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  Billy Cowsill has passed

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Author Topic:   Billy Cowsill has passed
Greg Simmons
Member

From: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

posted 19 February 2006 12:41 PM     profile     
OK, I was just checking the CBC News website to see what is going on in our big old world and saw this awful news...Billy was an amazing singer and musician...I am very sad today

quote:
Billy Cowsill, once the frontman for 1960s family band The Cowsills, has died at his home in Calgary at the age of 58.

Family members confirmed Sunday that Billy died Friday night. He had been fighting a lengthy battle with a variety of ailments which included emphysema, osteoporosis and Cushing syndrome. But the family did not reveal what caused Billy’s death.

Paul Cowsill, brother to Billy, told the Providence Journal that Billy had a history of problems with drugs and alcohol which had “caught up with him.”

The family had been gathered in Rhode Island over the weekend for a memorial service for Barry Cowsill, a brother who was also a member of the band. Barry drowned in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in September.

The Cowsills were the inspiration for the 1970s television sitcom The Partridge Family. The act included parents Bud and Barbara, daughter Susan and brothers William (Billy), Robert, Richard, Barry, Paul and John.

The Cowsills also had their own TV special and performed as a headline act in Las Vegas. They had several hits including Hair, The Rain and Indian Lake. They disbanded in the early seventies and went their own ways.

Billy moved to Canada 35 years ago and continued his musical career with the bands Blue Northern and The Blue Shadows, which released two well-received albums.

In an interview with the Calgary Sun in January 2002, Billy admitted his life spiralled out of control in Vancouver during the mid-1990s. His Calgary friends came to his rescue: “They dragged me [back to Calgary], put me up in a facility and allowed me to get my healthy, my sanity … back.”

Around 2002, Billy was halfway through a psychology degree from Mont Royal College and had formed a “weekend party band” called the Co-Dependents. His family said he was working towards a degree in musical education when he died.

Cowsill is survived by two sons, Travis and Del.


------------------

quote:

Western roots legend exits on a high note


Peter North, Special to The Journal
Published: Sunday, February 19, 2006

Billy Cowsill, who cut a big swath across the western Canadian roots music scene for 25 years, died in Calgary on Saturday.

The singer had been in poor health for the past few years. A number of back operations and emphyzema hindered his ability to sing since 2003.

Cowsill tasted fame after The Cowsills were signed to the MGM label in 1967. The act featured his mother Barbara and five siblings. The band hit the No. 2 spot on the Billboard charts with The Rain, the Park, and Other Things and repeated that chart performance with the theme from the musical Hair.

After The Cowsills called it quits in 1970, Billy Cowsill spent time in Austin and Los Angeles before heading to Canada in 1977. For a number of years Vancouver was his home base. He led the country-rock band Blue Northern, before forming Trainwreck with guitarist Linsay Mitchell and bassist Elmar Spanier. A mesmerizing performer, Cowsill enlisted the talents of singer Jeffrey Hatcher and formed The Blue Shadows in 1992. That band went on to record two acclaimed albums for Sony, before Cowsill moved to Calgary, where he began fronting The Co-Dependents.

"Billy said that he gave lots of love when he was on stage and got lots back," said longtime friend and associate Neil MacGonigill, who released the two live Co-Dependents albums.

"He had been through a lot, but went out on a high note. The latest Co-Dependents disc had been No. 1 for nine consecutive weeks in Calgary at Megatunes," added MacGonigill.

Billy Cowsill was 58 years old and is also survived by two sons, Travis and Del.
© The Edmonton Journal 2006


------------------

quote:

Billy Cowsill, lead singer of The Cowsills, dies on eve of brother's memorial

Canadian Press
Published: Sunday, February 19, 2006
CALGARY (CP) - William (Billy) Cowsill, 58, lead singer of the 1960s family band The Cowsills, has died at his home in Calgary after a lengthy illness.

News of his death Friday night was confirmed by family members who had gathered in Rhode Island for a memorial service for Barry Cowsill, a brother also in the band who drowned in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in September.

Billy Cowsill had moved to Canada 35 years ago and continued his music career with Blue Northern and later The Blue Shadows. But it was the Cowsills that led to his greatest success as lead singer with such hits as Hair and Indian Lake.

The band was also the inspiration for the TV series The Partridge Family. The Cowsills also had their own television special, performed a headline act in Las Vegas and did milk commercials.

Family members gathered Saturday at the memorial service for Barry Cowsill say Billy had been ill for several years with emphysema, osteoporosis, Cushing syndrome and other ailments. But they did not have details on his cause of death.

Paul Cowsill, another brother in the band, told the Providence Journal that Billy had a history of problems with drugs and alcohol that "caught up with him."

