The
last notes of this tour had hardly died away before a new decade dawned,
and, scheduled for the new year, a second tour of England. Following performances
in Manchester, Birmingham, Croydon and Eastbourne, this tour concluded
with a concert in London – the venue for this celebrated event again
being, as in 1974, the Royal Albert Hall. And even after the fourth encore,
the over 5,000 enthusiastic listeners in the Hall were still unwilling
to let Kaempfert and his orchestra go. In the end, Kaempfert himself,
as exhausted as he was pleased by this reception, stepped forward on this
16 June 1980 and brought the evening to an end with the honest announcement:
“I'd love to go on but I've run out of music. And my musicians are
thirsty!”
The Final Curtain
Two days after the completion of this demanding tour,
Bert and Hanne flew to the holiday house they shared on Mallorca. Even
on the plane he was already sorting through new offers – there was
no end to the requests for more live concerts – and he was also
planning to record a new album at the beginning of October.
Yet,
on 21 June 1980, everything changed. The news agencies reported: “Bert
Kaempfert has passed away, the result of a stroke suffered on Mallorca.”
He was just fifty-six years of age.
The music world mourned his sudden and untimely death.
On 15 January 1981 – it had been Kaempfert's wish
that his final resting place be in his beloved Everglades in Florida –
his ashes were scattered there on the water.
In memoriam
Bert
Kaempfert was like his music: quietly spoken. Despite all his tremendous
success internationally, he remained a modest person, and the innumerable
awards did nothing to change this. In 1993 he was given the highest honour
that can be accorded a composer: his posthumous induction into America's
Songwriters' Hall of Fame.
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