News

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 ...
Prior to his success of “Please Come to Boston,” Loggins’ song “Pieces of April” became a Top-20 Hot 100 hit for Three Dog Night in 1973.
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.
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.
Dave Loggins, the Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter best known for his 1974 hit “Please Come to Boston,” died Wednesday (July 10) at Alive Hospice in Nashville. He was 76 years old.
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 ...
David Allen Loggins, a GRAMMY-nominated singer and Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee who is best known for his 1974 hit "Please Come to Boston," has died. He was 76.
Two of his songs, Rogers' "Morning Desire" and Juice Newton's "You Make Me Want to Make You Mine," topped Billboard's country charts. "Please Come to Boston," Loggins' best-known single under this ...
Best known for the hit song “Please Come to Boston,” Loggins also wrote the song “Augusta,” which is the longest-running sports theme in history for the Augusta Masters Golf Tournament.