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Ronnie Montrose Death Ruled a Suicide

PostPosted: Wed Apr 11, 2012 4:51 pm
by tater1977
Ronnie Montrose Death Ruled a Suicide

http://www.guitarplayer.com/article/ron ... ide/148205


By Michael Molenda

It wasn’t prostate cancer that killed guitar legend Ronnie Montrose. He beat that gremlin into the dirt, as he did so many obstacles to his career and musical expression. But Montrose, who was immensely proud of being a “survivor,” simply couldn’t vanquish the clinical depression that plagued him since he was a toddler.

On March 3, 2012, he sought inner peace by taking his own life. A report by the San Mateo County Coroner’s Office, released on April 6, confirms the guitarist died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Anticipating the coroner’s findings would soon be made public, the Montrose family asked me to write this article. I was a long-time friend and colleague, and the family wanted the painful story to be told by a member of the Bay Area media that Montrose himself knew and trusted.

The family also posted the following statement on ronniemontrose.com:

“By now, the devastating truth of Ronnie’s death is public knowledge. We hope you can understand why we wanted to keep this news a private family matter for as long as possible. We can only hope that you will choose to celebrate Ronnie’s life, and what his music meant to you, rather than mourn his passing. Ronnie would have wanted it that way. He loved being a guitarist, a composer, a producer, and a creator of magic. He fully understood his gifts, and yet he constantly pushed himself to evolve, improve, and make better music. He did this for himself, and he did this for you, because he adored and appreciated his fans. Please keep his energy, his joy, and his love in your hearts.”

Montrose did not leave a suicide note, but his wife/manager Leighsa Montrose feels he was probably always planning for an exit.

“Ronnie had a very difficult childhood, which caused him to have extremely deep and damaging feelings of inadequacy,” said Leighsa. “This is why he always drove himself so hard. He never thought he was good enough. He always feared he’d be exposed as a fraud. So he was exacting in his self criticism, and the expectations he put upon himself were tremendous. Now I see that perhaps he didn’t want to carry these burdens for very much longer.”

The torment of self-doubt likely contributed to Montrose’s long-term alcoholism. The toxicology report showed his blood-alcohol level at 0.31% when he died—almost four times the legal limit in California. No evidence of other drugs was found in his system.

“I knew I had married an alcoholic, but Ronnie was never anything but loving,” said Leighsa. “He could be curmudgeonly and cranky, but he was never angry or abusive to me in any way. He definitely had a reputation for his bad temper and controlling personality when he was younger, but he’d always say that I got the best version of himself, and we were nearly inseparable. We ate every meal together. I went to every show he played.”

Famously mercurial, Montrose always seemed to tank a project just when things were getting good. Factor out the depression, and Montrose’s frequent conceptual and stylistic shifts seem like the actions of a true artist following his creative muse no matter what the business ramifications might be. But, knowing what Montrose was suffering through every day of his life, a different perspective arises—one of a man in constant evolution and reevaluation because he always felt he had to do much, much better.

And yet, Montrose was thrilled that 2012 was starting off on an “exponential curve.” The two-year break from the guitar he took between 2007 and 2009 in order to heal from the daily, painful effects of cancer—when his loyal bulldog, Lola, was constantly at his side, dropping him “down to a good sleep vibe”—did not permanently effect his technique. He had been touring regularly since late 2009, performing solo compositions, acoustic pieces, Montrose songs, and some Gamma material. By 2011, he was truly on fire as a player. Happily, he was captured on video just this past January 27, and the release of his one-and-only DVD, Ronnie Montrose Live at the Uptown, was one of the many joys he was anticipating in 2012. There were also more tour dates stacking up, and a Montrose reunion—celebrating Sammy Hagar’s birthday—slated for October.

“He was so looking forward to all the possibilities before him,” said Leighsa.

But the deaths of his uncle and his beloved bulldog within three weeks of each other in January 2012 (the week before, and the week after the filming of his live DVD), put Montrose in a reflective state, and likely exacerbated his ongoing depression.

