
After a 20-year battle with Parkinson’s disease, Maurice White who was the lead member of six-time Grammy winning 70’s group Earth Wind, and Fire has died. Mr. White died at his Los Angeles home and immediately after his passing was revealed to the world, he was the top trending subject on the popular Twitter website.
“My brother, hero and best friend Maurice White passed away peacefully last night in his sleep,” Verdine White, also a member of the band, told The Associated Press on Thursday. “While the world has lost another great musician and legend, our family asks that our privacy is respected as we start what will be a very difficult and life changing transition in our lives. Thank you for your prayers and well wishes.”
On Earth, Wind, & Fire’s official website, White was quoted as saying “We were coming out of a decade of experimentation, mind expansion and cosmic awareness. I wanted our music to convey messages of universal love and harmony without force-feeding listeners’ spiritual content.”
Having now sold more than 90m albums, Earth, Wind & Fire continue to record and perform but White retired from the group in 1995. He had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, although he concealed this fact for several years.
White formed a songwriting team in 1969 with two other Chicago-based composers, Wade Flemons and Don Whitehead, who wrote music for television and radio commercials. Signing to the Capitol label, the trio called themselves the Salty Peppers and enjoyed moderate success with a 1969 single, La La Time. This was followed by a move to Los Angeles and a new band name, derived from three astrological elements. White’s younger brother, Verdine, a flamboyant bass player, joined the lineup a year later and remains a member. Another brother, Fred, also played drums with the band in its heyday.
It took until 1973 for Earth, Wind & Fire to find a mass audience: that year, the group’s fourth album, Head to the Sky, with its danceable, groove-heavy songs featuring horns and White’s kalimba, or African thumb piano, was the first of a series of huge-selling records.
Their 1978 cover of the Beatles’ Got to Get You Into My Life, injected with the band’s distinctive and inventive strident brass and guitar riffs, won a Grammy.
White was a prolific composer and producer outside Earth, Wind & Fire, working with Deniece Williams, a former vocalist in Stevie Wonder’s band, the fusion band Weather Report, Barbra Streisand, Cher and Neil Diamond. He collaborated with Barry Manilow on Only in Chicago (1980). A self-titled solo album (1985) included a hit single in the form of a cover of Ben E King’s Stand By Me. White also wrote songs for films including the Eddie Murphy vehicle Coming to America (1988), produced albums by the jazz group the Urban Knights and wrote arrangements for the British group Cleopatra.
He won seven Grammy awards, with the band or as an individual performer; Earth, Wind & Fire will receive the Recording Academy’s lifetime achievement award this year.
Others celebrities have tweeted the following:
Dear Maurice White, I never had the honor of meeting you, but I had the honor of working with… https://t.co/hA3JgSHZqI
— DJ Cassidy (@DJCassidy) February 5, 2016
Thank You Maurice White for the Gift of Your Music! ❤️❤️❤️??????!
— Queen Latifah (@IAMQUEENLATIFAH) February 5, 2016
Maurice White, founding member of Earth, Wind and Fire, has died. Great music, energy, great spirit. The Lord must need a band up there.
— Bette Midler (@BetteMidler) February 5, 2016
#rip Maurice White #you‘re a shining star”. Kiss God for e brother #legend earth wind just lost… https://t.co/82RGkPw2Wo
— marlon wayans (@MarlonWayans) February 5, 2016
We worshipped EWF when we were youngbloods, and still do.
Here we are back in the day! https://t.co/nAFkjVxDiE#RIP @MauriceWhiteEWF— Nile Rodgers (@nilerodgers) February 5, 2016
Thank you for the music, Maurice White! May you rest in peace!
— Keith Sweat (@OGKeithSweat) February 4, 2016
Rest in Peace Mr Maurice White. #EarthWindAndFire condolences to the family.
— Estelle (@EstelleDarlings) February 4, 2016
Long before White retired from touring, Earth, Wind & Fire’s ebullient message had touched a generation. “We’ve touched so many people with these songs,” he reflected in 2000. “That was the whole objective, to try to inspire young people to believe in themselves and to follow through on their ideas.”
He is survived by his wife, his two sons, and his brothers Verdine and Fred.
Maurice White, drummer, singer and songwriter, born 19 December 1941; died 4 February 2016
Source: EWF Official website/ The Guardian/Wikipedia
