Garth Hudson Dies: The Band’s Last Surviving Member Was 87

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Garth Hudson, the keyboardist, sax player and archivist for Rock and Roll Hall of Famers The Band whose farewell show with the group was memorialized in Martin Scorsese’s landmark documentary The Last Waltz, died Tuesday in his sleep at a nursing home in Woodstock, NY. He was 87.

The executor of his estate executor confirmed the news to the Toronto Star.

Born Eric Hudson on August 2, 1937, in Windsor, Ontario, Hudson played in local bands before hooking up in the late 1950s with rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins’ The Hawks, which eventually would feature many of his Band mates. The group would back Bob Dylan’s on the notorious mid-’60s “Going Electric” tours and, rechristened The Band, they collaborated on groundbreaking album The Basement Tapes, helping to invent the Americana genre.

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The Band broke out with its 1968 debut album Music from Big Pink, which made the U.S. Top 30, went gold and featured such classic tracks as “The Weight” and the Dylan cover “I Shall Be Released.”

“The Weight” was featured in nearly two dozen movies, playing an integral role in classics such as Easy RiderThe Big Chill and as well as in projects as diverse as Patch AdamsStarsky & HutchDawn of the Planet of the Apes and The King of Staten Island.

In 1969, The Band played at Woodstock and became the first North American rock group to appear on the cover of Time magazine.

Later that year, the group — which also featured fellow Canadians Robbie Robertson, Rick Danko and Richard Manuel and American drummer Levon Helm — released its sophomore album The Band in 1969, which included its biggest pop single, “Up on Cripple Creek,” along with the Civil War-set folk tale “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.” The disc was its first Top 10 album, reaching No. 9 on the Billboard 200, and remains its only million-seller without Dylan.

The Band went on to release several other albums through the 1970s. Stage Fright (1970) reached No. 5 and featured the title track and “The Shape I’m In.” Cahoots (1971, No. 21) had “Life Is a Carnival,” and the Top 10 double live set Rock of Ages (1972) followed.

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Its other albums include Moondog Matinee (1973), Northern Lights-Southern Cross (1975) and Islands (1977). Along with 1975’s The Basement Tapes, The Band also released a pair of Top 10 albums with Dylan the year before: Planet Waves and Before the Flood. The soundtrack to The Last Waltz — which was recorded in November 1976 at the Winterland in San Francisco and released with the movie in April 1978 — also featured Dylan, Hawkins, Eric Clapton, Neil Young, Ringo Starr, Emmylou Harris, Van Morrison, The Staples Singers, Neil Diamond and many others. The album reached No. 13 in the U.S. and went gold.

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In 1973, The Band performed before the largest rock concert audience in history, an estimated 650,000 people, at the Watkins Glen Festival in New York. Two decades later, the surviving members of the group — Manuel died in 1986 — embarked on an extended tour of mostly small venues that included the House of Blues in West Hollywood and led in a slot at Woodstock ’94.

The Best of the Band was released in 1976 and went gold. It was followed by several other compilation discs, including the now-out-of-print three-CD box set Across the Great Divide. A second five-disc box, A Musical History, arrived in 2005.

More recently, The Band was the subject of the 2019 documentary Once Were Brothers, which told the group’s story from Robertson’s POV. The film was directed by Daniel Roher and executive produced by Scorsese, Brian Grazer and Ron Howard.

The band never won a Grammy during its career but received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy in 2008. The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994. 

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