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Ex-Alice In Chains Bassist Mike Starr Found Dead

‘Celebrity Rehab’ alum was 44 years old. By Ryan J. Downey Mike Starr in 1991 Photo: Marty Temme/ Getty Images Former Alice in Chains bassist Mike Starr was found dead Tuesday afternoon (March 8). TMZ reports that police found Starr’s body in a Salt Lake City, Utah, house at 1:42 p.m. He was 44 years old. A co-founding member of the pioneering Seattle grunge band, Starr appeared on VH1’s “Celebrity Rehab” in 2009. He was arrested last month for felony possession of a controlled substance. Salt Lake City police said he had several painkillers on him when he was arrested. Alice in Chains have written heart-wrenching and evocative songs about drug addiction. Former singer Layne Staley died in spring 2002 after overdosing on a mixture of heroin and cocaine, commonly known as a “speedball.” The group mounted a successful comeback with 2009’s Black Gives Way to Blue, which featured new vocalist William DuVall alongside guitarist Jerry Cantrell, drummer Sean Kinney and bassist Mike Inez. Mike Starr was born April 4, 1966, in Honolulu. He rose to prominence in the Seattle scene as bassist for Diamond Lie, which featured Cantrell and Kinney. Once Staley entered the fold, they changed their name to Alice in Chains and signed a major-label deal. Starr appears on the group’s debut album, Facelift, which produced the monster hit “Man in the Box.” He’s also on the band’s follow-up EP release, Sap, and their second album, Dirt, which was released in September 1992. Dirt is a hard rock classic, with “Rooster” remaining a radio staple. “Would?” was featured in the movie “Singles,” which was set in the Seattle scene. “Down in a Hole” has been covered by Ryan Adams, Fuel and Demon Hunter. Songs like “Junkhead” dealt with heroin use head-on. The band Godsmack, whose sound owes much to Alice in Chains, took their name from track nine. Cantrell wrote the majority of the songs with some heavy contributions from Staley. Starr is credited as a co-writer on one track, “Rain When I Die.” Starr left Alice in Chains while touring behind Dirt in 1993. Years later, he would reveal on “Celebrity Rehab” that his reason for leaving was his growing addiction to drugs. He briefly joined former Black Sabbath singer Ray Gillen in Sun Red Sun. Their self-titled debut was released in 1995, two years after Gillen died from AIDS-related complications. Heroin addiction sent Starr to “Celebrity Rehab,” which was followed by a stint in the spin-off show “Sober House.” He showed up on one episode of the following season of “Celebrity Rehab,” celebrating more than six months of sobriety. He was arrested for possession by Salt Lake City police on February 18, 2011. Mike’s dad told TMZ his son’s death is “a terrible shock and tragedy.” Share your condolences for Starr’s friends and family in the comments. Related Photos In Memoriam: Alice In Chains’ Mike Starr Related Artists Alice in Chains

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Ex-Alice In Chains Bassist Mike Starr Found Dead

Pete Best of the Beatles: ‘Memba Him?

Filed under: Pete Best , Memba Them , Beauty Before Ringo Starr joined the Fab Four in 1962, Pete Best was the original drummer in the Beatles . Guess what he looks like now ! Read more

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Pete Best of the Beatles: ‘Memba Him?

