Smiths’ bass guitarist Andy Rourke, 59, dies

Stolis Professor of The Party Andrew W.K., left, Taye Diggs, center, and The Smith's Andy Rourke, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominee, celebrate 35 years of nightlife at The Pyramid Club on Avenue A as part of The Scene By Stoli Project, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2014, in New York. 
(Photo by Diane Bondareff/Invision for Stoli Vodka/AP Images)
Stolis Professor of The Party Andrew W.K., left, Taye Diggs, center, and The Smith's Andy Rourke, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominee, celebrate 35 years of nightlife at The Pyramid Club on Avenue A as part of The Scene By Stoli Project, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2014, in New York. (Photo by Diane Bondareff/Invision for Stoli Vodka/AP Images)

LONDON -- Andy Rourke, bass guitarist of The Smiths, one of the most influential British bands of the 1980s, has died after a lengthy illness with pancreatic cancer, former bandmate Johnny Marr said Friday. He was 59.

In a lengthy post on Instagram, guitarist and songwriter Marr paid tribute to Rourke, whom he met when they were schoolboys in 1975.

"Throughout our teens we played in various bands around south Manchester before making our reputations with The Smiths from 1982 to 1987, and it was on those Smiths records that Andy reinvented what it is to be a bass guitar player," Marr said.

During their short time together as a four-piece band, The Smiths deliberately stayed away from the mainstream of popular music, garnering a cult following on the independent music scene.

Though much of the attention focused on the songwriting partnership of Marr and frontman Steven Patrick Morrissey, better known as Morrissey, the sound of The Smiths owed much to Rourke's bass and his rhythm section partner, drummer Mike Joyce.

As their popularity swelled, the band released some of the most enduring British music of the 1980s, including "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now" and "Girlfriend In A Coma."

The Smiths garnered a reputation for being depressing, but their music was darkly humorous and accompanied by stirring and uplifting guitars. Their albums, including "The Queen is Dead" and "Meat is Murder," remain a staple of many music fans and are at the forefront of the revival of vinyl records.

"I was present at every one of Andy's bass takes on every Smiths session," Marr said. "Sometimes I was there as the producer and sometimes just as his proud mate and cheerleader. Watching him play those dazzling basslines was an absolute privilege and genuinely something to behold."

Marr said he and Rourke maintained their friendship in the years after the band split up, recalling that Rourke played in his band at Madison Square Garden as recently as September 2022.

"It was a special moment that we shared with my family and his wife and soul mate Francesca," Marr said.

After The Smiths, Rourke played alongside The Pretenders and Sinead O'Connor, as well as with the supergroup Freebass, which included Gary Mounfield from the Stone Roses and Peter Hook from New Order.

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