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LTC Stephen F.
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Thank you, my friend SGT (Join to see) for posting the music of The Band performing Stage Fright in honor of the memory of Canadian bassist and singer Rick Danko who died of heart failure at the age of 55 on December 10, 1999.

Rick Danko - RARE TV APEARANCE - 1991
"The late great Rick Danko makes a rare TV appearance to a corny show called "The Real Story". While this is amazing footage, it is cheaply done and the guy interviewing Rick seems like an idiot. But anyways Ricks
happy go luck personality really shows here as he preforms "Stage Fright", gives a cool interview, and preforms "Blue River". Ricks awesome personality really shines through here. He seems just like a big kid."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zPKrFXIHcE


Stage Fright written by Robbie Robertson
Lyrics
"Now deep in the heart of a lonely kid
Who suffered so much for what he did
They gave this ploughboy his fortune and fame
Since that day he ain't been the same
See the man with the stage fright
Just standin' up there to give it all his might
And he got caught in the spotlight
But when we get to the end
He wants to start all over again
I've got fire water right on my breath
And the doctor warned me I might catch a death
Said, you can make it in your disguise
Just never show the fear that's in your eyes
See the man with the stage fright
Just standin' up there to give it all his might
He got caught in the spotlight
But when we get to the end
He wants to start all over again
Now if he says that he's afraid
Take him at his word
And for the price that the poor boy has paid
He gets to sing just like a bird, oh, ooh ooh ooh
Your brow is sweatin' and your mouth gets dry
Fancy people go driftin' by
The moment of truth is right at hand
Just one more nightmare you can stand
See the man with the stage fright
Just standin' up there to give it all his might
And he got caught in the spotlight
But when we get to the end
He wants to start all over again
You wanna try it once again
Please don't make him stop
Let him take it from the top
Let him start all over again"

Images:
1. Rick Danko and his wife Elizabeth Danko.
2. 1960 Rick Danko & the Starlights
3. good friends Carol Caffin and Rick Danko in Pennsauken, NJ, September 1990
4. Rick Danko, 1968.
5. Rick Danko 1991 'live on breeze hill' portrait.

Biographies
1. theband.hiof.no/articles/rick_danko_bio_carole_caffin.html
2. allmusic.com/artist/rick-danko-mn [login to see] /biography

Background from theband.hiof.no/articles/rick_danko_bio_carole_caffin.html
Authorized Biography
Rick Danko
by Carol Caffin
Copyright © 1992, 2000 Carol Caffin. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted with permission.
Since 1965, when he and his cohorts in The Band (then called The Hawks) conspired with Bob Dylan to "go electric," Rick Danko has been an integral part of the popular music landscape. As lead singer, bassist and acoustic guitar player for The Band, and as a solo artist, his contributions have been substantial.

Hailing from Green's Corners, about a mile and a half from the tiny rural town of Simcoe, Ontario, Rick was born into a musical family. Both of his parents and his three brothers played instruments and/or sang, and music was a way of life for him from the beginning. He listened to Hank Williams and Sam Cooke as a small child, and was "ready to go to Nashville" by the age of seven. With his oldest brother, Maurice ("Junior"), Rick sang and performed at family get-togethers and made his public debut on four-string tenor banjo before an audience of his first-grade classmates.

Rick quit school at 14 to pursue music full-time and in 1960, when he was 17, he joined rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins’ group, The Hawks, initially as rhythm guitarist. He soon moved to bass, learning his instrument "one string at a time," and, with the help of the Hawks’ boogie-woogie piano player (and later, pianist for the late 1980s incarnation of The Band) Stan Szelest, whose left-hand techniques he memorized and adapted to his bass playing, began developing his trademark percussive but sliding style.

Under Ronnie Hawkins’ tutelage, Rick began a three-year tenure of non-stop gigging and rigorous rehearsals that fellow Band-mate Richard Manuel once likened to "boot camp." By the time he was 20, he was a seasoned pro, having spent most of his teenage years "playing in bars that you were supposed to be 21 to play in."

