The group became part of the Juno Awards’ Canadian Music Hall of Fame in 1989. He was born Eric Garth Hudson in Windsor, ...
Garth Hudson, who played organ, accordion, saxophone, and more as a member of the Band—perhaps still the group that best ...
The Canadian virtuoso, known for his solo on “Chest Fever,” gave the group a “sound twice as big” and his mates music lessons.
Born on Aug. 2, 1937, in Windsor, Ontario, Eric Garth Hudson was the son of a musically inclined father, Fred Hudson, who was a fighter pilot in World War I before becoming a farm inspector ...
The last of the five members of the iconic American rock group, The Band, Garth Hudson’s death is the end of an era.
The group's official Instagram page dubbed Hudson "a musical genius and cornerstone of the group’s timeless sound." ...
Garth Hudson, the organist and multi-instrumentalist whose wizardry enhanced some of the best-known songs of 1960s and '70s rock group the Band including "Up on Cripple Creek," "Chest Fever" and ...
Garth Hudson, the last surviving founding member of the beloved ... "He died peacefully in his sleep, holding the hand of someone he loved." Born Eric Hudson in Windsor, Ontario, in 1937, the musician ...
Organist Eric “Garth” Hudson of rock group The Band, died on Tuesday, January 21, 2025, at age 87. He was the last surviving member of the original 1960s and ‘70s group. Hudson was also the only ...
Robbie Robertson, leader of The Band and film composer, dies at 80 Born Eric Garth Hudson in Windsor, Ontario on Aug. 2, 1937, music was a part of his life from the very beginning. Hudson joined a ...
He was born Eric Garth Hudson in Windsor, Ontario, on Aug. 2, 1937, and grew up in the northeastern city of London. His family was musical: His father played flute, drums, cornet and saxophone and ...