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Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 4:16 pm
by Tiki Torches
From Levon Helm's website:

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Dear Friends,

Levon is in the final stages of his battle with cancer. Please send your prayers and love to him as he makes his way through this part of his journey.

Thank you fans and music lovers who have made his life so filled with joy and celebration... he has loved nothing more than to play, to fill the room up with music, lay down the back beat, and make the people dance! He did it every time he took the stage...

We appreciate all the love and support and concern.

From his daughter Amy, and wife Sandy

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 4:21 pm
by springparrot
:(

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 5:55 pm
by ParrotheadRPB
This is very sad news. Ive seen the Levon Helm Band many times.Always puts on a great show.You could tell Levon really loved what he was doing on stage and was very appreciative of his fans. Thoughts and prayers to Levon and his family.

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 7:37 pm
by Tiki Torches
I would have loved to have attended one of Levon's Rambles up in Woodstock but alas, I never made it to one (he also put on a performance at Merlefest in North Wilkesboro, NC in recent years that folks are still raving about). Years and years ago, The Band was scheduled to play The Attic in Greenville, NC but the night before the gig Richard Manuel hung himself in his motel room down in Florida. However, I finally did get to see them when The Band played Woodstock '94 as part of something billed as the Music From Big Pink Revue. In addition to The Band, also on stage that day were Roger McGuinn, Bruce Hornsby, Jack Casady and Jorma Kaukonen from Hot Tuna, Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman. There may be some more footage out there from that day but so far this is all that I've been able to find.


Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 7:52 pm
by East Texas Parrothead
May this final journey be peaceful.

Thank you for all the glorious music you gave us for so many years.

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 8:12 pm
by MonumentBeach
Have always loved Levon and The Band. I saw The Levon Helm Band several times. I think the one that sticks out in my mind the most was seeing him close the 40th Anniversary Woodstock celebration at Bethel Woods (the original Woodstock site) in 2009. He was beaming that night...one show I'll never forget. What a voice!

He will be missed! A true 60s icon!

-Eric

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 9:20 pm
by MacPhin
we saw him at Newport Jazz when Jimmy played that day also. It was a great show. So glad we got to see him in action.

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 17, 2012 9:49 pm
by nycfeat
I was lucky to attend one of his last Rambles (a benefit show in Chicago for a music school):


Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 18, 2012 1:59 pm
by Tiki Torches
Garth Hudson and Robbie Robertson Send Prayers to Levon (from Relix)



Levon Helm’s two surviving The Band co-founders, Robbie Robertson and Garth Hudson, have both issues statements about the drummer’s condition. As previously reported, The Band drummer is “in the final stages of his battle with cancer.”

In message on his homepage, Hudson—The Band’s keyboardist—stated, “I am too sad for words right now. Please continue praying for Levon and family.” He also posts a link to the video above. Hudson and Helm first met as members of Ronnie Hawkins’ Hawks and continued to perform together through the latter day Band’s final shows in the late ’90s. In recent years, the musicians have continued to collaborate at Helm’s Midnight Rambles as well as at select other dates. Earlier this year, Hudson and Helm played a special tribute to Band co-founders Rick Danko and Richard Manuel at Helm’s studio before the drummer underwent a medical procedure.

Band guitarist Robbie Robertson and Helm also started performing together in The Hawks but their relationship has been strained since The Band parted ways for the first time in the late ’70s. Though the two musicians have not performed together in years, Robertson posted the following message on his Facebook page:

Last week I was shocked and so saddened to hear that my old band mate, Levon, was in the final stages of his battle with cancer. It hit me really hard because I thought he had beaten throat cancer and had no idea that he was this ill. I spoke with his family and made arrangements to go and see him.

On Sunday I went to New York and visited him in the hospital. I sat with Levon for a good while…, and thought of the incredible and beautiful times we had together. It was heartwarming to be greeted by his lovely daughter Amy, whom I have known since she was born. Amy’s mother, Libby Titus, and her husband, Donald Fagen, were so kind to help walk me through this terrible time of sadness. My thoughts and prayers are with his wife Sandy.

Levon is one of the most extraordinary talented people I’ve ever known and very much like an older brother to me. I am so grateful I got to see him one last time and will miss him and love him forever.

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 18, 2012 5:01 pm
by weirdo0521
:cry:

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 18, 2012 6:06 pm
by ParrotheadRPB
I never got to do a Midnight Ramble.It was always on my wish list,but for the past few years Levons been doing a free show every October at Gill Farm in Hurley NY to help promote local tourism. I did get to see this show 2 years ago.Great show and it was small enough to make it feel like a Ramble.


Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 18, 2012 6:49 pm
by popcornjack
I'm not gonna lie, even on a JB website: I'm gonna lose my sh*t when Bob Dylan dies. As much as I love JB (and loved Garcia) Dylan is to me the greatest singer songwriter of my time. That being said, for as talented as I believe him to be, his work with The Band helped introduce him to the world and, more importantly, introduce one of the greatest rock and roll bands to the world. Anyone who loves (or even likes) rock and roll needs to watch "The Last Waltz."



Prayers for Levon and his family.