Paul McCartney Joins Ringo Starr At Radio City Birthday Concert

Duo fittingly sang the Beatles’ ‘Birthday,’ following an all-star rendition of ‘With a Little Help From My Friends.’ By James Montgomery Ringo Starr performs while celebrating his 70th birthday Wednesday Photo: Kevin Mazur/ Getty Images In honor of his 70th birthday, Ringo Starr threw himself a party on Wednesday at New York City’s iconic Radio City Music Hall … with a little help from all his famous friends. It was, more correctly, a concert, one that saw Starr (backed by the latest incarnation of his All Starr Band) tear through more than two hours of Beatles tunes, covers, and even a solo hit or two, and, at the very end of the night, nearly bring the house down when he was joined onstage by his fellow former Beatle, Paul McCartney . Somewhat fittingly, the two remaining members of the Fab Four took on the White Album cut “Birthday,” with McCartney singing lead and Starr on drums (just like the good old days), as the sold-out Radio City crowd justifiably went nuts. And at the song’s conclusion, with the late John Lennon’s widow Yoko Ono looking on from the side of the stage, McCartney and Starr embraced and walked off the stage to a standing ovation. It was the first time the duo shared the stage since another Radio City gig, a benefit show headlined by McCartney in 2009 . The Macca/Starr duet occurred just moments after an entire army of Starr’s famous friends — including Ono, Joe Walsh, Steve Van Zandt, Angus Young and Max Weinberg — joined him for another rather appropriate song, “With a Little Help From My Friends.” It was, in theory, the de facto finale, until McCartney sprinted onstage, much to the delight of everyone in the house. What can we say? When Ringo Starr throws a party, he really throws a party. Related Artists Ringo Starr Paul McCartney The Beatles

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Paul McCartney Joins Ringo Starr At Radio City Birthday Concert

Police arrest woman for sex with 11-year-old

Bambi Starr Mason, 18-year-old woman from Louisville, Kentucky, has been woman charged with sexually abusing her young neighbor. Bambi Starr Mason, of the 7700 block of Brookview Drive, was arrested Monday evening. Police say she performed oral sex on an 11-year-old boy who was living nearby. Mason is accused of performing oral sex on the boy, and faces one charge of sodomy. The degree of the charge is not specified. Read more at the source: http://femalesexoffenders.com/fso/index.php/the-news/113-bambi-mason-arrested added by: b2r

Gang Starr’s DJ Premier Discusses Estranged Relationship With Guru

‘We never disbanded the group,’ Premier says of his late groupmate in a Vibe.com interview. By Jayson Rodriguez Gang Starr’s Guru and DJ Premier Photo: Gregg Delman/ MTV.com Gang Starr’s DJ Premier opened up about his estranged relationship with Guru and much more in an intimate interview with Vibe.com that posted on Wednesday (April 28) morning. The legendary producer’s comments are the latest in a series of remarks in which he’s incrementally opened up about his late groupmate and the controversy surrounding his death last week . Premier revealed that he hadn’t spoken with Guru in six years, mainly due to his problems with alcohol. “It was March 30, 2004,” he told writer Keith Murphy. “April 1 was the last email I received from him and I just found it in my computer. We were pretty much going at it about him straightening his life up with the drinking and everything … just getting himself together. Because talent wise, drinking or sober, he was always on point in the lab. He could lay down his vocals with no problem and he always wrote his rhymes dope. When he wrote his rhymes on page they were so messy [Laughs]. I used to ask him, ‘How can you even recite the verses and flow?’ He would be in the booth turning the paper upside down while he’s still rhyming and without having to punch in.” Despite his distance from Guru in recent years, which an associate of both men, rapper Black Jesus , characterized as minor and noted Guru’s vices as a detrimental influence, Premier said he maintained a regular relationship with the Gang Starr MC’s family. “I talk to them all the time,” he explained. “His father, his sister Patricia; the only one I haven’t spoken to is his younger sister. But they all know me well. His brother Harry … They all know me. And they know this is all some bullshit [the controversy with Solar ]. They been a little separated from Guru once he decided to move off of Gang Starr. He got distant from everybody. It had been six years since I talked to him. I was trying to get the truth about whether he was in the hospital after he had the cardiac arrest. I called his parents. Guru’s mother and my mother were pen pals for a long time. I remember the day he had the cardiac arrest. I called the house and I heard Guru’s father’s voice like ‘Chris … Man, it’s good to hear your voice.’ Now if he had some strange feeling about me he would have been like, ‘Son, I can’t talk to you right now.’ But that wasn’t the case. It felt so good speaking to him. I was able to get the real deal of what was going on. They know me well enough to know that I’m not some stranger that needs information to be held back from me. Why do I have to make it up? I don’t have an agenda.” Much has been made about Guru’s farewell letter, issued after his death by Solar, a producer he worked with in recent years while on hiatus from Gang Starr. In the letter, Guru allegedly referred to Premier simply as his “former DJ” and refused to mention his Gang Starr partner by name. Fans cried foul over the letter and asserted Solar misrepresented Guru by penning the message himself, a claim he denied to MTV News. Premier took the high road, however, when he issued a touching statement honoring his fallen friend. Last Friday, though, Premier spoke out against Solar during his Sirius XM radio show, where he put on a “salute” to Guru . The DJ repeatedly assailed Solar throughout the two-hour set and refused to acknowledge him by name. Preemo told Vibe.com he would “love to see that letter” and “would love to see the handwriting. Because I know Guru’s handwriting like the back of my hand with all the bills we had to pay together. I know it’s not him.” The DJ was noncommittal about Gang Starr’s future. He said the men discussed a seventh album years ago, but nothing ever came to fruition. Premier hinted at a possible DVD project featuring vintage footage, but would only say his focus is to honor their combined legacy, which he said Guru would want since the MC never completely removed himself from the partnership. “The main thing is we never dissolved our Gang Starr contract,” Premier said. “We are still signed to each other. We never disbanded the group. If Guru really wanted to super-dead it he would have said, ‘Yo, I want out.’ And I still would have tried to convince him to stay. We are still Gang Starr.” Share your memories of Guru and Gang Starr in the comments below. Related Videos Gang Starr’s Guru: Music Videos Gang Starr’s Guru Passes Away Related Photos Gang Starr’s Guru: A Life In Photos Related Artists Gang Starr Guru

