Alex Chilton, R.I.P.

ALEX CHILTON, onetime lead singer of the Box Tops, auteur of the ultimate cult band Big Star and quintessential iconoclast, died Wednesday of an apparent heart attack at a hospital in New Orleans. He was just 59 and had recently gotten married. “Alex was an amazingly talented person, not just as a musician and vocalist and a songwriter, but he was intelligent and well read and interested in a wide number of music genres," said John Fry, the owner of Memphis-based Ardent Studios, where he produced Big Star’s classic albums #1 Record (1973) and Radio City (1974). Chilton had been scheduled to perform with Big Star on Saturday at SXSW, but had characteristically passed on attending a panel devoted to Big Star. “We had a few good songs,” he reluctantly admitted to Bud Scoppa in 1994 after Scoppa, then heading A&R at Zoo Records, had persuaded the label to record and release a live album of Big Star’s 1993 reunion performance, titled Columbia after the site of the outdoor show at the University of Missouri. For some perspective, read Scoppa’s Rolling Stone review of #1 Record on the mag’s site. And here’s “Thirteen,” the classic ballad from the same album. (3/18a)

NEAR TRUTHS:
BLUSH OF FAME
We'll drink to that. (10/31a)
MEET THE AGENTS: BATCH #4
That's all she wrote. (10/30a)
UPDATE: THIS TOP 20 IS WIDELY RED
Columbia, the gem of the album chart. (10/30a)
HOLLY GLEASON SNAGS SIX NATIONAL A&E JOURNO NOMS
Oops, she did it again. (10/30a)
TYLER IS HEADED TO THE TOP
Unconventional move by unconventional dude is paying off. (10/30a)
THE GRAMMY SHORT LIST
Who's already a lock?
COUNTRY'S NEWEST DISRUPTOR
Three chords and some truth you may not be ready for.
AI IS ALREADY EATING YOUR LUNCH
The kids can tell the difference... for now.
ALL THE WAY LIVE
The players, the tours, the enormous beers.
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