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David Johansen, Famed New York Dolls Singer, Dies at 75

todayMarch 1, 2025 3

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David Johansen, who fronted the legendary 1970s proto-punk band New York Dolls and who also recorded under the pseudonym Buster Poindexter, died on Friday, February 28, his representative, Carla Parisi of Kid Logic Media, shared via email. The musician “died at home in New York City on Friday afternoon holding hands with his wife, Mara Hennessey, and daughter Leah, surrounded by music, flowers, and love,” according to a statement. Johansen was 75 years old.

The statement said that Johansen “died of natural causes after nearly a decade of illness,” but the musician had also recently revealed that he had been living with stage 4 cancer. At the time, his daughter, Leah Hennessey, launched a Sweet Relief fundraiser to help cover the costs of his care and medical treatment.

The New York Dolls released just one more studio album, 1974’s Too Much Too Soon, before they were dropped by their label, Mercury, for two records that did not sell well. Within the next year or two, the New York Dolls broke up for the first time.

Johansen shared his first solo album, a self-titled effort, in 1978, and he went on to release several more records in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Eventually, he adopted the persona Buster Poindexter. As Poindexter, he scored his first real hit, a cover of Arrow’s “Hot Hot Hot,” which reached No. 45 on the Billboard Hot 100.

In 2004, the former Smiths singer Morrissey helped Johansen reunite with his New York Dolls bandmates Sylvain Sylvain and Arthur Kane for shows in London. Kane died not long after the reunion, but Johansen, Sylvain, and others came together to record the New York Dolls’ 2006 comeback album, One Day It Will Please Us to Remember Even This. The reunited Dolls went on to make two more albums: the Todd Rundgren–produced Cause I Sez So and 2011’s Dancing Backward in High Heels.

Late in his life, Johansen was the subject of a documentary from directors Martin Scorses and David Tedeschi, Personality Crisis: One Night Only. “I’ve known David Johansen for decades, and his music has been a touchstone ever since I listened to the Dolls when I was making Mean Streets,” Scorsese said when he announced the film. “Then and now, David’s music captures the energy and excitement of New York City. I often see him perform, and over the years I’ve gotten to know the depth of his musical inspirations. After seeing his show last year at the Café Carlyle, I knew I had to film it because it was so extraordinary to see the evolution of his life and his musical talent in such an intimate setting. For me, the show captured the true emotional potential of a live musical experience.”


Go to Source:https://pitchfork.com/news/david-johansen-famed-new-york-dolls-singer-dies-at-75/

Author: Madison Bloom, Matthew Strauss

Written by: Madison Bloom,Matthew Strauss

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