//
Skip to content
Chittlin Circuit Magazine
Loading...

Java Code Module

Wide screen resolution  Default screen resolution  Increase font size  Decrease font size  Default font size 
You are here:  Home arrow News
Wilson Pickett dies of heart attack at 64 PDF Print E-mail
Wilson Pickett, the soul pioneer best known for the fiery hits "Mustang Sally" and "In The Midnight Hour," died of a heart attack Thursday, 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. One of Pickett's children said he hoped his father received the proper recognition.

"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 fourth of the singer's six children, told WRC-TV in Washington after his death.
A member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 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.
Pickett was defined by his raspy voice and passionate delivery.
But the Alabama-born Pickett actually got his start singing gospel music in church.
After moving to Detroit as a teen, he joined the group the Falcons, which scored the hit "I Found a Love" with Pickett on lead vocals in 1962 which you can hear right HERE. He started his solo career a year later
 
< Prev   Next >