NOTEWORTHY DEATHS

Studio drummer, Grammy Award winner

LONG BEACH, Calif. - Studio drummer Ricky Lawson, a collaborator with musicians including Michael Jackson, Eric Clapton, Phil Collins and Whitney Houston, died at a suburban Los Angeles hospital after a brain aneurysm. He was 59.

Lawson’s uncle, Paul Riserof Detroit, said Tuesday that Lawson was removed from life support 10 days after the aneurysm diagnosis and died about7 p.m. Monday.

Lawson was being treated at Long Beach Memorial Medical Center in Long Beach, Calif., about 25 miles south of Los Angeles.

The Detroit native learnedto play drums at age 16 and jumped into the music business even before graduating from Cooley High School, developing into one of the nation’s top studio musicians in the 1980s.

His work appears on Houston’s version of “I Will Always Love You.” He also performed with Al Jarreau, George Benson, Bette Midler, Quincy Jones and many others.

Lawson won a Grammy Award in 1986 for R&B instrumental performance for the song “And You Know That” by his group, Yellowjackets.

He became disoriented during a performance on Dec. 13 and was diagnosed with an aneurysm.

Drummer Questlove Jenkins of The Roots called Lawson “the master” on Twitter Dec. 18 in a message in which he said he was “praying for his recovery.”

Arkansas, Pages 14 on 12/26/2013

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