© AP / Levon Helm in 2007
Levon Helm, drummer and singer of the Band, dead
at 71
April 19, 2012, 3:27 PM EST
By David Browne
Rollingstone.com
Rollingstone.com
Levon Helm, singer and
drummer for the Band, died Thursday in
New York of throat cancer. He was 71.
"He passed away peacefully at 1:30 this afternoon surrounded by his friends
and bandmates," Helm's longtime guitarist Larry Campbell tells Rolling Stone.
"All his friends were there, and it seemed like Levon was waiting for them. Ten
minutes after they left, we sat there and he just faded away. He did it with
dignity. It was even two days ago they thought it would happen within hours, but
he held on. It seems like he was Levon up to the end, doing it the way he wanted
to do it. He loved us, we loved him."
Bing: Levon
Helm
In the late '90s, Helm, whose singing anchored Band classics like "The Night
They Drove Old Dixie Down," "Up on Cripple Creek," "Rag Mama Rag" and "The
Weight," was diagnosed with throat cancer and underwent 28 radiation treatments,
eventually recovering his voice. In recent weeks, however, Helm had canceled a
number of shows, including one at the New Orleans Jazz Fest on April 27 and
another in Montclair, N.J. A note posted to his website on Tuesday from his
daughter Amy and wife Sandy said that Helm was in the "final stages of his
battle with cancer. Please send your prayers and love to him as he makes his way
through this part of his journey. Thank you fans and music lovers who have made
his life so filled with joy and celebration...he has loved nothing more than to
play, to fill the room up with music, lay down the back beat, and make the
people dance! He did it every time he took the stage."
Born May 26, 1940, in Arkansas, Helm was literally
a witness to the birth of rock 'n' roll: As a teenager, he saw Elvis Presley, Little
Richard, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee
Lewis in concert and was inspired to play drums after seeing Lewis' drummer,
Jimmy Van Eaton. (Helm went on to play mandolin and other stringed instruments
as well). In 1960, Helm joined the backup band of rockabilly wildman Ronnie
Hawkins, a group that would eventually include Robbie Robertson,
Richard Manuel, Rick Danko and Garth Hudson, all future members of the Band.
The musicians broke from Hawkins to form their own
group -- their names included the Crackers and Levon and the Hawks -- but it was
their association with Bob Dylan that cemented
their reputation. After Dylan saw the group in a club (either in Canada or New
Jersey, depending on the source), he invited Helm and guitarist Robertson to
join his electric band. "Bob Dylan was unknown to us," Helm wrote in his 1993
memoir, "This Wheel's on Fire." "I knew he was a folksinger and songwriter whose
hero was Woody Guthrie. And
that's it." Robertson and Helm were in Dylan's electric band for his
controversial, frequently booed show at New York's Forest Hills Tennis Stadium.
Afterward, various members of the Band played on Dylan's "Blonde on Blonde"
album and toured with him in 1966. (Helm left temporary in 1965, tired of the
ongoing hostility from Dylan's folk fans.)
Recuperating in Woodstock after his 1966 motorcycle accident, Dylan again
hooked up with the band that would soon be the Band. Before Helm rejoined them,
they recorded the landmark "Basement Tapes," and the Band's crackling, homespun
take on American roots music began to take shape. Rechristening themselves the
Band, they signed to Capitol Records and released two classic albums, "Music
From Big Pink" (1968) and "The Band" (1969). Although Robertson was the Band's
principal songwriter, it was Helm's beautifully gruff and ornery voice that
brought the Canadian Robertson's mythic Americana songs to life. He was also one
of rock's earliest singing drummers.
In 1976, at Robertson's urging, the Band broke up
after their farewell concert, known as The Last Waltz. In meetings before the
concert and as recounted in "This Wheel's on Fire," Helm was adamantly opposed
to the group disbanding. "I didn't want any part of it," he wrote. "I didn't
want to break up the band." He begrudgingly went along, but his relationship
with Robertson was never the same. After the show, Helm formed his own band,
Levon Helm and the RCO All Stars, featuring fellow legends Dr. John, Steve Cropper
and Booker T. Jones, and recorded several solo albums. Helm also ventured into
acting with an acclaimed role in 1980's "Coal Miner's Daughter," playing
Loretta
Lynn (Sissy Spacek's) father. But he couldn't leave the Band behind, and
with Danko, Manuel, and Hudson, he formed a new version of the Band in the early
'80s, recording three new studio albums with them.
The Band continued for a while after Manuel's
suicide by hanging in 1986, but Danko's death in 1999 of heart failure ended the
Band once and for all. By then, Helm was dealing with throat cancer. After his
recovery, he began holding intimate concerts in his combination barn and studio
in Woodstock, called the Midnight Ramble, in part to pay his medical bills. The
low-key, woodsy performances became must-see shows and attracted a rock who's
who. Elvis
Costello, Natalie Merchant,
the Grateful Dead's Phil
Lesh and Donald Fagen were among the many who joined Helm and his band. The
Ramble shows led to two acclaimed Helm solo albums, one of which, 2007's "Dirt
Farmer," won a Grammy in the Best Traditional Folk category. "This go-round has
been a lot more fun," Helm told Rolling Stone in 2009. "Now I know I've got
enough voice to do it."
When the Band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994, Helm
didn't attend, revealing that his feud with Robertson was still on. "I thought
Levon was going to show," Robertson told Rolling Stone a few years later. "Then
that evening they said he changed his mind and wasn't going to come. And I
thought, 'Oh, God, it would have been better if he was here.'"Helm's throat cancer had taken a toll on his singing voice. Onstage and in recent interviews, his voice was sometimes strong but other times was reduced to a low rasp. But at one his last shows, in Ann Arbor on March 19 with a 13-piece band, the audience roared when he sang the Band classic "Ophelia." "I'm not the poster boy of good health," he said in an interview last year. "But I'm not doing too bad. I still got the energy to make music. As long as I can do that, I'm great."
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