The musician behind one of the most recognisable saxophone
solos – on Gerry Rafferty’s hit Baker Street – has died aged 60.
Raphael Ravenscroft, who found fame almost overnight
following the release of the 1978 track, went on to work with music icons
including Pink Floyd, Abba and Marvin Gaye. More recently he worked as a
session musician for pop artists Daft Punk and Duffy.
He died following a suspected heart attack early on Sunday.
Ravenscroft is reported to have been paid £27 for the Baker
Street session in the form of a cheque that bounced. The hit reached No 3 in
the UK charts and No 2 in the US, and Rafferty was said to have earned £80,000
a year from royalties.
In a radio interview in 2011, Ravenscroft said hearing the
song annoyed him. “I’m irritated because it’s out of tune. Yeah, it’s flat. By
enough of a degree that it irritates me at best.”
He had previously appeared on one disco album by Maxine
Nightingale, called Right Back Where We Started From, in 1976, as an arranger
but emerged as one of pop rock’s most prominent sax players.
In 1990 Ravenscroft, a former tutor of music at York
College, published a successful instruction book, The Complete Saxophone
Player.
In 2011, he recorded a tribute for Rafferty’s funeral,
called Forgiveness, which combined his saxophone playing with the voices of Grammy-nominated
choir Tenebrae.
This summer, Ravenscroft, of Exeter, Devon, organised a
charity gala concert in memory of a local schoolgirl who died after falling
from a wall in May this year.
Source-The Guardian UK
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