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Warren Zevon dies

ADVERTISEMENTSinger-songwriter Warren Zevon dies

Artist best known for 'Werewolves of London' died at 56 of cancer

02:07 AM CDT on Monday, September 8, 2003

Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES – Warren Zevon, a restless, sardonic bard who embodied the dark edge and excess of the famed singer-songwriter scene in 1970s Southern California, died after a battle with lung cancer. He was
56.

Mr. Zevon died Sunday afternoon at his home in Los Angeles, according to his manager, Irving Azoff, who said that the singer had been "very upbeat" in the last week because of the success of his new album and the recent birth of twin grandchildren.

While casual pop fans might recognize only his 1978 horror-show hit "Werewolves of London," Mr. Zevon for years enjoyed a cult following and the acclaim of his peers.

In a macabre songbook that includes "Excitable Boy," "Lawyers, Guns and Money" and "Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner," Mr. Zevon presented a world of the undead and the unethical on the rampage in a mercenary world.

The singer, a longtime smoker, learned in August 2002 that he was suffering from inoperable lung cancer.

Mr. Zevon spent much of his time during his illness doting on family and working in a home studio on a new album, The Wind .

The tracks also include some wry, unsentimental songs, in Mr. Zevon's familiar mode, and a version of the Bob Dylan classic "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," a selection that speaks to Mr. Zevon's candor and sense of grim theater. Mr. Dylan has recently paid tribute
to Mr. Zevon by singing several of his songs, including
"Accidentally Like a Martyr," in his concert sets. That same month, David Letterman devoted an entire episode on his late night CBS show to his old friend, an unprecedented time commitment by the long-running program.

Warren William Zevon was born Jan. 24, 1947, in Chicago and spent much of his youth shuttling between different cities in California, among them Los Angeles and San Francisco.

The classically trained young pianist quit high school and traveled from Los Angeles to New York to become a folk singer. That dream fizzled and Mr. Zevon bounced around the country, eventually returning to Southern California by the late 1960s. He made a living composing commercial jingles and playing on recording sessions. He also wrote some songs for the Turtles ("Like the Seasons" and "Outside Chance"), and by the early 1970s was a keyboard player and music director for the Everly Brothers.

In 1969, he had put out his first album, Wanted: Dead or Alive , on One Way Records, but it was largely ignored. Jackson Browne, Mr. Zevon's close friend, had championed his cause to music mogul David Geffen and the result would be Warren Zevon , a 1976 release from Asylum Records that would make the singer a darling of the critics. Mr. Browne produced the album, which included "Poor, Poor Pitiful Me," a major hit a year later for Linda Ronstadt.

He did have one song cut through in a big way – "Werewolves of London" from 1978 became an ominous novelty with its lyrics about a werewolf who enjoyed socializing but also mutilated little old ladies.

By the early 1980s, Mr. Zevon's notoriously wild ways had wrecked much of his personal life, and he went into a rehab program, which he would later memorably mock in "Detox Mansion."

His 1982 album, The Envoy , was a product of his cleaner living and was hailed as a return to his early form. Sentimental Hygiene from 1987 and the 1991 collection Mr. Bad Example again won him effusive reviews. Still, major commercial success eluded him. By last year, after learning of his health issues, he was sanguine about his flirtations with major stardom.

"It was a little more interesting this way, maybe," he said. "Maybe more aggravating, too. At least I've had one foot in a very normal kind of life."

Re: Warren Zevon dies

Rest in Peace.

bO²gie

... der ein Millionär wäre, wenn er für jedesmal, wenn er bei Werewolves of London da Ahoooooooooo mitgeheult hat, einen Cent bekommen hätte ...

I bought a first class ticket on Malaysian Air
Landed in Sri Lanka none the worse for wear
I'm thinking of retiring from all my dirty deals
See you in the next life, wake me up for meals

[Warren Zevon | Mr. Bad Example]