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Tag: dead musicians

  • Ray Manzarek Dies: Doors Founder Was 74

    Ray Manzarek Dies: Doors Founder Was 74

    Ray Manzarek, one of the founders of the hugely popular ’60s and ’70s rock group The Doors, has died after a long battle with cancer. He was 74 years old.

    Manzarek was one of the group’s principle writers, penning hits like “L.A. Woman”, “Light My Fire”, and “Hello, I Love You”. He also played keyboards in the band and made history after a chance encounter on Venice Beach with Jim Morrison in 1965.

    “We were aware of Muddy Waters,” Manzarek said of the group. “We were aware of Howlin’ Wolf and John Coltrane and Miles Davis. Plus, Jan and Dean and The Beach Boys and the surf sound. Robby Krieger brings in some flamingo guitar. I bring a little bit of classical music along with the blues and jazz, and certainly John Densmore was heavy into jazz. And Jim brings in beatnik poetry and French symbolist poetry, and that’s the blend of The Doors as the sun is setting into the Pacific Ocean at the end, the terminus of Western civilization. That’s the end of it. Western civilization ends here in California at Venice Beach, so we stood there inventing a new world on psychedelics.”

    From there, The Doors became an international sensation and as controversial as any rock group would ever be, with Morrison getting arrested for his various stage antics and keeping the rest of the group on their toes with his rampant drug use. Manzarek would go on to become a Grammy winner and a best-selling author, and revitalized his music career with a tour in 2002.

    “I was deeply saddened to hear about the passing of my friend and bandmate Ray Manzarek today,” said bandmate Robby Krieger. “I’m just glad to have been able to have played Doors songs with him for the last decade. Ray was a huge part of my life and I will always miss him.”

  • Richie Havens Dies: Woodstock Singer Was 72

    Richie Havens, who was well-known as the first performer at Woodstock, has died of a heart attack. He was 72 years old.

    A folk singer with a love for guitar playing, Havens was first-billed at the enormous music festival after building his reputation in clubs around Greenwich Village and finding a following with his albums. He’d built a solid reputation by then and had signed on with Albert Grossman, who just happened to also be Bob Dylan’s manager.

    Havens gained a huge audience when he took the stage at Woodstock, however, due in part to the fact that he played for nearly three hours as late performers trickled in to the show. The music festival would be a turning point, not just in his career, but in his life.

    “Everything in my life, and so many others, is attached to that train,” he said.

    Over his career, Havens released 25 albums and gained the admiration and respect of some of the biggest names in music, including Stephen Stills of Crosby, Stills and Nash.

    “Richie Havens was one of the nicest most generous and pure individuals I have ever met,” Stills said. “When I was a young sprite in Greenwich Village, we used to have breakfast together at the diner on 6th Avenue next to The Waverly Theatre. He was very wise in the ways of our calling. He always caught fire every time he played.”