Barry Goldberg, Keyboardist Who Performed with Bob Dylan at 1965 Newport Folk Festival, Dies at 83
Goldberg was onstage during one of the most infamous moments in music history
Barry Goldberg, keyboardist who performed with Bob Dylan at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, has died. He was 83 years old.
Reps for Goldberg confirm to PEOPLE that he died on on Wednesday, Jan. 22, while in hospice following a non-Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis with his family at his side.
Goldberg was born on Dec. 25, 1941 in Chicago. He was the grandson of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg.
In high school, Goldberg and guitarist Mike Bloomfield visited nightclubs in Chicago's south side. Soon, artists such as Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Buddy Guy and Otis Rush would become mentors of Goldberg.
Related: Bob Dylan Wins the Nobel Prize: Tracing His Literary Evolution in 22 Songs
The keyboardist formed the Bobby Blue Band with Mike Bloomfield, Buddy Miles and Harvey Brooks in the 1960s and was also a founding member of the band Electric Flag.
Throughout his career, Goldberg's performing, writing and producing credits extend to artists such as Steve Miller, the Ramones, Leonard Cohen, Stephen Stills and Rod Stewart.
He played the organ on the Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels’ 1966 Top 5 song "Devil With A Blue Dress On & Good Golly Miss Molly" and cowrote the songs "It’s Not The Spotlight" for Bobby Blue Bland and Rod Stewart along with "I’ve Got To Use My Imagination" for Gladys Knight & The Pips.
Beyond their performance at the Newport Folk Festival with Dylan, 83, in 1965, the pair would perform with Doug Sahm and The Band in Woodstock. Goldberg's self-titled 1974 album was the only project Dylan produced for another musician. Goldberg would later return the favor, producing Dylan's "People Get Ready" in 1990.
Related: Bob Dylan's 'Mr. Tambourine Man' Lyrics That He Threw Away Are Sold 60 Years Later for Over $500k
The 1965 Newport Folk Festival was the focal point of the Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown. Actor Justin Levine portrays the keyboardist in the film, also starring Timothée Chalamet, Edward Norton, Elle Fanning and Scoot McNairy.
Goldberg wrote about the festival night for the news site Forward, calling the experience a "wonderful dream," a "nightmare" and then "a wonderful dream again." He found himself at a party with Dylan and was introduced to him through a mutual friend, who suggested he play keyboard for him.
"The magic was definitely there that night, for all of us, as soon as the lights went on and we saw Dylan coming out, all in black, with that Stratocaster strapped on. That was a statement in itself, but it was also so much more," he wrote. "You felt how important his presence was, and how important what he was doing was; you knew it had meaning."
When Dylan performed with an electric guitar, which was a departure from his folk music and ultimately changed the pop music genre, the crowd was divided. Some booed, some cheered.
"For years, Bob had done his folk thing, and now all of a sudden it signified the end of the folk era as they knew it. Bob’s performance was closing that particular chapter, but he was also opening up a new one by creating folk-rock — an accomplishment that was more important than the crowd’s reaction."
"I had done my thing with Bob, and that was more than I could have ever hoped for, to go from not being able to play at the festival to taking this momentous jump into the musical unknown," he concluded.
"I knew that some kind of force, some kind of fate, some kind of thing had come along and touched me, and I wasn’t going to f--- with it."
Goldberg is survived by his wife of 53 years, Gail, and his son Aram.
Read the original article on People