Sunday, December 21, 2025

A Tribute to a Few of the Musical Greats Who Died in 2025

 As is inevitable, a number of musical greats have passed away this year. I won't attempt to cover everyone who deserves a mention, but here are some slightly revised tributes that I posted about three of them soon after their deaths, and a brief listing of some other notable individuals, plus some representative songs that they wrote or performed (or, in many cases, both).

Two of the most significant deaths came in June, when in the space of just a few days, the world lost two incredibly influential musical greats, Sylvester "Sly Stone" Stewart and Brian Wilson, both of whom were 82 years old when they died (though Wilson was less than 10 days from turning 83). Sly and the Family Stone was probably the most influential soul/funk band of the late 1960s and early 1970s, with a string of hits like "Dance to the Music", "Everyday People", "Sing a Simple Song", "Stand!", "I Want to Take You Higher", "Hot Fun in the Summertime", "Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)", "Everybody Is a Star", and "Family Affair", all written by Sly Stone himself. The composition of the group was mixed in both race and gender (including women who performed as musicians, not just vocalists), which was unusual at that time. My personal favorite is "Everyday People", which to me encapsulates all of the group's best features, both musically and in terms of their message of inclusion and universal brotherhood (a message that is if anything even more vital today). 

Brian Wilson was the musical mastermind behind the Beach Boys, one of the most influential groups ever. He was responsible for writing and arranging the vast majority of their output, at least up until the late 1960s when his mental issues began to get the better of him, and he continued to sporadically create brilliant music thereafter. His artistic peak came with Pet Sounds, widely regarded as one of the best albums of all time, and the abortive Smile project, songs from which were often the highlights of the later albums they were released on. He meticulously crafted songs note by note, producing classics like "I Get Around", "California Girls", "Wouldn't It Be Nice", "God Only Knows", "Caroline, No", "Good Vibrations", "Heroes and Villains", "Surf's Up", "This Whole World", "Til I Die", "Love and Mercy" and many more. His music was a big influence on a huge number of other artists, including the Beatles and particularly his "musical twin" Paul McCartney (they were born only two days apart), who cited Pet Sounds as a big influence on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. At some point, I hope to write a more comprehensive overview of Wilson's songs (at least from the parts of his catalog I am familiar with); I already have a list of over 25 of his best songs with the Beach Boys and as a solo artists, but they deserve a longer essay to accompany them. 

While he wrote far fewer songs and had a much briefer and far less mainstream musical career (especially relative to the length of his life), in many ways Tom Lehrer, who died in July at the age of 97(!), was nearly as influential as Stone and Wilson. Lehrer, arguably the 20th century's greatest writer of satirical songs, began writing songs while a student at Harvard in the 1940s. He recorded his first record, Songs by Tom Lehrer, in one hour at a cost of $15. The initial pressing of the record, made at Lehrer's own expense, was 400 copies; it eventually sold over a hundred thousand copies (to give a conservative estimate). He recorded a second album in 1959 in two versions, live (An Evening Wasted with Tom Lehrer) and studio (More of Tom Lehrer). His 1950s output included "The Old Dope Peddler", "Be Prepared", "The Irish Ballad", "When You Are Old and Gray", "I Hold Your Hand in Mine", "Poisoning Pigeons in the Park", "The Elements" (a recitation of all the chemical elements to the tune of the "Major-General's Song" from Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance), "The Masochism Tango" and "We Will All Go Together When We Go". In the early 1960s, he wrote an additional batch of songs for the satirical television show That Was The Week That Was and he recorded them in a live performance as the album That Was the Year That Was. These songs included "National Brotherhood Week", "Send the Marines", "New Math", "Wernher von Braun" and "The Vatican Rag". 

After 1967, Lehrer retired from live concert performances and didn't record any more albums. However, in the early 1970s, he wrote a number of songs for the children's program The Electric Company, including "N Apostrophe T" (performed by Jim Boyd and Lee Chamberlin), "The Menu Song" (performed by Rita Moreno and Morgan Freeman), "Snore, Sniff and Sneeze", "L-Y", and the highly memorable "Silent E" (the latter three performed by Lehrer himself). Even decades after hearing "Silent E" as a kid, I could still hear it in my head, so when I read that it was one of Lehrer's, I immediately recognized his voice in my mind.

