Christopher North, Founding Keyboardist of Ambrosia and ‘Hammond B3 King,’ Dead at 75

Photo Credit: Ambrosia Facebook Page

Christopher North, the founding keyboardist of Grammy-nominated rock band Ambrosia and the sonic architect behind some of the most distinctive progressive and soft rock of the 1970s and 1980s, has died. He was 75. The band announced his passing on their Facebook page on March 30. No official cause of death has been confirmed, though North had survived a battle with throat cancer in 2025, was struck by a speeding vehicle outside a Santa Monica restaurant in October of that year, and subsequently developed pneumonia. Bandmate David Pack addressed it directly in his own tribute: “It took him being hit by a car full speed while simply walking into his favorite restaurant in Santa Monica to finally take him out.”

North was born in San Francisco in 1951 and was playing in bands by the age of 13. He co-founded Ambrosia in 1970 alongside Pack, bassist Joe Puerta, and drummer Burleigh Drummond. The discovery story is one of rock’s better ones. Puerta recalled stumbling across North in a backyard shed: “There was a coffin with speakers in it. And at the end of the room, Chris was there, playing the organ with a bottle of wine on the top, smoking a cigarette, and there was a girl massaging his shoulders as he played. So I go, ‘We gotta get this guy in the band.'” Pack put it more succinctly: “He was dark, mysterious, played the hell out of a Hammond B3, and was a bluesman who liked to rock.”

Ambrosia’s self-titled debut arrived in 1975, notable for including “Nice, Nice, Very Nice,” which set a Kurt Vonnegut poem from Cat’s Cradle to music. The band went on to score five Top 40 singles between 1975 and 1980, including “Holdin’ On to Yesterday,” “How Much I Feel,” “Biggest Part of Me,” and “You’re the Only Woman (You & I).” North briefly left the group in 1977 over what Pack described as “serious mental and physical problems,” but returned for the band’s most commercially successful period. All four original members also contributed to The Alan Parsons Project’s landmark debut ‘Tales of Mystery and Imagination’ in 1976. North continued touring with Ambrosia into the 2020s, remaining a ferocious and commanding live presence right to the end. “Most nights he’d bloody his hands on the B3 or break off keys,” Pack said. “Ferocious is an understatement.”

The band’s tribute captured him completely: “A founding member since 1970, he was a keyboard wizard who brought an unmatched intensity and emotional depth to every performance. Christopher North’s work did more than just fill airwaves; it created ‘aural landscapes’ that balanced virtuosity with soulful, radio-friendly hooks. He was truly one of a kind.” He is survived by his brother Richard, son Reed, and daughter Crystal.