Wilson Pickett dies of heart attack at 64
NEW YORK — Wilson Pickett,
the soul pioneer best known for the fiery hits “Mustang Sally”
and “In The Midnight Hour,” died of a heart attack Thursday
in a Reston, Va., hospital, according to his management company.
He was 64.
Chris Tuthill of the management company Talent Source said Pickett
had been suffering from health problems for the past year. Pickett
lived in Ashburn, Va.
“He did his part. It was a great ride, a great trip. I loved
him and I’m sure he was well-loved, and I just hope that he’s
given his props,” Michael Wilson Pickett, the singer’s
son, told WRC-TV in Washington after his death.
Pickett — known as the “Wicked Pickett” —
became a star with his soulful hits in the 1960s. “In the
Midnight Hour” made the top 25 on the Billboard pop charts
in 1965, and “Mustang Sally” did the same the following
year.
“A fellow Detroiter, Wilson Pickett was one of the greatest
soul singers of all time,” Aretha Franklin said in a statement.
“He will absolutely be missed. I am thankful that I got the
chance to speak to him not too long ago.”
Pickett was defined by his raspy voice and passionate delivery.
But the Alabama-born Pickett got his start singing gospel music
in church.
After moving to Detroit, Michigan, as a teen, he joined the group
the Falcons, which scored the hit “I Found a Love” with
Pickett on lead vocals in 1962.
He went solo a year later, and would soon find his greatest success.
Sensuous soul
In 1965, he linked with legendary soul producer Jerry Wexler at
the equally legendary soul label Stax Records in Memphis, Tennessee,
and recorded one of his greatest hits, “In the Midnight Hour,”
for Atlantic Records.
A string of hits followed, including “634-5789,” “Funky
Broadway” and “Mustang Sally.” His sensuous soul
was in sharp contrast to the genteel soul songs of his Detroit counterparts
at Motown Records.
Indeed, Pickett even remade “Hey Jude” (with Duane Allman
on guitar) and “Sugar Sugar” in his own style. The latter
sounds like a completely different song from the Archies’
bubble-gum classic: bolder, gutsier, with a sensuousness that didn’t
exist in the original.
Roger Friedman, a journalist and friend who featured Pickett in
his 2002 documentary on soul greats, “Only the Strong Survive,”
said Pickett was “really Atlantic’s answer to James
Brown.”
“He wrote his own songs ... he was very, very musically adept,
and look at his contribution — look how many songs of his
songs have been covered,” Friedman told The Associated Press
on Thursday.
As Pickett entered a new decade, he had less success on the charts,
but still had a few more hits, including the song “Don’t
Let The Green Grass Fool You.”
“Like all these great legends of R&B, when disco came
in, it really impacted their careers,” Friedman said. “[But]
what Americans don’t realize is they have all continued to
be incredibly popular in Europe — every summer, touring Europe
to incredible crowds.”
Tough times
Still, Pickett suffered through some tough times. In 1991, he was
arrested for allegedly yelling death threats while driving a car
over the mayor’s front lawn in Englewood, New Jersey, and
less than a year later was charged with assaulting his girlfriend.
In 1993, he was convicted of drunken driving and sentenced to a
year in jail and five years’ probation after hitting an 86-year-old
man with his car. In 1987, he was given two years’ probation
and fined $1,000 for carrying a loaded shotgun in his car.
Besides his induction into the Hall of Fame in 1991, he was also
given the Pioneer award by the Rhythm and Blues Foundation two years
later. He also cast a long shadow and served as a role model in
“The Commitments” in 1991, without appearing in the
film.
“If I wasn’t in show business I don’t know what
I would have been — a wanderer or something, you know?”
he said in a 2001 interview. “But God blessed me with the
talent and the chance. I knocked on enough doors, and this is what
I can give myself credit for.”
Friedman said he had just spoken to Pickett last week and that he
seemed optimistic he would be able to put recent health troubles
aside and perform again.
“We had just a great talk,” he said. “He really
wanted to get back to business.”
(Associated Press)
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