When his sister came to visit rock singer Fergie Frederiksen in Mound, she called him "Denny," and everyone in the room looked at her like she was crazy.
She learned to toe the name line around her younger brother, who was the second lead singer of the Grammy-winning, hit-making Los Angeles band Toto. He recorded only one album, "Isolation," with the group, in 1984, and stayed with Toto for just two years. But he sang with many rock bands including Trillion, LeRoux and World Classic Rockers.
Dennis "Fergie" Frederiksen had lived in the Twin Cities since moving here with his then-wife, a Minnesota native, in the 1990s. He died Saturday of liver cancer at 62.
"He loved music, he loved golf, he loved his family and his kids, and he loved the Lord first of all," said his sister, Charlene Wilkerson, of Kentwood, Mich.
Frederiksen last performed in the summer of 2013 in Sweden and Japan with Legends: Voices of Rock, classic-rock singers including Bobby Kimball of Toto and Bill Champlin of Chicago.
On Dec. 15, friend Mike Woodley helped put together a celebration at the Bayview Event Center in Excelsior. "There was a turn-away crowd," said Woodley, a veteran Twin Cities broadcaster, "and people flew in on their own dime — Bobby Kimball, Jimi Jamison of Survivor, Alex Ligertwood of Santana, Fran Cosmo of Boston.
"Isn't that cool to do something while you're still around? He was still strong enough to talk."
Woodley figures that Frederiksen was "lucky because he fixed everything that was wrong in his life." That included taking his ex-wife on a date to the State Fair in 2012 to see Loverboy's Mike Reno perform.