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Singer Lou Rawls dies of cancer at 72

Sinatra said Grammy-winner had ‘silkiest chops in the singing game’

LOU RAWLS
Rose Prouser / Reuters file
Lou Rawls performs in Beverly Hills in 2001. The genre-spanning singer continued performing for decades after his chart-topping run in the 1960s and '70s, releasing his most recent album in 1998.
updated 7:13 p.m. ET Jan. 6, 2006

LOS ANGELES - Lou Rawls, the velvet-voiced singer and longtime community activist who started as a choir boy and went on to record such classic tunes as “You’ll Never Find Another Love Like Mine,” died Friday of cancer. He was 72.

Rawls died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where he was hospitalized last month for treatment of lung and brain cancer, said his publicist, Paul Shefrin. His wife, Nina, was at his bedside when he died.

Rawls’ trademark was his smooth, four-octave voice — the “silkiest chops in the singing game,” Frank Sinatra once said. Rawls’ used it in a wide variety of genres, including commercials. For millions of television viewers and radio listeners, Rawls was the familiar voice that said, “When you’ve said Budweiser, you’ve said it all.”

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“He was one of the few singers that you knew without hearing more than a few notes, that it was him,” Burt Bacharach told The Associated Press.

Rawls played a major role in the 1980s United Negro College Fund telethons that raised more than $200 million. In the ’60s he often visited schools, playgrounds and community centers.

“He’s just someone who recognized, like many African-Americans of a certain generation, that education was something that our kids didn’t get access to and that it was critically important for their future, and for our communities’ future and for the nation,” said Dr. Michael Lomax, president and CEO of the UNCF.

In September, Rawls performed in the organization’s “An Evening of Stars,” which was to be televised nationwide through the weekend.

“He appeared frail, but he was in good voice, and he was in great spirit,” Lomax said. “He was there with his son, newly adopted, and his wife. He was a happy and contented man.”

MSNBC TV VIDEO
Lou Rawls dies
Jan. 6: NBC’s Bruce Hall reports on Rawls' career.

MSNBC

“What I really loved about Lou was how his voice was so unique,” said Kenny Gamble, who with his partner Leon Huff wrote “You’ll Never Find,” released in 1976.

“The other thing was that he had a sense of community,” Gamble told The AP. “Thousands and thousands of young kids benefited from his celebrity.”

Aretha Franklin said in a statement that Rawls was a “memorable musical stylist ... who made a serious impact in the interest of historically black colleges and black folks.”

“It is his work for the children, his voice for the poor, his creating opportunity for young Americans, who had to overcome odds, that he most wanted to be his lasting legacy,” the Rev. Jesse Jackson said in a statement.

Rawls was raised on the South Side of Chicago by his grandmother, who shared her love of gospel with him. Rawls also was influenced by doo-wop and harmonized with his high school classmate Sam Cooke. The two friends joined groups such as the Teenage Kings of Harmony.

When he moved to Los Angeles in the 1950s, Rawls was recruited for the Chosen Gospel Singers, then moved on to The Pilgrim Travelers. He enlisted in 1955 as a paratrooper in the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division. Sgt. Rawls rejoined The Pilgrim Travelers three years later.

While touring with the group, Rawls and Cooke were in a car crash that nearly ended Rawls’ life. Cooke was slightly hurt, but another passenger was killed and Rawls was declared dead on the way to the hospital, according to Shefrin.

Rawls was in a coma for 5 1/2 days and suffered memory loss, but was completely recovered a year later.

“I really got a new life out of that,” Rawls said at the time. “I saw a lot of reasons to live. I began to learn acceptance, direction, understanding and perception — all elements that had been sadly lacking in my life.”

$10 plus pizza
Rawls performed with Dick Clark at the Hollywood Bowl in 1959. Late that year, Rawls was singing for $10 a night plus pizza at Pandora’s Box in Los Angeles when he was spotted by Capitol Records producer Nick Venet, who invited him to audition. He was signed by the label soon after.

LOU RAWLS
AP
Rawls poses with his Grammy at the 1972 awards. He won best male rhythm and blues vocal performance for "A Natural Man."

The album “Stormy Monday,” recorded in 1962 with the Les McCann Trio, was the first of Rawls’ 52 albums. That same year, he collaborated on Cooke’s hit “Bring It On Home to Me.”

In 1966, Rawls’ “Love Is a Hurtin’ Thing” topped the charts and earned Rawls his first two Grammy nominations, and he opened for The Beatles in Cincinnati.

During that period, Rawls began delivering hip monologues about life and love on the songs “World of Trouble” and “Tobacco Road,” each more than seven minutes long. Some called them “pre-rap.”

Rawls explained that he had been working in clubs where the stage was behind noisy bars.

“You’d be swinging and the waitress would yell, ’I want 12 beers and four martinis!’ And then the dude would put the ice in the crusher,” Rawls recalled. “There had to be a way to get the attention of the people. So instead of just starting in singing, I would just start in talking the song.”


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