- Joined
- Jun 24, 2010
- Messages
- 36,473
- Name
- Stu
I'm stunned!This isn't even close for me.
ROBERT NESTA MARLEY

I'm stunned!This isn't even close for me.
ROBERT NESTA MARLEY
All the ones mentioned above and...
Mozart - 34
Buddy Holly - 22
Sam Cooke - 33
Otis Redding - 26
Jim Morrison - 27
Ronnie Van Zant - 29
Keith Moon - 32
Bon Scott - 33
I could go on and on with this tragic list but don't want to hog this thread too much. Each loss of life has stung in its own way. Is there a more dangerous profession than being a musician? Bad eating habits, weird working hours, drugs, alcohol, sycophants who push drugs and alcohol, too many flights in rickety planes, the boredom of playing one show a night and then sitting in a hotel room which leads to self-destructive behavior, and on and on. It's a wonder some musicians like Keith Richards make it to old age.
Being a full-time author is a dangerous and tragic profession as well. See Ernest Hemingway, Jack London, Edgar Allen Poe, Herman Melville, etc.
I remember what a bummer it was to have Douglas Adams die after the way the last Hitchhiker's Guide book ended.True that! But I'm hoping that George R.R. Martin, who will be 66 in September, lives long enough to complete his 'A Song of Ice and Fire' series.![]()
Yeah, I agree on Douglas Adams. Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is definitely one of the funniest books I've ever read, perhaps THE funniest. The other in the series wasn't quite as funny, but all were good.I remember what a bummer it was to have Douglas Adams die after the way the last Hitchhiker's Guide book ended.
The Adams estate authorized an author named Eoin Colfer to write a 6th book (7th if you count the short story "Young Zaphod Plays It Safe"), but while good and based on Adams' notes, you can tell it wasn't Adams himself writing.
We're creating a pretty long list. One that comes to mind that hasn't been mentioned already (I think. Might've missed it. I've been known not to read too thoroughly.) is Heath Ledger.