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Robbie Robertson once cowrote a song titled _Life Is a Carnival_, and his own life often resembled just that. A guitarist and songwriter of enormous influence, he helped shape the Band into
a critical and commercial success in the 1970s and paved a road that was followed by dozens of folk-rock acts. Robertson, 80, died Wednesday in Los Angeles “after a long illness,” his
publicist, Ray Costa, said in a statement. From his youth in Canada, where he spent summers on the Six Nations Reserve with his mother, to his early days in Toronto bar bands, to a chance
meeting at age 15 with rockabilly musician Ronnie Hawkins, Robertson’s early life sometimes looked like the plot from a novel. By the early 1960s, while still a teen, Robertson was on his
way to Fayetteville, Arkansas, to join up with Hawkins and his band, the Hawks. Hawkins barnstormed through the U.S. and Canada with an evolving crew of musicians, eventually picking up the
players who would become the Band, including another Arkansan in drummer and singer Levon Helm. The group peeled away from Hawkins in 1963, touring as the Canadian Squires and then getting a
historic gig in 1965 backing Bob Dylan, who was shifting away from his acoustic folk singer image. That got them loudly booed on tour almost every night by purists furious that Dylan had
evolved from his roots. “I adjusted the strap on my Telecaster so I could release it with a quick thumb movement and use the guitar as a weapon. The concerts were starting to feel that
unpredictable,” Robertson wrote in his memoir, _Testimony_. Soon after Dylan was injured in a 1966 motorcycle accident and went to Woodstock, New York, to recuperate, the musicians joined
him. They were often referred to as Dylan’s band or simply, “the Band,” a name that stuck. In Woodstock, they recorded demo tapes with Dylan that became _The Basement Tapes_, one of rock’s
most famous bootlegs (which eventually was released commercially). The Band also began working without Dylan, writing songs and practicing in the pink house in which several of them lived.
That led to _Music From Big Pink,_ a rock album classic, with songs including “The Weight,” “Tears of Rage” and “This Wheel’s on Fire.” The album and subsequent recordings helped spawn the
entire subgenre of Americana music — a direct contrast to the heavy, high-volume and psychedelic songs that made up much of rock at the time. It also was a bit of an irony that the group
became so associated with an American roots music movement; of its five members, four were Canadian. (Left to right) Garth Hudson, Robbie Robertson, Levon Helm, Richard Manuel and Rick Danko
of the Band in London in June 1971. Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns _Time _magazine put the Band on its cover in 1970, and they became critical darlings and one of rock’s biggest acts.
Nationwide tours, including one with Dylan, followed. But by the late 1970s, Robertson in particular was weary of touring.