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Dublin, Ireland
53.3907° N · -6.1118° W
Get DirectionsPhil Lynott, the vocalist and bassist of Thin Lizzy, died on January 4, 1986, at Salisbury General Hospital in Wiltshire, England, from heart failure and pneumonia resulting from septicaemia caused by heroin use. He was 36 years old. He had been found unconscious at his home in Kew, southwest London, on Christmas Day 1985, and spent his final days in intensive care. His body was returned to Ireland, and he is buried at St Fintan's Cemetery in Sutton, on the northern shore of Dublin Bay.
Phil Lynott was born in West Bromwich, England, to an Irish mother and a Brazilian-Guyanese father, and was raised by his grandparents in Crumlin, Dublin. He was one of the very few Black Irishmen of his generation, and his experience of being an outsider infused Thin Lizzy's music with a romanticism and emotional depth that set them apart from their hard rock contemporaries. Songs like 'The Boys Are Back in Town,' 'Whiskey in the Jar,' 'Jailbreak,' and 'Dancing in the Moonlight' combined literary storytelling with twin-guitar harmonies that Lynott and his guitarists perfected. His bass playing and vocal style were entirely his own.
Phil Lynott's grave at St Fintan's Cemetery is a popular pilgrimage site, particularly for Irish fans who regard him as one of the country's greatest rock musicians. A statue of Lynott stands on Harry Street in Dublin city centre, and his childhood home at 85 Leighlin Road in Crumlin bears a blue plaque. His mother Philomena ran a hotel in Manchester for many years and was a tireless champion of his legacy until her death in 2019.
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