music legends we've lost
1 / 11
Dee Dee Warwick 9/25/45 - 10/18/08 - Dee Dee Warwick, who won recognition for both her solo work and her performances with her older sister Dionne Warwick, has died. Warwick had several hits on the soul and R&B charts in the 1960s and 70s, including "Foolish Fool," "She Didn't Know (She Kept on Talking)" and a version of "I'm Gonna Make You Love Me" that was later covered by Diana Ross and The Supremes. Warwick was 63.
2 / 11
Levi Stubbs 6/6/36 – 10/17/08 - Stubbs, best known as the chief voice of the Motown R&B group The Four Tops died at his home in Detroit after a long battle with cancer. Stubbs, whose voice was featured on hits "Baby I Need Your Loving" and "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)," was 72.
3 / 11
Norman Whitfield 5/12/40 – 9/16/08 - Whitfield was one of the Motown pioneers of epic soul. The hit singles Whitfield produced in his 25-year career included "I Heard It through the Grapevine," "Ain't Too Proud to Beg," "Cloud Nine," "War," "Papa Was a Rolling Stone," "Smiling Faces Sometimes" and "Car Wash." The Grammy-winning songwriter reportedly died of complications from his long struggle with diabetes. He was 67.
4 / 11
LeRoi Moore 9/7/61 – 8/19/08 - Moore, best known as a founding member of the Dave Matthews Band, passed away due to serious injuries, including a punctured lung and broken ribs he suffered in an ATV accident on June 30. The sax player was 46.
5 / 11
Pervis Jackson 9/7/61 – 8/19/08 - Jackson was the big man with the deep, smooth, bass voice in a string of 1970s R&B hits by the Spinners. One of the group's bigger hits was "Games People Play." Jackson died a week after being diagnosed with brain and liver cancer. He was 70.
ADVERTISEMENT