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 18, 2012 6:59 pm
by Tiki Torches
popcornjack wrote:I'm not gonna lie, even on a JB website: I'm gonna lose my sh*t when Bob Dylan dies. As much as I love JB (and loved Garcia) Dylan is to me the greatest singer songwriter of my time.
Jimmy Buffett isn't the only person that make my musical world go 'round so I see no harm whatsoever in saying you're more of a Dylan fan or that you feel he's the greatest singer/songwriter of your time.

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 18, 2012 10:45 pm
by Tiki Torches
From VH1's Classic Albums series, the making of The Band.


Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 19, 2012 12:40 am
by Tiki Torches
Joe Henry on Levon. In the event that you're not familiar with Joe, in some circles he's best known as Madonna's brother-in-law. In others he's known as the producer of albums by the likes of Rodney Crowell, the Carolina Chocolate Drops, Mary Gauthier and more recently, Bonnie Raitt (he produced her newest album, Slipstream). He's also a well regarded solo artist in his own right.

GONE/NOT GONE: LEVON HELM IN MOTION

As I sit writing this, on the late evening of April 17, Levon Helm is not yet gone, but neither is he fully here among the living. As we understand from his family, he is hovering now at the doorway between this world and the next…taking the air of mortals in shallow and halting breaths, but with his eyes rolled back against the drawn curtain of his times. Already, for many of us sadly absorbing the falling shoe of this news and preparing for the other, he has assumed the flickering posture of memory; of those who have danced alive in our high beams, throwing shadows that move like ancient black rivers, and pointing the way forward from so far behind us that he shall forever, hence forth, stand ahead on the pathway like an omen of what is still to come.

Levon entered my life when I was so young as to have had no notion that my gate needed a guard; thus, he waltzed right in and I was completely vulnerable to his raucous and ranging alchemy, and he changed me. Like children pulled into ministerial service when still in single digits, I looked unquestioningly upon Levon Helm as my church elder…a deacon who spoke our gospel; who swung- and sung-out time in glorious illumination of its wild and elastic poetry. In the same way that his great friend and sometimes-boss Bob Dylan connected the dots between Jimmy Reed, Arthur Rimbaud, and Muhammad Ali, so Levon drew the second line that had Howlin’ Wolf, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, and Hank Williams all dancing out in front of the same New Orleans funeral party. (They all walked liked Bo Diddley and didn’t need no crutch.)

As I await word of the inevitable –while we all wait— I find there is nothing I can do but listen. And when I do, I am moved; moving…leaning, as implied, from the past tense into present action; loosing my mind to the instinctive sway of my knees and shoulders, as I am reminded how much of our true intelligence resides in our bodies’ southern hemisphere.

Yes, all we can do this day is listen and move. But then, that is all Levon Helm ever asked of any of us.

Joe Henry
South Pasadena, CA

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 19, 2012 12:04 pm
by Tiki Torches
This was shot at the Norva in Norfolk, VA last night where Megafaun were opening for the Drive-By Truckers. I hate like hell that it's under these circumstances but I'm looking very forward to hearing them perform this tonight when they open for the Truckers at the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro, NC. And yes, the camera angle is off but the sentiment is fully intact.


Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 19, 2012 3:32 pm
by Tiki Torches
Levon Helm, Drummer and Singer of the Band, Dead at 71
Battled throat cancer since the Nineties

By DAVID BROWNE

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Levon Helm performs at the Life is Good Festival at the Prowse Farm in Canton, Massachusetts.
Douglas Mason/Getty Images

Levon Helm, singer and drummer for the Band, died on April 19th in New York of throat cancer. He was 71.

"He passed away peacefully at 1:30 this afternoon surrounded by his friends and bandmates," Helm's longtime guitarist Larry Campbell tells Rolling Stone. "All his friends were there, and it seemed like Levon was waiting for them. Ten minutes after they left we sat there and he just faded away. He did it with dignity. It was even two days ago they thought it would happen within hours, but he held on. It seems like he was Levon up to the end, doing it the way he wanted to do it. He loved us, we loved him."

In the late Nineties, Helm – whose singing anchored Band classics like "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," "Up on Cripple Creek," "Rag Mama Rag," and "The Weight" – was diagnosed with throat cancer and underwent 28 radiation treatments, eventually recovering his voice. In recent weeks, however, Helm had canceled a number of shows, including one at the New Orleans Jazz Fest on April 27th and another in Montclair, New Jersey. A note posted to his website on Tuesday from his daughter Amy and wife Sandy said that Helm was in the "final stages of his battle with cancer. Please send your prayers and love to him as he makes his way through this part of his journey. Thank you fans and music lovers who have made his life so filled with joy and celebration...he has loved nothing more than to play, to fill the room up with music, lay down the back beat, and make the people dance! He did it every time he took the stage."

Born May 26, 1940 in Arkansas, Helm was literally a witness to the birth of rock & roll; as a teenager, he saw Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis in concert and was inspired to play drums after seeing Lewis' drummer, Jimmy Van Eaton. (Helm went on to play mandolin and other stringed instruments as well). In 1960, Helm joined the backup band of rockabilly wildman Ronnie Hawkins – a group that would eventually include Robbie Robertson, Richard Manuel, Rick Danko and Garth Hudson, all future members of the Band.

