Thursday, August 18, 2022

'Goodbye Horses' Singer Q Lazzarus Has Reportedly Died

Q Lazzarus AKA Diane Luckey
Q Lazzarus is dead and this time there will be no coming back.

Diane Luckey — the woman behind the enigmatic figure that once captured the imagination of the music world — has passed away at 59.

According to an obituary released by New Jersey's Jackson Funeral Home, the Garden State native died on July 19, following a short illness.

Born in Neptune, New Jersey, on Dec. 12, 1962, she leaves behind "Goodbye Horses," a single that became a cult hit after its use as a soundtrack to a pivotal moment in 1991's "The Silence of the Lambs."

Her disappearance following the success of the song, made possible only by a fateful cab ride with the movie's director, Jonathan Demme, was one of music's greatest mysteries until the efforts of persistent journalists Kelsey Chapstick and Thomas Gorton, got her to come out of her self-imposed exile in 2018 and set the record straight.

“Hi, sorry to bother you. I just wanted people to know I am still alive, I have no interest in singing anymore. I am a bus driver in Staten Island (I have been for YEARS), I see hundreds of passengers everyday so I am hardly hiding (or dead!)," she wrote to Chapstick in a direct message on Twitter. "I have given Thomas Gorton (Dazed) my fone number and address just to confirm I am ‘real’, sorry if this is a boring end to the story, I am going to come off twitter soon as I find it odd, please take note of this message incase anyone else is interested. THANK YOU."

The duo did not take Luckey at her word. Lazzarus had been famously private and was never billed by her real name during her career. Following their investigation, however, the two were convinced of the woman's sincerity, even though Luckey, nor her family, cooperated with them further.

It was a wild reveal. During her time away from music fan theories had run rampant as to the reason. The fact that she never collected royalties that were due to her for her song deepened the mystery. Even the songs writer, and Luckey's former bandmate in Q Lazzarus and the Resurrection, William Garvey, speculated she had died before he passed away in 2009.

Her obituary filled in some of the gaps in her story. It reveals Luckey moved to New York City at the age of 18 and "immediately started working at Sigma Sounds Studio as a backup singer and writing jingles for commercials. Shortly thereafter, she started writing songs, recording music, and headlining concerts under the name Q Lazzarus."

It was during this time in the 1980s that she connected with Demme during one of the many side gigs she used to support her music career. She picked up the director while working as a cabbie and played him her demo. The director was immediately infatuated with the music and used the song “Candle Goes Away” in his 1986 film "Something Wild."

When Luckey’s signature song, "Goodbye Horses", was released in 1988, it was included in Demme's film "Married to the Mob." It did not become a cult hit, though, until its inclusion in 1991's Oscar winner for best picture, "The Silence of the Lambs."

After appearing in Demme’s next film, 1993’s Philadelphia, as a musician covering the Talking Heads’ “Heaven,” Luckey disappeared from public view.

During that time the multi-talented instrumentalist moved to London and toured before moving on to other pursuits, including a long journey through South America and six months spent on a fishing boat in Alaska, according to her obituary:

She also performed at and hosted many parties at large clubs and arenas in London and collaborated with her friend Danny Z on house music tracks when back in the United States.
At the time of her death, Diane was finishing work on a feature documentary about her life and music with filmmaker and friend, Eva Aridjis. 

The film is scheduled to be released in 2023, along with an album of songs spanning her entire musical career.

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

A’Ja Wilson Becomes First Female Athlete to Sign Endorsement Deal With Ruffles

Lorie ShaullCC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Ahead of the tipoff of the WNBA playoffs tonight, the basketball league's official chip announced a huge endorsement deal for one of the players that will be vying for the championship.

Ruffles announced Las Vegas Aces star forward A’ja Wilson, 26, has signed a multi-year contract with the brand.

"Now, as the Official Chip of the WNBA, we're proud to welcome our first-ever female athlete to our roster with a flavor of her own," Stacy Taffet, senior vice president of marketing, Frito-Lay North America, said of the deal in a statement released by the company. "A'ja embodies what it means to Own Your Ridges, so we're owning our ridges too and elevating our product game as part of this partnership by bringing fans the first-of-its-kind Ruffles Ridge Twists."

The chipmaker added that the deal with the four-time WNBA All-Star would begin with the “game-changing launch of the new Ruffles Ridge Twists product line, including her own signature flavor, Smoky BBQ."

"I grew up eating Ruffles so it's a dream come true to join the family of Chip Deal athletes and have my own signature flavor that's inspired by my Southern roots," Wilson said.

The deal makes the Hopkins, South Carolina, native the first-ever female athlete to represent the brand.

Selected as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 WNBA draft by the Aces, Wilson led the University of South Carolina to its first NCAA Women’s Basketball Championship in 2017. The Gamecock's all-time leading scorer, she was named the SEC Player of the Year a record three times in a row and led South Carolina to four consecutive SEC championships.

Wilson was named the WNBA's Rookie of the Year in 2018. She earned league MVP honors in 2020 and won an Olympic gold medal the same year as part of Team USA.

The chips will be available in stores nationwide in the coming weeks and are currently available on snacks.com in 5.5oz bags for $5.59 and 1.75oz bags for $2.29. Las Vegas heads into the WNBA Playoffs as the league’s top-seeded team. They face off against the Phoenix Mercury at home in Game 1 of the first round at 10 p.m. ET.

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Solange Knowles to be the First Black Woman to Compose Music for New York City Ballet

beyRaph_PHCC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
The artist once known best as Beyoncé's little sister, Solange Knolwes, continues to prove that while she may never equal her older sibling's acclaim as a singer — her considerable talents behind the mic and beyond, place her among the most exciting performers working today.

Knowles' — who went from being an occasional backup dancer for the Beyoncé-fronted girl group Destiny's Child to a Grammy Award-winning R&B singer — latest venture is writing a score for a New York City Ballet production.

She announced the collaboration on her official Instagram account Tuesday.

"🖤very excited to announce i've composed an original score for the New York City Ballet 🖤 choreography by Gianna Reisen, score performed by the City Ballet Orchestra and soloist from my ensemble," Knowles wrote.


The NYCB confirmed the news on its Facebook page.

"Multi-hyphenate recording artist Solange Knowles will foray into ballet for the first time, composing a score for Gianna Reisen's 2022 Fall Gala world premiere," it posted. 


It is not the first time the 36-year-old singer-songwriter has spread her wings artistically beyond music. She has also worked as an actress, and in recent years ventured into performance art.

"I’m not at all interested in entertainment," she told Surface magazine —during a discussion about her artistic ambitions — in a 2018 interview. "I’m really interested in energy exchange between the viewer and the performer. One way to do that is to make an inclusive experience through style, through energy, through space." 

Knowles has debuted performance art pieces around the globe, including putting on shows at Germany's famed Elbphilharmonie (Witness!) concert hall and Los Angeles' Getty Museum (Bridge-s). 

After its premiere during NCYB’s annual Fashion Gala on Sept. 28., the production will be staged later this year on Oct. 1, 8, 11 and 16. It will also return for five performances during the Company’s 2023 Spring Season on May 2, 11, 13, 17 and 18.

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