By the early 60s, Rick and the other Hawks had outgrown the limited roadhouse and honky-tonk circuit and left Hawkins to pursue greener pastures. Bob Dylan saw them perform in the mid-60s and was so impressed that he signed The Hawks to accompany him on his 1965-66 World Tour. The Band’s collaboration with Dylan, initially greeted with boos and catcalls around the globe, changed the course of popular music by spawning one of the most significant musical hybrids of the rock era, "Folk Rock."

Rick’s penchant for musical hybrids began germinating, literally, in his own backyard in Simcoe, a town heavily populated with displaced Southern tobacco farmers. The interesting mix of Northern and Southern cultures there was later reflected in his music and is partly responsible for the occasional Southern inflection that colored some of his words.

After the tumultuous world tours with Dylan (the European leg of which was documented in the obscure film Eat the Document), Rick moved from Manhattan to upstate New York, along with Dylan and the other members of the still-unnamed Band. He rented a big pink house in West Saugerties, near Woodstock, and with Dylan and The Band began recording songs which soon surfaced on bootlegs and were officially released in 1975 as The Basement Tapes.

In 1968, after toying with a host of politically incorrect names, like the Crackers and the Honkies, The Band made its official debut with the release of its seminal and eclectic album, Music From Big Pink (Capitol), which became the fulcrum for the country rock and roots rock of the coming decades.

The music of The Band was at once traditional and contemporary, and the combination made it timeless. In the eye of the psychedelic hurricane, The Band virtually pioneered the use of traditional instruments like mandolins, accordions and fiddles in rock & roll, and Rick Danko was one of the first non-rockabilly players to use stand-up acoustic bass on a rock record. In the midst of political unrest and the peace movement, The Band’s lyrics celebrated real life - beauty, tranquillity, nature, good sex, good friends, small town America, Southern culture - a series of themes whose influences would be felt in another musical hybrid, Americana, 25 years later.

Big Pink catapulted The Band, if not to commercial superstardom, to the upper echelon of rock music. Many brows were furrowed, but accolades abounded, and even Eric Clapton cited them as a major influence and the impetus for leaving the electric power trio Cream behind to go solo.

A succession of albums and tours followed and The Band, now a firm fixture in the rock aristocracy, played virtually every major festival from Woodstock to Watkins Glen. In 1976, on Thanksgiving Day, The Band officially called it quits with a farewell concert at San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom. The concert, which featured an unprecedented all-star lineup to which The Band graciously played back-up, was documented in Martin Scorsese’s much lauded film, The Last Waltz, regarded by many as the finest concert film of all time.

After The Last Waltz, Rick, who needed music as much as it needed him, continued to perform and record. His 1978 debut solo album, a self-titled gem which was initially overshadowed by the grandeur of The Last Waltz but has since garnered both critical and popular acclaim, marked the beginning of a very important period in Rick’s career.

His transition from ensemble player to frontman seemed an easy one. Rick Danko (Arista) was not a Band album in disguise. On the contrary, it showcased his individuality--his wonderful harmonies, his mature and sensitive songwriting, his sense of humor (evidenced on the tongue-in-cheek "Java Blues"), his "less is more" approach to playing and arranging, his affinity for odd collaborations (the pairing of Eric Clapton’s electric rock guitar with Band-mate Garth Hudson’s ethereal country accordion on the Danko-penned "New Mexico"), and the strongest vocal work of his career.


During the early 1980s, Rick maintained a low profile and, in 1983, reunited with The Band (minus Robbie Robertson, who pursued a solo career). During that period, he began playing acoustic guitar as well as bass onstage, and his unique style of tuning and playing (revealing the bass player in his soul) became another of his signature sounds. Throughout the 80s, never one to "sit at home," Rick continued to play solo, with The Band, in pairings with Richard Manuel, Levon Helm, Paul Butterfield, Jorma Kaukonen and others. In 1985, he appeared (with Manuel, Helm and Hudson) in a feature film, Man Outside, and in 1987, he released an instructional video, Rick Danko’s Electric Bass Techniques (Homespun).

