Guitarist John Sykes, who performed with the rock bands Whitesnake and Skinny Lizzy, has died at 65. He helped compose one of many defining energy ballads of the late-Nineteen Eighties hair-metal scene in “Is This Love,” which drove gross sales of Whitesnake’s self-titled 1987 LP to gross sales of greater than 8 million copies in the USA.
His loss of life was introduced in a press release on his web site, which stated he died “after a hard fought battle with cancer.” The assertion didn’t say when or the place he died.
Sykes joined Whitesnake in 1984 when the band’s frontman, former Deep Purple vocalist David Coverdale, requested him to exchange founding guitarist Micky Moody whereas the British band was on tour behind that 12 months’s “Slide It In.” That album, Whitesnake’s sixth studio LP, broke the group within the U.S., and Sykes went on to collaborate intently with Coverdale for “Whitesnake,” co-writing many of the album’s songs; the album peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 (behind Michael Jackson’s “Bad”) and spawned MTV staples “Here I Go Again” — whose music video starred Coverdale’s future spouse, mannequin and actor Tawny Kitaen, writhing atop two parked Jaguars — in addition to “Still of the Night” and the craving “Is This Love,” which hit No. 2 on the Scorching 100.
But these iconic movies don’t characteristic Sykes, as Coverdale had fired the guitarist earlier than the “Whitesnake” album was launched — a dismissal Sykes stated he came upon about from the band’s A&R rep.
“David said nothing to any of us about having decided to kick us out of the band,” Sykes advised Rock Sweet journal in 2017. “I was furious and wasn’t about to accept this. So I went down to the studio where David was still recording his vocals, prepared to confront him. Honest to God, he ran away, got in his car and hid from me!”
In 2023, Coverdale advised Steel Edge that “things went squirrely” between him and Sykes and that “no matter how incredible of an album that we made together, we were unable to connect as people.”
Sykes was born in Studying, England, in 1959 and began taking part in guitar as an adolescent. He carried out with the bands Streetfighter and Tygers of Pan Tang earlier than becoming a member of a latter-day model of Skinny Lizzy, which had scored a top-20 pop hit in 1976 with “The Boys Are Back in Town.” Sykes performed on 1983’s “Thunder and Lightning,” Skinny Lizzy’s remaining studio album earlier than founder Phil Lynott died in 1986.
After Whitesnake, Sykes fashioned the group Blue Homicide with drummer Carmine Appice of Vanilla Fudge, then launched a solo profession; he additionally toured with a Lynott-less incarnation of Skinny Lizzy.
Data on survivors wasn’t instantly accessible.