Charlie Pride dead from Covid
Charley Pride, country music's first Black superstar, dies at 86 of COVID-19 complications
Matthew Leimkuehler and Dave Paulson, Nashville Tennessean
Sun, December 5, 2021, 7:47 PM
Charley Pride — a sharecropper's son who rose from rural Mississippi to become the first Black superstar in country music — died Saturday at age 86.
The "Kiss An Angel Good Mornin" singer died in Dallas, Texas, due to complications from COVID-19, according to a news release from his publicist, Jeremy Westby.
In a career spanning more than five decades, Pride cemented a trailblazing legacy unlike any entertainer before him.
He overcame club audiences unwilling to hear a Black singer cover Hank Williams and promoters equally skeptical at hosting his performances to once being the best-selling artist on RCA Records since Elvis Presley.
Pride topped country charts 29 times in his career, singing stories rich with honesty — "I Can't Believe That You've Stopped Loving Me," "I'm Just Me" and "Where Do I Put Her Memory," among others — in his distinct, welcoming baritone voice.
CMA Awards honor Charley Pride for remarkable career
Though he detailed his struggles in his 1995 autobiography, Pride wasn’t always one to dwell publicly on the magnitude of his accomplishments. As he spoke to The Tennessean in November, he said he was often asked which of his songs was his favorite to sing.
His response? “The one that I'm singing at the moment. Out of 500 and some songs, that's what my answer is.”
Pride's vast accolades include Country Music Association Entertainer of the Year in 1971, Male Vocalist of the Year wins in 1973 and '74 and a 1993 invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry.
Charley Pride, left, is emotional just after learning he has been elected as the newest member of the Country Music Hall of Fame June 16, 2000 during Fan Fair week. He was named along with Faron Young by Hall of Fame member Brenda Lee, right, during a press conference at the hall.
And, in 2000, he became the first Black member of the Country Music Hall of Fame.
"To be doing that at a time when nobody really wanted him here, it's crazy to look back now ... that must've been so hard," Darius Rucker told The Tennessean in November. "I can deal with whatever comes my way because it can't be near what Charley went through."
His remarkable career was applauded by a live audience at the 2020 CMA Awards, where he received the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award. He was introduced by one of the genre's modern Black stars, Jimmie Allen.
"I might never have had a career in country music if it wasn't for a truly groundbreaking artist, who took his best shot, and made the best kind of history in our genre,” Allen told him.
Unlike nearly every other awards show held this year, the CMAs were produced with a live, socially distanced audience at Nashville’s Music City Center.
Lifetime Achievement Award: Nearly 50 years after his first trophy, trailblazing Charley Pride returns to the CMA Awards
Charley Pride performs "Kiss An Angel Good Morning" during the 50th annual CMA Awards show at the Bridgestone Arena Nov. 2, 2016 in Nashville.
Mississippi upbringing
Charley Frank Pride was born to father Mack Pride and mother Tessie B. Stewart Pride on March 18, 1934, in Sledge, Mississippi.
One of 11 children, he worked as a kid picking cotton for his father, a local sharecropper who often gathered his family around an old Philco radio to play Grand Ole Opry broadcasts.
Pride saved $10 to buy his first guitar, with an assist from his mother, out of a Sears Roebuck catalog.
He learned songs from formative Opry singers, often hearing the Louvin Brothers on the famed WSM broadcast — which, at 50,000 watts, traveled 275 miles southwest to Pride's corner of rural Mississippi — and catching radio star Smilin' Eddie Hill at makeshift concerts in town.
"I lived only 54 miles from Memphis," Pride said. "They'd come down, put a flat bed truck up."
Pride later told Hill: "I wanted to get up there so bad. He said, 'You shoulda said something. We would've probably got ya up there.' That wasn't the thing to do back in those days. Segregation, you know."
From baseball fields to a record deal
But music only played a B-side in Pride's burgeoning passions. His first big hit came on the baseball diamond.
In the 1950s, not a decade after Jackie Robinson smashed segregation barriers for Black athletes in the major leagues, Pride pursued his own major league career. He bounced between Negro leagues and major league farm systems, pitching for teams in Wisconsin, Kentucky, Alabama, Idaho, Texas and, perhaps most notably, the Memphis Red Sox.
