|
Gazza |
Gene Pitney found dead in hotel
American superstar Gene Pitney has been found dead aged 65 in his bed in a Cardiff hotel.
Pitney - who found fame with Twenty Four Hours From Tulsa - was pronounced dead at the Hilton hotel at 1000 BST.
He was on a UK tour and had shown no signs of illness. The cause of death is not yet known but is not suspicious.
His biggest success was in the 1960s and he enjoyed a 1989 revival with his chart-topping duet, Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart, with Marc Almond.
Mark Howes of his management company In Touch Music said the singer was found in his bed.
Mr Howes told BBC Wales that everyone had been shocked by the death and there had been no signs that he was ill.
"He did a good show last night at St David's Hall and it was wonderful," he said.
"I've seen him quite a few times on this tour and he was fit and well. He said it was the best tour he had done for quite a few years."
Pitney has continually toured over the last 40 years.
He received a glowing local newspaper review for what proved to be his final concert in Cardiff.
He received a standing ovation at the end of his 90-minute performance on Tuesday night.
He had nine dates left on his 23-date UK tour and was due to appear at Bristol's Colston Hall on Wednesday.
Rolling Stones
Pitney's songs have been recorded by some of the world's biggest stars - Hello Mary Lou was released by Rick Nelson, Roy Orbison recorded Today's Teardrops as the B-side to his million-selling single, Blue Angel.
He is also credited with helping the Rolling Stones break the American market with his endorsement of the band.
Mick Jagger and Keith Richards wrote his hit That Girl Belongs to Yesterday which became the Stones duo's first composition to reach the American charts.
Pitney returned to the charts with Marc Almond in 1989
The son of a mill worker, Pitney said childhood ambitions of becoming a performer could not have been further from his mind.
He once recalled how his first solo performance at school degenerated into an embarrassing whimper as Pitney was petrified by the expectant audience.
Overcoming his nerves over the next few years, Pitney learned to play the guitar and piano and formed a schoolboy band.
It was during one of their gigs that his distinctive voice was discovered by the "the proverbial fat man with a cigar" who took him off to New York.
He is survived by his wife Lynne and three sons who live in his native Connecticut
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/4878926.stm
[Edited by Gazza] |
|
Break The Spell |
"And Mr. Spector and Mr. Pitney Came Too." RIP Gene |
|
corgi37 |
Money cant buy ya health. He was just in Oz a couple of months ago. What a bummer. At least he died in a nice hotel and with perfect teeth. |
|
lotsajizz |
'superstar'? not in the US ... but it seemed like everyone I met in Britain or Ireland LOVED the guy and he was a superstar there...strange how different cultures latch onto different artists....like that weird French/Jerry lewis thang...
anyway, R.I.P. Mr. Pitney
[Edited by lotsajizz] |
|
Voodoo Scrounge |
RIP Gene |
|
Factory Girl |
RIP Gene Pitney |
|
StickyFishFingers |
I know very little of his songs but he certainly did his bit in getting the Stones on the road to success, so cheers to Mr Pitney may he rest in peace. |
|
Break The Spell |
quote: lotsajizz wrote:
strange how different cultures latch onto different artists....like that weird French/Jerry lewis thang...
Also like that Germany / Hasselhoff thing. |
|
gimmekeef |
RIP...."Isnt it funny what a town without pity can do!" |
|
Joey |
RIP GENE !!!!!!!
|
|
speedfreakjive |
just walked past a advertisement for his up-coming gig in Liverpool, R.I.P |
|
Martha |
Sad news.
RIP Gene and thank you for the music.
xxoo,
Martha Melodylan |
|
jb |
Thanks so much Gene. |
|
glencar |
RIP Mr. Pitney |
|
pdog |
Bummer... Too many dead threads around. |
|
gimmekeef |
Okay pdog..I keep waiting for that knot in the girls top to give way!!! |
|
corgi37 |
He was on 3AW, #1 talk back station here in Melb only about a month ago. And, as he's asked every time by Ernie Sigley, he mentioned the Stones. Could have been a bit of crap, but he reckons he doesnt remember any sessions with Spector or the boys. Not that they didnt happen, but, ahem, he "didnt remember". hahaha. But, he has said before that he was spruiking for the band in the U.S. in the early days as he found them all charming.
Man, i only found out today he wrote "He's a rebel" and "Hello, Mary Lou".
Those 2 songs alone would allow a fabulous lifestyle with lotsa blow and dirty, skanky, anal-gaping ho's.
I gotta write me a hit! |