For Lehrer, music was largely a sideline; he was a mathematician by training. After we was drafted into the army in the 1950s, he worked for two years at the then-secret National Security Agency, during which time, by his own account, he invented the Jello shot. He taught mathematics for decades at a university in California before retiring in 2001. He himself once stated that over a period of 20 years, he'd only performed 109 shows and written 37 songs (a later estimate is about 50 songs). Nevertheless, he attracted a wide range of fans, ranging from the UK's Princess Margaret (when she was awarded an honorary music degree in 1957, the orator mentioned Lehrer in discussing the breadth of her taste, sparking an interest in Lehrer's music in the UK) and writer and scientist Isaac Asimov (who wrote about enjoying a Lehrer performance in a nightclub in 1954) to actor Daniel Radcliffe (who once sang "The Elements" on The Graham Norton Show). The British theatrical producer Cameron Mackintosh, who went on to produce some of the most successful musicals of all time (Les Miserables and The Phantom of the Opera being just two examples), devised and produced the musical Tomfoolery based on Lehrer's songs early in his career. Musicians who have expressed great admiration for Lehrer include Randy Newman, Steely Dan's Donald Fagen, and "Weird Al" Yankovic.

One of Lehrer's most impressive actions came towards the end of his life, when he formally relinquished the rights to all of the music and lyrics he had written in his life, putting them all into the public domain. This means that anyone can perform or record any of his work without having to ask for permission or paying any royalties. If only more songwriters nearing the end of their lives would do the same.... 

Stone, Wilson, and Lehrer are of course hardly the only important musical figures who passed away in 2025. Among the others are, in rough chronological order of death, Peter Yarrow, Sam Moore, Marianne Faithfull, Jerry Butler, Chris Jasper, Roberta Flack, David Johansen, Joey Molland, Charles Strouse, Freddie Aguilar (Philippines), Alf Clausen, Mick Ralphs, Lalo Schifrin, Connie Francis, Ozzy Osbourne, Rick Davies, John Lodge, and 楊弦 (Taiwan). 

Here is an incomplete list of notable songs written or performed by the abovementioned individuals (see the text above for more songs by Stone, Wilson, and Lehrer):

