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Tony Bennett, last of the classic American crooners, dead at 96

  • The singer of hits like I Left My Heart in San Francisco and Strangers in Paradise continued to win over audiences across a seven-decade career
  • At age 88, Bennett became the oldest person ever to reach No 1 on the US album chart through a collection of duets with Lady Gaga

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Tony Bennett performs at Radio City Music Hall in New York in October 2013. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Tony Bennett, the last in a generation of classic American crooners whose ceaselessly cheery spirit bridged generations to make him a hitmaker across seven decades, died Friday in New York. He was 96.

Raised in an era when big bands defined US pop music, Bennett achieved an improbable second act when he started winning over young audiences in the 1990s – not by reinventing himself but by showing his sheer joy in belting out the standards.

At age 88, Bennett in 2014 became the oldest person ever to reach No 1 on the US album chart through a collection of duets with Lady Gaga, who became his friend and touring companion as younger stars rushed to work with the singing great.

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Bennett, who revealed in 2016 that he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, died in his hometown, his publicist Sylvia Weiner announced, without revealing a cause.

Tributes quickly poured in from the music, political and acting worlds.

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“Without doubt the classiest singer, man and performer you will ever see. He’s irreplaceable. I loved and adored him,” Elton John wrote on Instagram.

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