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Gang Starr’s DJ Premier Discusses Estranged Relationship With Guru

Solar Defends Guru’s Final Letter: ‘Those Are His Words’

‘This is what Guru wanted, not what Solar wanted,’ the Gang Starr MC’s friend tells MTV News about controversial statement. By Shaheem Reid, with reporting by Sway Calloway Solar and Sway Photo: MTV News The controversy over Guru’s last statement to the public continues. On Tuesday, after the Gang Starr MC’s death , his friend Solar put out a letter that he said Guru wrote in his final days. The letter had Guru distancing himself from his Gang Starr partner, DJ Premier. Fans, fellow MCs and even Guru’s family questioned whether the letter was authentic. Solar maintained the same stance he had on Tuesday afternoon when he talked with MTV News: The letter is real, and he had not doctored the words. “This is what Guru wanted, not what Solar wanted,” Solar told Sway on Wednesday (April 21). “Only thing I can say is, when he wrote his statements and we recorded his life story [Solar said that he and Guru also wrote the MC’s life story months ago], he recorded it the way he saw it. He didn’t record it to fit somebody else’s desires. He didn’t write his story or his records to fit what Gang Starr fans wanted or what Jazzmatazz fans wanted. He did his music and lived his life according to what Guru wanted. Guru is a man. He lived his own life. He was in no way, shape or form not living his life according to his own plans. He wasn’t being dictated to. He wasn’t being told what to do. He made his own decisions. He ate what he wanted to eat, lived where he wanted to live, dated who he wanted to date.” Solar said he and Guru put the letter together in January, one month prior to him being admitted in the hospital, where he would stay until he died Monday of myeloma cancer. When asked if the words were 100 percent Guru’s, Solar said: “To the most part. When it’s written, you put it in the proper framework. But yes, these are his words. “Guru wrote some of it himself,” Solar added. “The myeloma affected his hands, his coordination. So he sat down and talked to me. I made physical notes, and I made mental notes of his life, strategic events, songs, concepts. We realized over the last year these things had to be documented. His particular document had to be edited down from a larger statement, which was two statements combined. It was [originally] one statement: ‘If I’m in the hospital and things get to a certain point, what do I want to release to the fans?’ He had a statement that was released earlier, and people said, ‘Oh, it’s not Guru.’ Every major star, every major athlete who passes and releases a statement through their loved ones, this is standard. There’s nothing odd about this.” On Wednesday, Guru’s family released a statement refuting points in the letter Solar released, including mention of a charity organization. DJ Premier released his own statement expressing his love for his former music partner. Share your memories of Guru and Gang Starr in the comments below. Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Solar Gang Starr’s Guru Passes Away Related Photos Gang Starr’s Guru: A Life In Photos Related Artists Gangstarr

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Solar Defends Guru’s Final Letter: ‘Those Are His Words’

