His family announced on his official website that he unexpectedly died on 6 March
following complications during routine surgery.
The Nottingham-born musician rose to fame after appearing at the Woodstock
festival in 1969.
The band, who had eight Top 40 albums in the UK, had their biggest hit in
1971 with I'd Love To Change the World.
"We have lost a wonderful and much loved father and companion, the world has
lost a truly great and gifted musician," said the statement from his wife and
daughters.
Lee worked with The Beatles' George Harrison, Steve Winwood, Ronnie Wood and
Mick Fleetwood on his first solo album, On the Road to Freedom, in 1973.
He released his 14th record, Still on the Road to Freedom, in August last
year.
He was due to play a concert at Olympia Hall in Paris on 7 April with blues
guitarist Johnny Winter.
Woodstock
In an interview with Guitar
World he said he still picked up a guitar "pretty much every day".
The Woodstock Festival, held outside New York in August 1969, featured
legendary performances from Jimi Hendrix and The Who.
Lee's 11-minute rendition of, I'm Going Home, was immortalised in the 1970
documentary of the event.
"I've still got the original Woodstock 335, but sadly I don't use it these
days as it has become too valuable," he said in 2012.
Born in Nottingham, Lee began playing guitar age 13 and formed the core of
the band Ten Years After by 15.
The band won their first recording contract in 1967 and travelled to America
a year later due to success on underground radio stations.
Ten Years After toured the US 28 times over a seven-year period.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario