Don Was
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 72 |
Date of birth | September 13,1952 |
Zodiac sign | Virgo |
Born | Detroit |
Michigan | |
United States | |
Nationality | American |
Spouse | Gemma Corfield |
Music groups | Was (Not Was) |
Job | Actor |
Singer | |
Film director | |
Bassist | |
Film Producer | |
Record producer | |
Film Score Composer | |
Movies/Shows | Backbeat |
Brian Wilson: I Just Wasn't Made for These Times | |
The Country Bears | |
Forever Is a Long, Long Time | |
The Union | |
Awards | Grammy Award for Album of the Year |
Grammy Award for Producer of the Year, Non-Classical | |
BAFTA Award for Best Film Music | |
Grammy Award for Best Musical Album for Children | |
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Direction | |
Children | Tony Fagenson |
Solomon Fagenson | |
Henry Fagenson | |
Parents | Bill Fagenson |
Harriet Fagenson | |
Siblings | Nancy Fagenson Potok |
Songs | 1987 |
List | 1983 |
1987 | |
Albums | Backbeat |
Forever's a Long, Long Time | |
Live | |
Goodtime Rock 'N Roll | |
Groups | Wolf Bros |
Was (Not Was) | |
Ryan Adams & the Cardinals | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 491268 |
Don Was Life story
Don Edward Fagenson, known professionally as Don Was, is an American musician, record producer, music director, film composer, documentary filmmaker and radio host. Since 2011, he has also served as president of the American jazz label Blue Note Records.
Don Walsh: The man who made the deepest ever dive
... But Don Wasn t stuck in the past...
Luxury rehab centres now offer therapy for 'crypto addiction'
...By Kelly NgBBC NewsThere was a time when Don Was pouring up to $200,000 (£164,700) every week into cryptocurrency trades...
Pig vomit toxin key to Martian meteorite mystery
......
Dylan's new Blowin' In The Wind sells for £1. 5m
... Unlike the original, he is backed by a small band, including Greg Leisz on mandolin and Don Was on bass...
A one-off Bob Dylan recording could sell for £1m
... Their subtle and sympathetic arrangement - with Greg Leisz on mandolin and Don Was on bass - adds a new dimension to the song, without stealing focus from the message...
Nicola Sturgeon apologises to people accused of witchcraft
... SNP MSP Natalie Don Was already planning a member s bill extending a formal pardon, and Ms Sturgeon noted that parliament may choose to legislate in due course...
'After mum died, nobody talked about you for 15 years
... Iain and his father, Don, over the years, Don Was in contact with most of Irene s family and many of their old neighbors and friends...
Nicola Sturgeon apologises to people accused of witchcraft
Nicola Sturgeon has offered a formal apology to people accused of witchcraft between the 16th and 18th centuries, many of whom were executed.
The Scottish First Minister said she was choosing to acknowledge an " egregious historic injustice".
It is thought 4,000 Scots, most of them women, were accused of breaking the Witchcraft Act between 1563 and 1736.
Ms Sturgeon also told MSPs that parliament could choose to legislate to pardon those convicted under The Law .
The Witches of Scotland campaign had urged the government to offer a public apology, saying it would send a " powerful signal".
Witch hunts took place in many countries during that period, but academics say Scotland's execution rate was five times the European average.
Confessions were regularly secured under torture, with those condemned strangled and burned at the stake.
In a statement at Holyrood, the First Minister said those accused under The Act " were not witches, they were people and they were overwhelmingly women".
'Colossal scale'She said: " At a time when women were not even allowed to speak as witnesses in a courtroom, they were accused and killed because they were poor, different, vulnerable or in many cases just because they were women.
" It was injustice on a colossal scale, driven at least in part by misogyny in its most literal sense, hatred of women.
" Today on International Women's Day, as First Minister on behalf of the Scottish Government , I Am choosing to acknowledge that egregious historic injustice and extend a formal posthumous apology to all of those accused, convicted, vilified or executed under the Witchcraft Act of 1563. "
The Witches of Scotland group has been to pardon those convicted under The Act , with QC Claire Mitchell saying it would correct As Far as possible a " terrible miscarriage of justice".
SNP MSP Natalie Don was already planning a member's bill extending a formal pardon, and Ms Sturgeon noted that parliament may choose to legislate in due course.
Source of news: bbc.com