On March 2, Montrose had been drinking heavily, but he got up the next day at 8 am and made breakfast for Leighsa and her mother (who resided at the Montrose home), which was his typical routine. At 10:03 am, Montrose texted Leighsa, asking if she wanted him to bring lunch down to her design studio. As she was on a deadline, and had already arranged to meet him at home for lunch, she declined his “sweet” offer.

The mood abruptly changed when Montrose texted he was glad Leighsa had “figured it out, found the hooch, and stopped him from going down the dark path.” At 11:01 am, he added, “I have the .38 in my hand and am ready to go.”

“Ronnie always had a dark and bizarre sense of humor,” said Leighsa. “And, at this point, I truly thought he was speaking in metaphors.”

But the next text—“I’m so sorry. Still have the gun in my hand. I’m going on that voyage. I love you beyond measure”—worried her, and she immediately called him and asked that he come to her studio. He agreed, saying he would be right down.

“After about four minutes, he wasn’t here, and I told my mother, ‘We’ve got to go home—something is wrong,’” said Leighsa. “When I turned to look at my phone, I saw the last text from him. I didn’t hear it come in. It said, ‘I can’t. I’ve got the gun to my head.’”

They rushed home, but it was too late. Montrose was sitting in his favorite recliner in his living room, an unregistered Smith & Wesson Model 38 Special CTG Airweight revolver in his hand, and his cell phone at his feet.

“I looked at his peaceful and calm face, and I said to him, ‘You’ve shown me I have no choice in this matter,’” said Leighsa. “I told him I loved him. I accepted what had happened. And then I sat calmly on the couch and called the Brisbane Police Department.”

Ronnie Montrose was pronounced dead by medics from Brisbane Fire Engine #81 at noon.

“My sense of Ronnie as the persistent and decisive adventurer—as well as all his music about space, flight, and travel—speaks volumes about his choice and his action,” reflected Leighsa. “Seeing beyond was always what he did best. He was always breaking new ground, following his heart, his intuition, his star. And for reasons we may never fully understand, he made a choice to ‘lift off.’

“If you were observant enough, you could catch him at every show noodling a bit of the melody to Led Zeppelin’s ‘In My Time of Dying.’ The song contained the lyrics, ‘Well, well, well, so I can die easy. ‘Well, well, well, so I can die easy.’”

PostPosted: Wed Apr 11, 2012 5:54 pm
by steveo777
Why do people leave such a mess?
Cowardice....fuck, Ronnie, you didn't have to do that! Help was available, but not now.

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 4:07 am
by SF-Dano
A tragic shame. I will remember Ronnie with a smile whenever I hear one of his tunes.

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 4:54 am
by AR
Wouldn't have been easier to have a barbeque in his bathroom?

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 5:07 am
by Don
What would be interesting to know is how many of the people participating in the Montrose tribute show knew about the real cause of death. For some people, the way Montrose went out may very well make a difference in how they would choose to celebrate his passing.

Going in thinking the guy died from cancer only to now find out that he actually got the upper hand in that battle but pissed away a possible second chance at life anyway puts a whole new spin on things.

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 6:20 am
by verslibre
They were his friends and collaborators. Why would it make a difference in how they celebrated? I can't see Sam storming out of there, going "He what?! I'm not singing!"

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 6:25 am
by Don
verslibre wrote:They were his friends and collaborators. Why would it make a difference in how they celebrated? I can't see Sam storming out of there, going "He what?! I'm not singing!"


Not everyone is as forgiving when someone takes their own life versus facing something beyond their control like cancer. Even if it doesn't make a difference in the end, mourning someone who you think got a bad break in life and now finding out that he took himself out of the game, I just can't imagine everyone would just roll with that like there is no difference between suicide and dying from something out of your control.

If these guys all knew the truth before hand, it will be a moot point anyway.

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 8:53 am
by verslibre
Again, I can't see guys like Sam, Bill Church or Jim Alcivar (etc.) refusing to do anything upon learning of Ronnie's choice. It just sucks that he's no longer around. I hope the DVD streets sooner than later.

