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John Denver

John Denver (December 31, 1947 - October 12, 1997), born Henry John Deutschendorf, was an American singer, songwriter and musician.

Denver had a successful singing and songwriting career and a minor career as an actor, his most notable acting credit being in the film Oh, God![?] opposite George Burns. In 1994 Denver wrote an autobiography entitled Take Me Home[?]. He was born in Roswell, New Mexico, lived most of his adult life in Aspen, Colorado and died off the coast of Monterey, California while piloting a "Long E-Z," an experimental private plane[?]. Denver's plane had the fuel tank alternator switch located behind his seat and it is believed he lost control while trying to engage the secondary fuel tank.

John Denver was recognized not only for his musical ability but also for his humanitarian[?] work. He worked extensively on conservation projects and helped to create the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. He also founded his own environmental group called the Windstar Foundation[?]. Denver had a keen interest in the causes of and solution to hunger and visited Africa during the 1980s to witness first-hand the suffering caused by starvation and also to work with African leaders towards a solution.

Table of contents

Discography

In chronological order, 1969-1991 (U.S. Releases)

On RCA Records:

On Windstar Records:

† Albums widely considered to be among Denver's most important works.

†† The first "Greatest Hits" album is important historically because it contains new, revisionist recordings of several hit songs. After its release these versions were used for airplay despite differing in subtle but important ways from the original versions; generally, they are more polished.

Songs of Note

External Links

Related Artists

Denver started his recording career with the Chad Mitchell Trio[?]; his distinctive voice can be heard where he sings solo on Violets of Dawn. He recorded three albums with the Mitchell Trio, replacing Chad Mitchell[?] himself as lead singer[?]. His group Denver, Boise and Johnson[?] released a single before he moved on to a solo career.

Bill Danoff[?] and Taffy Nivert[?] appeared as singers and songwriters on many of Denver's albums up until forming the Starland Vocal Band in 1976. The band's albums were released on Denver's Windstar[?] label.

Denver's early solo success was largely due to a recording of his Leaving, on a Jet Plane which was recorded by Peter, Paul and Mary. It became a No. 1 hit for the group.

Denver recorded songs by Tom Paxton[?], Eric Anderson, David Mallet, and many others in the folk scene.

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump