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LaMonte McLemore, a founding member of the Grammy-winning vocal group The 5th Dimension, died at age 90 on Tuesday at his home in Las Vegas, his representative said.
McLemore — born Sept. 17, 1935, in St.
Louis — had suffered a stroke several years earlier and died of natural causes surrounded by family.
He co-founded the group in the mid-1960s with Marilyn McCoo, Billy Davis Jr., Florence LaRue and Ron Townson; The 5th Dimension scored multiple hits including “Up, Up and Away” and the six-week No. 1 medley “Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In,” and won multiple Grammy Awards, including Record of the Year twice.
McLemore’s warm bass vocals anchored the group’s polished pop-soul harmonies.
Outside music he was a longtime photographer whose work appeared in Jet and other publications and who trained as an aerial photographer in the U.S. Navy; he also briefly pursued baseball in the Dodgers’ farm system.
The group’s role in events such as the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival has been revisited in recent years.
McLemore is survived by his wife, Mieko, a daughter, an adopted son, a sister and three grandchildren; memorial arrangements were not immediately announced.
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Yahoo Music NewsThe 5th Dimension Co-Founder LaMonte McLemore Dies at 90
TV & showbiz Articles | Mail OnlineLaMonte McLemore dead at 90: Soul icon from the pioneering group The 5th Dimension passes away at Las Vegas home


















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