Legendary “Dayton funk” artist dies

Rod Temperton wrote Heatwave's two biggest hits, played keyboard
Photo of the band Heatwave from Dayton Daily News archives

Photo of the band Heatwave from Dayton Daily News archives

The man behind one of the biggest songs in "Dayton funk" history has died.

British-born musician and songwriter Rod Temperton died last week of cancer in London, the Associated Press announced.

He was 66.

In this March 29, 2012 file photo, songwriter Rod Temperton and his wife Kathy attending a Teenage Cancer Trust concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London. Songwriter Rod Temperton has died of cancer in London. He was 66. His music publisher said Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2016 in a statement that the man who wrote Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” and other hits had died last week. It did not say exactly when. (Yui Mok/PA via AP, File)

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Temperton was working in an English frozen fish factory in the mid-1970s when he started his career in the funk band Heatwave as its keyboardist.

Temperton wrote the band's two biggest hits "Boogie Nights" and the ballad "Always and Forever."

The band's lineup included Dayton brothers Keith Wilder and the late Johnnie Wilder Jr., the band's lead singer.

Johnnie Wilder Jr. died at his home in Clayton in 2006 following a car accident. He was 56.

>> RELATED: 8 Dayton acts you should give a funk about

Temperton's work with Heatwave attracted the attention of Motown owner Quincy Jones. Temperton wrote some of Michael Jackson's biggest hits including "Thriller," "Off the Wall," "Rock with You."

He collaborated with Aretha FranklinHerbie Hancock, Anita Baker.

Temperton was nominated for an Oscar as a co-writer of “Miss Celie’s Blues (Sister),” from the soundtrack of “The Color Purple.”

A Heatwave jacket is on display at the Funk Music Hall of Fame and Exhibition Center inside of the Dayton Metro Library’s Northwest Branch at 2410 Philadelphia Drive.

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Artifacts from Heatwave are on display at the Funk Music Hall of Fame and Exhibition Center inside of the Dayton Metro Library’s Northwest Branch at 2410 Philadelphia Drive.

>> RELATED: Is Dayton letting funk music die?

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