His daughter’s words broke the silence: “My father, my hero, is gone.” A rock pioneer, a husband of 59 years, a man who turned horns into
heartbreak and hope, taken after a brutal six-year battle with Alzheimer’s. The sound that shaped Chicago has faded, but the grief is only growing lou… Continues…
Walter Parazaider didn’t just help form Chicago; he imagined it before it existed. A rock band with horns was his wild idea, and his saxophone,
clarinet, and flute turned that vision into a soundtrack for millions of lives. From “Color My World” to “Just You ’n’ Me,” his solos carried
wedding vows, breakups, and late-night drives, quietly stitching themselves into memory.
Behind the legend was a devoted husband and father enduring a ruthless disease that slowly stole the man long before it claimed his life.
His daughter’s raw goodbye and his wife’s tender recollection of “59 wonderful years” reveal a family that loved him far beyond the stage lights.
Though Alzheimer’s dimmed his final years, it could not erase the music he gave the world. Every time a Chicago song plays, Walter’s horn rises again, clear and defiant against the dark.