Grammy-winning saxophonist David Sanborn, renowned for his soaring solos featured in compositions by David Bowie and Bruce Springsteen, has passed away at the age of 78.
David Sanborn’s impact on music, spanning multiple genres, is immense. His collaborations with iconic artists like David Bowie and Bruce Springsteen left an indelible mark on the industry. His legacy will continue to inspire musicians for generations to come.
“Real musicians don’t have any time to spend thinking about limited categories,” he once told an interviewer.
Sanborn leaves behind a rich legacy, his body of work deeply embedded in popular culture, often unnoticed by casual observers.
“Anyone with a record collection more than a foot wide probably owns a piece of David Sanborn’s unmistakable sound but doesn’t know it,” a source said in 1991, when music collectors mostly still kept vinyl.
One of Sanborn’s most memorable contributions is the iconic opening riff of Bowie’s “Young Americans,” featuring a searing solo that infused the five-decade-old track with a timeless freshness.
Born in Tampa, Florida, in 1945 to a father serving in the US Air Force, Sanborn spent his formative years in Missouri.
At the age of three, he contracted polio, which affected the right side of his body, leaving his arm underdeveloped.
Introduced to the saxophone at 11, upon a doctor’s recommendation to improve his lung capacity, Sanborn embraced the instrument wholeheartedly, as reported.
Despite a prostate cancer diagnosis in 2018, Sanborn persisted in performing. His Facebook page statement confirmed his commitment, highlighting scheduled concerts extending into the following year.
“David Sanborn was a seminal figure in contemporary pop and jazz music,” it added.
“It has been said that he ‘put the saxophone back into Rock ‘n’ Roll.'”