Guitarist J. Geils found dead in his Massachusetts home
(CNN)John
Warren Geils Jr., the guitarist and founder of the eponymous J. Geils
Band, has died, police in Groton, Massachusetts, said.
Police
came to Geils' home for a well-being check, police Chief Donald Palma
said. The 71-year-old was found unresponsive and was declared dead at
the scene.
Police
are investigating the death as a standard procedure. Foul play was not
suspected and a preliminary investigation suggests Geils died of natural
causes, Palma said.
The
J. Geils Band was one of the most popular American touring bands of the
1970s. But they did not achieve commercial fame until the 1980s, when
they released radio mainstays such as "Centerfold," "Love Stinks" and
"Freeze-Frame."
Born in
New York in 1946 and raised in New Jersey, Geils was best known as a
musician, but his first love was cars -- a passion he inherited from his
father along with his ear for music, he told Autoweek in 2012.
He
met band mates Danny Klein and "Magic Dick" Salwitz at Worcester
Polytechnic Institute, where he was studying mechanical engineering.
"That was the end of engineering school for all three of us," he told the magazine. They formed the J. Geils Band in 1967 with lead singer Peter Wolf and drummer Stephen Jo Bladd.
The
group released a string of albums in the 1970s but would not achieve
commercial success until the 1980s, starting with the release of "Love
Stinks," its first platinum-selling record, according to Rolling Stone.
Their 12th album, "Freeze-Frame," featured its popular title track as
well as chart-topper "Centerfold," which spent six weeks at the top of
the Billboard Hot 100 in 1982.
Wolf
left the band to pursue a solo career and did not appear on its final
album, released in 1984. The band officially broke up in 1985,
occasionally coming together for reunion shows. The J. Geils band was
nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the fourth time in
October, but was not selected for the 2017 class.
''Being
part of the J. Geils Band was a lot of fun. We made 14 records, and
eventually made some money. But it got to be a grind. In some respects
it was like any other job; it starts to wear on you a little bit," Geils told The Boston Globe in 2004.
Geils'
semi-retirement from music allowed him to return to cars. He started
KTR Motorsports out of a garage in Carlisle, Massachusetts, to service
vintage Ferraris, Maseratis and other Italian cars. He sold the business
in 1996, according to Autoweek.
He also remained active as a musician, forming the band Bluestime with Salwitz and releasing two records.
Geils' contemporaries, including musicians from the band Foghat and The Fixx, expressed their condolences on Twitter.
POSTED BY:OPUOMONI PRIYE
DATE:04/12/2017
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