine (Pieces Of Dreams), Nancy Wilson, Betty Everett, Mongo Santamaria, Leo Sayer, Elton John (Blue Moves), the Manhattan Transfer, Seals & Crofts, Shalamar, Hall & Oates, Herb Alpert (Rise), and Gladys Knight ~ Page passed away in 1998
September 13, 1933 ~ Bassist Lewie Steinberg, full name Lewie Polk Steinberg, born in Memphis, Tennessee, USA ~ Best known as the original bassist for Booker T & the MG's, present on the single Green Onions b/w Behave Yourself, and the albums Green Onions and Soul Dressing. Steinberg was replaced by Donald Duck Dunn in 1965 ~ Steinberg passed away in 2016
September 13, 1932 ~ Eddie Brown, commonly known as percussionist Eddie Bongo Brown born in Clarksdale, Mississippi, USA ~ Backed numerous Motown artists mostly during the 1960s as member of the label's houseband the Funk Brothers. Best known for his contributions to songs such as I Know I'm Losing You by the Temptations, I Second That Emotion by the Miracles, and If I Were Your Woman by Gladys Knight & the Pips. Also worked with Brass Fever, present on both Brass Fever and Time Is Running Out, which also included John Handy, Lee Ritenour, Buddy Collette, Oscar Brashear, and Shelly Manne ~ Brown passed away in 1984
September 13, 1925 ~ Singer, drummer, songwriter, actor Mel Tormé, full name Melvin Howard Tormé, born in Chicago, Illinois, USA ~ Dubbed “the Velvet Fog” for his smooth vocal delivery. Child prodigy. Actively recording since the 1940s. Known for songs such as Careless Hands, Again, The Four Winds And Seven Seas and Bewitched ~ Tormé passed away in 1999
September 13, 1922 ~ Singer, pianist Charles Brown born in Texas City, Texas, USA ~ Influential on artists such as Floyd Dixon, Cecil Gant, Ivory Joe Hunter, Percy Mayfield, Johnny Ace, and Ray Charles. Known for a string of late-1940s, early-1950s top 10 hits including Drifting Blues, Hard Times, and Merry Christmas Baby. Member of Johnny Moore's the Three Blazers. Married to singer Mabel Scott from 1949 through 1951, with whom he also worked including on the 1948 Elevator Boogie hit ~ Brown passed away in 1999
September 13, 1918 ~ Singer, actor Dick Haymes, full name Richard Benjamin Haymes, born in Buenos Aires, Argentina ~ One of the most popular male vocalists of the 1940s. Brother of songwriter Bob Haymes. Worked with Harry James, Tommy Dorsey, Jeanne Crain, Dana Andrew, Vivian Blaine, Helen Forrest, Judy Garland, the Andrews Sisters, Nelson Riddle, Bing Crosby, Gordon Jenkins, Cy Coleman, and Johnny Kay ~ Haymes passed away in 1980
September 13, 1911 ~ Bandleader, mandolinist, songwriter Bill Monroe born in Rosine, Kentucky, USA ~ Commonly referred to as “the Father of Bluegrass,” the genre defined by Monroe. Led the Bluegrass Boys. Known for songs such as Blue Grass Breakdown, Blue Moon Of Kentucky, and Molly And Tenbrooks ~ Monroe passed away in 1997
September 13, 1910 ~ Leon Brown Berry, commonly known as swing saxophonist Chu Berry born in Wheeling, West Virginia, USA ~ Leader and sideman. Starting in the late-1920s Berry worked with Sammy Stewart, Benny Carter, Teddy Hill, Fletcher Henderson, Cab Calloway, Spike Hughes, Bessie Smith, the Chocolate Dandies, Mildred Bailey, Teddy Wilson, Billie Holiday, Wingy Manone, Lionel Hampton, and others ~ Berry passed away in 1941
September 13, 1893 ~ Clarinetist Larry Shields born in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA ~ Best known as a member of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, the first jazz band to record commercially. Co-wrote the band's Clarinet Marmalade and At The Jazz Band Ball. Influential on later clarinetists such as Benny Goodman and Dink Johnson. Also played with Papa Jack Laine, Bert Kelly, King Watzke, Paul Whiteman, and others. ~ Shields passed away in 1953
September 13, 1874 ~ Composer Arnold Schoenberg born in Austria ~ Considered one of the most influential composers of the 20th century ~ Schoenberg passed away in 1951