Joe Cocker Died Today..

Discussion in 'Rock 'n' Roll' started by old tiger, Dec 22, 2014.

  1. old tiger

    old tiger Senior Member

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    A great performer is gone..
    remember 1969 Woodstock..
    rest in peace,JOE...and thanks for your music...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=bRzKUVjHkGk
     
  2. mallyboppa

    mallyboppa Senior Member

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    R.I.P. Joe
    http://youtu.be/CdWj9-ir37g
     
    2 people like this.
  3. deleted

    deleted Visitor

    awe, thats sad.. RIP Joe. I seen him in concert with tina turner. great show.. a great man ..
     
  4. Vanilla Gorilla

    Vanilla Gorilla Go Ape

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    Kind of thought he was already dead
     
  5. the highway terror

    the highway terror Member

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    RIP Joe Cocker.
     
  6. Moonglow181

    Moonglow181 Lifetime Supporter Lifetime Supporter

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    Yes, very sad.
     
  7. Gongshaman

    Gongshaman Modus Lascivious

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    One helluva singer, performer. loved everything he did. RIP
    Listening now..
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8IvCyw_aTQ
     
    3 people like this.
  8. Aerianne

    Aerianne Lifetime Supporter Lifetime Supporter

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    Safe travels, Joe!

    http://youtu.be/95v7R67to-I
     
    2 people like this.
  9. Tyrsonswood

    Tyrsonswood Senior Moment Lifetime Supporter

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    Man... R.I.P. Joe
     
  10. Spiral Sea

    Spiral Sea Member

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    sad news. going to watch some more Mad Dogs and Englishmen clips.




    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-407iUd_pFY
     
    1 person likes this.
  11. drumminmama

    drumminmama Super Moderator Super Moderator

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    Thanks for the tunes, and travel onto the next plane, Joe.
     
  12. Spectacles

    Spectacles My life is a tapestry Lifetime Supporter

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    Joe Cocker rest in peace.
     
  13. Dude111

    Dude111 An Awesome Dude HipForums Supporter

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    Very sad :(
     
  14. scratcho

    scratcho Lifetime Supporter Lifetime Supporter

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    One a' my favorites. He had bad alcohol problems for a while, but I think he got through it. When I lived in Hawaii, his show had to be canceled because he was falling down drunk. Regardless,one of the great ones, no doubt.
     
  15. RonPrice

    RonPrice Member

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    [SIZE=16pt]JOE COCKER[/SIZE]​
    [SIZE=16pt]...our very different careers[/SIZE]​
    [SIZE=16pt]Part 1:[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]John Robert[/SIZE] [SIZE=16pt]"Joe" Cocker(1944-2014) was an English rock and blues singer who came to popularity in the 1960s in the first years of my young adulthood. He passed away two days ago as I write this personal retrospective.[/SIZE]


    [SIZE=16pt]He was known for his gritty voice, spasmodic body movement in performance, and [/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]cover versions[/SIZE] [SIZE=16pt]of popular songs, particularly those of [/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]the Beatles[/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]. His life-narrative is divided into several phases, at least that is the pattern at that useful online encyclopedia, Wikipedia.[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]Cocker began playing drums and harmonica in 1959 with a group called the Cavaliers. I joined the Baha'i Faith that year. I was in grade 10, in love with at least 3 girls, and was a home-run king in a little town at the centre of Ontario's Golden Horseshoe.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Part 1.1:[/SIZE]


