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Canadian singer, guitarist and songwriter (1966–2008) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norman Jeffrey Healey (March 25, 1966 – March 2, 2008)[1] was a Canadian blues, rock and jazz guitarist, singer and songwriter who attained popularity in the 1980s and 1990s. He reached No. 5 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart with "Angel Eyes" and reached the Top 10 in Canada with the songs "I Think I Love You Too Much" and "How Long Can a Man Be Strong".
Jeff Healey | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Norman Jeffrey Healey |
Born | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | March 25, 1966
Died | March 2, 2008 41) Toronto, Ontario, Canada | (aged
Genres | |
Occupations |
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Instruments |
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Years active | 1981–2008 |
Labels | Arista, BMG, Sony, Eagle, Sensation, Healey-O-Phonic, Stony Plain, Convexe Entertainment, Provogue, CBC, Arbor |
Spouse(s) | Krista Miller (m. 1992, div. 1998) Cristie Hall (m. 2004) |
Website | jeffhealey |
Born in Toronto, Ontario,[2] Healey was raised in the city's west end. He was adopted as an infant;[3] his adoptive father was a firefighter. When he was almost one year old, Healey lost his sight due to retinoblastoma, a rare cancer of the eyes.[2] His eyes had to be surgically removed, and he was given ocular prostheses.
Healey began playing guitar when he was three, developing his unique style of playing the instrument flat on his lap.[2] At nine years old, his musical talents were showcased in an interview on the TVOntario children's programme Cucumber. When he was 15, Healey formed the band Blue Direction,[4] a four-piece that primarily played bar-band cover tunes and featured bassist Jeremy Littler, drummer Graydon Chapman, and schoolmate Rob Quail on second guitar. The band played at clubs in Toronto,[2] including the Colonial Tavern.
Healey began hosting a jazz and blues show on radio station CIUT-FM, where he was known for playing from his massive collection of vintage 78 rpm gramophone records.[5]
Shortly thereafter he was introduced to bassist Joe Rockman (born January 1, 1957, Toronto) and drummer Tom Stephen (born February 2, 1955, New Brunswick – died February 20, 2023), with whom he formed a trio, the Jeff Healey Band. The band made their first public appearance at the Birds Nest, located upstairs at Chicago's Diner on Queen Street West in Toronto. They received a write-up in Toronto's NOW magazine, and soon were playing almost nightly in local clubs, such as Grossman's Tavern and the famed blues club Albert's Hall (where Jeff Healey was discovered by guitarists Stevie Ray Vaughan and Albert Collins).[2]
After being signed to Arista Records in 1988, the band released the album See the Light, which appeared on the RPM Top 100 chart in 1989.[6] It featured the hit single "Angel Eyes" and the song "Hideaway", which was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance. While the band was recording See the Light, they were also filming (and recording for the soundtrack of) the Patrick Swayze film Road House.[2] Healey had numerous acting scenes in the movie with Swayze, as his band was the house cover band for the bar featured in the movie.[2] In 1990, the band won the Juno Award for Canadian Entertainer of the Year. The albums Hell to Pay and Feel This gave Healey 10 charting singles in Canada between 1990 and 1994, including a cover of the Beatles' "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", which featured George Harrison and Jeff Lynne on backing vocals and acoustic guitar.[7]
By the release of the 2000 album Get Me Some, Healey began to concentrate on jazz.
He went on to release three CDs of music of traditional American jazz from the 1920s and 1930s. He had been sitting in with these types of bands around Toronto since the beginning of his music career. Though known primarily as a guitarist, Healey also played trumpet during live performances. His main jazz group for touring and recording was Jeff Healey's Jazz Wizards.
Healey was an avid record collector and amassed a collection of well over 30,000 78 rpm records. Starting in 1990 he hosted a radio program of very early jazz on CIUT at the University of Toronto with Colin Bray. Later he went national on CBC Radio's program entitled My Kind of Jazz, in which he played records from his vast vintage jazz collection. He moved the show two years later to Jazz FM – CJRT; as a part of ongoing celebrations for what would have been Healey's 50th birthday in 2016, the latter program began to air in repeats Wednesdays 9pm on jazz.fm.[8]
For many years, Healey toured throughout North America and Europe and performed at his club, "Healey's" on Bathurst Street in Toronto, where he played with his blues band on Thursday nights and also with his jazz group on Saturday afternoons. The club moved to a larger location at 56 Blue Jays Way and was rechristened "Jeff Healey's Roadhouse." Though he had lent his name to the club and often played there, Jeff Healey did not own or manage the bar. (The name came from the 1989 film, Road House, in which Healey appeared.) At the time of his death, he had been planning to perform a series of shows in the United Kingdom, Germany, and the Netherlands, with his other band, the Jeff Healey Blues Band (aka the "Healey's House Band") in April 2008.
Over the years, Healey toured and sat in with many well-known performers, including The Allman Brothers, Bonnie Raitt, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Buddy Guy, B. B. King, ZZ Top, Steve Lukather, Eric Clapton and many more. In 2006, Healey appeared on Deep Purple vocalist Ian Gillan's CD/DVD Gillan's Inn.
