News
Dave Loggins in performance in the 1970s. ... 10 pop hit with the wistful “Please Come to Boston” and wrote the enduring theme for the Masters golf tournament, died on July 10 in Nashville.
Dave Loggins, the singer-songwriter behind the 1974 smash “Please Come to Boston” and the theme for the Masters golf tournament, has died. He was 76. According to an obituary notice placed in ...
Dave Loggins, the Grammy nominated Hall of Fame singer/songwriter best known for his 1974 hit, “Please Come To Boston,” died on July 10th at Alive Hospice in Nashville, Tennessee.He was 76 ...
Dave Loggins, ‘Please Come to Boston’ Singer and Masters Theme Composer, Dies at 76. Loggins wrote the theme song "Augusta" for the Augusta Masters Golf Tournament, which has been used since 1982.
Dave Loggins wrote his song about the Masters after playing the course in 1981. Gems. ... Loggins died Wednesday at a hospice facility in Nashville, Tenn., at the age of 76.
Dave Loggins, a singer-songwriter who composed the theme song for television coverage of The Masters, died Wednesday in Nashville. He was 76. Loggins's piece, "Augusta," was cited in his obituary ...
Dave Loggins, composer of CBS’ Masters theme song ‘Augusta,’ dies at 76 The theme is named the "longest-running sports theme in history" in Loggins' obituary.
Dave Loggins died July 10th, 2024 at the age of 76. He is survived not only by his three sons Quinn, Kyle and Dylan but by the legacy of "Augusta," the iconic Masters theme song we hear each and ...
Dave Loggins, a singer-songwriter who had a memorable chart-topper with “Please Come to Boston” in 1974, died Wednesday at Alive Hospice in Nashville. He was 76; no cause of death was given.
Country singer Dave Loggins has died at the age of 76. The musician, who wrote the Masters golf tournament theme song Augusta and had a solo hit with the 1974 track Please Come to Boston, died on ...
Loggins, a Grammy-nominated member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, died on Wednesday, July 10 at Alive Hospice in Nashville, according to an obituary published in The Tennessean.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results