Thursday, December 13th, 2007


From SAN DIEGO, California, Ike Turner, whose role as one of rock’s critical architects was overshadowed by his ogrelike image as the man who brutally abused former wife Tina Turner, died Wednesday at his home in suburban San Diego. He was 76.

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Ike Turner won a Grammy for best traditional blues album for ‘Risin’ With The Blues’ on February 11.

“He did pass away this morning” at his home in San Marcos, said Scott M. Hanover of Thrill Entertainment Group, which managed Turner’s musical career.

There was no immediate word on the cause of death, which was first reported by celebrity Web site TMZ.com.

Turner managed to rehabilitate his image somewhat in later years, touring around the globe with his band the Kings of Rhythm and drawing critical acclaim for his work.

He won a Grammy in 2007 in the traditional blues album category for “Risin’ With the Blues.”

But his image is forever identified as the drug addicted, wife abusing husband of Tina Turner. He was hauntingly portrayed by Laurence Fishburne in the movie “What’s Love Got To Do With It,” based on Tina Turner’s autobiography.

In a 2001 interview with The Associated Press, Turner denied his ex~wife’s claims of abuse and expressed frustration that he had been demonized in the media while his historic role in rock’s beginnings had been ignored.

“You can go ask Snoop Dogg or Eminem, you can ask the Rolling Stones or (Eric) Clapton, or you can ask anybody…anybody, they all know my contribution to music, but it hasn’t been in print about what I’ve done or what I’ve contributed until now,” he said.

But as would be the case for most of his career, Turner, a prolific session guitarist and piano player, was not the star on the record, it was recorded with Turner’s band but credited to singer Jackie Brenston.

And it would be another singer , a young woman named Anna Mae Bullock, who would bring Turner his greatest fame, and infamy.

Turner met the 18-year-old Bullock, whom he would later marry, in 1959 and quickly made the husky-voiced woman the lead singer of his group, refashioning her into the sexy Tina Turner. Her stage persona was highlighted by short skirts and stiletto heels that made her legs her most visible asset. But despite the glamorous image, she still sang with the grit and fervor of a rock singer with a twist of soul.

The pair would have two sons. They also produced a string of hits. The first, “A Fool In Love,” was a top R&B song in 1959, and others followed, including “I Idolize You” and “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine.”

But over the years they’re genre~defying sound would make them favorites on the rock ‘n’ roll scene, as they opened for acts like the Rolling Stones.

The densely layered hit “River Deep, Mountain High” was one of producer Phil Spector’s proudest creations. A rousing version of “Proud Mary,” a cover of the Creedence Clearwater Revival hit, became their signature song and won them a Grammy for best R&B vocal performance by a group.

Still, their hits were often sporadic, and while their public life depicted a powerful, dynamic duo, Tina Turner would later charge that her husband was an overbearing wife abuser and cocaine addict.

In her 1987 autobiography, “I, Tina,” she narrated a harrowing tale of abuse, including suffering a broken nose. She said that cycle ended after a vicious fight between the pair in the back seat of a car in Las Vegas, where they were scheduled to perform.

It was the only time she ever fought back against her husband, Turner said.

After the two broke up, both fell into obscurity and endured money woes for years before Tina Turner made a dramatic comeback in 1982 with the release of the album “Private Dancer,” a multiplatinum success with hits such as “Let’s Stay Together” and “What’s Love Got To Do With It.”

The movie based on her life, “What’s Love Got To Do With It,” was also a hit, earning Angela Bassett an Oscar nomination.

But Fishburne’s glowering depiction of Ike Turner also furthered Turner’s reputation as a rock villain.

Meanwhile, Turner never again had the success he enjoyed with his former wife.

After years of drug abuse, he was jailed in 1989 and served 17 months.

Turner told the AP he originally began using drugs to stay awake and handle the rigors of nonstop touring during his glory years.

“My experience, man, with drugs, I can’t say that I’m proud that I did drugs, but I’m glad I’m still alive to convey how I came through,” he said.