The end of the decade marked the beginning of one of the most productive phases in Rick’s life and career. In 1989, he and Band drummer/vocalist Levon Helm toured as part of Ringo Starr’s All-Starr Band (Rick’s rendition of Buddy Holly’s "Raining In My Heart," which appeared on the live album Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band (Rykodisc) and features Clarence Clemons on sax, became a highlight of his live solo shows). That same year, The Band was inducted at Canada’s Juno Awards into the Hall of Fame of the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.

In 1990, Rick, along with Helm, Hudson, Sinead O’Connor, Van Morrison and others, appeared in Roger Waters’ The Wall concert in Berlin. In October, 1992 Rick performed with The Band at the Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Tribute at Madison Square Garden and, in January, 1994, he and The Band were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. The induction speech was made by long-time friend and fan, Eric Clapton.

In 1991, Rick began working on a project that would become near and dear to his heart, a collaboration with Folk legend Eric Andersen and Norwegian singer/songwriter Jonas Fjeld. The almost immediate result of the trio’s collaboration was an award-winning album, Danko Fjeld Andersen (Stageway), which was honored in Norway with a Spellemans Pris (the Norwegian Grammy) for Record of the Year and was released in late 1993 by Rykodisc. The Rykodisc release was honored by AFIM (formerly NAIRD) the following year. Danko Fjeld Andersen, which contains some of Rick’s finest work, received a four-star review in Rolling Stone.

1993 proved to be a banner year for Rick. In addition to the "Trio Album," Rick and The Band recorded their first studio album in 17 years, the acclaimed Jericho (Pyramid), which featured a rootsy rendition of Bruce Springsteen’s "Atlantic City," and several original compositions. In early 1996, The Band released High On The Hog (Pyramid) and in February, 1997, Rykodisc released Ridin’ On The Blinds, the follow-up to Danko Fjeld Andersen, which was recorded in Norway in 1994. Jubilation, The Band’s third album in five years, was released on River North Records in September, 1998.

In September 1999, Rick came back strong with an 11-song collection of inspired performances called Live On Breeze Hill. Rick was joined on this mostly live outing by some of the finest musicians in the business, including Band-mate Garth Hudson and long-time collaborator and Band co-producer Aaron Hurwitz. Eric Clapton said of Rick in 1999 "Rick’s singing has had a tremendous influence on me - it’s only my own humble opinion, but I think you have to be a great musician before you can sing like that." Rick’s voice indeed sounded better than ever, and he began actively promoting the CD, as well as laying down tracks for a new album (which would be released, posthumously, in August 2000 as Times Like These).

On December 10, 1999, Rick Danko died as he had lived - simply, without fanfare, pomp or pretense. If the tears, prayers and tributes that followed are any indication, this country boy whose goal was to "help the neighborhood" certainly succeeded. The world is a much better place because of Rick Danko, and a much sadder one without him.

--Carol Caffin

Postscript
A personal note
The day I met Rick was the last day of normalcy in my life. It was the last day that I was willing to accept the mundane, to go with the flow, or to do what was expected of me, just because it was expected. It was the last day that I wore a suit to work, the last day I was even on time for work! My "enviable" music business job with one of the top entertainment attorneys on the east coast suddenly seemed like a joke to me.
The day after I met Rick, I came to work two hours late in jeans and moccasins. My boss promptly summoned me into his office and asked me, in no uncertain terms, what the hell happened to me. I told him that I’d met Rick Danko and The Band, as if that should explain everything. His perplexed expression would become a familiar response in the weeks and months ahead.

I got through that day in a slow-motion haze - not on Cloud 9, just unsettled. As corny as it sounds, something was just different, and I couldn’t put my finger on it. After all, I’d met many rock stars - I worked in music, and we often had famous musicians and producers in the office. And I wasn’t the "star-struck" type.

