Jump to content

Jimmy Castor RIP

Unconfirmed at the minute, but I've read online that Jimmy has passed away.

 

 

Sad news.

 

 

 

added by site

 

news clip and link

 

 

Funk great Jimmy Castor, the man who made the Troglodyte and Bertha Butt famous, passed away on Monday at the age of 64. At this time, there is no cause of death.

 

According to VVN Music affiliate Noise11, "Castor's grandson P.J. Romain said on Twitter that his "grandfather is unresponsive at the hospital," before breaking the news eight hours later in a tweet that said: "My grandfather Jimmy Castor died today at 2:30 on MLK day."

 

""Disco musician Nile Rodgers also tweeted his grief, saying: "I can't stop crying. How do I explain how much his brilliant upbeat music touched my soul? Jimmy Castor RIP.""

 

Read more: http://www.vintagevi...l#ixzz1jhAvFTWh

 

 

bio feature clip and link

 

Castor recorded a few singles for the My Brothers label with the Clintonian Cubs in the early 1 960s before his first solo sides for Jet Set ('65), Decca ('66), and then Smash, a subsidiary of Mercury, the label he had started out on, By 1966 there was a new sound in Harlem; doo-wop was out (although it would never die, experiencing regular revivals into the 1 990s).

 

The new sound, inspired by the large and growing Puerto Rican population of Harlem, was dubbed Latin soul, and locals like Ray Barrette (11 Watusi") and Joe Cuba ("'Bang' 'Bang'") were the new stars uptown, By now Castor had added cimbales and vibes to his arsenal of talents and with his longtime writing and producing partner John Pruitt came up with one of the all-time great New York Latin soul discs-"Hey, Leroy, Your Mama's Callin' You."

"Hey, Leroy" was and is irresistible, with its fat melodic bass line, descending piano triplets, timbales, and conga grooves, wailing sax, and call-and-response refrain"go to yo' mama, go to yo' mama." By Christmas week of '66 it had risen to #16 on Billboards national R&B charts (#31 pop), but in Harlem it was as good as #1 and would be sung by kids on the baseball fields and playgrounds of New York for a decade.

 

read more http://www.70disco.com/jimmycas.htm




Members Comments

Recommended Comments

Just finished reading Garth Cartwrights more miles than money, the author meets jimmy in vegas where he moved in 1997 jimmy kept a close eye on his royalties and woe betide anyone who sampled anything he wrote,saw him in 1970 in croydon. Jimmy was born june2 1943. RIP

Link to comment
Social source share

so so sad

I agree, a legend with roots that go back far and into many different scenes.

I gotta say though, I laughed at someone with the handle "caveman" posting in this thread. You should change your user ID to Troglodyte.

Link to comment
Social source share

I agree, a legend with roots that go back far and into many different scenes.

I gotta say though, I laughed at someone with the handle "caveman" posting in this thread. You should change your user ID to Troglodyte.

for a pre historic archeologist the handle fit's fine.

Link to comment
Social source share

for a pre historic archeologist the handle fit's fine.

I guess he does say "cavemen" also in the song though so it is funny that you posted even with that handle. You know that this was his biggest hit:

Link to comment
Social source share



Get involved with Soul Source

Add your comments now

Join Soul Source

A free & easy soul music affair!

Join Soul Source now!

Log in to Soul Source

Jump right back in!

Log in now!



×
×
  • Create New...