NEW YORK ā Charlie Colin, bassist and founding member of the band Train, best known for their early-aughts hits like āDrops of Jupiter" and āMeet Virginia,ā has died. He was 58.
Colinās sister Carolyn Stephens confirmed her brother's death to The Associated Press on Wednesday. He died after slipping and falling in the shower while house-sitting for a friend in Brussels, celebrity website TMZ.com reported.
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Colin grew up in Southern California, later attending Berklee College of Music in Boston. After college, he played in a group called Apostles guitarist Jimmy Stafford and singer Rob Hotchkiss. The band eventually dissolved, and Colin moved to Singapore for a year to write jingles.
Eventually, Colin, Hotchkiss and Stafford relocated to San Francisco, where Train formed in the early '90s with singer Pat Monahan. Colin brought in drummer Scott Underwood to round out the group, according to an interview with Colin and Hotchkiss in Berkleeās alumni magazine.
As a founding member of the pop-rock band, Colin played on the band's first three records, 1998's self-titled album, 2001's āDrops of Jupiterā and 2003's āMy Private Nation." The latter two releases peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard 200 chart.
āMeet Virginia,ā from Train's debut album, broke the Top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100, but it was their sophomore album that confirmed the band's success.
The eight-times platinum title track āDrops of Jupiter (Tell Me)" featured the Rolling Stones ' session pianist Chuck Leavell and Leonard Cohenās string orchestrator Paul Buckmaster and was written about the death of Monahan's mother. It hit No. 5 on the Billboard chart and earned two Grammys, including best rock song.
Colin left Train in 2003 because of substance abuse.
āCharlie is one incredible bass player, but he was in a lot of pain, and the way he was dealing with it was very painful for everyone else around him," Monahan told NBC San Diego.
In 2015, he reunited with Hotchkiss to start a new band called Painbirds, alongside Tom Luce. In 2017, he formed another band, the Side Deal, with Sugar Rayās Stan Frazier and the PawnShop Kingsā Joel and Scott Owen.
On Wednesday, a tribute to Colin appeared on Train's social media pages.
āWhen I met Charlie Colin, front left, I fell in love with him. He was the sweetest guy and what a handsome chap. Letās make a band thatās the only reasonable thing to do,ā it reads.
āHis unique bass playing a beautiful guitar work helped get folks to notice us in SF and beyond. Iāll always have a warm place for him in my heart. I always tried to pull him closer but he had a vision of his own. Youāre a legend, Charlie. Go charm the pants off those angels,ā the unsigned post continued.
Prior to his death, Colin documented his time in Brussels, deeming it āofficially my favorite cityā in a March Instagram post.
Colin also worked as the musical director of the Newport Beach Film Festival.
āCharlie was a special part of the Newport Beach Film Festival family,ā said Todd Quartararo, co-founder of the Newport Beach Film Festival. āHis heart, compassion and creativity will surely be missed.ā
He is survived by his parents, sister and niece.