Guru And Gang Starr ‘Represent The True Essence Of Hip-Hop,’ Fat Joe Says

‘He was a nice, cool, humble dude,’ Joe says of recently passed MC. By Shaheem Reid Guru Photo: Johnny Nunez/ WireImage Fat Joe says he lost more than a friend when Guru passed away on Monday (April 19). He says hip-hop lost an incredible performer and ambassador of purity in the art form. A very young Joe appears in the video for Gang Starr’s “Suckas Need Bodyguards” and the Bronx MC said he knew the duo at the very start of their careers. “I knew them before rap,” Joe told MTV News about Guru and DJ Premier. “Showbiz brought them through the ‘hood. When I was running the streets of the Bronx crazy, they was already rappin’. First day I met [Guru], I showed him a tech I had in my waistline. He was like, ‘Ah sh–! Joey Crack?’ I was like, ‘Yeah n—a, I got you.’ He was the coolest n—a. Guru, man — real hip-hop. They the purest. Gang Starr is the purest group in hip-hop ever. Pure hip-hop — uncompromised, pure hip-hop. I had many days with these n—as. That’s my family. I remember being on tour with them and spending all night, until, like, 9 in the morning talking sh– to Guru. In his hotel room, just talking sh– till the sun came up. “Even though his music was hardcore gangsta music, he was a nice, cool humble dude,” Joe added. The leader of the Terror Squad also talked to us about the impact and influence of Gang Starr. “They was the dynamic duo,” Joe said. “They the n—as shooting videos in the beach in the winter when the beach is ice. F—in’ ‘Mass Appeal,’ one of the greatest records ever created in hip-hop. I drove down from New York to Miami the day that sh– came out. That’s when hip-hop was hip-hop. Every single station on the way down to Miami, ‘Brand-new Guru, brand-new Gang Starr.’ Every single radio station. It’s incredible that they wasn’t from the city, but they represent the sound of New York. When everybody says, ‘Bring New York back,’ they mean bring it back to Gang Starr n—a. They talking about Gang Starr, similar to the South talking about Andre 3000 and them. They represent the true essence of hip-hop.” Related Videos Gang Starr’s Guru Passes Away Related Photos Gang Starr’s Guru: A Life In Photos Related Artists Guru Fat Joe Gang Starr

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Guru And Gang Starr ‘Represent The True Essence Of Hip-Hop,’ Fat Joe Says

N.O.R.E.’s ‘R.I.P. Guru’ Pays ‘Respect’ To Late Gang Starr MC

‘I’m not big on funerals, so this is my way of going to the funeral,’ Nore tells MTV News of tribute track. By Shaheem Reid N.O.R.E. Photo: Ray Tamarra/Getty Images N.O.R.E. released a tribute freestyle Tuesday (April 20) with Iman Thug called “R.I.P. Guru.” Nore said he was scheduled to go in the studio and wanted to pay homage to the Gang Starr MC after hearing about his death . “I didn’t even think about being the first one,” Nore told MTV News about putting out a Guru tribute record. “I had to do a freestyle for [producer] Clark Kent, and I said, ‘What’s more appropriate?’ Handle two birds with one stone … and send a rest-in-peace shout-out to Guru at the same time. “I just came back from Vegas,” he added. “I wasn’t by a phone or a computer. I wasn’t using it. When I finally got back in and got the news, I was stunned. Guru was a great guy. I got drunk with him a lot. He always showed love, respect. I wanted to pay my respect. I’m not big on funerals, so this is my way of going to the funeral.” In the freestyle, Nore raps about sharing great times with the trailblazing MC, who succumbed to cancer on Monday. N.O. told us they shared a mutual respect. “I just remember eating at a diner somewhere and him reciting the vocals to ‘T.O.N.Y.,’ ” N.O.R.E. recalled. “How ironic is it that I just went to the studio to finish the touches on ‘T.O.N.Y. Part 2’? That was always his favorite record. It’s ironic that the day I finish ‘T.O.N.Y. Part 2,’ I finish a tribute freestyle to his legacy. One of the wildest memories is us being in the diner and him running up to me saying [my lines]: ‘N—as tried to sh– on me, make history.’ It was always mind-blowing to me. He was a general, he was a person I always looked up to, whose music I grew up on. For him to know my sh– was a blessing.” Nore cited “Just to Get a Rep” as one of his favorite Gang Starr records . “When I heard ‘Stickup kids is out to tax,’ that’s exactly what was going on,” he explained. “Being a stickup kid was even doper than being a drug dealer. Everybody goes out there to get their bread, and the stickup kids get ’em. The ‘Dwyck’ joint with Nice and Smooth — he just was a general. We rhymed over ‘Mass Appeal’ [on the tribute freestyle], so that was one of my favorites. He meant a lot. We lost another legend.” Share your memories of Guru and Gang Starr in the comments below. Related Artists Gang Starr N.O.R.E.