“I’m a good example that you can go to the bottom. … I used to pray, `God, if you let me get three days clean, I will never look back.’ But I never did get to three days. You know why? Because I would lie to myself. And then only when I went to jail, man, did I get those three days. And man, I haven’t looked back since then.”

But while he would readily admit to drug abuse, Turner always denied abusing his ex~wife.

After years out of the spotlight his career finally began to revive in 2001 when he released the album “Here and Now.” The recording won rave reviews and a Grammy nomination and finally helped shift some of the public’s attention away from his troubled past and onto his musical legacy.

“His last chapter in life shouldn’t be drug abuse and the problems he had with Tina,” said Rob Johnson, the producer of “Here and Now.”

Turner spent his later years making more music and touring, even while he battled emphysema.

Accolades for both his early and later work continued to come in as he grew older, and the once broke Turner managed to garner a comfortable income as his songs were sampled by a variety of rap acts.

In interviews toward the end of his life, Turner would acknowledge having made many mistakes, but maintained he was still able to carry himself with pride.

“I know what I am in my heart. And I know regardless of what I’ve done, good and bad, it took it all to make me what I am today,” he once told the AP.
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Thank you AP News
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Well, personally I will miss Ike Turner and his music.

They, Ike and Tina were the Sonny and Char of Soul, to me.

We all make mistakes…but in the end it is what we do with our mistakes that makes the difference.

Rest in Peace and play that guitar and piano!

~The Baby Boomer Queen~

BOLINGBROOK, Illinois, A former police officer suspected in his wife’s disappearance has set up a Web site to ask for financial help with his legal defense.

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Former Illinois police officer Drew Peterson is considered a suspect in the disappearance of his fourth wife, Stacy.

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Drew Peterson’s site says he wants to collect money from people who believe he deserves a defense without going broke.

“For the cost of a few cups of your morning coffee, you can help to ensure that Drew can afford to support his ongoing legal defense, find his missing wife, and divert any remaining funds into a trust for his children,” the site says.

Peterson’s attorney, Joel Brodsky, said any money collected on DefendDrew.com will go into a trust account over which Peterson will have no control. [The site has since been disabled.]

Brodsky said it will be used first to pay for legal fees and then to hire a private investigator to look for 23 year old Stacy Peterson, who vanished in late October. Any remaining money will be put into a trust for Peterson’s four dependent children, the Web site says.

Peterson, 53, a longtime member of the Bolingbrook Police Department until he quit after his wife disappeared, has denied any involvement in her disappearance. He has said he believes his wife left him for another man and is alive.

Investigators from several agencies continued their underwater search of a canal just south of Bolingbrook on Tuesday, said Trooper Mark Dorencz. Authorities have not said why they are searching the canal.

“His best defense is to find Stacy,” Bosco said. “Let’s put that as a priority, Drew.”

The site, which collects money through PayPal, appeals for sympathy for Peterson and his children, who “may end up impoverished” by the cost of mounting a defense. The site says “media sensationalism” surrounding the story has caused the family hardship and stresses Peterson’s years of public service as a police officer.

The investigation of the disappearance also has prompted the exhumation of the body of Drew Peterson’s third wife, Kathleen Savio.

Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow has said after examining evidence he believes Savio’s death was a homicide staged to look like an accident. Results of the new autopsy have not been released.

Peterson has not been named a suspect in Savio’s death.

Brodsky said Tuesday the Web site was his idea, but Peterson approved it. He said without the public’s help, Peterson could lose his home to pay his legal bills.

“It’s hundreds of detectives against Drew,” Brodsky said. “I don’t think anybody could withstand that type of onslaught.”

Brodsky said he would be in court Wednesday seeking the return of vehicles, computers, guns, ammunition and other items seized by police from Drew Peterson’s home. The property Peterson wants returned includes eight handguns and three long guns, Brodsky said.

“By federal law, retired police officers are allowed to carry weapons in all 50 states,” Brodsky said, noting that Peterson has not been charged with a crime. “Why shouldn’t he have them back?”
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Thank you AP News
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Well, there you have it Baby Boomers…

I wouln’t give this man one copper penny!

~The Baby Boomer Queen~