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Bill Fay, Cult Folk Musician, Dies at 81

"Bill was a gentle man and a gentleman, wise beyond our times," his label wrote.

Bill Fay, the British cult folk singer-songwriter, has passed away at the age of 81.

On Saturday (Feb. 23), Fay’s label Dead Oceans confirmed his death in a statement on Instagram, noting that the musician “peacefully” passed away that morning in London. A cause of death was not specified, but Fay had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease.


“Bill was a gentle man and a gentleman, wise beyond our times,” Dead Oceans wrote in a statement. “He was a private person with the biggest of hearts, who wrote immensely moving, meaningful songs that will continue to find people for years to come.”

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Born in North London in 1943, Fay studied electronics at a university in Wales, where he began honing his songwriting skills on piano and harmonium. His early recordings caught the attention of former Van Morrison drummer Terry Noon, who helped him sign to the Decca Records subsidiary Dream.

Fay released two albums with the label: his self-titled debut in 1970 and Time of the Last Persecution in 1971. The latter album was a commercial failure, and he was dropped by the label. Fay would not release any new music for decades afterward.

“I didn’t leave the music business — the music business left me,” Fay told The Guardian in February 2024. “It wasn’t difficult, because I still had the music … and you find the songs. And then you find another. That’s good enough for me.”

After leaving the music industry, Fay worked as a groundskeeper, fruit picker and factory worker, among other jobs, all while continuing to make music. In 1998, a small British label reissued his first two albums, leading to renewed interest in his work. Producer Jim O’Rourke soon discovered Fay’s music and played it for Jeff Tweedy during the recording sessions for Wilco’s 2002 album, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. Tweedy was so taken with Fay’s music that he incorporated a cover of “Be Not So Fearful” into Wilco’s live shows, even convincing Fay to join the band on stage in 2007 and 2010.

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“There’s a simplicity and an elegance to it,” Tweedy told The Guardian last year. “You immediately recognize this is something uncut by ambition and fashion; it’s just somebody humbly adding their voice to contribute some beauty in, and maybe make peace with, the world.”

O’Rourke also introduced Fay’s music to Current 93’s David Tibet, who helped release the 2005 compilation Tomorrow, Tomorrow & Tomorrow, which featured recordings from 1978 to 1981.

In the years that followed, producer Joshua Henry discovered a copy of Time of the Last Persecution in his father’s record collection and eventually reached out to Fay. This connection led to Fay signing with Dead Oceans, where he released three new albums: Life Is People (2012), Who Is the Sender? (2015), and Countless Branches (2020).

Dead Oceans stated that Fay had been working on new music just a month before his death.

“Only a month before his passing, Bill was busy working on a new album,” the label wrote. “Our hope is to find a way to finish and release it, but for now, we remember Bill’s legacy as the “man in the corner of the room at the piano”, who quietly wrote heartfelt songs that touched and connected with people around the world.”

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See Dead Ocean’s announcement of Fay’s passing on Instagram here.

This article was first published by Billboard U.S.

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