But this was different. I knew instinctively that this one meeting would change the course of my life forever. And it did. And I never looked back.

I spent the next few months working at my job, and freelancing as a writer and publicist. I’d had several articles published about The Band, including a feature story on Rick , which a friend of mine sent to him.

One day, as I was at my desk, the phone rang. "Hi, is this Carol?" I didn’t know whether to faint, puke or fall off the chair, because I recognized that voice immediately. "Carol, this is Rick Danko... sorry to bother you at work... got a minute?"

Rick told me that he’d "been reading" some of my stuff, and was very impressed with my writing. "You know more about me than I do, my dear!," he said with that Danko Chuckle. He invited me to the next Band show and, after the show, he asked me if I would like to work with him in a "formal capacity," (which, as anyone who’s worked with The Band knows, doesn’t really exist!) and I agreed. The rest, as they say, is history.

Rick became an important part of my life and career. From the beginning, I had an overwhelming desire to help him. Rick just had a way of bringing out the nurturing side of everyone who knew him - men, women, young and old. Why else would anyone who’d ever driven with him lend him their car? The people who really cared about him wanted to somehow protect him. And he cared about people in return. Rick had a hard time hurting anyone’s feelings, even the hangers-on who just wanted to be part of "the scene." At times, to those who really didn’t know him personally, he could come off as naïve or even gullible. Perhaps it was the puppy dog eyes. Or perhaps it was the trembling tenor. Or maybe it was that Eternal Grin. But, as Elliott Landy has said, Rick liked to play the "country cousin." He was much wiser than any of us really knew.

I began doing tour publicity for him and ended up working with him on a day-to-day basis for several years. He introduced me to Eric Andersen, and I became Eric’s publicist as well. One night in 1991, he called me just after returning from Norway. He played a beautiful song over the phone that he’d recorded called "Driftin’ Away," and asked me what I thought. I told him I loved it, made some tapes and started sending them around to radio stations across the country. Rick was real proud of our "grass roots operation!" Before long, there was a buzz on the "trio album," and soon there was a record deal with Ryko.

I did press for the Danko-Fjeld-Andersen album, which was released just a few weeks before Jericho. It was a true labor of love. The media was excited by the "comeback" of Rick Danko, and the press was positive all over the world. 1993 was a great year - Woodstock again seemed to be the dreamy place it once was. Rick was doing what he loved more than anything else in life - playing. Solo shows, trio shows, Band shows. He did them all, and he loved them all. He could certainly hold his own as a frontman, but he was also a happy and willing sideman, never had to be the star of the show, even when it was his own show. As long as he was on stage, he was in a safe place.

He was more than a phenomenal musician, and much more than The Band’s "class clown," though he was probably the funniest person I’ve ever met. And there is just no describing how funny. You simply had to know Rick to know what I mean. He was, and always will be, one of a kind. You could not be in his company without smiling. Because he was always smiling. But as happy-go-lucky as he was - and he really, really was--you could tell that he’d been hurt. You just can’t sing like he did unless you’ve been wounded.

Rick was childlike, in the purest way. William Blake made the important distinction in his poetry between "childish" and "childlike" - Rick was the personification of that distinction. He was a seasoned road warrior who’d seen it all and done it all a million times, yet he still saw the world in a truly innocent way. He’d shared the stage with legends, played to millions of adoring fans, spawned a whole new school of bass players. But he’d blush if a compliment went much beyond "great show, Rick."

At 56, Rick was still a boy. A boy who was genuinely thrilled at the concept of email. Who marveled at fax technology. Who loved vanilla milkshakes and Dunkin’ Donuts.

I spoke to Rick on December 9. I told him I would be calling him the next day with some interviews, at Danko Standard Time - 2:00 pm.

The next morning, as I was in the midst of arranging an interview for him, I picked up a call-waiting message. It was a New York-area DJ wanting to know how I could sound so chipper. "Whatdaya mean?" I asked. "It’s not true then, about Rick?" My heart pounded "What about Rick?!" He told me that his station had received a call from someone saying that Rick Danko had died.

