Everything Music. Everything News. Everything live.

Tommy DeCarlo, longtime Boston singer who rose from a Myspace tribute, dies at 60

Photo Credit | Matt8062 | Wikimedia Commons
Photo Credit | Matt8062 | Wikimedia Commons

Tommy DeCarlo, the singer who stepped into one of classic rock’s most difficult roles as the longtime frontman for Boston, has died at 60 after battling brain cancer.

DeCarlo’s children Annie, Talia and Tommy Jr. confirmed his death in posts shared to his social accounts, writing that their father “fought with incredible strength and courage right up until the very end.”

For many fans, DeCarlo’s story always felt almost too improbable to be real. He was not a major-label hopeful working club circuits when his life changed. He was a Home Depot employee in North Carolina and a devoted Boston fan grieving the 2007 death of original singer Brad Delp. In tribute, DeCarlo recorded songs honoring Delp and uploaded Boston covers to Myspace, then sent the page to the band.

That unlikely message eventually reached Boston founder Tom Scholz. After an initial rejection, DeCarlo’s voice, one that echoed Delp’s emotional lift and sky-high phrasing, earned him a spot at a Delp tribute concert. Not long after, he was asked to join Boston and became the group’s live lead singer for nearly two decades.

He was later featured on Boston’s 2013 album Life, Love & Hope, but DeCarlo’s lasting legacy was made onstage: helping carry songs like “More Than a Feeling,” “Peace of Mind,” and “Don’t Look Back” to another generation without trying to erase the history that came before him.

In a biography posted on Boston’s website, DeCarlo once said, “It wasn’t like I was trying to sing like Brad… it was just that I loved to sing along with him.” That humility became central to how fans embraced him. He didn’t arrive as a replacement in spirit; he arrived as a steward of a sound that meant everything to him long before it became his job.

His path  from fan to tribute singer to arena-stage frontman remains one of rock’s most unusual second acts. And for Boston listeners, it ensured that a distinctive voice and catalog continued to ring out in full, even after devastating loss.

DeCarlo is survived by his children and family.

Related Stories

Eric Clapton’s Crossroads 2026 Is Headed to Austin With a Two-Night Guitar All-Star Summit

Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival has never been about subtlety. It is about guitar heroes, big rooms, louder amps, and…

Deep Purple and Kansas 2026 Tour Dates Kick Off in April

Deep Purple and Kansas are two very different rock institutions, but that contrast is exactly why their 2026 run has…

Hear It: Jimmy Page Releases New Version of ‘Ten Years Gone,’ Reframing a Zeppelin Masterwork

Jimmy Page has opened a new chapter in Led Zeppelin history by releasing a fresh version of “Ten Years Gone,”…

Paul McCartney at the Fonda: What Actually Happened at the March 28 Hollywood Show

Paul McCartney’s March 28 stop at the Fonda Theatre in Hollywood was the kind of show that reminds you why…

Lindsey Buckingham Hints at Reconciliation With Stevie Nicks: ‘Something That’s in the Air’

Lindsey Buckingham has reopened one of classic rock’s most emotionally loaded storylines, and he did it with a phrase that…

Lou Gramm’s 2026 Tour: Full List of Dates Announced

Lou Gramm is taking the road again in 2026, and the schedule now posted on his official site lays out…

Pink Floyd’s 1975 Los Angeles Sports Arena Concert Gets New Vinyl and CD Life

By the spring of 1975, Pink Floyd occupied a rare place in rock history: they were already one of the…

John Fogerty Brings Centerfield Back With a 2026 Re-Release

John Fogerty is taking Centerfield back to the plate, and this time he is doing it with the kind of…

Paul McCartney Returns With New Music, Announces The Boys of Dungeon Lane

Paul McCartney’s latest chapter is no longer rumor. The former Beatle has returned with a new single, “Days We Left…