    [SIZE=16pt]I found the delineation of the several stages of Cocker's life in Wikipedia helpful in providing a framework for my own life-experience: 1959 to 1966, 1966 to 1969 and 1969 to 1971, and so I utlize that framework below. I'll leave it to readers who are interested in the evolution of Cocker's career to go to Wikipedia. In my case these 3 phases were characterized by: [/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]1959 to 1966: finishing high school and university, finishing my adolescent baseball, hockey and football careers[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]1966 to 1969: finishing teachers' college, starting marriage, starting my teaching career, and moving away from home and hearth.[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]1969 to 1971: recuperation from first episode of bipolar disorder; moving to Australia[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Part 2:[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Mr. Cocker’s career began to take shape around 1965 when he and the keyboardist, Chris Stainton, formed the Grease Band which played in pubs throughout northern England before relocating to London in 1967. The year 1965 was also the year my own career began to take shape, and in 1967 that career began. While I was a student in my last year of a sociology degree, I decided to teach among the Inuit in Canada's eastern Arctic.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Cocker broke into the big time with his chart-topping 1968 cover of The Beatles’ With A Little Help From My Friends. He sang the song at Woodstock in 1969. [/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]His appearance there, captured in the 1970 concert film “Woodstock,” established him as one of pop’s most powerful and irrepressible vocalists.[/SIZE][SIZE=16pt] That song was released in October 1968 in the UK while I was in a large psychiatric hospital recovering from an episode of what came to be called bipolar I disorder.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Part 2.1:[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Cocker, too, had mental health issues, mainly depression, and drug addiction mixed with alcoholism. I was protected from both alcoholism and drug addiction by my bipolar disorder. I had the severe form of BPD and, if I had got mixed-up with alcohol and drugs, my life would have made much more of a nightmare than it already was with the symptoms of BPD.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Cocker injected some American soul into English rock-n-roll; he was the first white English singer to really sound black. Cocker moved beyond the fluid soul of Sam Cooke and jazzy extemporization of Ray Charles to just lose himself in the musical moment.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Part 3:[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Cocker also came to Australia in October 1972, some 15 months after I did. Just as my career and personal life was taking-off in 1972, Cocker's was beginning to descend into the alcohol and depression mentioned above. By the 1980s, his wife, Pam, had helped him get onto the straight-and-narrow. By the 1980s, marriage, career and psychiatric treatment for my BPD, all helped to regularize my life.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]“Up Where We Belong” resuscitated Mr. Cocker’s career in 1982 as my own career was also resuscitated by a job in Australia's Northern Territory as an adult educator in the small country town of Katherine. By the time Cocker passed away yesterday, 23/12/'14, he had millions of fans from his 20 albums, from Woodstock releases, and all sorts of activities on the celebrity circuit from 1988 to 2014. I, too, had millions of readers thanks to the developments of the internet from 1988 to 2014. But I was still a two-bit player in the world's celebrity minor leagues.-Ron Price with thanks to Wikipedia and several obituaries published in the first 24 hours after Joe Cocker's death.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Part 4:[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]I'm not in your league, Joe.[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]But I found looking back at[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]the road you travelled, and[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]the road I've travelled that[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]there were some useful ways,[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]means to make comparisons &[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]contrasts that throw light on my[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]own modus operandi......modus [/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]vivendi[/SIZE][SIZE=16pt], my own raison d'etre.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]There was some crazy stuff in my[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]life-narrative, but nothing as crazy[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]as what you got into, Joe, in your [/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]70 years of battling-away with the[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]intensities in your emotional life...[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]I had my own over-the-topness, too,[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]but was pleased to have moderating[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]influences of prophylactics1 from the[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]medical specialty of psychiatry which[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]have kept me from depression, mania-- [/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]all sorts of emotional imbalances in life.[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]1 [/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]pharmacology's [/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]precautionary[/SIZE][SIZE=16pt], [/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]preventative[/SIZE][SIZE=16pt], [/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]preventive[/SIZE][SIZE=16pt] medications[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=16pt]Ron Price[/SIZE]
    [SIZE=16pt]24/12/'14.[/SIZE]
     
  16. SnakeOilWilly

    SnakeOilWilly Members

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    One of the greats. He will be dearly missed. RIP Joe Cocker.
     
  17. Dirtyhippycommiebastard

    Dirtyhippycommiebastard Member

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