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 9:54 am
by DrFU
Don wrote:What would be interesting to know is how many of the people participating in the Montrose tribute show knew about the real cause of death. For some people, the way Montrose went out may very well make a difference in how they would choose to celebrate his passing.

Going in thinking the guy died from cancer only to now find out that he actually got the upper hand in that battle but pissed away a possible second chance at life anyway puts a whole new spin on things.


I thought the same thing, Don.

I tried to get tickets but it sold out instantly.

RIP RM ... score another one for the demons ...

PostPosted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 11:52 am
by majik
Don wrote:
verslibre wrote:They were his friends and collaborators. Why would it make a difference in how they celebrated? I can't see Sam storming out of there, going "He what?! I'm not singing!"


Not everyone is as forgiving when someone takes their own life versus facing something beyond their control like cancer. Even if it doesn't make a difference in the end, mourning someone who you think got a bad break in life and now finding out that he took himself out of the game, I just can't imagine everyone would just roll with that like there is no difference between suicide and dying from something out of your control.

If these guys all knew the truth before hand, it will be a moot point anyway.


Clinical depression is a serious debilitating illness both physically and mentally and is as much beyond the control of sufferers as cancer is. There are 10% of sufferers that do not respond favourably to medication or treatments and are beyond medical help. These people are left to cope alone and find their own strategies ( usually creativity ) to live with their illness, for some its since childhood, a whole lifetime. This was his bad break in life not the cancer, the man battled throughout his entire life in every area of it, even the simple enjoyable things taken for granted by others are impacted and it is hidden.
Suicide wasn't a choice but the outcome of serious illness a valid death as any other.

PostPosted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 2:15 pm
by Peartree12249
majik wrote:
Don wrote:
verslibre wrote:They were his friends and collaborators. Why would it make a difference in how they celebrated? I can't see Sam storming out of there, going "He what?! I'm not singing!"


Not everyone is as forgiving when someone takes their own life versus facing something beyond their control like cancer. Even if it doesn't make a difference in the end, mourning someone who you think got a bad break in life and now finding out that he took himself out of the game, I just can't imagine everyone would just roll with that like there is no difference between suicide and dying from something out of your control.

If these guys all knew the truth before hand, it will be a moot point anyway.


Clinical depression is a serious debilitating illness both physically and mentally and is as much beyond the control of sufferers as cancer is. There are 10% of sufferers that do not respond favourably to medication or treatments and are beyond medical help. These people are left to cope alone and find their own strategies ( usually creativity ) to live with their illness, for some its since childhood, a whole lifetime. This was his bad break in life not the cancer, the man battled throughout his entire life in every area of it, even the simple enjoyable things taken for granted by others are impacted and it is hidden.
Suicide wasn't a choice but the outcome of serious illness a valid death as any other.


I couldn't agree more. As in this case drug addiction and/or alcoholism are often the result of the depressed person's attempt to self-medicate the problem away, which works great for a while and then as it usually does, it turns on the person often making the self-hatred, guilt & depression even worse until life itself becomes so intolerable and bleak that death is seen as a welcome release. Folks should try walking a mile in these people's shoes before they judge them.

PostPosted: Tue May 01, 2012 7:56 am
by SF-Dano

PostPosted: Tue May 01, 2012 8:42 am
by verslibre
Those clips rock. Where the hell is the A Night With Ronnie Montrose DVD?

PostPosted: Tue May 01, 2012 3:15 pm
by Deb

PostPosted: Tue May 01, 2012 3:48 pm
by Maui Tom
Don wrote:What would be interesting to know is how many of the people participating in the Montrose tribute show knew about the real cause of death. For some people, the way Montrose went out may very well make a difference in how they would choose to celebrate his passing.

Going in thinking the guy died from cancer only to now find out that he actually got the upper hand in that battle but pissed away a possible second chance at life anyway puts a whole new spin on things.


when you are in the throes of depression....a pill an arms length away that will take you to the promised land is too far away to even attempt to reach...a lot of you need to get off your fucking high horse....