Terence Wilson, a founding member of UB40 who was known by fans of the pioneering reggae band as Astro, has died following a short illness. He was 64.
Wilson’s death was confirmed Saturday on the official Twitter page for his group, UB40 featuring Ali Campbell & Astro.
“We are absolutely devastated and completely heartbroken to have to tell you that our beloved Astro has today passed away after a very short illness,” the statement read. “The world will never be the same without him.”
The current, separate iteration of the band UB40, which Wilson left in 2013, also confirmed the singer’s death. “Our sincere condolences to his family,” the band tweeted.
UB40 formed in Birmingham, England in the late 1970s, when reggae was becoming an outlet for the country’s working class youth to express their feelings about issues including racism and poverty. UB40 took their name from the British unemployment benefits card, a form they replicated as the cover of their 1980 debut album Signing Off.
“I went through the same rigmarole as most black people in the late 70s,” Wilson told The Guardian in an interview in May, referencing the era’s stop-and-frisk “sus law,” which often unfairly targeted men of color. “It was a weekly occurrence. We found it harder to write love songs than militant lyrics, because it was a lot easier to write about stuff you had witnessed or read about. It seemed natural to us.”
The four time Grammy-nominated band topped the U.K. singles chart with the cover “Red Red Wine,” a crossover American favorite, as well as a cover of the Elvis Presley classic “(I Can’t Help) Falling In Love With You” and “I Got You Babe” featuring The Pretenders’ Chrissie Hynde.
In 2013 Wilson left UB40 and formed his own version of the band alongside former members Ali Campbell and Mickey Virtue.
“Since Astro rejoined my band, it’s been a renaissance for us,” Campbell said in a 2016 interview. “Me and Astro is enough to make the fans happy, they’re voting with their feet.”
Wilson and Campbell continued to release music and perform, and were planning a 2022 tour for their last album, Unprecedented, up until Wilson’s death.
Earlier this year, another founding member of UB40, the group’s saxophonist and songwriter Brian Travers, also died following a battle with cancer.
My Morning Jacket, Ringo Starr, Blondshell & 7 New Songs to Stream Right Now
Khruangbin to Bring ‘A LA SALA’ Tour to St. Augustine in April
Shannon and the Clams, Rahill, Levitation Room, Ghost Funk Orchestra to Headline JME Soundstage Series in 2025
Chicago Alt-Country Faves Wilco Return to St. Augustine with Indie-Folk Great Waxahatchee
The Tiny Desk Contest is Back for 2025! Here’s How to Enter
Local Darkwave Duo Limo Scene Set Their GPS for ‘80s Dancefloor Gloom with Latest Single, “Angelic Three”
Japanese Breakfast, Tom Misch, SPELLING and 6 New Songs to Stream Right Now
With “Immediate,” Local Indie Act Soft Glades Make a Gentle Introduction to Jacksonville Music Scene
Grammy-Winning Singer-Songwriter and Guitarist Billy Strings Returns to St. Augustine for Three Shows of ‘Highway Prayers’
JME Screening of the Algorithm-Directed Doc ‘ENO’ Offers Brian Eno Fans a Once-In-A-Lifetime Cinematic Event
JME Live Music Calendar
Want more live music? We got you…