Al Jarreau, Grammy-winning jazz singer, dead at 76
Al Jarreau, the jazz-pop musician best known for the hits "Breakin' Away," "We're in This Love Together" and the theme song to the popular 1980's TV show, "Moonlighting," died Sunday, according to posts on his verified social media accounts. He was 76.
Jarreau
died about 9 a.m. ET in Los Angeles surrounded by his wife, son and a
few friends, according to posts on his Facebook page and Twitter
account.
Nicknamed
the "Acrobat of Scat" for his innovative vocal stylings, Jarreau was
one of the few performers of his day who successfully bridged pop, jazz
and R&B. He released more than 20 albums over his storied career,
won seven Grammy Awards and remained a tireless performer right up until
his death.
He had only retired
from touring last week. A February 8 statement on Jarreau's Twitter
account announced his retirement from touring after being hospitalized
in Los Angeles for exhaustion.
"He is thankful for his 50 years of
traveling the world in ministry through music, and for everyone to share
this with him -- his faithful audience, the dedicated musicians, and so
many others who supported his efforts," it said.
Alwyn Lopez Jarreau was born March 12, 1940 in Milwaukee. His was a musical household.
"My mother was a piano teacher and church organist. My dad was a minister, and a singer," Jarreau said in a 2012 invterview with All About Jazz.
"My brothers were singing quartet music in the living room when I was
four and five years old. They were singing ... [scatting]...stuff like
that, that's what I wanted to be like. I wanted to be like my brothers,
singing this jazzy music."
After
earning a master's degree in vocational rehabilitation from the
University of Iowa, Jarreau moved to San Francisco in the late 1960s,
where after crossing paths with a young pianist -- and future jazz
legend himself -- named George Duke, he decided to quit his day job and
pursue music full time with the George Duke Trio.
After gaining traction in the Bay Area
and Los Angeles, Jarreau headed to New York, where, playing alongside
guitarist Julio Martinez, he began to reach a wider audience. This led
to appearances on Johnny Carson's "Tonight Show," Merv Griffin and other
TV gigs.
His debut album,
released in 1976, made an immediate splash in jazz circles. Mainstream
pop success followed in 1981 with the album "Breaking Away," which hit
the Top 10 on the Billboard charts and spawned his biggest hit, the
breezy "We're in This Love Together."
In
1985 Jarreau was part of an all-star lineup of musicians who sang on
"We Are the World," the hit song that raised money for famine relief in
Africa. His line: "...and so we all must lend a helping hand."
Although
Jarreau never replicated his pop success of the early 1980s, many of
his subsequent albums topped the contemporary jazz charts and he
remained a concert draw around the world.
In
1996 he did a three-month stint on Broadway as the Teen Angel in a
production of "Grease." He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
in 2001.
Jarreau is survived by his wife, Susan, and son Ryan.
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