2013 In Memoriam: Musicians We Lost This Year
For as much joy as music brings us every year, it also brings us some sadness. Lou Reed, George Jones, Ray Price — we lost true legends in 2013, as well as a host of other beloved and talented musicians and music industry figures.
By Kenny Herzog and Rolling Stone Staff
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Chrissy Amphlett
The Divinyls singer, known internationally for her band's sultry 1991 hit "I Touch Myself," passed away on April 21st after battling breast cancer and multiple sclerosis.
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Peter Banks
The original guitarist for British prog pioneers Yes, Banks (far left) died from heart failure in his London home on March 7th. He was 65.
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Leroy “Sugarfoot” Bonner
The Ohio Players frontman and voice behind ubiquitous soul and funk hits like "Love Rollerocaster," died from undisclosed causes on January 26th. He was 69-years-old.
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Cedric “Im” Brooks
The Jamaican-born saxophonist, famous for his playing alongside reggae artists like Burning Spear and as part of ska group the Skatalites, dies from cardiac arrest in a New York hospital on May 3rd. He was 70.
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Phil Buerstatte
The former White Zombie drummer and member of Wisconsin metal band Last Crack died in his sleep from undisclosed causes on May 19th. He was 46.
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Clarence Burke Jr.
The R&B singer (middle), one-fifth of sibling group the Five Stairsteps, was best known for his vocals on their 1970 smash "O-o-h Child." Burke Jr. died from undisclosed causes on May 26th, one day after his 64th birthday.
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Clive Burr
Iron Maiden's original drummer, who played on the British heavy metal act's first three records — including the landmark The Number of the Beast — died from multiple sclerosis on March 12 at the age of 56.
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Donald Byrd
A jazz trumpeter, Byrd was both a groundbreaker in hard bop and helped steward the genre's pop crossover, died of undisclosed causes on February 4th. He was 80-years-old.
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JJ Cale
JJ Cale, the Oklahoman songwriter and guitarist whose original compositions have been covered by everyone from Eric Clapton to Spiritualized, died from a heart attack on July 26. He was 74.
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Chi Cheng
The Deftones bassist, who had been in a coma since sustaining injuries in a 2008 car accident, passed away from heart failure on April 13th. He was just 42-years-old.
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Phil Chevron
Pogues guitarist and Irish punk icon Phil Chevron died from an inoperable tumor following several years of struggles with cancer on October 8th. He was 56.
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Benjamin Curtis
Benjamin Curtis, the former Secret Machines guitarist and Tripping Daisy drummer who most recently made up half of the dream-pop duo School of Seven Bells, died at age 35 after battling T-cell Lymphoblastic Lymphoma, a rare type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
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Mac Curtis
Pioneering rockabilly star Mac Curtis died on September 16th from a brain hematoma brought on by injuries sustained in a car accident. He was 74.
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George Duke
The jazz fusion keyboardist, who helped color the sound of records by everyone from Miles Davis to Frank Zappa, died, at age 67, from chronic lymphocytic leukemia on August 5.
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Ricky “Lord Infamous” Dunigan
A founding member of Memphis rap stars and Oscar winners Three 6 Mafia, Dunigan died at age 40 of a sudden heart attack.
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Arash Farazmand, Soroush Farazmand, and Ali Eskandarian
Brothers Arash and Soroush Farazmand, 28 and 27-years-old respectively, both founding members of Iranian indie band the Yellow Dogs, were tragically shot and killed in their Brooklyn apartment on November 11 by fellow musician Ali Akbar Mohammadi Rafe. Arash and Soroush's neighbor, songwriter Ali Eskandrian, was also murdered, before Rafe took his own life on the building's roof.
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Pat Fear
The frontman for California punk eccentrics White Flag was an advocate for music outsiders up until his death from natural causes on September 24th. He was 52.
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Tompall Glaser
Thomas Paul aka "Tompall" Glaser, a key figure in country music's "Outlaw Movement" and contemporary of Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson, died from an unspecified illness on August 13th. He was 79-years-old.
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Eydie Gorme
The beloved balladeer and "Blame it on the Bossa Nova" singer, who toured and performed for decades with husband Steve Lawrence as Steve and Eydie, died from an undisclosed illness on August 10th. She was 84.
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Jeff Hannemann from Slayer
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Scott Hardkiss
The influential San Francisco-cum-New York electronic DJ, who was one-third of techno trio the Hardkiss Brothers, died of undisclosed causes on March 25th. He was 43.
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Richie Havens
Havens, the folk singer/songwriter, who famously opened the original Woodstock festival with a stirring performance of his song "Freedom," died of a heart attack in his New Jersey home on April 22nd at 72-years-old.
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Faye Hunter
The original bassist/co-vocalist for '80s jangle-poppers and R.E.M. contemporaries Let's Active died of an apparent suicide at her North Carolina home on July 21st. She was 59-years-old.
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Rick Huxley
The bass player for British Invasion pop stars and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees the Dave Clark Five died on February 11. Huxley had battled for years with emphysema, though the official cause of death was not disclosed. He was 72.