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N.O.R.E.’s ‘R.I.P. Guru’ Pays ‘Respect’ To Late Gang Starr MC

Guru’s Best: The Top 10 Essential Gang Starr Tracks

MTV News’ hip-hop team shares their faves, plus five of Guru’s Jazzmatazz greats. By Sway Calloway, Rahman Dukes, Shaheem Reid, Steven Roberts and Jayson Rodriguez Gangstarr Photo: Capitol No one questioned Guru’s claim that he was “one of the best yet.” The Boston native had one of the most distinctive voices in hip-hop history. You didn’t even need a whole bar to know that Gifted Universal Rhymes Unlimited was on the mic. Backed by beats from the almighty DJ Premier, Guru supplied glorious vocals on battle raps, intricate life stories and candid street commentary. The 43-year-old MC passed away on Monday due to complications from cancer. And despite the fact that the Gang Starr duo were estranged for the last several years, their legacy is concrete — one of the richest in hip-hop history. Here at MTV News, the hip-hop team listed our choices for 10 essential Gang Starr songs. 1. “Dwyck,” featuring Nice and Smooth : The party record from 1994’s Hard to Earn is timeless. We love the simplistic rhymes from the trio, like, “Lemonade was a popular drink and it still is,” and Primo’s beat is a signature hip-hop treats. 2. “Take It Personal” : The phone rings on the beat; the song (from 1992’s Daily Operation ) is off the hook. With imposing precision, Guru pulls the curtain back and sees a backstabber for the scoundrel he is. “I can see through you, ’cause I’m the Guru/ What you gonna do when I start to step to you.” 3. “Mass Appeal” : No crossover. Gang Starr always kept artistic integrity, and on this Hard to Earn track, Guru admonishes the posers with lines like, “You’re a son like Elroy/ And you’d be happy as hell to get a record deal/ Maybe your soul you sell for the mass appeal.” 4. “Just to Get a Rep” : “Stick up kids just out to tax.” In this song on 1991’s Step in the Arena, Guru’s words take us to the frontlines, where misguided youths think that the way of the gun is the road to respect. 5. “Suckas Need Bodyguard” : The aggression is turned up as Guru puts the heat on chumps in this Hard to Earn song. “My rhymes are a cargo, and yours are just a quarter ounce.” The chorus pretty much gets the group’s point across: “Fake MCs, they always act hard, but won’t walk the streets without their bodyguards.” 6. “Ex-Girl to the Next Girl” : One of Guru’s greatest gifts on the mic was his clarity in thought and articulation. His stories would unfold almost right in front of your eyes. Here, he shows some vulnerability as he navigates the relationship waters but finds triumph in the end. The track (from Daily Operation ) gave an early indication of where he would later go with his heralded Jazzmatazz series. 7. “Royalty,” featuring K-Ci and JoJo: After a four-year break between albums, the two underground Kings returned with two-thirds of the legendary R&B group Jodeci for this inspirational track (on 1998’s Moment of Truth ) about striving for greatness. Guru even shouts out our very own Sway and his partner King Tech. 8. “Words I Manifest” : Vintage, early Gang Starr. The duo came out of the gate promoting knowledge of self and establishing their roles in hip-hop. “I got tenacity, because I have to be/ The brother who must live and give with much insight/ Foresight to ignite, excite and delight.” 9. “You Know My Steez” : Gang Starr talk about their lauded musical modus operandi, an authentic representation of the essence of hip-hop. 10. “The ? Remainz” : “This is a battle rhyme in case you haven’t noticed/ You get replaced, you get demoted.” The belligerence is beautiful in this 1994 track, as Guru and Primo once again answer the bell and silence any questions as to whether they’ve earned the title of hip-hop Ownerz. Five Essential Records From the Jazzmatazz Series : “Loungin’ ” with Donald Byrd “Trust Me” with N’Dea Davenport “Keep Ur Worries” with Angie Stone “Le Bien, le Mal” with MC Solaar “Plenty,” featuring Erykah Badu What are your favorite Gang Starr and Guru songs? Share them in the comments below. Related Videos Gang Starr’s Guru Passes Away Related Artists Guru (Rap) Gangstarr