The musicians broke from Hawkins to form their own group – their names included the Crackers and Levon and the Hawks – but it was their association with Bob Dylan that cemented their reputation. After Dylan saw the group in a club (either in Canada or New Jersey, depending on the source), he invited Helm and guitarist Robertson to join his electric band. "Bob Dylan was unknown to us," Helm wrote in his 1993 memoir This Wheel's on Fire. "I knew he was a folksinger and songwriter whose hero was Woody Guthrie. And that's it." Robertson and Helm were in Dylan's electric band for his controversial, frequently booed show at New York's Forest Hills Tennis Stadium. Afterward, various members of the Band played on Dylan's Blonde on Blonde and toured with him in 1966. (Helm left temporary in 1965, tired of the ongoing hostility from Dylan's folk fans.)

Recuperating in Woodstock after his 1966 motorcycle accident, Dylan again hooked up with the band that would soon be the Band. Before Helm rejoined them, they recorded the landmark Basement Tapes, and the Band's crackling, homespun take on American roots music began to take shape. Rechristening themselves the Band, they signed to Capitol Records and released two classic albums, Music From Big Pink (1968) and The Band (1969). Although Robertson was the Band's principal songwriter, it was Helm's beautifully gruff and ornery voice that brought the Canadian Robertson's mythic Americana songs to life. He was also one of rock's earliest singing drummers.

In 1976, at Robertson's urging, the Band broke up after its farewell concert, known as "The Last Waltz." In meetings before the concert and as recounted in This Wheel's on Fire, Helm was adamantly opposed to the group disbanding. "I didn't want any part of it," he wrote. "I didn't want to break up the band." He begrudgingly went along, but his relationship with Robertson was never the same. After the show, Helm formed his own band, Levon Helm and the RCO All Stars, featuring fellow legends Dr. John, Steve Cropper, and Booker T. Jones, and recorded several solo albums. Helm also ventured into acting with an acclaimed role in 1980's Coal Miner's Daughter, playing Loretta Lynn (Sissy Spacek's) father. But he couldn't leave the Band behind, and with Danko, Manuel, and Hudson, he formed a new version of the Band in the early Eighties, recording three new studio albums with them.

The Band continued for a while after Manuel's suicide by hanging in 1986, but Danko's death in 1999 of heart failure ended the Band once and for all. By then, Helm was dealing with throat cancer. After his recovery, he began holding intimate concerts in his combination barn and studio in Woodstock, called the "Midnight Ramble," in part to pay his medical bills. The low-key, woodsy performances became must-see shows and attracted a rock who's who; Elvis Costello, Natalie Merchant, the Grateful Dead's Phil Lesh and Donald Fagen were among the many who joined Helm and his band. The Ramble shows led to two acclaimed Helm solo albums – one of which, 2007's Dirt Farmer, won a Grammy in the Best Traditional Folk category. "This go-round has been a lot more fun," Helm told Rolling Stone in 2009. "Now I know I've got enough voice to do it."

When the Band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994, Helm didn't attend, revealing that his feud with Robertson was still on. "I thought Levon was going to show," Robertson told Rolling Stone a few years later. "Then that evening they said he changed his mind and wasn't going to come. And I thought, 'Oh, God, it would have been better if he was here.'"

Helm's throat cancer had taken a toll on his singing voice. On stage and in recent interviews, his voice was sometimes strong but other times was reduced to a low rasp. But at one his last shows, in Ann Arbor on March 19th with a 13-piece band, the audience roared when he sang the Band classic "Ophelia." "I'm not the poster boy of good health," he said in an interview last year. "But I'm not doing too bad. I still got the energy to make music. As long as I can do that, I'm great."

Sail on Levon Helm....

Posted: April 19, 2012 5:09 pm
by captenuta

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 19, 2012 5:47 pm
by Tiki Torches
Tara Nevins of Donna the Buffalo posted this on her Facebook page yesterday. In a subsequent post she said the band was working up a version of "The Weight" that they're going to perform during one of their appearances at Shakori Hills (in Pittsboro, NC) over the weekend.
Levon your incredible soulfulness as a drummer, singer, and as the great man that you are, fills my heart. I feel deeply honored and fortunate to have been graced by the kindess and support you showed me while recording at your studio. I am immensely humbled by the amazing experience of having been given the opportunity to make music in that great space, to have you play drums on my record and to be invited to share the stage with you at your Midnight Ramble. I am forever thankful to have gotten to watch you play to hear you sing. You play and you sing from the center of where heart and soul come from. I can watch and listen to you endlessly! Thank you for your inspiration. You are a deep and beautiful man. I honor you and am sending you my love. I will always remember that day you built a fire for me at the studio and how you loved your sweet dog "Muddy" so much.

Re: Levon Helm

Posted: April 19, 2012 6:22 pm
by Whodat81
Levon is playing this inheaven right now! RIP Levon. Truly a great American!