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First Black country music superstar, Charley Pride dies from Covid complications

The first Black country music superstar Charley Pride has died from Covid complications.

Pride, 86, who was the first Black member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, died in Dallas, Texas on Saturday, his publicist confirmed.

Dolly Parton and a string of celebrities took to Twitter to pay tribute to the musician.

Dolly Parton tweeted “I’m so heartbroken that one of my dearest and oldest friends, Charley Pride, has passed away,”

“It’s even worse to know that he passed away from Covid-19. What a horrible, horrible virus. Charley, we will always love you.

“Rest In Peace. My love and thoughts go out to his family and all of his fans.”

Pride has released a lot of albums and sold more than 25 million records during a career that began in the mid-1960s.

He had three Grammy Awards, more than 30 number one 1 hits between 1969 and 1984, won the Country Music Association’s Top Male Vocalist and Entertainer of the Year awards in 1972 and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2000.

Pride was raised in Sledge, Mississippi, the son of a sharecropper. He had seven brothers and three sisters.

As a young man before launching his singing career, he was a pitcher and outfielder in the Negro American League with the Memphis Red Sox and in the Pioneer League in Montana.

After playing minor league baseball a couple of years, he ended up in Helena, Montana, where he worked in a zinc smelting plant by day and played country music in clubs at night.

After a tryout with the New York Mets, he visited Nashville and broke into country music when Chet Atkins, head of RCA Records, heard two of his demo tapes and signed him.

Throughout his career, he sang positive songs instead of the sad ones often associated with country music.

In 1994, he wrote his autobiography, Pride: The Charley Pride Story, in which he disclosed he was mildly manic depressive.

He had surgery in 1997 to remove a tumor from his right vocal cord.

“I’d like to be remembered as a good person who tried to be a good entertainer and made people happy, was a good American who paid his taxes and made a good living,” he said in 1985. 

“I tried to do my best and contribute my part.”

He is survived by his wife, Rozene, whom he married in 1956; three children, Kraig, Dion and Angela; and several grandchildren.