Just then, Elizabeth Danko called to tell me what I already knew. The rest is a blur of sobs and wails.

Life hasn’t been the same since.

--Carol Caffin"

2. Background from allmusic.com/artist/rick-danko-mn [login to see] /biography
"Artist Biography by Bruce Eder
Rick Danko was -- and will forever be known as -- one of the three singing members of the Band, as well as their bassist. Their principal lead singer on the first album, he was second of the members to join the group back in its days backing Ronnie Hawkins, and the second of its members to pass away.
He was born Richard Clare Danko on December 29, 1943, in Greens Corner, Ontario, Canada, near the town of Simcoe. The latter is in a part of Ontario populated by a large number of families descended from expatriate Southerners from the United States, and the echoes of Southern culture ran through the music and language in the area, with a special emphasis on country music. Danko's whole family played or sang, and he was playing banjo for his classmates as early as the first grade. As a boy, he listened to Hank Williams, among other country artists of the late '40s and early '50s, in addition to gospel and R&B, with Sam Cooke and Fats Domino both strong influences during his teen years. He gave up school to go into music full-time when he was in his mid-teens, and made the jump to the big time -- relatively speaking -- by joining Hawkins' backing band, the Hawks, at age 17. Guitarist Robbie Robertson was already a member of a couple of years' standing at that point, and Danko was initially the group's rhythm guitarist, but he soon learned to play bass and switched to the four-string instrument. He not only mastered the electric bass but also the upright acoustic bass, and became an amazingly accomplished player on both instruments at a very young age.
Danko was part of the split with Hawkins when the group broke away from their former employer, and he was along for the ride when they got picked up as Bob Dylan's backing band, and for the switch in name from the Hawks to the Band. And when they emerged to fame in their own right in 1968, it was as equals -- initially, at least, no member was more or less prominent than any other in terms of their sound; this changed somewhat as Robbie Robertson (also their in-house songwriter) began receiving greater exposure, but in the beginning and for the first few years, everyone had an equal part and was equally important in the eyes of the public. Danko's bass work was distinctive enough, but along with Levon Helm and Richard Manuel, he was also one of the three singing members of the group, and his lead vocals were all over their debut album, Music from Big Pink. But Danko was badly injured in an automobile accident soon after that album's release -- people write about Dylan's motorcycle accident from this era, but relatively few realize that the man who sang lead on most of Music from Big Pink broke his neck and back in nine places, and spent months in traction recovering. He was back for their second album, The Band, and he became one of the most memorable new vocalists in rock during this period, his performances on songs such as "When You Awake," "The Unfaithful Servant," and "It Makes No Difference" among the most searingly beautiful in '60s and '70s rock.
The group got through its prime years with some shifts in emphasis and changes in its dynamics -- Manuel and Helm became much more visible as singers after the debut album, and Robertson had what amounted to a lock on the songwriting as well; and eventually, amid the stresses of touring and performing, recording and meeting the obligations of their record label, all of the members decided it was time to move on to develop identities separate from the group. In 1977, less than a year after the Band played what was supposed to be its farewell concert, Danko was signed to Arista Records, and his self-titled debut solo album appeared in 1978, unfortunately a little too close to the release of the Band's swan song, The Last Waltz, as a movie and LP set. Danko got good reviews from those critics who could devote the time and space to it, but the Band's release eclipsed any chance he had to find an audience as a solo artist, and by 1980, Danko was without a recording contract. He subsequently rejoined Helm, Manuel, and keyboardist Garth Hudson in a re-formed version of the Band (sans Robbie Robertson) for a tour, which yielded a superb concert video (released on laser disc as well). It was to be the last time that the four members would work together -- in early March of 1986, pianist/singer Richard Manuel, succumbing to years of struggling with alcohol and drug problems, committed suicide.
Danko re-emerged in the mid-'80s in various musical ensembles and combinations, with other ex-Band members (including a film appearance with Helm, Hudson, and Manuel in the movie Man Outside), as well as working with Paul Butterfield and Jorma Kaukonen, among others. He and Helm became part of ex-Beatle Ringo Starr's All-Starr Band, and he also participated in such live events as the Roger Waters concert presentation of The Wall in Berlin, and -- with his fellow ex-members -- was part of a Band reunion in the Bob Dylan 30th-anniversary tribute concert at Madison Square Garden.
For all of this activity, Danko was not -- and had not been for some time -- a well man. He'd shown signs of having an addictive personality fairly early in his post-Ronnie Hawkins career, and as was later revealed, the car accident in 1968 had exacerbated a precarious psychotic condition. And although he'd kept matters under control, there was a price to be paid in terms of his health. Meanwhile, he kept busy musically, joining with American '60s folkie Eric Andersen and Norwegian singer/songwriter Jonas Fjeld for a project that was released as Danko/Fjeld/Andersen in 1993. That same year, he was part of the re-formed Band's Jericho album, a critical success that was followed three years later by High on the Hog. A year after that came Ridin' on the Blinds, a follow-up to Danko/Fjeld/Andersen, and in 1998 came the Band's Jubilation; it would be the last time that the three active original members worked together on a Band project. Danko toured occasionally during this period, but his physical condition made it difficult for him to go on the road; his weight increased dramatically as his health declined, and he was nowhere near his best at some shows. He was also arrested for an attempt to smuggle heroin into Japan, and during the trial he revealed that he had become addicted to the drug while seeking a relief from the constant pain he'd been in since the car accident in 1968.
Yet on a good night, or at a good recording session, he could still surprise fans by recapturing much of his past glory. His live album Rick Danko in Concert, recorded at two 1997 shows, is everything one could wish for in a live performance from the man, vocally and instrumentally; and Live on Breeze Hill, although more uneven, cut with the Band's Garth Hudson, has its transcendent and near-transcendent moments, most notably Danko's performance on "Crazy Mama," and even the band standards come off OK. A brief tour in late 1999 proved him closer to the end than anyone wanted to think -- on December 10, 1999, just under three weeks before what would have been his 56th birthday, Rick Danko died in his sleep of heart failure.

