Ronald Bell, Kool & The Gang Star, Has Died At The Age Of 68

The band's co-founder wrote some of their biggest hits including Celebration and Cherish.

Kool & The Gang co-founder Ronald Bell has died at the age 68 it has been announced.

A rep for the musician said he died on Wednesday at his home in the US Virgin Islands with his wife by his side. No cause of death was released.

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Ronald "Khalis" Bell
Rich Fury/Invision/AP

The singer and songwriter co-founded Kool & The Gang in New Jersey in 1964 and wrote some of the group’s best-known songs, including party staple Celebration, Cherish, Jungle Boogie and Summer Madness.

The band were one of the biggest of the 1970s and won the Grammy for Album Of The Year in 1978 for their work on the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack.

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(L-R) Robert "Kool" Bell, Ronald "Khalis" Bell, Dennis "DT" Thomas and George Brown attend a ceremony honouring Kool & The Gang with a star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame on Oct. 8, 2015, in Los Angeles.
Rich Fury/Invision/AP

They are also one of the most sampled artists of all time, with the horns from their 1973 funky jam Jungle Boogie featuring on hundreds of other songs.

In 2015, Kool & the Gang were honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame.