Fans, Music Greats Mourn Loss Of Mr. Rock 'N' Roll Chuck Berry

Fans and musicians around the globe mourned the death of Rock 'n' Roll's wild founding father Chuck Berry at the age of 90.
Instead of a wish for Berry to rest in peace, the estate of famed guitarist Bo Diddley tweeted a message to the music legend to "rock in power." The estate of John Lennon — whose own music was inspired by the rhythm pioneer — posted a quote from the late Beatle hailing Berry as "another name" for rock 'n' roll.
Berry's rock anthems like "Johnny B.Goode," "Roll Over Beethoven" and "Maybelline" set the stage for future generations of fans and countless budding musicians pinning their hopes on playing the guitar like Berry could.
Rocker Huey Lewis honored Berry as "maybe the most important figure in all of rock and roll. His music and his influence will last forever."
Keith Urban thanked Berry for his "poetry, passion and potency."
The Jacksons tweeted: "Chuck Berry merged blues & swing into the phenomenon of early rock 'n' roll. In music, he cast one of the longest shadows. Thank You, Chuck."
Writer Stephen King said Berry's death "breaks my heart."
The Rolling Stones have said they are "deeply saddened" by the death of Chuck Berry, describing him as a "true pioneer of rock 'n' roll and a massive influence on us."
Chuck Berry
Rock in Power pic.twitter.com/FkNdi8u5RY
— BoDiddleyReal1 (@bodiddley) March 18, 2017
"If you had to give Rock 'n' Roll another name, you might call it Chuck Berry"
John Lennon (with Chuck Berry)
Mike Douglas TV Show, 1972 pic.twitter.com/ViJtLblEwt
— John Lennon (@johnlennon) March 18, 2017
Chuck Berry was rock's greatest practitioner, guitarist, and the greatest pure rock 'n' roll writer who ever lived.
— Bruce Springsteen (@springsteen) March 18, 2017
Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today.
Chuck Berry. Maybe the most important figure in all of rock and roll. His music and his influence will last forever. - Huey
— Huey Lewis (@Huey_Lewis_News) March 18, 2017
RIP Chuck Berry !!!! Thank you for the poetry, the passion and the potency! GO JOHNNY GO. - KU
— Keith Urban (@KeithUrban) March 18, 2017
I wanted to be this man when I was 7, still do. First performance I ever saw and he blew me away #chuckberrypic.twitter.com/Pab6j8fWY1
— LA ROUX (@larouxofficial) March 18, 2017
RIP Chuck Berryhttps://t.co/9MoHHXnxD7
— Carole King (@Carole_King) March 18, 2017
Clarification: This article has been updated to reflect that Diddley's Twitter account is not the guitarist himself (he died in 2008), but that of his estate.
This article originally appeared on HuffPost.