Email

Legendary blues singer Bobby Bland dies at 83: media reports

File photo of Blues singer Bobby "Blue" Bland, 68, originally from Rosemark, Tennessee, at the Blues Foundation fourth annual Lifetime Achievement Awards November 9, 1998 at the House of Blues in Hollywood. REUTERS

(Reuters) – Bobby “Blue” Bland, a pioneer of the modern soul-blues sound, died on Sunday, according to Memphis media reports. He was 83.

File photo of Blues singer Bobby “Blue” Bland, 68, originally from Rosemark, Tennessee, at the Blues Foundation fourth annual Lifetime Achievement Awards November 9, 1998 at the House of Blues in Hollywood. REUTERS

Local television stations cited the Memphis Music Foundation, which could not be reached for comment.

Bland was a member of the Blues Foundation’s Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. His hits included “Turn on Your Love Light,” “Further on Up the Road” and “I Pity the Fool.”

Bland, known as “The Lion of The Blues,” was born in 1930 in Rosemark, Tennessee. He moved to Memphis in 1947 where he began mixing sounds from gospel, blues and R&B music, joining the Beale Streeters, a group that included Johnny Ace, B.B. King and Junior Parker, according to Bland’s biography on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame website.

“His hallmark was his supple, confidential soul-blues delivery,” the website said.

Bland received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997.

(Reporting By Brendan O’Brien; Editing by Mary Wisniewski and Stacey Joyce)

Related posts

Death toll in attack on Christmas market in Germany rises to 5 and more than 200 injured

US Senate passes government funding bill, averts shutdown

Trump wants EU to buy more US oil and gas or face tariffs