He earned a stop in 1956 on the Negro American League all-star team, only to be drafted later that year into U.S. military service. He served until 1958.
"I was gonna go to the major leagues and break all the records there and set new ones," Pride said, adding a laugh. "By the time I was 35 or 36, then I was gonna go sing. That's what my plan was."
In the early 1960s, Pride's major league opportunities dwindled — but his voice grew.
He lived in Montana at the time, where he played semi-pro baseball, worked at a smelting factory and occasionally sang tunes in honky-tonk bars. At a Montana gig in 1962, touring country singers Red Sovine and Red Foley invited Pride to sing two songs on stage — “Lovesick Blues” and “Heartaches By The Number."
Sovine encouraged Pride to visit Cedarwood Publishing in Nashville and, in 1963, he obliged. Pride first took to Music City on his way home from a New York Mets tryout in Clearwater, Florida.
At Cedarwood, Pride connected with his would-be manager Jack D. Johnson and, two years later, landed a deal at RCA with the help of Chet Atkins and producer "Cowboy" Jack Clement.
Audiences react to a Black country musician
In the mid-1960s — as civil rights activists marched for equality in the South — the label hesitated at promoting an African-American in country music.
Despite being formed by intertwining Black and white Southern cultures in the early 20th century, the once-called "hillbilly" format ("hillbilly music" was released in the 1920s as a segregated marketing tactic for white record buyers; Black consumers were marketed toward "race records") was dominated for decades by white artists and gatekeepers.
Charley Pride gets ready to perform during the 14th annual CMA Awards show at the Grand Ole Opry House Oct. 13, 1980.
The label pushed Pride's early singles, such as "The Snakes Crawl at Night" and "Before I Met You," without distributing his picture.
RCA could keep Pride's face off a record, but promoters couldn't keep him from audiences who paid tickets to hear his voice.
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Pride recalled being introduced to rousing applause early in his career, only to be greeted to silence as he took the stage. He made a sound similar to a deflating balloon when recalling those first gigs.
"They were quiet as a pin," Pride said. "They thought maybe it was a joke."
During a 1966 show at Olympia Stadium in Detroit, Pride faced the biggest gig of his career to that point. He'd been walking out to a few hundred deflated balloons each night. This night, he'd be walking out to thousands.
"Here's what Jack and I came up," Pride said, "'Ladies and gentlemen I realize it's a little unique with me comin' out on stage wearin' this permanent tan. I got three singles -- I only have ten minutes -- I get through with those I'll maybe do a Hank Williams song, but I ain't got time to talk about pigmentation.'"
"And I hit it."
Leaving a legacy in country music
By 1967, Pride sang his way into the top 10 of the country charts with "Just Between You and Me." And he didn't stop there.
From the downhome honesty on "All I Have to Offer You (Is Me)" to wanderlust heartbreak on 'Is Anybody Goin' to San Antone," Pride's charming baritone propelled him to the top of country charts throughout the 1970s and '80s.
He reached a pinnacle of commercial country music success achieved by few artists before him, totaling more than 50 top 10 country hits.
"Just as a country music singer, Charley Pride is one of the all-time greats," Rucker said. "He's a superstar, everybody knows he's an icon."
And no song may be associated with Pride's legacy more than hit "Kiss An Angel Good Morning," which spent five weeks at No. 1 on the country charts and crossed into pop success.
Charley Pride tries out a seat on the MTA trolley car named for him June 15, 1999. The car, with "The Pride of Country Music" emblazoned on the side, was dedicated during Pride's annual Fan Fair breakfast.
"I had no idea it would do what it did," Pride said. "I just couldn't wait to get into the studio to get that baby done. It's been my biggest, so far."
He credited his success to the singing that took him from baseball fields to the Grand Ole Opry stage.
"Chet Atkins, he told Jack Clement he'd never heard a voice ... just cut through, when I started singing like that," Pride said. "I guess it's the richness of the voice."
After earning Entertainer of the Year in 1971, Pride won the CMA Awards' Male Vocalist of the Year in 1973 and 1974 — the first artist to earn back-to-back victories in the competitive category.
A three-time Grammy Award winner, the Recording Academy honored Pride with a Lifetime Achievement award in 2017.
