Walter Parazaider, Founding Saxophonist of Chicago, Dead at 81
The woodwind player who conceived the idea of a rock band with horns died June 17 in hospice care after a six-year battle with Alzheimer's disease.
Walter Parazaider, the founding saxophonist and woodwind player who helped create Chicago in 1967 and whose flute solo on ‘Colour My World' became one of rock's most recognizable instrumental passages, died Wednesday, June 17, in hospice care. He was 81. His wife, JacLynn, confirmed the cause as complications from Alzheimer's disease, which Parazaider had battled for six years.
A Band Built From One Man's Vision
Parazaider was born March 14, 1945, in Maywood, Illinois. He studied classical clarinet before gravitating toward rock, and his path to music history ran through DePaul University in Chicago, where he formed a college band called the Missing Links with future Chicago bandmates Terry Kath and Danny Seraphine. It was also at DePaul that he met Jimmy Guercio, the producer who would become central to Chicago's early commercial success.
The band's origin story is inseparable from Parazaider's ambition. He is credited with conceiving the idea of a rock band built around a horn section, a then-rare configuration that would become Chicago's defining characteristic. James Pankow later recalled the moment the group committed to the project: ‘We had a get together in Walter's apartment on the north side of Chicago. It was Danny, Terry, Robert, Walter, Lee, and myself, and we agreed to devote our lives and our energies to making this project work.'
Lee Loughnane, speaking to Classic Rock Revisited, put it plainly: ‘Walt and Jimmy went to DePaul and when the Missing Links broke up, they wanted to start a show band with horns. That is where we came from.'
The group initially called themselves The Big Thing, then renamed to Chicago Transit Authority before shortening the name to Chicago for their second album in 1970. Their 1969 self-titled debut went double-platinum, and every subsequent album through 1978's Hot Streets sold at least a million copies in the United States alone. By some estimates, Chicago has sold more than 100 million records across nearly 40 albums.
The Sound That Defined an Era
Parazaider's woodwind work, alongside trombonist James Pankow and trumpeter Lee Loughnane, formed the brass and woodwind trio at the core of Chicago's biggest hits. His saxophone and flute contributions appear across decades of the band's catalog.
Among the tracks featuring the Parazaider-Pankow-Loughnane horn section:
- Questions 67 and 68
- 25 or 6 to 4
- Saturday in the Park
- Does Anybody Really Know What Time it Is?
- Just You ‘n' Me
- Feeling Stronger Every Day
- Call on Me
- Dialogue (Part I & II)
- Beginnings
- (I've Been) Searching So Long
- Old Days
- You're the Inspiration
- Will You Still Love Me?
- What Kind of Man Would I Be?
Retirement, Diagnosis, and Final Years
Parazaider stepped away from touring in 2017 due to health issues, including a heart condition. Loughnane addressed the departure at the time, telling the Syracuse Post-Standard in 2018: ‘Walt had to retire due to health reasons. The rigors of the road take their toll and don't get any easier so you have to adapt.'
In April 2021, Parazaider publicly disclosed his Alzheimer's diagnosis in a statement posted on the band's website. ‘Five months ago, I was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease,' he wrote. ‘Needless to say, my wife, daughters and myself were shocked and devastated. It has taken a while to process this news and the fact is, we still are. The good news is we have a wonderful medical facility here and I have a very good doctor. I am working hard and not going to give up.'
His daughter Felicia announced his death on Facebook. ‘I love you poppy, my Pal,' she wrote, in part. ‘You coloured our world.' Felicia also posted separately: ‘Thank you for loving my father, even if you didn't personally know him. I'm in shock and disbelief and yet not at all. This was the worst six years.'
JacLynn Parazaider, who was at her husband's side when he died, spoke to TMZ: ‘He had put up a good fight with Alzheimer's and unfortunately it ended tonight. We are going to miss him for sure … We were married for 59 years and we had 59 wonderful years.' Parazaider is survived by JacLynn and daughters Laura and Felicia.
Beyond music, Parazaider appeared alongside his Chicago bandmates in the 1973 crime drama Electra Glide in Blue, playing a member of a motorcycle gang. The film was directed by Guercio, who was Chicago's producer at the time.