Dance to the Music (S. Stewart)    Sly and the Family Stone (Sly Stone [Sylvester Stewart])
Everyday People (S. Stewart)    Sly and the Family Stone
Stand! (S. Stewart)    Sly and the Family Stone
Family Affair (S. Stewart)    Sly and the Family Stone
If You Want Me to Stay (S. Stewart)    Sly and the Family Stone
California Girls (W: Love/Wilson M: Wilson)    The Beach Boys (Brian Wilson)
God Only Knows (W: Asher/Wilson M: Wilson)    The Beach Boys
Good Vibrations (W: Love M: Wilson)    The Beach Boys
Heroes and Villains (W: Parks M: Wilson)    The Beach Boys
Surf's Up (W: Parks M: Wilson)    The Beach Boys
'Til I Die (Wilson)    The Beach Boys
Love and Mercy (Wilson)    Brian Wilson
The Old Dope Peddler (Lehrer)    Tom Lehrer (Tom Lehrer)
Be Prepared (Lehrer)    Tom Lehrer
Poisoning Pigeons in the Park (Lehrer)    Tom Lehrer
National Brotherhood Week (Lehrer)    Tom Lehrer
Wernher von Braun (Lehrer)    Tom Lehrer
The Vatican Rag (Lehrer)    Tom Lehrer
Silent E (Lehrer)    Tom Lehrer
Puff the Magic Dragon (W: Lipton M: Yarrow)    Peter, Paul and Mary (Peter Yarrow)\
Day Is Done (Yarrow)    Peter, Paul and Mary
Leaving On A Jet Plane (Denver)    Peter, Paul and Mary
Torn Between Two Lovers (Yarrow/Jarrell)    Mary MacGregor
Light One Candle (Yarrow)    Peter, Paul and Mary
Hold On, I'm Comin' (Hayes/Porter)    Sam & Dave (Sam Moore)
Soul Man (Hayes/Porter)    Sam & Dave
I Thank You (Hayes/Porter)    Sam & Dave
As Tears Go By (Jagger/Richards/Oldham)    Marianne Faithfull (Marianne Faithfull)
Sister Morphine (Faithfull/Jagger/Richards)    Marianne Faithfull/The Rolling Stones
Broken English (Faithfull/Reynolds/Mavety/York/Stannard)    Marianne Faithfull
The Gypsy Faerie Queen (Faithfull/Cave)    Marianne Faithfull
For Your Precious Love (Brooks/Brooks/Butler)    Jerry Butler and the Impressions (Jerry Butler)
He Will Break Your Heart (Butler/Carter/Mayfield)    Jerry Butler
Make It Easy on Yourself (W: David M: Bacharach)    Jerry Butler
I Don't Want to Hear It Anymore (Newman)    Jerry Butler
Only the Strong Survive (Butler/Gamble/Huff)    Jerry Butler
Love Put Me on a Corner (Jasper)    The Isley Brothers (Chris Jasper)
Caravan of Love (Isley/Jasper/Isley)    Isley-Jasper-Isley 
Compared to What (McDaniels)    Roberta Flack (Roberta Flack)
The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face (MacColl)    Roberta Flack
Killing Me Softly with His Song (W: Gimbel/Lieberman M: Fox)    Roberta Flack
Feel Like Makin' Love (McDaniels)    Roberta Flack
And So It Goes (Flack/Angelou/Miles)    Roberta Flack
Personality Crisis (Johansen/Thunders)    New York Dolls (David Johansen)
Lonely Planet Boy (Johansen)    New York Dolls
Funky But Chic (Johansen/Sylvain)    David Johansen
Hot Hot Hot (Cassell)    Buster Poindexter [David Johansen]
I'd Die Babe (Molland)    Badfinger (Joey Molland)
Love Time (Molland)    Badfinger
Love Is Easy (Molland)    Badfinger
Put on a Happy Face (W: Adams M: Strouse)    Dick Van Dyke (Charles Strouse)
Once Upon a Time (W: Adams M: Strouse)    Ray Bolger and Eileen Herlie
Those Were the Days (W: Adams M: Strouse)    Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton
Tomorrow (W: Charnin M: Strouse)    Andrea McArdle
It's the Hard Knock Life (W: Charnin M: Strouse)    Andrea McArdle and Cast
Anak (Aguilar)    Freddie Aguilar (Freddie Aguilar)
Magdalena (Aguilar)    Freddie Aguilar
Mindanao (Aguilar)    Freddie Aguilar
Ipaglalaban Ko (Aguilar)    Freddie Aguilar
Who Needs The Kwik-E-Mart? (W: Daniels M: Clausen)    Hank Azaria and Cast (Alf Clausen)
We Do (W: Swartzwelder M: Clausen)    The Simpsons
We Put the Spring in Springfield (W: Keeler M: Clausen)    Dan Castellaneta, Harry Shearer, Tress MacNeille
Canyonero (Clausen/Cary)    Hank Williams Jr.
Ready for Love/After Lights (Ralphs)    Mott the Hoople (Mick Ralphs)
One of the Boys (Hunter/Ralphs)    Mott the Hoople
Can't Get Enough (Ralphs)    Bad Company
Feel Like Makin' Love (Rodgers/Ralphs)    Bad Company
The Cat (Schifrin/Ward)    Jimmy Smith with Lalo Schifrin (Lalo Schifrin)
Theme from Mission: Impossible (Schifrin)    Lalo Schifrin
Tar Sequence (Schifrin)    Lalo Schifrin
Bullitt (Main Title) (Schifrin)    Lalo Schifrin
Theme from Enter the Dragon (Schifrin)    Lalo Schifrin
Who's Sorry Now (W: Kalmar/Ruby M: Snyder)    Connie Francis (Connie Francis)
Everybody's Somebody's Fool (Keller/Greenfield)    Connie Francis
Where the Boys Are (W: Greenfield M: Sedaka)    Connie Francis
Vacation (Francis/Weston/Hunter)    Connie Francis
Pretty Little Baby (Stirling/Nauman)    Connie Francis
Paranoid (Butler/Iommi/Osbourne/Ward)    Black Sabbath (Ozzy Osbourne)
War Pigs (Butler/Iommi/Osbourne/Ward)    Black Sabbath
Crazy Train (W: Daisley M: Rhoads/Osbourne/Daisley)    Ozzy Osbourne
No More Tears (Osbourne/Wylde/Inez/Castillo/Purdell)    Ozzy Osbourne
Bloody Well Right (Davies)    Supertramp (Rick Davies)
From Now On (Davies)    Supertramp
Goodbye Stranger (Davies)    Supertramp
Brother Where You Bound (Davies)    Supertramp
Ride My See-Saw (Lodge)    The Moody Blues (John Lodge)
Isn't Life Strange (Lodge)    The Moody Blues
I'm Just a Singer (In a Rock and Roll Band) (Lodge)    The Moody Blues
Gemini Dream (Hayward/Lodge)    The Moody Blues
鄉愁四韻〈詞:余光中 曲:楊弦〉    楊弦 (楊弦)
民歌手〈詞:余光中 曲:楊弦〉   楊弦
迴旋曲〈詞:余光中 曲:楊弦〉   楊弦
山林之歌〈詞曲:楊弦〉   楊弦

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