At his peak, some referred to Pride as the Jackie Robinson of country music, but the path for Black country singers after Pride wouldn't be followed as quickly as those in major leagues. It took country gatekeepers until 2008 to welcome another Black artist, Rucker, to top the radio charts; pleas for diversity on the charts and in positions of power in country music continue today.
In the final year of his life, Pride’s influence and impact was perhaps more evident than ever. One of the last songs he recorded was “Why Things Happen,” a collaboration with both Allen and Rucker, as other Black country performers continued to find critical acclaim (Mickey Guyton) and chart success (Kane Brown).
As he stood on stage at the CMAs in November, Pride acknowledged that he’d been a inspiration for many others. But he immediately pivoted, dedicating almost all of his two minute speech to key figures in his life and career, including Johnson and Clement.
“With all of the people that have been influenced by my life, and what my life has been influenced by, I’ve gotta say something about some of them.”
In lieu of flowers, the Pride family asks for donations to The Pride Scholarship at Jesuit College Preparatory School or St. Philips School and Community Center in Dallas. Donations may also be made to a local food bank or a charity of choice.
This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Charley Pride dies of COVID-19 complications at 86 years old
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Comments
December 12, 2020
I think the news person needs a new job .... Matthew Leimkuehler and Dave Paulson, Nashville Tennessean
Sun, December 5, 2021, 7:47 PM
Fantastic voice, the epitome of easy listening.
Used to hear him a lot he was on the top of the country list when I was in the service.
Great voice and entertainer. Saw him live in Seattle back in the 70’s.
I noticed that.
Date errors aside, "complications from COVID-19" means that he died of something else, but tested positive for COVID. It was likely pneumonia or a heart attack that actually got him; he just happened to also have a virus. Can't have a pandemic panic without inflated mortality numbers, you know.
RIP Charlie Pride. Whether you left us a year ago or just recently, I still hope you RIP.
Fortunate enough to have seen him entertain live when living in DFW.
One of the best, a real C&W singer. There are so very few left, RIP Charlie : Roll on Mississippi, carry me home..."
Spot on Rocky
Two of my close friends both RVN vets, one a neighbor, inflicted with chronic terminal diseases just happened to catch covid an passed shortly after.
''Rain is a dripping off the brim of my hat
Sure is cold today
Here I am a' walking down 66
Wish she hadn't done me that way...''
Here he is singing ''Anybody Going to San Antone'' What a great song.
I drove the Big Rig from South Carolina to Laredo more than 400 times. Every time I rolled west out of Houston on I 10, I was headed to ''San Antone'' and I swear every single time I was singing this song.
''Anybody goin' to San Antone, or Phoenix Arizona
Any place is all right, as long as I
Can forget I've ever known here...''
Thank you Charlie Pride. What a great artist.
Rest in Peace Charlie Pride.
A very high percentage of deaths attributed to COVID were actually due to some other cause. Same is true with hospitalizations. The Omicron panic was started when people in southern Africa were hospitalized for some other reason, then automatically tested for COVID. I've heard the same if true here in the US.
Charley Pride died on December 12, 2020, from COVID-19 complications.
We saw him perform in Greenville, Texas a few years before that. He was in his 80s at that time, but did a really good job.
as a kid I remember him on the country music shows my dad thought was the only thing TV sets were made for LOL
and way i enjoyed his talent at the time I never even gave a thought to him being Balck only that he was just a good singer
after skimming thru the story he had a uphill battle to get where he was
🤣
"Can't have a pandemic panic without inflated mortality numbers, you know."
Absolute truth there.
My Dad was a huge fan of his. They were both from MS and born poor. Now they can finally meet.
RIP
The owner of my local golf course and his two sons went on a golfing holiday to Nevada last January. They all came down with COVID, and the Dad - who had been afflicted with lung issues for years - died on a ventilator, with pneumonia. Listed cause of death was COVID, though, NOT pneumonia.
It's like dying in a car wreck because you were texting and the cause is listed as "death by cell phone."
My dad always watched The Lawrence Welk show. 😮 I could never figure out his ideas of good entertainment until Hee Haw hit the air waves! It just had to be those Lennon Sisters!! 😁
On the subject of Charie Prides death, I am most curious about why the media just now decided to publicize the story, a whole year after the fact??