Chicago's Statement and Hall of Fame Legacy
The band posted a statement to Chicago's Instagram page Wednesday morning. ‘Chicago is heartbroken to share the sad news of Walter Parazaider's passing this morning,' the statement read. ‘We extend our deepest condolences to his family, friends and countless Chicago fans who are all grieving his loss today. A Rock & Roll band with horns was Walt's idea. He put the band together and they rehearsed in the basement of his mother's home. He is also the one who did the hard work to book shows for the young, unknown band, performing top 40 covers at local bars in and around Chicago.'
Parazaider was present when Chicago was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016. He was not part of the band's most recent original album, 2022's Chicago XXXVIII: Born for This Moment, and appeared on only three songs from 2014's Chicago XXXVI: Now. With Robert Lamm and James Pankow also having retired, Loughnane is now the sole remaining original member of the band.
What we know
- Walter Parazaider died on June 17, 2026, in hospice care from complications of Alzheimer's disease. He was 81.
- His wife JacLynn confirmed the death and noted they had been married for 59 years.
- Parazaider was born March 14, 1945, in Maywood, Illinois.
- He co-founded Chicago in 1967, initially under the name The Big Thing, alongside Robert Lamm, James Pankow, Peter Cetera, Danny Seraphine, Lee Loughnane, and Terry Kath.
- Parazaider publicly disclosed his Alzheimer's diagnosis in April 2021 via a statement on the band's website.
- He retired from touring with Chicago in 2017 due to health issues.
- Parazaider was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with Chicago in 2016.
- He is survived by his wife JacLynn and daughters Laura and Felicia.
The take
Walter Parazaider's death closes a chapter that stretches back to the very invention of a genre. When he assembled a rock band around a horn section in the late 1960s, the move was genuinely unusual. Most rock acts of the era treated brass as an occasional ornament; Parazaider built it into the architecture. The result was a sound that influenced everyone from Blood, Sweat and Tears contemporaries to the horn-driven pop-rock that dominated FM radio through the 1970s.
Chicago's commercial arc is worth remembering in full. The band's run from their 1969 debut through the late 1970s represents one of the most sustained commercial streaks in rock history, with consecutive platinum albums at a time when that designation still meant something. The pivot to softer, ballad-driven material in the 1980s, which alienated some early fans, also introduced the band to a new generation and kept them commercially viable well past the point where many of their peers had faded.
Parazaider's specific contribution, the woodwind voice in a brass section that also included Pankow's trombone and Loughnane's trumpet, gave Chicago a textural range that most rock bands simply could not replicate. His flute work on ‘Colour My World' in particular became a kind of shorthand for a certain strain of 1970s romanticism. With Lamm and Pankow now also retired and Loughnane the last original standing, the band that Parazaider conceived in a Chicago apartment more than five decades ago has effectively passed into legacy status.
Why it matters
For classic rock fans, Parazaider's death marks the effective end of Chicago's founding generation. He was the person who had the original idea, recruited the players, booked the early gigs, and shaped the sound that sold more than 100 million records. His passing also underscores how Alzheimer's disease has become an increasingly visible presence in the classic rock community, as the generation that built the genre in the late 1960s and 1970s now faces the health realities of their 70s and 80s. The loss is both personal and historical.
What's next
Chicago has not announced any formal memorial events or tribute concerts as of the band's June 17 statement. Loughnane remains the sole original member still active with the group. Fans can expect further tributes from the band and the broader music community in the days ahead, consistent with the outpouring that followed the Instagram statement posted Wednesday morning.
Frequently asked questions
How did Walter Parazaider die?
Parazaider died from complications of Alzheimer's disease on June 17, 2026, in hospice care. He had been diagnosed with the disease five months before publicly disclosing it in April 2021.
How old was Walter Parazaider when he died?
Parazaider was 81 years old. He was born March 14, 1945, in Maywood, Illinois.
When did Walter Parazaider stop touring with Chicago?
Parazaider retired from touring with Chicago in 2017 due to health issues, including a heart condition.
Was Walter Parazaider in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?
Yes. Parazaider was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Chicago in 2016.
Who are Walter Parazaider's survivors?
Parazaider is survived by his wife JacLynn, with whom he was married for 59 years, and daughters Laura and Felicia.