Image Credit: Chilton: Jay Blakesberg / Retna Ltd., Stephens: Ch Drummer Jody Stephens should be preparing to play a show with Big Star this Saturday at the SXSW music festival. Instead, he is mourning his friend and bandmate Alex Chilton, who died yesterday. “It took me completely by surprise,” Stephens said this afternoon, over the phone from Austin, Texas. “I saw Alex in November and he looked great. Good shape. Great spirit. Alex was doing wonderfully. Yesterday, I get a call from his wife and, you know, he’s passed away. I spent the rest of the day and this morning just feeling numb. It’s a shocker. You really have to bare yourself emotionally to be in a band. And when you do that, it opens up stronger bonds. There’s a profound relationship.”
The drummer said he was finding at least a measure of solace in the fact that so many people at SXSW have been expressing their love for Big Star’s music in the wake of Chilton’s unexpected death. “There has been this outpouring,” he revealed. “I just spoke to somebody and he said, ‘I’ve seen three different bands already today that have done Big Star songs.’ It means a lot.”
Stephens also confirmed that Saturday’s Big Star show will go ahead in some form or other. “We still plan to play but we will turn it into a musical way of honoring Alex,” he said. “And that, to me. is the important thing. I had this great sibling feel with Alex. It’s not like we talked a lot, but we had this wonderful connection onstage.”
More on Alex Chilton:
Alex Chilton: The House of Representatives pays tribute
Alex Chilton, R.I.P.: Paul Westerberg, Patterson Hood, and Craig Finn share their thoughts
Alex Chilton: SXSW mourns Big Star singer
Alex Chilton: An appreciation
Alex Chilton dies at 59
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I am utterly devestated. My suspicions were aroused at the Thee Silver Mt Zion Memorial Orchestra gig I was at tonight in The Button Factory, Dublin, Ireland, when they dedicated their encore to him. Then the DJ played ‘Holocaust’. What can I say? Big Star were perhaps the most perfect group ever. His solo career was always a gas. Who cares how many records he sold? His work was loved beyond measure. As he said himself: “My songs sound like hits to me.” Me too, Alex, me too! RIP