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Blender's 10 Worst Rock Star Plane Crashes

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Aceshigh7, Feb 2, 2007.

  1. Aceshigh7

    Aceshigh7 Contributing Member

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    Thought this was pretty interesting. Had no idea that so many famous musicians had died this way. Small private aircraft definitely seems a bit risky.. At least compared to commercial aviation.

    http://www.blender.com/guide/articles.aspx?ID=2308

    From oldest to most recent..

    Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson

    Holly, Valens and Richardson were barnstorming through the Midwest in 1959 on a package tour and looking to avoid a frigid February ride from Iowa to Minnesota aboard a bus whose heater was on the blink. Holly chartered a plane for himself and two bandmates, but guitarist Tommy Allsup lost a coin flip to Valens for one seat on the plane, and Holly’s bass player, future country star Waylon Jennings, graciously gave up his seat to Richardson, who was running a fever. Holly reportedly needled Jennings about his decision, telling him, “I hope your old bus freezes up.” Jennings responded: “Well, I hope your plane crashes.” Crash it did, into a snowy Iowa field, shortly after takeoff, killing everyone aboard, and forever memorializing February 3, 1959 as “The Day the Music Died.”

    Patsy Cline

    In 1963, country star Patsy Cline flew to Kansas City to play a benefit show for the widow of a local radio DJ. Her plans to fly back to Nashville were delayed a day by bad weather. The following day, Cline reportedly turned down an offer to drive back to Music City with singer Dottie West, instead boarding a small four-seat airplane carrying fellow country singers Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins, and flown by her manager, Randy Hughes. The plane skirted bad weather back towards Tennessee, then made a pit stop for gas and dinner in a town called Dyersburg. Hughes called his wife who told him the sun was shining in Nashville. Based on her weather report, Hughes flew right into the heart of a storm and crashed into a wooded swamp outside Camden, TN, killing everyone on board.

    Otis Redding/The Bar-Kays

    In early December 1967, Otis Redding was nearly finished recording what would soon be his biggest hit, “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay,” when he and his band, the Bar-Kays, embarked on a short promotional tour. After a stop in Cleveland, the band flew on Redding’s private plane through icy weather to play a show in Madison, Wisconsin. They never made it. The plane plunged into the frigid waters of Lake Monona, outside Madison, killing Redding and four members of the Bar-Kays. Booker T. & the MGs guitarist Steve Cropper later put the finishing touches on “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay,” but left Redding’s whistling — which had originally been a placeholder for a third verse Redding hadn’t yet written — in tact, and the song became Redding’s biggest hit.

    Jim Croce

    On September 20th, 1973, folk singer Jim Croce played a concert at Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana. He planned to spend the night in town before heading to Texas for another college show, but changed his plans at the last minute and flew out on a small, twin-engine plane shortly after his show. He reportedly got only about 30 feet off the ground in Natchitoches, when his plane clipped the top of a tree at the end of a dimly-lit airstrip and crashed into the ground, killing Croce and all four others on board. His third album, I Got a Name, recorded a week before his death, was released two weeks later and quickly became a hit.

    Lynyrd Skynyrd

    The legendary Southern rockers had just released their 1977 album, Street Survivors, when they chartered a plane to take them from Greenville, South Carolina to Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Engine problems caused the plane to run out of gas and crash into a wooded swamp in Gillsburg, Mississippi. Frontman Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines and vocalist Cassie Gaines were all killed, and most of the rest of the bandmembers were seriously injured. Rumors that Van Zant had been decapitated in the crash by a Betamax video player persist today despite copious evidence to the contrary. Immediately following the crash, drummer Artimus Pyle ran nearly a mile with broken ribs to get help from a nearby farmhouse, but the farmer freaked at the sight of the bloodied drummer and shot him in the shoulder with a shotgun, further injuring him but sparing his life.

    Randy Rhoads

    On March 18th, 1982, the metal guitar whiz was on his way to a festival in Orlando, Florida, touring as part of Ozzy Osbourne’s band. The band bunked down for the night at the bus driver’s house in Leesburg, Florida. Early the next morning, the driver took Rhoads and one other crewmember on an early morning airplane joyride. Once in the air, the bus driver — who had cocaine in his system and was flying on an expired pilot’s license — decided it’d be a great idea to “buzz” the tour bus where Ozzy was still sleeping. Their first three low-altitude passes were successful, but on their fourth flyby, the plane’s right wing hit the tour bus, puncturing its side panel. The plane then took out a pine tree before slamming into a house and bursting into flames. Neither the house, the plane nor the three passengers aboard it survived.

    Rick Nelson

    Nelson had graduated from his childhood success as “Ricky” on his parents’ TV show, The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet in the early '50s to genuine rock idol status in the late '50s and early '60s, but by the mid-'80s he was a nostalgia act on a package tour of the South trying to revive his career. After closing his set in Gunnersville, Alabama with a version of Buddy Holly’s “Rave On,” Nelson hopped on a chartered DC3 bound for Dallas. A fire in the passenger cabin caused the pilot to attempt an emergency landing in DeKalb, Texas but the plane plowed into wires, utility poles and trees on the way down. Nelson was one of seven passengers who perished in the crash. Rumors that the cabin fire was caused by passengers freebasing cocaine were never proven.

