TODAY'S NEWS - QUICKIES THAT CHANGE OFTEN

"I WILL NOT FOLLOW WHERE THE PATH MAY LEAD, BUT I WILL GO WHERE THERE IS NO PATH, AND I WILL LEAVE A TRAIL." Muriel Strode -KHS65 class motto.
"The good old days....when we weren't good and we weren't old" Barbara Schwarz Moss 2010
SEE WWW.KHS65.COM FOR 169 PIX FROM OUR 45TH REUNION - CLICK THE SMALL PHOTO FOR LARGER VERSION. See lots of NEW grade school pix!
CHECK THE LABELS, GO TO KIRKWOOD HISTORY ARTICLES & CLICK THE POST ABOUT FRANCIS SCHEIDEGGER'S PIX FOR A GLIMPSE OF A PLACE I BET EVERYONE REMEMBERS - and much more!


We seem to all be suffering a common problem these days, WHERE DID OUR LIVES GO? Our brains seem to still be 18, but our bodies are talking a different language. Sarah Orne Jewett puts it much more eloquently than do I:

“Neither of my companions was troubled by her burden of years. I hoped in my heart that I might be like them as I lived on into age, and then smiled to think that I too was no longer very young. So we always keep the same hearts, though our outer framework fails and shows the touch of time.”

FOR LATEST NEWS BE SURE TO CHECK OUT KHS65 AT FACEBOOK TOO!


Interactive news, reviews, gossip, musings, activities, photos, mysteries, histories, stories, truths, lies & video tapes from & for graduates of the Kirkwood (MO) High School fabulous class of 1965. Email us anything you would like to share to leslieatkhs65dotcom. See photos at www.khs65.com - comment here or on the website to make yourself heard! FIND US ~ www.khs65.com ~ www.khs65.org ~ FACEBOOK KHS65 ~ http://khs65blog.com ~ KHS65 MAKE IT A HABIT!

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Obituary for our KHS63 member Dave Sanborn, remembered by so many of us!

Many of us had connections to the late fabulous musician Dave Sanborn.  Feel free to post your memories here if you wish.  Here is his obituary from Legacy.com.  

David Sanborn (1945–2024), Grammy-winning saxophonist

David Sanborn was a six-time Grammy-winning saxophonist whose smooth jazz broke through to the mainstream, with a dozen albums hitting the Billboard Top 200. 

  • Died: May 12, 2024 (Who else died on May 12?
  • Details of death: Died in Tarrytown, New York of prostate cancer at the age of 78. 

David Sanborn’s legacy 

When David Sanborn was young, he contracted polio and was left so weak, he turned to the saxophone to help strengthen his lungs. It proved a fortuitous means of recovery. He studied music at Northwestern University and the University of Iowa, then began to make professional strides in the 1960s, when he played with The Paul Butterfield Blues Band. He even played the famed Woodstock music festival with the group. 

In the 1970s, Sanborn recorded parts for artists like Steve Wonder (on “Tuesday Heartbreak”), David Bowie (1947–2016) (the famed “Young Americans” LP), and James Taylor (on “How Sweet It Is”), among others. However, it was his string of crossover hits in the ‘70s and ‘80s that made him an international star. Lumped into the “smooth jazz” genre – a niche Sanborn distanced himself from – his approachable, relaxing sound helped him land a dozen albums on the Billboard Top 200 and won him six Grammy Awards. 

For a time, Sanborn was with the “Saturday Night Live” house band and made regular appearances with Paul Shaffer on “Late Night with David Letterman.” Major records include “Hideaway,” “Voyeur,” and “A Change of Heart.” He also composed scores for film, including the “Lethal Weapon” sequels and “Psycho III.” Other artists he played with include James Brown (1933–2006), Billy Joel, B.B. King (1925–2015), Linda Ronstadt, Bonnie Raitt, The Rolling Stones, Chaka Khan and Ween. 

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