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				Join Date: Dec 31, 2009 Location: Georgetown, Texas 
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				 Jimmy LaFave Dies 
 
			
			Austin singer and icon Jimmy LaFave passed away yesterday.  He was one of my favorite local artists and I had seen him perform fairly recently at The Backstage.  No idea he was so sick.  Soon after that performance news was released about his illness.  So sorry to see such a gifted performer leave this world  
 Jimmy LaFave
 July 12, 1955 –  May 21, 2017
 
 
 The LaFave Family regrets to inform Jimmy's friends and fans  across the world that the Austin based singer-songwriter  passed from this world, surrounded by loved ones in his home on May 21, 2017 after a courageous battle with cancer.
 
 
 
 Jimmy LaFave was born in Wills Point, Texas. He started school in  Mesquite and by Junior High was making music perched behind his Sears  & Roebuck drums kit. It wasn't long before his mother traded a  drawer full of green stamps for his first guitar, and the switch to  singer-songwriter was in progress. His family later moved to Stillwater,  Oklahoma, where he finished high school.  Jimmy lived in Austin, TX for  nearly 30 years, but is often identified as being from Oklahoma because  of his strong musical ties to the state and his role in the development  of “Red Dirt Music.”  Early on he embraced the spirit of Woody Guthrie  and worked to promote Guthrie’s legacy around the world in both words  and song.
 Shortly after arriving in Austin he was asked to help  launch the songwriter nights at the new performance venue Chicago House.  In 1988 he recorded his self-produced tape, Highway Angels...Full Moon  Rain, which won the Austin Chronicle Readers’ Poll Tape of the Year  Award.  In 1992, Jimmy released the self-produced CD, Austin Skyline,  which drew international attention to his songwriting and vocal talents.   His second album, Highway Trance was released in 1994 followed by his  third CD, Buffalo Return to the Plains, in 1995.
 Critical acclaim  led to extensive touring in the United States and Europe, and in 1996 he  was asked to tape a performance for the PBS musical series Austin City  Limits, and was invited by Nora Guthrie to appear in Cleveland at the  Rock and Roll Hall of Fame tribute to Woody Guthrie. That same year  LaFave won his second consecutive Austin Music Award for Best  Singer-Songwriter. His fourth CD, Road Novel, which was released in  early 1997 received many glowing reviews. That year he was asked by Nora  Guthrie to speak and perform at the induction of Woody Guthrie into the  Oklahoma Hall of Fame. He traveled to Europe twice that year and also  toured the USA and Canada and made multiple appearances on NPR’s  Mountain Stage.
 
 
 
 In 1998 Jimmy compiled a 15-year retrospective  of bootleg tapes, live performances, radio shows and studio out takes.   LaFave kicked off 1999 with the release of the CD entitled Trail. The  double CD contains 31 tracks recorded in Texas and around the world.   Including 12 Dylan songs, it answered the demand of fans for a 'LaFave  does Dylan' CD.
 In 2001 Jimmy released Texoma. The CD received  some of the best press of his career, including reviews by the  Associated Press, VH–1, Billboard and Playboy. The ballad “Never Is a  Moment” from the album, a radio favorite, became his most-requested song  ever. That year when not playing his own musical dates, Jimmy toured  with a Woody Guthrie tribute project he conceived entitled Ribbon Of  Highway–Endless Skyway. The show featured a rotating cast of notable  musicians performing Woody’s songs interspersed with narrations from his  many writings. He also appeared that year at the annual Woody Guthrie  Folk Festival. Jimmy serves on the Advisory Board for the festival and  performed there 12 straight years. He was always quick to acknowledge it  as his favorite musical event.
 In 2005 LaFave released Blue  Nightfall.  This stunningly soulful album was LaFave’s first in four  years and once again received many favorable reviews.  In April of that  year, Jimmy was then honored when one of his musical heroes Bruce  Springsteen invited him on stage for a duet at his show at the Nokia  Arena in Dallas.  That same month Jimmy was very grateful when Nora  Guthrie allowed him to look through the unseen lyrics from the Woody  Guthrie Archives.  She helped Jimmy choose 19 songs for a future “Woody”  CD project, which he co–wrote music to the lyrics using his own style  and interpretations.
 
 
 In early 2007 Cimarron Manifesto was  released where it spent several weeks as number 1 on the Americana music  chart.  Later that year, Jimmy along with Dallas businessman Kelcy  Warren, established Music Road Records.  The label’s first CD release  was Ribbon of Highway–Endless Skyway, a two-disc set from the Woody  Guthrie tribute tour.  Music Road also released Favorites 1992-2001, a  compilation CD from Jimmy’s back catalog.
 In late 2012, Music  Road released Depending on the Distance and Looking into You: A Tribute  to Jackson Browne, co-produced by Jimmy, and released in 2014.  Jimmy’s  latest record, The Night Tribe was released on May 12, 2015.  On April  26th, Jimmy LaFave was honored with the first annual Restless Spirit  award by the Red Dirt Relief Fund at Bob Childers Gypsy Café in  Stillwater, OK.  On June 14th, 2017, Jimmy will be posthumously inducted  into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame.  He was also recently added to  the Austin Music Awards Hall of Fame as well as officially being  recognized by the Governor of Texas and the Texas Music office for his  songwriting contribution to the Texas music scene.
 At the time of  his death, Jimmy had recorded numerous new songs at his studio in South  Austin and had also begun work on a book featuring a collection of his  photography.
 
 
 
 Survivors include his son, Jackson LaFave of  Austin, TX, co-parent and former wife, Barbara Fox of Austin, TX,  father, G.G “Frenchy” LaFave of Kingfisher, OK, siblings Garry LaFave of  Cashion, OK, Lee Ann LaFave Swanson of Aurora, CO, Robert LaFave of  Edmond, OK, Connie LaFave Gallupe of Kingfisher, OK; longtime friend and  companion Ashley Warren of Austin, TX, numerous aunts and uncles,  nieces and nephews, and cousins, along with his adored Lab, Chief.
 
 
 He was preceded in death by his beloved mother, Betty (Robbins) LaFave.
 In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you make a donation to the pet  charity of your choice or perform an act of unsolicited kindness.
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