"He'd be the first one to tell you he's paying the fiddler," he said.

The Cowsill family included parents Bud and Barbara, a daughter Susan and brothers William, Robert, Richard, Barry, Paul, and John.

Billy is survived by two sons, Travis and Del.
© The Canadian Press 2006



“I always knew that there was something out there that I needed to get to.
And it wasn't where I was at that particular moment."

-Bob Dylan

[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 19 February 2006 at 01:06 PM.]

Greg Simmons
Member

From: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

posted 19 February 2006 01:43 PM     profile     
Check out "On the Floor of Heaven", from the Blue Shadows album of the same name, with Greg Leisz on pedal steel.

The best song I ever wrote I think was "On The Floor Of Heaven".
Billy Cowsill Dec. 2004

[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 20 February 2006 at 01:39 PM.]

David L. Donald
Member

From: Koh Samui Island, Thailand

posted 20 February 2006 01:15 AM     profile     
Not a good year for the family.
My condolences to them.

My sister was a big fan of tyhe Cwosills,
she had everything they recorded.

Joey Ace
Sysop

From: Southern Ontario, Canada

posted 20 February 2006 04:07 AM     profile     
Very sad.

I saw the Cowsills at a State Fair in the 60s, and saw The Blue Shadows at a small club in Hamilton in the 90s.

I remeber being very impressed with the vocal harmonies.
Billy was very aproachable and talented.

Thanks for the track Greg.

[This message was edited by Joey Ace on 20 February 2006 at 04:13 AM.]

Mark Vinbury
Member

From: N. Kingstown, Rhode Island, USA

posted 20 February 2006 06:51 AM     profile     

The Cowsills were an interesting phenomenon
here in our small state. While I didn't know them personally, our band shared the stage a couple of times in the 60's.
We were trying to get as far away from our unsupportive parents as possible.
These kids were always suspect, rocking out with Mom in a mini skirt and Dad actually buying them equipment.
When a TV show was modeled after them we just used it as an excuse to write them off as "selling out to the establishment" and didn't take them seriously as a "real band".
The reality was they were talented musicians and it apparently took an overwhelming amount of effort for them to come back around on the other side.
Truely a sad time for the family.

Greg Simmons
Member

From: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

posted 20 February 2006 04:49 PM     profile     
A better article, more personal than the standard newswire schtick...
quote:

Rock legend Cowsill dies in Calgary home

Heath McCoy
Calgary Herald

Monday, February 20, 2006

Billy Cowsill was a veteran rock 'n' roller; a man who had been through the wringer after 40 years in the harsh music business.

He had weathered it all: fame on an international level and the fall from glory; drugs and booze; stunning musical highs and soul crushing lows when it all fell apart. His music was his great love and that had pulled him up from the darkest depths so many times. He was determined that this time was not going to be any different, even as he laid in a nursing home bed with a broken hip, breathing with the aid of an oxygen tank because of his emphysema.

But as grizzled and ailing as he was, Cowsill's manager Neil MacGonigill said the old rocker looked like a little boy last September, his excitement infectious as he sat up in bed listening to the tapes that were brought for his approval.

The music was from a live recording that was made in June 2001 of Cowsill's popular local band, The Co-Dependents.

MacGonigill was having the tapes remixed for the album, Live At The Mecca Cafe: Volume 2, which was released in December.

"It was as cute as can be, because I've known Billy for a long time and he was a bad boy, a real gun fighter, and here he is in his pyjamas sitting on the edge of his bed listening to those songs," MacGonigill said.

"He was like a hawk too, (focused on) every little nuance. Half way through (the recording) he looks over and says 'I was pretty good, wasn't I, Neil?' He was digging it. That was a nice thing for Billy."

But childlike enthusiasm aside, Cowsill -- who died Saturday at his Calgary home, at the age of 58 -- was notoriously tough, and despite the ailments that plagued him in his final years, including osteoporosis and Cushing syndrome, he was not going down without a fight.

With his respiratory problems, he could no longer muster the powerful harmonies he was revered for, and he had spent months stubbornly retraining himself to sing.

Just over a year ago he sang on a Hank Williams tribute album, which is still in the works. And, as recently as New Year's Day he hobbled upon the stage at the Ironwood bar with two canes, to sing three Williams tunes alongside some of the city's top local musicians.

"With one lung and being on oxygen he couldn't belt it out like he did in his heyday, but it still sounded great." says Josh Marantz, manager of the Ironwood.

