James Chance Dies at 71

James Chance, the bandleader and singer-saxophonist of influential punk-funk groups including the Contortions and Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, died yesterday in New York after a long period of illness. His brother David Siegfried, organizer of a GoFundMe for the late artist, did not disclose a cause of death, but wrote that the family joined him in his final days to share “memories of his time in music, childhood and family.” James Chance was 71 years old.

Chance was born James Siegfried in Milwaukee, where he studied piano at the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music, confounding teachers by developing a style in thrall to Thelonious Monk and Albert Ayler. He moved to New York in the mid-1970s and, inspired by Alan Vega’s Suicide, formed James Chance and the Contortions. Alongside bands like Mars and DNA, they established the no wave movement, an abrasive counterpoint to the CBGB scene at a time when breakout bands like Talking Heads, Television, and Blondie were often away on tour. Chance was involved in the entire first side of the influential, Brian Eno–produced compilation No New York in 1978.

Chance’s output slowed in the 1980s, but a 2001 Contortions reunion prompted sporadic tours (and some financial disputes with ex-bandmates) as the band’s legend and influence grew. Upon the news of his death, artists as disparate as Otomo Yoshihide, Blondie’s Chris Stein, and Kid Congo Powers paid tribute, the last writing that he first saw the Contortions in 1978 at CBGB. “A new world opened up to me that day,” he said. “Earth shattering. Amazing style, both musical and sartorial.”

A virtual memorial will be held in due course, David Siegfried noted in the GoFundMe.

Correction: An earlier version of this article inaccurately stated that James Chance was 70 years old.

Source : Pitchfork