    Stevie Ray Vaughan

    In 1990, the Texan bluesman had just finished a scorching set alongside fellow blues guitar virtuosos Robert Cray , Buddy Guy , Eric Clapton and his brother Jimmie Vaughan at a Wisconsin amphitheater and was preparing for a bus trek to Chicago. At the last minute, Stevie was told there was room for him, Jimmie and Jimmie’s wife on one of four helicopters Clapton had hired to make the trip to the Windy City. As it turned out, there was only one seat; Jimmie let Stevie have it. Taking off in light fog, Stevie’s helicopter quickly slammed into the side of a ski hill, killing him and four others on board. The crash went unnoticed until the chopper failed to arrive in Chicago and was found early the next morning scattered across the side of the hill.

    John Denver

    On October 12th, 1997, the wildly popular (if critically lambasted) country star and avid amateur pilot was at the controls of an experimental single-engine plane he’d bought only a few days earlier, when he apparently ran into trouble flying low over the California coastline. Running low on gas, the “Leaving, On a Jet Plane” songwriter was likely trying to switch to his auxiliary tank, when he accidentally applied the plane’s right rudder and plunged 500 feet into the Pacific Ocean below. Denver had previously walked away unscathed from an accident involving a 1931 biplane he’d been piloting, but this time he was not so lucky. Rescue crews arrived less than 30 minutes after the plane went down, but by the time Denver’s mangled body was removed from Monterey Bay shortly thereafter, he was already dead.

    Aaliyah

    Having just finished shooting a video for her single, “Rock the Boat” in the Bahamas, rising R&B princess Aaliyah hired a private plane to ferry her and her crew back to Florida in 2001. Before takeoff, baggage handlers and the plane’s pilot complained that Aaliyah’s entourage had too much luggage, but the passengers apparently refused to leave anything behind. The plane was therefore well beyond its weight capacity when it crashed shortly after liftoff, killing Aaliyah and five other passengers instantly and leaving three others with injuries they would also later succumb to. Autopsy reports revealed that the pilot, who’d recently been arrested for cocaine possession, had both alcohol and cocaine in his system at the time of the accident. He’d also been fired by another aviation company a mere four hours before the fatal flight after he’d failed to turn up for work two days in a row.
     
    #1 Aceshigh7, Feb 2, 2007
    Last edited: Feb 2, 2007
  2. pradaxpimp

    pradaxpimp Contributing Member

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    Scratching musician off my top job prospects.
     
  3. TheFreak

    TheFreak Contributing Member

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    You'd think eventually a whole baseball team would get wiped out.
     
  4. Hmm

    Hmm Member

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    John Denver, Aaliyah, Jim Croce and Patsy Cline are classified as "Rock stars"?

    :confused:


    There's also something not quite right with Patsy Cline being included with those other three in my sentence there..
     
  5. A-Train

    A-Train Contributing Member

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    Well, if more rock stars had died in plane crashes, there would have been a better list.
     
  6. Rocketman95

    Rocketman95 Hangout Boy

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    I've thought about that. It's amazing that there's really only been one huge tragedy (Marshall) involving a sports team's plane crashing. Of course, there was also OSU's plane a few years ago.

    Maybe I'm missing some.
     
  7. Buck Turgidson

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    Don't mess around with Jim.

    Ricky Nelson is a much more appropriate target for your scorn.
     
  8. Lynus302

    Lynus302 Contributing Member

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    I was listening to 610 a few years back and a caller asked about this very scenario. I can't remember what the hosts had to say exactly, but they basically said that there was some sort of plan a given league would take (they were talking about the NBA specifically) to rebuild the team....I think its like an expansion draft of sorts.
     
  9. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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    Of course, most of these were very small, private planes (one was a helicopter) and more than half happened prior to 1980. Plane safety has improved dramatically since then as have the status of private planes flown by sports teams, etc.

    Nevermind that some of these were based on stupidity (stoned pilots, stunt pilots, drugs on board, etc).
     
  10. Supermac34

    Supermac34 President, Von Wafer Fan Club

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    Small planes crash all the time, and almost all of these are small, prop driven planes.

    Large commercial or private jets are much safer and don't usually crash. That's why whole teams don't usually get killed in plane crashes, they are riding around on safer, better maintained planes.
     
  11. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Contributing Member

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    the farmer freaked at the sight of the bloodied drummer and shot him in the shoulder with a shotgun, further injuring him but sparing his life.
    ______

    That is really crazy. :eek:
     
  12. TheFreak

    TheFreak Contributing Member

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    Interesting ... I was really just trying to quote Seinfeld though.
     
  13. IROC it

    IROC it Contributing Member

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    Okay, Blender... then tell us... What would be the "best" kind of plane crash?

    "10 Worst." :rolleyes:
     

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