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Andy Johns
Johns, a producer and engineer whose credits included Led Zeppelin's Physical Graffiti and the Rolling Stones' Exile on Main Street, died on April 7th after visiting the hospital with a stomach ulcer. He was 62.
500 Greatest Albums of All Time: The Rolling Stones' 'Exile on Main Street'
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George Jones
The country legend, whose hard living mirrored his bittersweet lyrics, died from complications related to fever and irregular blood pressure on April 26th. Known as "the greatest voice in country music," Jones passed away at the age of 81.
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Chris Kelly
The Kriss Kross rapper (right), who scored one of the '90s most enduring hits with "Jump," died of a drug overdose on May 1st. He was 34.
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Allen Lanier
Allen Lanier — a co-founding member of Blue Öyster Cult who also contributed to vital punk records by Patti Smith and the Clash — died on August 14th. Lanier, who was 67, succumbed to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
500 Greatest Songs of All Time: Blue Öyster Cult, '(Don't Fear) the Reaper'
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Yusef Lateef
The lyrical reed player, one of the first to introduce world music influences into jazz, died on December 23rd at 93.
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Ricky Lawson
A studio drummer for the likes of Michael Jackson and Eric Clapton, Lawson died following a brain aneurysm at 59.
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Alvin Lee
The guitar virtuoso and leader of British rock band Ten Years After died from complications during a surgical procedure on March 6th. He was 68.
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Claudio Leo
The ex-Lacuna Coil guitarist and founder of rock band Cayne (far left) died from an undisclosed illness on January 17th. His age is unknown.
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Jackie Lomax
The singer-songwriter, who rose to fame after joining the Beatles' Apple Records roster in the late '60s and collaborating with the Fab Four, died from cancer on September 15th. He was 69 years old.
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Magic Slim
Guitarist Magic Slim, born Morris Holt in Mississippi, helped define the sound of post-war electric blues in Chicago as a younger peer of icons like Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. He was 75.
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Ray Manzarek
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Mindy McCready
A talented but troubled country star, McCready openly battled her addiction issues. She succumbed to a self-inflicted gunshot wound on February 17th. She was 37-years-old.
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Jason Molina
The venerable singer-songwriter behind longtime indie favorites Songs: Ohia and Magnolia Electric Co., Molina had struggled with alcohol abuse. He died of natural causes in his Indianapolis home on March 16th at age 39.
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Cory Monteith
Cory Monteith, a star of the Fox series Glee, was found dead in Vancouver in July. Autopsy findings revealed the death as due to "mixed drug toxicity, involving heroin and alcohol." The actor was only 31-years-old.
Cory Monteith's Most Memorable 'Glee' Performances
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Mick Morris
Morris, bassist for popular 2000s metalcore outfit Eighteen Visions and known to fans as MickDeth, succumbed to a pre-existing heart condition on June 2. He was 35 years old.
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Shadow Morton
George "Shadow" Morton, the songwriter and producer behind the Shangri-Las' hits "Remember (Walking in the Sand)" and "Leader of the Pack," died on February 16th at the age of 71. A family friend said the cause was cancer.
500 Greatest Songs of All Time: The Shangri-Las, 'Leader of the Pack'
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Cordell “Boogie” Mosson
Cordell "Boogie" Mosson (far left), best remembered as the bassist for George Clinton's Parliament-Funkadelic collective, died in April at the age of 60.
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Junior Murvin
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Alan Myers
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Patti Page
Page, the record-setting vocalist who charted more than 111 hits including "(How Much is that) Doggie in the Window" and "Tennessee Waltz," died from undisclosed causes — though she had been suffering from heart and lung ailments — on New Year's Day. She was 85-years-old.
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Reg Presley
The Troggs frontman, whose vocal on the band's 1966 cover of "Wild Thing" has been heard the world over, died from lung cancer at his home in England on February 4th. He was 71.
The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time: The Troggs, 'Wild Thing'
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Ray Price
Ray Price, one of the greatest voices of country music, who revolutionized the genre with Number One hits like "Crazy Arms" and "City Lights," died at home in Mt. Pleasant, Texas, after a long battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 87.
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Phil Ramone
The iconic record producer, who won 14 Grammy Awards for his work on albums by the likes of Paul Simon and Billy Joel, died from an aortic aneurysm in a New York hospital on March 30th. He was 79-years-old.
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Lou Reed
Lou Reed, the seminal Velvet Underground frontman, rock genius, and solo provocateur/poet died from liver disease on October 27th. He was 71.
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Bobby Rogers
Bobby Rogers (far right), the Miracles co-founder, who was born in the same hospital on the same day as lifelong friend and bandmate Smokey Robinson, died on March 3rd from diabetes-related complications. He was 73.
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Romanthony
Romanthony, the house producer and DJ who sang the hook on Daft Punk's 2000 single "One More Time," died on May 7th at the age of 45. The family of Romanthony, whose real name was Anthony Moore, confirmed that he died from complications of kidney disease.