The tragedy of Billy Cowsill's death must have struck his family particularly hard, as they were gathered in Rhode Island holding a memorial service for Billy's younger sibling Barry when they heard the news. Barry, who died at the age of 51, was found face down in the mud under a New Orleans wharf on Dec. 28, four months after he had disappeared following hurricane Katrina, which had devastated the city in August.

At press time the Cowsill family could not be reached for comment.

Barry and Billy were both members of The Cowsills, a family pop band from Rhode Island that achieved international fame in the late '60s with such massive hits as The Rain, The Park & Other Things, Indian Lake, and the title song from the rock musical, Hair.

Teeny bopper heartthrobs of the day, who appeared on the Ed Sullivan and Johnny Carson shows, guitarist Billy fronted the band while Barry played bass. Brothers Bob and John played organ and drums. Eventually their mother Barbara and little sister Susan joined the band too, under the direction of the family's patriarch, the reputedly dictatorial Bud Cowsill.

The Cowsills, who provided the inspiration for TV's The Partridge Family, eventually broke up in a storm of bitter acrimony that left some members estranged from each other for several years. But Billy and Barry always had a bond, as the brothers who wanted The Cowsills to move away from their family-friendly pop past and become an edgy rock band.

Both Billy and Barry lived through tumultuous times after the breakup of The Cowsills, hitting the landmines typical of the rock world.

Each of them experienced the ups and downs of the music business. Each of them struggled with substance abuse. In fact, the day hurricane Katrina struck, Barry Cowsill was set for a trip to a Los Angeles rehab centre.

In an old interview with the Herald, Calgary filmmaker Joel Stewart, who did a TV documentary on Billy Cowsill in 2004, spoke of the singer's wild times in the 1970s: "hanging out with Warren Zevon and doing qualudes with (guitarist) Waddy Wachtel."

Billy's nomadic road led him to Vancouver in the 1980s where he fronted The Blue Shadows, who were known for their breathtaking Everly Brothers-like harmonies. But Billy continued to indulge his vices in those years, going so far as to describe the Shadows as "three vegetarians and a junkie."

Eventually he was rescued by members of Calgary's music scene, included McGonigill and Jann Arden, who, essentially, held an intervention for him. Newly sober, Billy formed The Co-Dependents in the late '90s, a country-rock quartet that was much-loved on Calgary's thriving roots-music scene.

At first when Billy moved to Calgary, he didn't play at all, says his former bandmate in The Co-Dependents, Tim Leacock. "Finally he said, 'Look, you got a car and I need to work, so you better get a bass (guitar)," Leacock says. "We started playing as a duo and it was awful at first because I had never really played bass and here I am trying to back up this guy. He'd just play whatever he felt like playing and he'd be choked that I didn't know some obscure George Jones tune."

Even after the Co-Dependents parted ways, due to Billy's health problems, Leacock and Cowsill remained close.

"Him and I still get together and sing all the time," said Leacock in a recent interview. "He's still kicking my butt too. 'C'mon! You can hit that note! You gotta breathe! Do you want some of my oxygen?' . . . . He made me so much better at what I do, just being a part of that. I didn't just learn about music through Billy. I learned how to keep on keepin' on, you know?"

McGonigill best described Billy's commanding stage presence. "Listen to Slow Down (on Live At The Mecca Cafe: Volume 2)," McGonigill said. "(Guitarist) Steve Pineo's solos are so great, because Billy's encouraging him by almost yelling at him. The way Billy put it was: 'Yeah, I always thought of it as a chuck wagon race. I was the driver and the boys were the horses.'"

But Billy battled depression in his final days, McGonigill said. "He'd like to sing and play all the time, but he's on that oxygen and he can't get around much because of his bone disorder. . . . For years Billy was a three-pack-a-day guy (with cigarettes). . . . And for years he was a codeine addict, a pill-popper, and I think he's experiencing the cumulative effects of all that stuff. . . . So he just can't sing like he used to. He sings quiet now, and he beats himself up over it. A guy like Bill, his self esteem hinges on his performances. That's where he was always the winner."

Despite Billy's fears, however, when news of his death filtered through the Calgary music scene on the long weekend, his rich legacy was fondly recalled. "My wife and I, some of our happiest times came listening to Billy," says Gerry Garvey, former manager of the now defunct King Eddy blues bar. "You'd see him and he looked like this grizzled old Keith Richards-guy. But he'd open his mouth and he sounded like an angel."

An interview with McGonigill, weeks before Billy's death, confirmed the forgotten legend's enduring popularity on the Calgary scene. "I started bringing him here in the mid-70s and people just loved him," McGonigill said. "College kids, punk rockers, grannies, they all loved him, even when he swore like a trooper."

hmccoy@theherald.canwest.com


[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 20 February 2006 at 05:09 PM.]

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