Ross the Boss is dead.
It’s only been a few months since I last saw him live. That concert feels different now—retroactively heavier, like it was already a farewell and we just didn’t know it.
For those unfamiliar, Ross Friedman was one of the founding members of Manowar—and arguably the most important one. I know that’s a bold claim. So let me explain how I tend to think about great bands.
The Anatomy of a Great Band
In my mind, every successful band is built on three key roles:
- The Business Brain — the one who brings people together, keeps them together, and steers the ship.
- The Specialist — the one who does one thing exceptionally well.
- The Creative Genius — the one who defines what the band actually sounds like.
Sometimes these roles belong to three different people. Sometimes they merge into one. But lose any one of them, and something essential is gone.
Ross Friedman was Manowar’s creative genius.
The Subtle Loss
When you lose the business brain, you feel it immediately: Chaos, bad decisions, maybe even the end of the band.
When you lose the specialist, the absence is obvious. That skill simply cannot be replicated.
But when you lose the creative genius… it’s different.
The loss is subtle.
It doesn’t hit you all at once.
There’s inertia. Momentum carries the band forward for a while. One album, maybe two. But slowly, something starts to feel off. Songs begin to echo what once was instead of discovering what could be. Riffs feel like shadows of older ideas. The spark fades, not in a dramatic explosion, but in a long, quiet dimming.
The magic doesn’t disappear overnight.
It just… stops being magic.
The Sound of a Band
For Metallica, that person was Cliff Burton. His death didn’t end the band but it undeniably changed it.
For Manowar, that person was Ross Friedman.
Was he as technically gifted as Cliff Burton? Probably not.
But that’s not the point.
It was his riffs. His instincts. His ideas.
He gave Manowar its identity.
When he was in the band, there was always that feeling:
“What are they going to do next?”
After he left? The risks felt smaller. The sound more familiar. The unknown became known. And not always in a good way.
The Man Behind the Soundtrack
Ross the Boss may have been sidelined in the story of Manowar, but to me, he was the one who gave it its soul.
And in doing so, he became part of the soundtrack of my life.
Rest easy, Ross.
You will be missed.
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