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Takara_Soong

Jeff Healey - March 25, 1966 - March 2, 2008

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From the Toronto Star:

Legendary Toronto blues guitarist and old-style jazz aficionado Jeff Healey died Sunday in Toronto’s St. Joseph’s Hospital after a lifelong battle with a rare form of cancer — retinoblastoma — that blinded him in his first year. He was 41.

 

“Discovered” in a Toronto club in 1982 by Texas blues guitarist, the late Stevie Ray Vaughan, Healey astonished music fans with his outrageous technique. Self-taught by age 4, he laid the electric guitar across his lap and played it in much the same way as a pianist manipulates a keyboard.

 

Though he specialized in blues-based rock and sold more than a million copies of his Grammy-nominated 1988 debut album See the Light — released after a cameo performance in the Hollywood movie Road House with Patrick Swayze — Healey’s real passion was vintage American jazz.

 

Healey hosted a long-running CBC Radio series, My Kinda Jazz, before moving the program to Toronto’s Jazz-FM station, relying solely on his personal collection of 35,000 rare and obscure 78 rpm recordings and an encyclopedic knowledge of the music and personalities he featured in the show.

 

Healey also played trumpet and clarinet, and in the past decade recorded three albums of vintage jazz with Jeff Healey’s Jazz Wizards, including It’s Tight Like That.

 

Healey was an internationally known star who shared stages with B.B. King and Vaughan, and recorded with George Harrison, Mark Knopfler and blues legend Jimmy Rogers.

 

At the time of his death Healey was planning to release his first rock/blues album in eight years, Mess of Blues, recorded in studios in Toronto, in concert in London, England, and at the popular Entertainment District club that bore his name, Jeff Healey’s Roadhouse. It goes on sale in Europe March 20, and in Canada and the U.S. April 22.

 

“Jeff was an amazing colleague and as a musician and a personality, in a league of his own,” the Jazz Wizards’ drummer Gary Scriven said Sunday night.

 

“It was always game on for him. His generosity and sense of humour lasted till the end. He was brave without ever being dramatic. In a word, Jeff was inspirational.”

 

In 2007 Healey underwent surgery to remove cancerous tissue from his legs and both lungs. Radiation and chemotherapy failed to halt the spread of the disease, as did alternative homeopathic treatment in the U.S. this year.

 

Despite his illness, Healey continued to perform across Canada with both his blues band and jazz ensemble, and had scheduled a tour of Germany and the U.K., including an appearance on BBC’s Jools Holland Show, in April, his publicist said.

 

“I’m so sad to hear this news,” award-winning Canadian guitarist and music producer Colin Linden said on the phone from New York. “There was a quality of genius in the way Jeff harnessed that distinctive technique. He was such a natural musician.”

 

Veteran Toronto guitarist Danny Marks, who fronts the Jeff Healey Band at the Roadhouse on Tuesday nights, said “Jeff was a tremendous musician and always so kind. He always knew the odds were against him, but it never ruined his sense of humour. I used to love to watch him having fun — he’d throw his head back and laugh like a little child.”

 

Healey leaves his wife, Christie, daughter Rachel, 13, and son Derek, 3, as well as his father and stepmother, Bud and Rose Healey, and sisters Laura and Linda.

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Wow, that's a shame. I didn't know a whole lot about him or his music but I he did sing one of my favorites from the late 80's.

 

m8lTSGmEosc

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Wow, I haven't heard that song in years. Very sad.

Yeah, it had been a while for me too. I remember when it came out I was still in the Army... I used it a time or 2 with a girlfriend or 2.

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