Who sang All Star? Learn all there is to know as former Smash Mouth lead singer Steve Harwell recently passed away after battling alcoholism.
Steve Harwell, the former lead singer of US pop-rock band Smash Mouth, has died aged 56. His death was announced by his manager Robert Hayes, who said in a statement to Rolling Stone that Harwell “passed peacefully and comfortably” with family and friends by his side. “Steve’s iconic voice is one of the most recognisable voices from his generation,” Hayes added. “He loved the fans and loved to perform… Steve lived a 100 percent full-throttle life. Burning brightly across the universe before burning out.”
Hayes did not specify the cause of death, but he told TMZ earlier this week that the singer had been suffering from liver failure.
Harwell had faced numerous other health issues in recent years, since a 2013 diagnosis of heart disease cardiomyopathy and the neurological disorder, acute Wernicke encephalopathy, which affected his speech and memory. He also suffered from alcoholism.
When did Steve Harwell form Smash Mouth?
Born in California in 1967, Harwell formed Smash Mouth in 1994 when his manager and longtime friend Kevin Coleman introduced him to two other musicians in San Jose.
In 1996, the four men experienced a minor breakout when their song Nervous in the Alley was played by a local radio station while the band was still unsigned. Record labels soon showed interest and the group signed with Interscope before releasing their debut album Fush Yu Mang in 1997. With a distinctive sound that blended ska, lounge music, psych-pop and more, topped with Harwell’s hip-hop influenced vocals, the single Walkin’ on the Sun became their first major hit, reaching No 1 on the Billboard modern rock charts and the UK Top 20.
Their second album, 1999’s Astro L”unge’ contained Smash Mouth’s biggest single All Star, which became a huge hit internationally and remains the group’s only appearance in the Top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100. “When Astro Lounge came, we had enough time under our belt touring, getting better,” Harwell told Rolling Stone in 2019. “I was becoming a better singer and our sound started developing.” In 2001, All Star featured in the opening credits of Shrek – a usage that continued to spawn memes and parodies throughout the following two decades, making the band an internet mainstay. The song now has close to a billion streams on Spotify. However, tragedy would soon strike his career.
What tragedy struck Steve Harwell at the peak of his career?
Harwell suffered tragedy at the height of the band’s fame in 2001, when his son Presley died from leukemia aged six months, and he postponed the release of their third, self-titled album. The band released four further albums, most recently Magic in 2012. In 2006, Harwell appeared on the VH1 reality show The Surreal Life, where he lived and performed challenges alongside a group of other celebrities.
Later in his career, he became a more controversial figure. In 2015, Harwell made headlines for yelling profanities at a crowd in Colorado; he later apologised for the incident. In August 2020, the band was widely criticised for playing a packed gig in South Dakota during the pandemic, during which Harwell was reported as saying: “F*** that COVID s***!” The concert was later described as a super-spreader event.
In 2021, Harwell announced his retirement days after a concert in upstate New York during which he appeared to threaten audience members and perform a Nazi salute. At the time, a source close to the band revealed that Harwell had been dealing with multiple health conditions. “I’ve tried so hard to power through my physical and mental health issues, and to play in front of you one last time,” Harwell wrote in a statement in 2021, “but I just wasn’t able to.”
What was Steve Harwell’s cause of death?
It has also been reported that Harwell had been suffering from liver failure following a life-long battle with alcohol abuse and addiction. Liver failure, the loss of liver function, is rare and kills approximately 50,000 adults in the US per year.
An estimated 5.5million are thought to have cirrhosis, or severe scarring of the liver often caused by alcoholism, which can lead to liver failure. The liver is a critical organ in the body responsible for a myriad of functions that support metabolism, immunity, digestion, detoxification and vitamin storage. It also makes proteins to help blood clot and carry oxygen and manufactures bile for digestion.
Acute liver failure can be caused by a sudden trigger that overloads an already damaged liver. Regularly drinking a lot of alcohol eventually causes the liver to start replacing healthy cells with scar tissue — impairing the organ’s ability to function.
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