Healey discovered and helped develop the careers of other musical artists, including Alex Pangman, Terra Hazelton, Amanda Marshall,[9] Shannon Curfman, and Philip Sayce[10]
In early 2009, Healey's album Mess of Blues won in The 8th Annual Independent Music Awards for Best Blues Album.[11]
In 2009, Healey was inducted into the Terry Fox Hall of Fame.
In June 2011, Woodford Park in Toronto was renamed Jeff Healey Park in his honour.[12]
In 2014, Healey was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame. In September 2016, Jeff Healey was inducted into the Mississauga Music Walk of Fame.[13] In March 2016 the posthumous album Heal My Soul was released,[14] followed by the companion album Holding On in December of the same year.[15] Both records were compiled by Roger Costa from unreleased recordings.[16] The 12 track Heal My Soul featured six covers and a number of collaborations with Marti Frederiksen, Arnold Lanni and Stevie Salas.[17] The 15 track Holding On album contains ten live tracks recorded in 1999 at the Rockefeller Music Hall in Norway and five studio tracks.[18]
Healey married Krista Miller in 1992; they had a daughter and were divorced in 1998. He married Cristie Hall in 2004 and had a son with her.[19][20]
On January 11, 2007, Healey underwent surgery to remove metastatic cancer tissue from both lungs. In the previous 18 months, he had two sarcomas removed from his legs.[21] On March 2, 2008, Healey died of sarcoma in his home town of Toronto at the age of 41.[19][22] He was buried at Park Lawn Cemetery, in Etobicoke, Ontario. Healey's death came a month before the release of Mess of Blues, which was his first rock/blues album in eight years.[23]
Year | Album | Label and Catalog Number | CAN | AUS [24] |
GER | UK [25] |
US [26] |
Certification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | See the Light | Arista ARCD-8553 | 25 | 33 | 33 | 58 | 22 | |
1990 | Hell to Pay | Arista ARCD-8632 | 5 | 20 | 17 | 18 | 27 |
|
1992 | Feel This | Arista 07822-18706-2 | 27 | 37 | 83 | 72 | 174 |
|
1995 | Cover to Cover | Arista 07822-18770-2 | 44 | 80 | – | 50 | – |
|
2000 | Get Me Some | Eagle ER-202042 | – | – | 54 | 135 | – |
Year | Album | Label and Catalog Number | US | UK |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | Among Friends | Stony Plain B000I2KPO6 | – | – |
2004 | Adventures in Jazzland | Stony Plain B000I2KPOG | – | – |
2006 | It's Tight Like That | Stony Plain B000ETRIZ2 | – | – |
2008 | Mess of Blues | Stony Plain B0016MX3F0 | – | 182 |
2009 | Songs From The Road | Stony Plain B002F040F4 | – | – |
2010 | Last Call | Stony Plain B0036WL32S | – | – |
Year | Single | Peak chart positions | Album | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CAN | AUS [24] |
UK [25] |
US | US Rock | |||||||||||||
1986 | "Adrianna / See the Light" | — | — | — | — | — | single only | ||||||||||
1988 | "Confidence Man" | 36 [41] |
84 | 76 | — | 11 | See the Light | ||||||||||
1989 | "Angel Eyes" | 16 | 115 | 86 | 5 | 24 | |||||||||||
"See the Light" | — | — | — | — | 33 | ||||||||||||
"Raising Heaven / Hoochie Coochie Man" (by Patrick Swayze / The Jeff Healey Band) | — | — | — | — | 29 | Road House Soundtrack | |||||||||||
"When the Night Comes Falling From the Sky" | — | — | 99 | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Roadhouse" | — | 146 | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
1990 | "I Think I Love You Too Much" | 5 | — | 98 | — | 5 | Hell to Pay | ||||||||||
"While My Guitar Gently Weeps" | 27 | 127 | 85 | — | 7 | ||||||||||||
"Full Circle" | 72 | — | — | — | 16 | ||||||||||||
1991 | "How Long Can a Man Be Strong" | 8 | — | — | — | 34 | |||||||||||
"How Much" | 32 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
1992 | "Cruel Little Number" | 17 | — | — | — | 2 | Feel This | ||||||||||
1993 | "Heart of an Angel" | 52 | — | — | — | 20 | |||||||||||
"Lost in Your Eyes" | 5 | — | — | 91 | — | ||||||||||||
"Leave the Light On" | 60 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
1994 | "You're Coming Home" | 40 | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||
1995 | "I Got a Line on You" | 34 | — | — | — | — | Cover To Cover | ||||||||||
"Angel" | 33 | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"Stuck in the Middle with You" | 33 | 96 | 79 | — | 39 | ||||||||||||
2000 | "My Life Story" | — | — | — | — | — | Get Me Some | ||||||||||
"I Tried" | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
"—" denotes single that did not chart or was not released. |
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