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Guru’s Best: The Top 10 Essential Gang Starr Tracks

Guru Fans React To His Death, Question ‘Farewell’ Letter

‘The Guru ‘farewell’ letter reeks of fakeness,’ one fan writes. By MTV News staff Gang Starr’s Guru and DJ Premier Photo: Gregg Delman/ MTV.com Within moments of publishing the news that former Gang Starr MC Guru had died at age 43 after a long battle with cancer, dozens of reactions began flooding in paying tribute to the pioneering MC. “RIP my dude. You were the realest performer I have ever had the pleasure to meet,” wrote fan Cody James. Russell said, “One of the slickest rhyme-sayers has moved on,” predicting that although he has passed, the classic Guru songs will “forever bang in somebody’s CD player or iPod.” Reader Alex went further, saying a bit of hip-hop died on the day Guru passed, praising him for the fact that his unique jazz/hip-hop sound stretched from New York to the West Coast, while Julio said Guru and Premier were a huge influence on him and his love of hip-hop, calling Guru a pioneer and a rap “demi-god.” A number also lamented that Guru and his former partner in Gang Starr, DJ Premier, seemingly could not overcome their differences before the rapper’s death, alluding to the strong language Guru used in a letter reportedly written by him before his death. In the letter, Premier is not even referred to by name, but expresses the wish that Guru’s “ex-DJ” not have anything to do with “my name likeness, events, tributes etc. connected in anyway to my situation including any use of my name or circumstance for any reason and I have instructed my lawyers to enforce this. I had nothing to do with him in life for over 7 years and want nothing to do with him in death. Solar has my life story and is well informed on my family situation, as well as the real reason for separating from my ex-DJ.” In addition to showering praise on the MC (born Keith Elam), a number of commenters expressed their concern that the posthumous letter from Guru’s partner, Solar, supplied by a PR firm handling press inquiries about the rapper’s health, was suspect. Gang Starr’s Guru: A Life In Photos “The Guru ‘farewell’ letter reeks of fakeness,” wrote Rob, who said he found it hard to believe that Guru was so bitter in death that he would go out of his way to diss his longtime music compatriot Premier. A spokesperson for the PR company that distributed the letter said it was submitted by Solar and approved by Guru and Solar. “No real fan of Gang Starr is going to believe this letter!,” said Louis. “It sounds like something that was written between Solar and his lawyers while Guru laid in bed unable to write or speak. It sounds more to me like a letter bragging about Solar than about Guru’s personal legacy. How can you not want Premier to be involved in the death of Guru?” In the end, though, they were mostly just sad that the world had lost such a gifted lyricist. “When the world loses an artist, a hero, an icon, a pioneer, we as humans can’t help but look back at what this person has done to personally touch our lives,” said Marz. “Such a moment has come with the passing of one of the greatest MCs in the world of hip-hop. A man who didn’t conform, didn’t sell out, didn’t lose sight of the big picture. Integrity is the word that comes to mind. Through his words he showed me that to be down you didn’t have to set your morals or common sense aside. … Thank you Guru, for being one of the greatest street professors to so many who attended the school of hard knocks.” Share your memories of Guru and Gang Starr in the comments below. Related Videos MTV News Vault: An Interview With Gang Starr Related Artists Gang Starr Guru

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Guru Fans React To His Death, Question ‘Farewell’ Letter