OriginalTickets logo
Music

Walter Parazaider, Chicago Co-Founder and Saxophonist, Dies at 81

Walter Parazaider, the saxophonist who co-founded the band Chicago in his basement in 1967, has passed away at 81. He was an integral part of the band's sound until his 2018 retirement due to Alzheimer's.

·Jun 17, 2026·via Rolling Stone
Walter Parazaider, Chicago Co-Founder and Saxophonist, Dies at 81

Tribute

Chicago Saxophonist Walter Parazaider Dead at 81

The band formed in Parazaider’s basement in 1967, and he remained a pivotal part of their sound until he was forced to step aside in 2018 to battle Alzheimer’s

By Andy Greene

Andy Greene

- Chicago Saxophonist Walter Parazaider Dead at 81 - See Bruce Springsteen Perform ‘People Have the Power’ With Bono and Patti Smith - Holly Humberstone Unwinds on Her Tour Bus By Spinning Tom Petty, Van Morrison, and Big Thief

View all posts by Andy Greene

June 17, 2026

Walter Parazaider, a founding member of Chicago who played several wind instruments in the band, including sax, flute, and clarinet, died June 17 after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. He was 81. Rolling Stone has confirmed his death.

Parazaider’s long tenure in Chicago stretched from their earliest incarnation in 1967 until 2018, when he stepped off the road due to health issues. Along the way, he played thousands of concerts, appeared on nearly all of the group’s albums, and was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2016.

“He had put up a good fight with Alzheimer’s, and unfortunately it ended tonight,” his wife JacLynn told TMZ. “We are going to miss him.”

Chicago formed in Parazaider’s basement on Feb. 15, 1967, when the group played together for the first time after coming together at Chicago’s DePaul University. “We sat around my kitchen table and said, ‘Let’s make a band that’s the best in the world,'” Parazaider recalled to Classic Rock in 2015. “My idea was to make horns an integral part of a rock band. In that sense, we blazed the trail. We had lofty ideas and hopes. We were young and ignorant.”

After becoming a popular live band around Chicago — fueled by the guitar virtuosity of Terry Kath, the vocals of bassist Peter Cetera and keyboardist Robert Lamm, and the crisp horn blend of Parazaider, trumpet player Lee Loughnane, and trombonist James Pankow — they began touring nationally. “We played at the Whisky A Go Go in Los Angeles in 1968, and afterwards there was a tap on my shoulder,” Parazaider told Classic Rock . “Jimi Hendrix looked me straight in the eye and said: ‘The horns are one set of lungs. And your guitar player is better than I am.'”

Chicago signed with CBS Records and cut their self-titled debut LP in 1969. It was their first time in a studio, and they were terrified. “We were sort of in a circle,” Parazaider said in the 2016 documentary Now More Than Ever: The History of Chicago. “And for myself, personally, I think maybe Lee and Jimmy, we didn’t want to look at each other since we were afraid if we looked at one of the other guys, we’d make them make a mistake.”

Editor’s picks

The 250 Greatest Albums of the 21st Century So Far

The 100 Best TV Episodes of All Time

The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

100 Best Movies of the 21st Century

Once they shook off the nerves, Chicago cut a masterful debut packed with songs like “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?,” “Beginnings,” “Questions 67 and 68,” and a cover of the Spencer Davis Group’s “I’m a Man” that remain staples of their live shows. The album flew up the charts and earned the group a Best New Artist Grammy nomination. (They were known as the Chicago Transit Authority for their first album, but were forced to shorten it to Chicago before the second one due to legal pressure from the actual Chicago Transit Authority.)

Chicago were one of the most popular groups of the Seventies thanks to “Saturday in the Park,” “Feelin’ Stronger Every Day,” “Old Days,” and many other hits. In 1976, they hit Number One with the soft-rock ballad “If You Leave Me Now.” Some of their older fans didn’t love the new direction, even if it brought them a larger audience. “The song was Number One in every country in the world,” Loughnane told Rolling Stone earlier this year. “If you mentioned ‘Chicago’ in Europe or Australia or anywhere else in the world to people, they would say ‘Al Capone’ or ‘If You Leave Me Now.'”

Tragedy struck the band on Jan. 23, 1978, when Terry Kath accidentally killed himself while playing around with a gun he didn’t know was loaded. “Terry and I were teenage friends, and it was devastating for me,” Parazaider said in 2015. “When I heard the news on the phone, I almost went to my knees. It was like being hit with a sledgehammer. We thought, ‘Maybe this is the way the band should end.’ We had fan mail saying: ‘Please, don’t stop the band now.’ That really helped us. But I have to be honest — there are some things you never get over.”

Related Content

Oliver Tree, ‘Life Goes On’ Singer, Dead at 32

Bill Cody, Voice of the Grand Ole Opry, Dead at 67

James Blood Ulmer, Innovative Guitarist Who Fused the Avant-Garde to Blues, Dead at 86

Talay Riley, Songwriter for Dua Lipa, Britney Spears, H.E.R., Dead at 35

The group soldiered on by hiring guitarist Donnie Dacus to take Kath’s place. “It’s a new band,” Parazaider told Rolling Stone in December 1978. “That’s not a cold statement. We’ve gotten past probably the lowest point in our lives. The way I feel now and the way I felt in February is like night and day.”

The group struggled to find relevance in the aftermath of Kath’s death, largely thanks to shifting musical tastes. But things changed in 1981 when songwriter-producer David Foster came into their orbit, helping them craft the massive hits “Hard to Say I’m Sorry” and “You’re the Inspiration.”

But Foster worked mostly with Cetera and largely excluded the others from the creative process. “I was like a young rattlesnake, all the venom, all at once,” Foster recalled in the Chicago documentary. “I wanted to make a great record, nobody is going to get in my way, and it’s going to be my way. They really resented that.”

Trending Stories

Bruce Springsteen, U2, Stevie Wonder, More Stars to Perform at Obama Presidential Center’s Opening

_Originally reported by [Rolling Stone](https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/chicago-walter-parazaider-dead-1235579437/)._

Source Attribution

This story is summarized from coverage by Rolling Stone.

Read full story →

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

Loading comments…