His songs slipped into ordinary days until they became anything but ordinary—lullabies at bedtime, sing-alongs on long drives, the soundtrack to growing up. His music turned animated frames into lived emotion, teaching generations that a simple melody, honestly written, can say what words alone never could. In a noisy, ever-accelerating world, his work stood quietly apart: sincere, unhurried, and deeply human.
Those who knew him speak of discipline without ego, brilliance without distance. He cared less about awards than about the child in the audience who might feel less alone for three minutes and thirty seconds. Now, as tributes circle the globe, his true legacy is being measured not in trophies, but in memories. His body of work is complete, yet his story isn’t over—every time his music plays, he is briefly, beautifully here.