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Subject: Re: [Mellotronists] John Entwhistle

From: Mark Glinsky <glinskym@...>
Date: 2002-06-28

At 05:40 PM 6/28/2002 -0400, mrivers@... wrote:
>John Entwhistle died????


The Who Bassist John Entwistle Dies


06/28/2002 9:39 AM ET
By CHELSEA J. CARTER

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Stunned fans of The Who's John Entwistle left flowers and
consoled each other outside a casino concert hall where the bass player who
helped make the band one of the biggest in rock history had been expected
to perform Friday.

Entwistle was found dead Thursday in his Hard Rock Hotel room of an
apparent heart attack. He was 57.

"The Ox has left the building - we've lost another great friend," bandmates
Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey wrote on Townshend's Web site. The Who's
celebrated drummer, Keith Moon, died in 1978.

Former Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman described Entwistle as "the
quietest man in private but the loudest man on stage."


"He was unique and irreplaceable," Wyman said.

Entwistle, a co-founder of The Who, was on medication for a heart
condition, according to Steve Luongo, the drummer in another Entwistle band
for the last 15 years. An autopsy was scheduled for Friday, but Clark
County Coroner Ron Flud said no foul play was suspected.

The Who's scheduled concert at the Hard Rock on Friday was canceled, as was
a July 1 show in Los Angeles. The rest of the three-month, nationwide tour
was undecided, said Beckye Levin of promoter Clear Channel Entertainment.

Outside The Joint, where the concert was scheduled, fans like Lauren J.
Hammer, 35, of Boulder, Colo., gathered in front of a growing collection of
flower bouquets and a large British flag. She held her Colorado license
plate that read "WHO R U" and business cards that stated "Who Fan
Extraordinaire."

The casino played the band's songs, and the hotel changed its marquee from
a concert promotion to a memorial reading, "John Entwistle. 1944-2002. You
will be missed by all."

"My whole life has been altered today," said fan Stefanie Cushing, 34, of
Seattle, who had tickets for seven shows.

From London, Entwistle's family issued a statement that thanked fans for
their messages of condolence and asked for "a brief period of privacy in
which to mourn and adjust our lives to this tragedy."

The Who, founded in London in the early 1960s, was part of the British rock
invasion along with the Rolling Stones and the Beatles. They were never as
successfully commercially as their peers, but many songs became classics,
including "I Can See For Miles,""I Can't Explain,""Substitute,""Pinball
Wizard,""Won't Get Fooled Again" and "Who Are You."

An early hit, "My Generation," was an anthem for baby boomers and included
the line, "Hope I die before I get old." They were also known for their
"pop art" style, from pinning medals on their jackets to draping flags over
their amplifiers.

Their music reflected their offstage life, with band members often fighting
and vowing to quit the group. While the Beatles fit happily into a unified
sound, The Who seemed to slug it out right in front of their fans.

Their concerts were literally explosive - a fusion of acrobatics and
volcanic sound that left the stage and their instruments a smoldering
wreck. They were so loud that the Guinness Book of Records measured a 1976
show and certified them as the world's loudest band, their noise level just
below a jet plane's roar. Townsend and Entwistle both suffered permanent
hearing damage.

"A lot of our fans liked us because we made mistakes. It made us look more
human. And then the fact that we could actually sort of burst out laughing
on stage when we made a real bad blunder," Entwistle told The Associated
Press in a 1995 radio interview.

Without the steady Entwistle, someone once observed, the band might have
literally flown off the stage. His fingers raced across his bass, but he
stood silently in contrast to his hyperactive bandmates: Moon, guitarist
Townshend and lead singer Daltrey.

Ray Manzarek, keyboardist for the Doors, called Entwistle "one of the
great, great rock 'n' roll bassists of all time. A real genius."

Entwistle's songwriting contributions were minimal compared to Townshend,
but he did pen such fan favorites as "Boris the Spider" and "My Wife," both
of which displayed his dark humor. He was also the only member of the band
with formal musical training.

He was among the first in rock to experiment with the six- and eight-string
bass, and he also played the French horn.

"As a musician, he did for the bass guitar what Jimi Hendrix did for the
guitar," said Luongo, 49, who played drums in The John Entwistle Band.

Entwistle was born Oct. 9, 1944, in London, and played piano and trumpet in
his early years. He met Townshend and Daltrey in high school and by 1964
the band was born, with Moon on drums.

Many Americans first learned about The Who after they played at the 1967
Monterey Pop concert, the first major rock festival. Their status as
superstars was confirmed two years later at Woodstock, where they opened
with Entwistle's "Heaven and Hell."

Their albums included "Happy Jack,""The Who Sell Out,""Who's
Next,""Quadrophenia" and "Who Are You." They also made 1969's
groundbreaking rock opera, "Tommy," about a deaf, dumb and blind messiah.
The album was turned into a 1975 film, starring Ann-Margret and Jack
Nicholson, in 1975 and later into a Broadway show.

The Who have sold 18 million albums, according to the Recording Industry
Association of America. They have had 14 gold albums, 10 platinum and five
multiplatinum.

Few bass players had a job more challenging than Entwistle's, playing
rhythm alongside Moon, rock's loudest, fastest and most unpredictable
drummer. Entwistle in many instances improvised as much as guitarist
Townshend, who once said the bass player provided more lead material than
he did.

"A lot of my playing is improvising," Entwistle explained to Bass Frontiers
magazine in 1996. "I will just discover different little patterns or riffs
in any key at anytime. Somewhere in my brain I have a list of things I can
play. It's a matter of putting them in the right order."

He released the first of his nine solo albums in 1971, and later formed his
own ensemble, Ox, while continuing to play with The Who.

After Moon's death, Kenny Jones took over on drums, but the band made just
two more studio albums, neither well regarded, and retired in 1982. The
later reunited and toured frequently, giving a rousing performance at last
year's "Concert for New York," which raised money for the victims of the
Sept. 11 attacks. A greatest hits album, "Ultimate Collection," entered the
Billboard charts two weeks ago at No. 31.

They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990.

Entwistle was also an artist and was in Las Vegas in part to open a show at
the Grammy's Art of Music Gallery at the Aladdin Hotel-Casino. His work
included cartoon-type portraits of himself and his fellow band members.