We say goodbye to a great musician and composer whose work extended beyond Golden Earring.” George Kooymans, guitarist behind the hit "Radar Love," has died
- IAAM Radio

- Jul 24
- 2 min read
Updated: Aug 18
Kooymans passed away on July 23 from complications associated with ALS. He was 77.
George Kooymans, the guitarist who found fame with Golden Earring and their 1973 hit “Radar Love,” died July 23 at age 77. An attorney for the band said Kooymans’ death was caused by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
"We say goodbye to a great musician and composer whose work extended beyond Golden Earring,” Kooymans’ family wrote in a statement. “George was a beloved husband, father, grandfather, but above all, a friend."
For millions of American teens in the 1970s, there was no more perfect song for late-night cruising than Golden Earring’s “Radar Love.” Its shuffling boogie rhythm encouraged pedal-to-the-metal driving, while the lyrics captured the thrill of joyriding and, hopefully, getting lucky.
Pushing it all along was the insistent riffing of Kooymans, who punctuated the space between Barry Hay’s lyrics with some of the tastiest licks outside of a Dairy Queen drive-thru. “Radar Love” was and remains the quintessential American hard-rock road song.
So it surprised many young American listeners when they discovered Golden Earring hailed not from the U.S. but the Netherlands. What's more, the group had been a going concern for more than 10 years by the time it scored its breakthrough hit.
Kooymans and bass guitar player Rinus Gerritsen launched the band in the Hague as the Tornadoes, but had to change their name when the U.K.-based Tornados had a hit with “Telstar.” They took the name Golden Earrings from a song by the English beat group the Hunters, and found success as a pop act at home and in the U.K.
In 1969, the band dropped the “s” from its name and went full-on hard rock, earning an invitation to open the Who’s 1972 European tour and record for their Track Records label, just in time to release 1973’s Moontan and its single “Radar Love.”
In 2021, Kooymans was diagnosed with ALS, an incurable neurodegenerative disease that affects nerve cells controlling voluntary muscle movement and leads to progressive muscle weakness and paralysis. Golden Earring disbanded upon news of his condition.
In a statement, Limore Noach, director of the ALS Netherlands Foundation, recalled how Netherlanders stood behind Kooymans when news of his fight was made public.
"When it became known that George Kooymans had ALS and could no longer perform, it was heartwarming to see how the whole of the Netherlands rallied in support,” she said.
“Our thoughts are with his family, friends, and the other band members, and we wish them much strength," she added.








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