Don Wilson (second from left) with the Ventures in 1960

Michael Ochs Archives
Influential instrumental rock band behind the hit “Walk, Don’t Run” were inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Don Wilson, co-founder and rhythm guitarist for the influential instrumental rock band the Ventures, died Saturday at the age of 88.

Wilson’s family first confirmed to Seattle journalist Saint Bryan that the guitarist “passed peacefully” of natural causes in Tacoma, Washington.

“Our dad was an amazing rhythm guitar player who touched people all over world with his band, The Ventures,” Don’s son Tim Wilson said in a statement. “He will have his place in history forever and was much loved and appreciated. He will be missed.”

Wilson and guitarist/bassist Bob Bogle formed the Ventures in 1958 when they were both Seattle-area construction workers moonlighting as musicians; just two years later, the Ventures’ electric guitar-led rendition of Johnny Smith’s “Walk, Don’t Run” rose to Number Two on the Hot 100; it was later included among Rolling Stone’s 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time.

“[“Walk, Don’t Run”] started a whole new movement in rock & roll,” John Fogerty said when inducting the Ventures into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. “The sound of it became ‘surf music’ and the audacity of it empowered guitarists everywhere.” 

The single proved to be so enduring that when the Ventures released a re-recorded version of “Walk, Don’t Run” in 1964 — amid the surf rock explosion — it once again placed in the Top 10. In the first half of the Sixties, the band would go on to have hits with “Telstar,” “Perfidia” and a take on the theme from “Hawaii Five-O.”

Prior to their induction in 2008, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame called the Ventures “the quintessential instrumental rock and roll band.” “Few bands are as prolific as the Ventures—they released thirty-seven albums in twelve years, many of them thematic,” the Rock Hall stated. “They rocked America in the sixties and went on to lasting international fame and influence.”

Among those influenced: Eddie Van Halen, who once told Rolling Stone that the Ventures’ “Pipeline” was one of the first songs he learned when he began playing guitar. The Beach Boys also learned the guitar by listening to the Ventures’ records, Carl Wilson once said.

Over the span of 40 albums (and potentially hundreds), the Ventures primarily recorded instrumental rock covers of other artists’ hits, but when the band did write their own music, it was often Wilson and Bogle who penned it;  Wilson is also credited with penning “Love Goddess of Venus,” from 1964’s The Ventures in Space.

While the Ventures continue to perform with a completely different lineup, Wilson was the lone surviving member of the band’s “classic,” Rock Hall-inducted formation: Drummer Mel Taylor died in 1996, followed by Bogle in 2009lead guitarist Nokie Edwards in 2018 and guitarist Gerry McGee in 2019.

A singer who claims Jason Derulo sexually harassed her and then turned “deeply hostile” when she rebuffed his advances has resurrected her previously dismissed lawsuit against the platinum-selling artist and Atlantic Records by filing it in New York.

Emaza Gibson, known professionally as Emaza Dilan, first sued Derulo and Atlantic in October 2023 in Los Angeles, but a California judge dismissed the complaint last year, ruling that Gibson had signed artist agreements with clauses agreeing that all legal disputes would be confined to New York courts. Gibson’s new lawsuit, filed Thursday in Manhattan state court, includes the same allegations but now cites New York laws for her claims of discrimination, retaliation, hostile work environment, breach of contract, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

“This case arises out of a recording deal gone wrong due to egregious sexual harassment, broken promises, and retaliatory career sabotage,” the new 49-page lawsuit obtained by Rolling Stone alleges. “What began as a dream opportunity quickly descended into a nightmare of quid pro quo sexual harassment and intimidation.”

In the new complaint, Gibson, 27, alleges that Derulo reached out to her via direct message in August 2021 and said he wanted to sign her for his new joint venture linking Atlantic Records with his own label, Future History. Gibson claims Derulo, 35, promised he would personally mentor her and collaborate with her on multiple albums, which caused her to feel “over the moon” at the prospect of Derulo “leveraging his star power to boost her introduction to the market.”

Gibson says the professional relationship took an unexpected turn when Derulo allegedly pressured her to drink alcohol with him during late-night meetings and purportedly made sexually explicit comments to her on Nov. 2, 2021. She claims Derulo told her that if she wanted to “make it” in the music industry, she would have to take part in what the lawsuit describes as “ritualistic sex acts.” Gibson says she made it clear she wasn’t interested, and Derulo “became increasingly disinterested and aloof” after that.

Lawyers for Derulo, Future History, Atlantic, and Derulo’s longtime manager, Frank Harris, did not respond to requests for comment. Derulo previously denied Gibson’s claims against him, stating in an Instagram post that the allegations were “completely false and hurtful.”

With her refiled lawsuit, Gibson clearly is not backing down. “Derulo exploited his power, implying that plaintiff’s success was conditioned on participating in degrading sexual rituals and cocaine use,” the New York complaint states. “When plaintiff resisted Derulo’s advances and later complained about his misconduct, defendants retaliated by withdrawing support, stalling her music releases, and ultimately terminating her contract under pretextual circumstances.”

The lawsuit further alleges Derulo “physically intimidated” Gibson “by lunging at her and screaming in her face without provocation.” Gibson claims Derulo “deliberately sabotaged her dream and career when she didn’t submit to him sexually, an abuse of power that likely any reasonable member of the community would find despicable.”

Speaking with Rolling Stone when she first filed her claims in 2023, Gibson said her alleged experience with Derulo dashed her dreams. “This is super devastating for me. [Professional singing] is something I always wanted to do since I was a little girl. Jason was one of my favorite artists on the pop scene. I accept this amazing offer only to find out the person I looked up to would put me through such a traumatic situation,” she said.

“We are fully committed to defending Jason’s innocence against these blatantly false and baseless claims. If these false accusations are refiled in New York, we are confident that the New York court will ultimately dismiss the case and prove Jason’s innocence. The court was correct in dismissing the lawsuit in California,” Derulo’s legal team said in a statement to Rolling Stone last year, after the case was fully dismissed in Los Angeles.

In his Instagram statement, Derulo said he stood “against all forms of harassment” and remained “committed to supporting people following their dreams” in the entertainment industry. “I’ve always strived to live my life in a positively impactful way, and that’s why I sit here before you deeply offended by these defamatory claims,” he said.

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