词条 | David M. Bailey |
释义 |
|image= | | name = David M. Bailey | image_size = | background = solo_singer | origin = | genre = Folk, rock, Contemporary Christian Music Acoustic | years_active = 1996–2010 | label = | associated_acts = Certain Sounds, Bailey & Deasy, Not by Chance, David M. Bailey | website = www.davidmbailey.com | current_members = | past_members = }} David M. Bailey (February 26, 1966 – October 2, 2010) was an American singer-songwriter. He released over 20 albums between 1997 and 2010, primarily playing Acoustic Folk. BiographyDavid M. Bailey was the son of Presbyterian missionaries and was raised, primarily, in Beirut, Lebanon. He spent the last two years of his high school education in southern Germany (the Black Forest area), where he was prolific in his songwriting and performing. Upon returning to the United States, he attended Grove City College; he then{{When|date=October 2013}} married Leslie McGarvey and entered corporate America. {{When|date=October 2013}} He was diagnosed with a Glioblastoma Multiforme IV (GBM 4) brain tumor that was to have killed him in six months. He quit his corporate job and returned to his love of songwriting and performing. He toured and performed for a few years in the duo Not by Chance, along with guitarist, vocalist and songwriter Douglas Ebert. The duo eventually dissolved and Bailey toured solo from then on. In 2003, he was a "New Folk Finalist" at the Kerrville New Folk Competition at the Kerrville Folk Festival.[1] In late 2008, Bailey was diagnosed with a recurrence of glioblastoma. On November 20, 2008, Bailey had surgery to remove a cyst and new tumor.[2][3][4] His trials with the initial occurrence of glioblastoma, and the initial recurrence in 2008, were discussed in Sanjay Gupta's book Cheating Death. On October 2, 2010, Bailey died of brain cancer following a month-long surge during which he was able to visit with family and friends from across the United States.[5] David performed and provided workshops for christian and cancer conferences nationally and around the world. He attended the New Wilmington Mission Conference off and on for his entire life and was an Elder in the Presbyterian Church (USA). Discography
DVD release
References1. ^"Local church to host David Bailey", Ledger-Enquirer, 2007-03-10{{dead link|date=November 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} 2. ^"David Bailey reveals new cancer threat", "www.DavidMBailey.com", 11-20-2008 3. ^"Virtual Brain Tumor Trials", 11-21-2008 4. ^Biography 5. ^http://www.pcusa.org/news/2010/10/4/david-m-bailey-succumbs-brain-cancer/ External links
19 : 1966 births|2010 deaths|American folk singers|American rock guitarists|American male guitarists|American male singer-songwriters|American rock singers|American pop singers|American Presbyterians|American singer-songwriters|American rock songwriters|American male songwriters|Songwriters from Virginia|Grove City College alumni|People from Beirut|American performers of Christian music|Guitarists from Virginia|20th-century American guitarists|20th-century male musicians |
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