The end of the decade marked the beginning of one of the most productive phases in Rick’s life and career. In 1989, he and Band drummer/vocalist Levon Helm toured as part of Ringo Starr’s All-Starr Band (Rick’s rendition of Buddy Holly’s "Raining In My Heart," which appeared on the live album Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band (Rykodisc) and features Clarence Clemons on sax, became a highlight of his live solo shows). That same year, The Band was inducted at Canada’s Juno Awards into the Hall of Fame of the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.

In 1990, Rick, along with Helm, Hudson, Sinead O’Connor, Van Morrison and others, appeared in Roger Waters’ The Wall concert in Berlin. In October, 1992 Rick performed with The Band at the Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Tribute at Madison Square Garden and, in January, 1994, he and The Band were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. The induction speech was made by long-time friend and fan, Eric Clapton.

In 1991, Rick began working on a project that would become near and dear to his heart, a collaboration with Folk legend Eric Andersen and Norwegian singer/songwriter Jonas Fjeld. The almost immediate result of the trio’s collaboration was an award-winning album, Danko Fjeld Andersen (Stageway), which was honored in Norway with a Spellemans Pris (the Norwegian Grammy) for Record of the Year and was released in late 1993 by Rykodisc. The Rykodisc release was honored by AFIM (formerly NAIRD) the following year. Danko Fjeld Andersen, which contains some of Rick’s finest work, received a four-star review in Rolling Stone."

FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen Lt Col Charlie Brown LTC Greg Henning LTC Jeff Shearer Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price Maj Marty Hogan CPT Scott Sharon CWO3 Dennis M. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SSG William Jones SGT John " Mac " McConnell SP5 Mark Kuzinski PO1 H Gene Lawrence PO2 Kevin Parker PO3 Bob McCord
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Died too young.
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Fate of too many musicians
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Dying so young.
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