Guitarist known as J. Geils found dead in Massachusetts home

Authored by wcvb.com and submitted by ImpulsiveOgre
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Guitarist known as J. Geils found dead in Massachusetts home

5 Investigates has learned John Warren Geils Jr., the artist known professionally as J. Geils and part of the rock group The J. Geils Band, was found dead in his Groton, Massachusetts home.

The 71-year-old was found unresponsive by police around 4 p.m. Tuesday after they responded to his home for a well-being check. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Foul play is not suspected at this time.

Geils and the band are best known for their album, "Freeze Frame" and the song "Centerfold," which hit No. 1 for six weeks.

Geils formed the band during his time at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, where he studied mechanical engineering.

At Worcester, he formed J. Geils Blues Band with Danny Klein, Magic Dick Salwitz, Stephen Jo Bladd, and Peter Wolf, with Seth Justman becoming the last member before the band released its debut album in 1970.

The J. Geils Band was influenced by soul music and rhythm and blues, but it moved toward pop and rock by the time the album "Love Stinks" came out in 1980.

After 11 albums, the band's 12th album, "Freeze Frame," hit No. 1 on the Billboard charts for four weeks in 1981 and remained on the chart for 70 weeks. The title track "Freeze Frame" made it to No. 4.

While on tour, opening acts for the band included the Eagles, Billy Joel, ZZ Top and U2.

The band broke up a few years later.

Geils has called Groton his home for 35 years.

Wolf wrote a short message on Facebook about his former bandmate, "Thinking of all the times we kicked it high and rocked down the house! R.I.P Jay Geils."

WCVB's Chronicle profiled Peter Wolf several months ago. Watch below:

gibbonfrost on April 12nd, 2017 at 03:58 UTC »

Polnareff finally got his revenge.

crawlingkingsnake6 on April 12nd, 2017 at 00:00 UTC »

Woah, he lived on my street for a while. Even played at our local Fourth of July celebration

RIP J, hope you find your way down the line

deville66 on April 11st, 2017 at 23:46 UTC »

The J. Geils Band were one of the greatest bands of the 70's. Their live shows were the stuff of legend. Just listen to Full House Live and Blow Your Face Out. He will be missed. RIP.