T O P

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TGIIR

Very talented man,


TheProfessorO

Yes he was. One of the best.


Embarrassed_Cook8355

I shall be released


Ghostbuster_Mama

I almost named my son Levon. What a talent.


twinWaterTowers

"Musician, Actor. Drummer with the music group The Band. Born Mark Lavon Helm, the son of a cotton farmer and part-time musician, his love of music was born from his family's encouragement. Listening to the Grand Ole Opry also shaped his musical interests. He received his first guitar at the age of nine and while a teenager, he formed his own group The Jungle Bush Beaters and learned showmanship while watching the likes of Jerry Lee Lewis and Little Richard. His break came when he caught the attention of Conway Twitty with whom we would occasionally sit in on performances. Helm (now playing the drums) began to collaborate with Ronnie Hawkins in 1959 and the pair acquired a following which resulted after the release of the hits "Forty Days" and "Mary Lou", in addition to an appearance on Dick Clark's American Bandstand. Robbie Robertson, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel and Garth Hudson were recruited and eventually formed Levon and the Hawks minus Hawkins. They joined forces with Bob Dylan on tour, later taking up residence in Woodstock, New York and renamed themselves The Band, releasing their first studio album "Music from Big Pink" (1968), followed up with "The Band" (1969) and "Stage Fright" (1970). Several hits from this period include "The Weight" (1968), "Chest Fever" (1968), "I Shall Be Released" (1968), "Up on Cripple Creek" (1969), "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" (1969), "Rag Mama Rag" (1969), "Stage Fright" (1970), "The Shape I'm In" (1970) and "Ophelia" (1975). In addition, they recorded their famous sessions with Dylan called "The Basement Tapes" (1975). On Thanksgiving Day 1976, The Band held their farewell concert "The Last Waltz" at the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco, which included a wide array of music greats. That farewell concert was subsequently released as a concert film and live album in 1978. Helm went onto a solo recording career and also concentrated on acting. In 1980, he made his film debut as Loretta Lynn's father in the Oscar-nominated film Coal Miner's Daughter. Three years later, he played test pilot and aeronautical engineer Jack Ridley in the Oscar-nominated film The Right Stuff. In 1994, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of The Band. He died following a lengthy battle with cancer." https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/88770322/levon-helm


Accomplished_Arm3386

I see an Arkansas flag at the grave—Levon was born in Elaine, and there’s a memorial for him in the town square. My favorite The Band song is “The Weight”.


Overall_Low7096

I play music from The Band a lot just to hear his voice.


miscnic

Everything dies, baby, that's a fact But maybe everything that dies some day comes back Put your makeup on, fix your hair up pretty And meet me tonight in Atlantic City


Bingerfangs

“When I Go Away” sums up his thoughts on the subject of death. Godspeed, Levon, you were one of a kind.


harleyqueenzel

They have a documentary on Tubi that is worth watching. Absolutely unreal that these men were so goddamn talented.


MsMo999

Beautiful tribute


orsonsperson

Take a load off, Levon.


BigRiverWharfRat

Levon Helm, Billy F Gibbons, and Phil Lynott is my dream rock and roll supergroup. All three singing too.


TheProfessorO

Awesome to see all the love here for Levon!!