Chicago Sun-Times

Guitarist of U.K. punk band

- BY MARK KENNEDY

NEW YORK — Guitarist Andy Gill, who supplied the scratching, seething sound that fueled the highly influentia­l British punk band Gang of Four, died Saturday, according to a statement from the band. He was 64.

Mr. Gill died after a brief respirator­y illness. “His uncompromi­sing artistic vision and commitment to the cause meant that he was still listening to mixes for the upcoming record, whilst planning the next tour from his hospital bed,” the band said.

Mr. Gill, along with original bandmates Jon King, Hugo Burnham and Dave Allen, released in 1979 one of the most seminal albums of the punk era, “Entertainm­ent!” It was named by Rolling Stone magazine in 2003 as one of the 500 greatest albums ever.

Tributes were posted online from Gary Numan, who called Mr. Gill “a unique talent,” to Tom Morello, who called Mr. Gill “one of my principal influences” and hailed his “incendiary art and wry wit.”

Mr. Gill was also a respected record producer, notably working with the Red Hot Chili Peppers on their self-titled debut in 1984. Other bands he produced include The Jesus Lizard, the Stranglers and Killing Joke.

Mr. Gill’s jagged guitar playing was sharp and almost abrasive. Last year, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said Mr. Gill “virtually weaponized the instrument with his stabbing, scraping attack and feedback sorcery.”

The Gang of Four’s sound was a mix of rock, funk, reggae and R&B. It would greatly influence LCD Soundsyste­m, Bloc Party, the Futurehead­s and Franz Ferdinand. But Mr. Gill was not a fan of Coldplay, revealing in a 2008 interview that he found them “pompous, mawkish, and unbearably smug” and called the band the “sonic equivalent of wilted spinach.”

Born in Manchester, Gill studied art in Leeds where he met singer King. While Gang of Four never had a top 40 hit, their songs like “Natural’s Not in It” and “At Home He’s a Tourist” became cult classics.

Mr. Gill’s wife, Catherine Mayer, tweeted: “This pain is the price of extraordin­ary joy, almost three decades with the best man in the world.”

 ?? JASON DECROW/AP ?? Gang of Four guitarist Andy Gill (left) and singer Jon King in 2011.
JASON DECROW/AP Gang of Four guitarist Andy Gill (left) and singer Jon King in 2011.

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