Only Keith Flint and Maxim of the Prodigy rivalled Jazz in his command of the stage at the helm of a superstar 90s dance act – but there was more to him than his ability to energise a crowd

Maxi Jazz, lead singer of Faithless, dies aged 66

Of all the artists who commanded the stage as dance music became big business in the 1990s, Maxi Jazz was in a class of his own. It wasn’t just that the Faithless frontman was an imposing vocalist: his sonorous tone and steady enunciation made that a given. While the group’s first two albums, Reverence and Sunday 8PM, delivered award nominations and a parade of Top 20 singles, it was on stage where Faithless minted their reputation as an elite-level act.

Born Maxwell Fraser in 1957, Maxi Jazz – as he had become known since stints on pirate radio in the mid-1980s – was nearly 40 years old by the time Faithless formed in 1995. The practising Buddhist’s air of pacific wisdom positioned him as a spiritual counter to the spangled masses who came to bear witness as the band’s popularity soared. The energy of an entire arena would flow through Fraser, this calm eye of a rave storm.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Domestic abusers ‘weaponised’ Covid in England and Wales, study finds

Police forces urged to stay alert to ‘Covid blaming’ as an excuse…

Non-fatal strangulation set to become criminal offence in UK

Perpetrators could face up to seven years in prison after sustained campaign…

UN global climate poll: ‘People’s voice is clear – they want action’

Biggest ever survey finds two-thirds of people think climate change is a…

Man jailed for life for murdering wife and dismembering body in Lincoln

Nicholas Metson, who paid a friend £50 to help dump Holly Bramley’s…