David Egan (musician)
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Reuben David Egan (March 20, 1954 – March 18, 2016) was an American singer, songwriter, and pianist based in Lafayette, Louisiana, who composed, recorded, and performed rock, Cajun-rock, soul, and blues.[1][2] Egan died March 18, 2016, at his home from cancer.[3]
Selected discography
As composer, arranger, and performer
- "Underground Stream," by David Egan
- Album: OCLC 237222844
- Irma Thomas, vocals; David Egan, piano
- "One Foot In The Bayou," by David Egan
- David Egan, vocals and piano
- "Good To You Baby," by David Egan and Buddy Flett (né Bruce Mechlin Flett; born 1951)
- Album: OCLC 153996636
- "If You Knew How Much," by David Egan
- "Stone Survivor," by David Egan
- "These Honey-Do's," by Irma Thomas and David Egan
- Album: OCLC 68175294
- "Peace, Love and BBQ," by David Egan, Tony Braunagel, and John Lee Schell
- Album: OCLC 224558754
- "Fading Footsteps" by David Egan
- Album: OCLC 58462519
- "Please No More," by David Egan and Greg Hansen
- Performed by Marcia Ball, Irma Thomas and Tracy Nelson
- "French Café," by David Egan
- "Gotta Be More," by Marc Broussard, David Egan, and Marshall Altman
- "Momentary Setback," by Marc Broussard and David Egan
- Debut Album: OCLC 52770347
- "First You Cry," by David Egan and Buddy Flett (né Bruce Mechlin Flett; born 1951)
- Performed by Lil’ Band O’ Gold (David Egan, vocals and keyboards)
- Album:
OCLC 27421522
- "Wake Up Call," by David Egan and David Love Lewis (born 1946)
- Produced by Mike Vernon
- Produced by
- "Sing It," by David Egan
- Album: OCLC 38558587
- "People Will Be People," by David Egan
- "Even Now," by David Egan and Buddy Flett (né Bruce Mechlin Flett; born 1951)
- Album: OCLC 40622686
- "Too Much Wine," by David Egan
- "Can’t Get Nothin’ Sucka," by David Egan and Nathan Williams
- Album: Nathan and the OCLC 45091358
- "When I Was A Dinosaur," by David Egan and Larry Armer (né John Larry Armer; born 1949)
- Album: OCLC 26154305
- Album: Dr. Demento's 25th Anniversary Collection: More of the Greatest Novelty Records of All Time, OCLC 33275688
- Album: OCLC 29787478
- Album: OCLC 23284804
Bands
- Filé
- A Train
References
- ^ "Artist Biography: David Egan," by William James Ruhlmann (born 1955), AllMusic (retrieved June 29, 2015)
- ^ "David Egan: Halleluiah, He's a Dreamer," Archived 2015-05-02 at the Wayback Machine by John Radanovich, OffBeat, 2009
- ^ "Local musician David Egan dies at 61". Theadvertiser.com. 2016-03-18. Retrieved 2016-03-27.