Saturday, July 17, 2021

Robby Steinhardt obit

Kansas singer, violinist Robby Steinhardt has died at 71

 

He was not on the list.


Robby Steinhardt, the co-lead vocalist of Kansas whose violin playing helped give the band its distinctive sound, died Saturday from a combination of acute pancreatitis and sceptic shock, his wife, Cindy Steinhardt, said Monday. He was 71. Robby Steinhardt had been in a Tampa hospital since May 13, and he suffered a second, fatal sepsis infection July 17, a day before he was scheduled to be transferred to a rehab center, his wife said in a social media post.

"We are beyond devastated as our lives were about to start a new adventure," Cindy Steinhardt wrote. "Robby just recorded his first solo album," and with "a tour to start in August, Robby was so looking forward to being back on stage doing what he loved." The band Kansas also released a statement saying band members, "past and present, wish to express our deepest sorrow over the death of our bandmate and friend, Robby Steinhardt. Robby will always be in our souls, in our minds, and in our music. ... We love him and will miss him always."

Steinhardt was born in Chicago in 1950 but grew in Lawrence, Kansas, Variety reports. He joked the Topeka progressive rock band White Clover in 1972, and the band soon became Kansas. Steinhardt shared lead and backup vocal duties with Steve Walsh, and the other core band members were drummer Phil Ehart, guitarists Rich Williams and Kerry Livgren, and bassist Dave Hope. The band hit mainstream success with their 1976 Leftoverture and its single "Carry on Wayward Son." Their biggest hit, "Dust in the Wind," was from their follow-up 1977 album, Point of Know Return. Steinhardt played violin and sang harmony.

Steinhardt left Kansas in 1982, then rejoined the band from the late 1990s until 2006. He also played in the group Steinhardt Moon and Stormbringer.

He and Steve Walsh were the only original members of the band who are not from Topeka.

Steinhardt's violin sound, and its interplay with the guitar and keyboards, helped define the Kansas sound. His lead vocals provided a contrast to the high tenor of singer Steve Walsh. The two often sang in harmony, with Steinhardt taking the lower voice. He has said that unless he has a writing credit on a song—his credits include about a half dozen songs—the violin (and occasional viola) part was written out for him, usually by Kerry Livgren.

Steinhardt joined a re-formed White Clover in 1972, with the group adopting the Kansas name before their first album in 1974. He was with the group through their most successful period. In 1983, he did not show up to record the next Kansas album. His departure from the band after the Vinyl Confessions tour in 1982 was for personal reasons.

Subsequently, he fronted his own band, Steinhardt-Moon and was a member of the Stormbringer Band from 1990 to 1996, recording two CDs with the group during his membership. He also contributed to a Jethro Tull tribute album, To Cry You a Song: A Collection of Tull Tales on Magna Carta Records.

 

 

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