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  • Scottish group the Bay City Rollers on the set of...

    Scottish group the Bay City Rollers on the set of their 1976 pop television program ‘Shang-A-Lang’. The Bay City Rollers, formed in Edinburgh, chose their name by pointing randomly at a map of America and finding Bay City in Michigan. The pop group had their first hit with ‘Keep On Dancing’ which reached number 9 in the charts in 1971. They rapidly became a teen sensation with dedicated fans who wore tartan like their idols. (Evening Standard/Getty Images)

  • Model Twiggy (Lesley Hornby) blocks her ears against the sound...

    Model Twiggy (Lesley Hornby) blocks her ears against the sound of pop group Bay City Rollers on the bagpipes during a TV concert on July 22, 1976. (Robin Jones/Evening Standard/Getty Images)

  • Young fans of the pop group the Bay City Rollers...

    Young fans of the pop group the Bay City Rollers decked out in the band’s trademark tartan clothing at a concert in Swansea on May 27, 1975. (Evening Standard/Getty Images)

  • The Bay City Rollers perform as they tape an episode...

    The Bay City Rollers perform as they tape an episode of the ‘Wonderama’ television show in New York on January 16, 1976. (AP Photo/Martin Lederhandler)

  • Top Scottish popsters the Bay City Rollers – Woody Wood,...

    Top Scottish popsters the Bay City Rollers – Woody Wood, Eric Faulkner, Alan Longmuir, Les McKeown and Derek Longmuir – on the barrel of a century-old cannon at Fort St Catherine in Bermuda in 1975. (Keystone/Getty Images)

  • A member of the Scottish pop group the Bay City...

    A member of the Scottish pop group the Bay City Rollers warms up backstage before their New York debut on Saturday, Jan. 8, 1977. (AP Photo/Charles Kenneth Lucas)

  • The Scottish pop group the Bay City Rollers perform before...

    The Scottish pop group the Bay City Rollers perform before a frenzied group at their New York debut on Saturday, Jan. 8, 1977. Thousands of teenagers rushed toward the stage and many were crushed in the mishap. (AP Photo/Charles Kenneth Lucas)

  • A young fan of the Scottish pop group Bay City...

    A young fan of the Scottish pop group Bay City Rollers wearing tartan clothing on May 25, 1975, holds a poster of guitarist Stuart ‘Woody’ Wood. (Angela Deane-Drummond/Evening Standard/Getty Images)

  • Singer Les McKeown with Scottish pop group The Bay City...

    Singer Les McKeown with Scottish pop group The Bay City Rollers, plays at the Budokan in Tokyo on December 30, 1976. (Keystone/Getty Images)

  • Scottish pop band, the Bay City Rollers, Alan Longmuir, John...

    Scottish pop band, the Bay City Rollers, Alan Longmuir, John Devine, Gordon ‘Nobby Clark’, Derek Longmuir and Eric Faulkner in the United Kingdom on October 27, 1972. (George Stroud/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

  • Some of the fans of the Scottish pop group The...

    Some of the fans of the Scottish pop group The bay City Rollers, sream and shout at their idols during a concert in America in 1977. (AP Photo)

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LONDON  — Alan Longmuir, a founding member of the Bay City Rollers who played multiple instruments, including bass guitar and keyboards, has died in Scotland. He was 70.

His family said in a Twitter statement that he died peacefully surrounded by loved ones. No other details were given. He had been receiving medical treatment in Edinburgh.

“He was an extraordinary man with an extraordinary heart,” Longmuir’s family said. “He brought so much love and kindness to everyone he met, and he leaves a huge hole in our family.”

The Bay City Rollers were formed at the end of the 1960s and enjoyed substantial commercial success. They were known for their tartan outfits and upbeat, catchy tunes like “Bye Bye Baby” and “Shang-a-Lang.”

The band had a fanatical teen following and sold more than 100 million records. They split up in 1978 and reunited in 2015 for a string of sold-out performances.

The family statement says Longmuir used to describe himself as just a plumber from Edinburgh who got lucky.