Dennis Locorriere, the lead singer of Dr Hook sadly passed away at the weekend. Some of you will know that Dr Hook were a band I was particularly fond of.
I never got to see Dr Hook in concert but I came close. In 2018 it was announced that Dennis was bringing back Dr Hook albeit with a different line up on tour in 2019 to celebrate 50 years. I bought tickets to see them in London and I don't think I'd bought tickets so far in advance before. Shortly after the tour began the remaining dates got postponed including London because Dennis had to have a medical procedure.
We all know what happened in 2020, then a revised tour got under way at the end of 2021 but did not include a London date. I had hoped the opportunity would present itself again but sadly it wasn't to be.
A lot of music I got into when I was younger came from musicians I knew absolutely nothing about. More often than not once I got to know more about said musician as a person it was more off-putting if anything. With Dennis though it had the opposite affect.
Having seen him in interviews he always came across as entertaining and a pretty down to earth sort of bloke. He would tell it how it is and I found that refreshing.
He also used to blog on his website, not just about music but lots of random things too. One post that stands out is when he talked about one thing he found amusing about life in England was the dividers we use at the checkouts in supermarkets. He pointed out when you put it behind your shopping the person behind you thanks you like you've done something really nice for them, but the reason he does it is so he doesn't accidentally have to end up paying for someone else's crap.
Although he posted lots about what was on his mind he did point out that he never posts about his personal life. I have a similar philosophy with this blog, I talk about my musical journeys but never post anything about my personal life.
He was asked a lot about a possible Dr Hook reunion and he gave several different answers as to why it wouldn't happen. Whilst the general public were more interested in Dr Hook material than his solo material it sounded like he got more joy from performing as a solo artist.
In one interview he said that going on tour means spending hours on buses and planes and sitting in hotel rooms, none of which is enjoyable. The 2 hours he spends on stage on the other hand is what makes it worthwhile, therefore it's important he's getting joy from that aspect.
Perhaps not what the public wanted to hear, but as I've pointed out he told it how it was. He'll be sadly missed.