Chicago Police spokeswoman Janel Sedevic said a friend found Harden's body yesterday afternoon in an apartment on the city's West Side. She said that there was no sign of injury but that narcotics and drug paraphernalia were found near his body. An autopsy was scheduled for today, but the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office declined to comment further today morning.
Harden's death comes just days before his EP was scheduled for release and less than a month after fellow house music house music star Frankie Knuckles also died the city.
"It's just a tragic loss of a great musical genius," said longtime friend and collaborator Morris harper, who performs as DJ Spinn and who was scheduled to appear yesterday night with Rashad in Detroit.
Rashad was considered a pioneer of footwork, an electronic oriented music genre that originated in Chicago. Once known as juke, footwork is named for its quick dance moves and is known for what Rolling Stone calls a "frenzied and hypnotic style of dance music that features heart-racing BPMs and, often, chopped-up loops of popular rap, R&B and pop vocals."
"He shared his music with everyone that would listen," Harden's father, Anthony Harden, told the Sun-Times. "He's been all over the world, taking footwork all over the world.