Tuesday, December 30, 2025 | 07:46 PM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

American blues singer Bobby Bland passes away

Image

Press Trust of India London
Bobby Bland, the American blues singer, died in Memphis on Sunday following complications from an ongoing illness. He was 83.

Bland was born in Rosemark, Tennessee in 1930.

Known as The Lion of The Blues, he was a contemporary of blues and soul icons BB King and Ray Charles, and joined blues group the Beale Streeters when he first moved to Memphis in 1947, reported Daily Telegraph.

50 years years later, he won a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award for his services to music.

Bland's chart success came during the 50s' and late 60s', at the point he mastered the smooth and dynamic vocals that made his name.
 

He topped the charts with hits 'That's the Way Love Is' and 'I Pity the Fool'. A handful of Bland's other tracks - 'Turn on Your Love Light', 'Call on Me' and 'Ain't Nothing You Can Do' - made the Top 40.

However, Bland's music influenced rock acts in the Sixties, including The Grateful Dead, who covered Love Light during their live shows and Van Morrison, who covered Ain't Nothing You Can Do.

The singer's distinctive voice developed over time - Bland spent the early 50s' mimicing King's falsetto. But he later attributed his more gravelly tone to Aretha Franklin's father, Rev CL Franklin.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Jun 24 2013 | 6:55 PM IST

Explore News