Tommy DeCarlo 
Music

Tommy DeCarlo, who became longtime singer of Boston after a Myspace tribute, dies at 60

The musician toured with Boston for nearly 20 years and sang on their 2013 album, Life, Love and Hope

The Associated Press

Tommy DeCarlo, who became the lead singer of classic rockers Boston for nearly 20 years based on a Myspace tribute to the band’s original singer, has died.

Tommy DeCarlo passes away at 60

Tommy’s children, Annie, Talia and Tommy Jr., said in posts on his Facebook and Instagram pages that their father, who had been struggling for months with brain cancer, died Monday. They said, “He fought with incredible strength and courage right up until the very end.” He was 60.

Brad Delp, the original singer of the band that was founded in 1975 and had hits including More Than a Feeling and Peace of Mind, died in 2007.

Tommy DeCarlo, lead singer of the group Boston, right, performs at the Boston Strong Concert: An Evening of Support and Celebration at the TD Garden

Tommy, then a 43-year-old working at a Home Depot in North Carolina, wrote, sang and recorded a tribute song to Brad. He posted that song along with a few Boston covers to his Myspace page and sent the link to the band.

Tommy initially got a polite rejection, according to Rolling Stone. But founding guitarist and songwriter Tom Scholz, struck by his voice's resemblance to Brad, invited DeCarlo to perform at a tribute concert for the late singer. Scholz then asked him to join the band.

“It wasn’t like I was trying to sing like Brad,” Tommy said in a bio on the band's website, “it was just that I loved to sing along with him.”

Tommy toured with Boston for nearly 20 years and sang on their 2013 album, Life, Love and Hope.

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