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ANNOUNCEMENTS:
BOB ENOS, ROOMFUL OF BLUES TRUMPET
PLAYER
JULY 4, 1947 – JANUARY 11, 2008
Bob
Enos, longtime trumpet player for Roomful of Blues, died in his sleep
in his hotel room in Douglas, Georgia, early Friday morning, January
11, 2008 of suspected heart failure. He was 60. Roomful had played the
Douglas Country Club the previous night. The band was on its way to
Fort Lauderdale, Florida on Sunday to perform on The Legendary Blues
Cruise. Roomful is continuing its current tour with former band member
John Wolfe taking Enos’s place.
Enos joined Roomful Of Blues in September, 1981. Only saxophonist Rich
Lataille had been with the band longer. He appeared on every album
that Roomful made apart from its first three releases, including a new
CD, “Raisin’ A Ruckus,” set to be released on January 15, 2008. Enos
can also be heard with the Roomful horn section on recordings by Pat
Benatar, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Colin James, Jimmy “T99” Nelson and
others. Influenced by Louis Armstrong and Roy Eldridge, Enos’ driving
delivery and punching high notes put a sparkle atop the Roomful horn
section and frequently drew gasps from the audience.
Born
in Boston, Massachusetts, on July 4, 1947, Bob took up the trumpet at
age 14, studied at the Boston Conservatory of Music, and spent the
late sixties and early seventies playing in R&B and soul bands. After
studying with John Coffee and Ray Copeland, he spent two of years
working with the legendary Platters (led by Herb Reed) before joining
Jack Radcliffe and the New Viper Revue. He then founded the
award-winning band Channel One and was with this jazz fusion group for
three years. After a period of freelance work he joined Roomful,
literally on the eve of the band’s first coast-to-coast tour.
“Bob
was one of a kind,” said Roomful bandleader Chris Vachon, “a
unique talent. The band obviously feels devastated. When you work as
closely together as a band like Roomful does, each person is family –
we’re like brothers. It makes this kind of thing hard, very hard
indeed.”
Bob (Bubba as we called him) was a great man
and great friend.," said Mike LeBeau sound engineer and tour manager.
A one of a kind. Loving Husband, Father. He could always make you
laugh or smile even in the worst situations. "Cheer up my little
Bubba" he would say. He played music from his heart and soul. "I'll
miss him dearly, but everytime I look into the sun I'll see him shine
and know someday like all our lost Fathers, Mothers, Brothers,
Sisters, and Friends we'll be together again".
“He could always hit those high
notes,” said Roomful’s former bandleader Greg Piccolo. “It
was an amazing thing – I had never worked with a trumpet player who
was so consistent. It didn’t matter how tired the band was, how long
the drive to the job had been. He was always there, right on the
money. He was a bull.”
“He was a pro through and through,”
commented Bob Bell who managed Roomful for over 20 years. “He
loved the music and he loved the band. Outside of his family, it was
his life. He brought a lot of joy to an awful lot of folks. And he was
a really sweet guy.”
He is survived by his wife Jill, sons Louis, Jude and Joseph, and
daughter Elizabeth.
Contributions for Bob Enos’ son’s education may be sent to:
Bob Enos Memorial Scholarship Fund
c/o TD Bank North
127 South Street
Wrentham, MA 02093
Click on this site to read how Bob Enos'
passing has been reported around the country.
http://www.inform.com/related_content/52994359,0
This article courtesy of:
http://www.roomful.com/
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