vrijdag, september 26, 2003

Singer Robert Palmer has died of a heart attack in Paris aged 54.
The British star is best known for his hits Addicted to Love, Some Guys Have All the Luck and Didn't Mean to Turn You On. He had been in the French capital on a two-day break with partner Mary Ambrose, after recording a TV appearance in the UK. His manager said he suffered the heart attack in the early hours of Friday morning.
The Yorkshire-born singer had recently been on tour of Europe to promote his latest album Drive.
Palmer had been performing since the early 1970s, playing in bands including Mandrake Paddle Steamer and Dada, featuring Elkie Brooks. He then went on to front Vinegar Joe, releasing three albums with the band before launching his solo career. He was also a member of 1980s supergroup Power Station, which also included members of Duran Duran. But it was it was during the 1980s that he achieved mainstream recognition.
Known for his sharp dress sense, his solo album Riptide produced the top five hit Addicted to Love, which was backed with one of rock music's most famous videos.
Click here to see Robert Palmer perform Looking for Clues on Top of the Pops in 1980.
It featured Palmer backed by a band featuring identically-dressed woman, who were also made up to look the same. But after scoring hits with She Makes My Day and Mercy Mercy Me he turned he returned to his rhythm and blues roots. His Ridin' High album in 1992 was a mix of genres from Tin Pan Alley and cabaret classics. A greatest hits album was released in 1995 and reached number four in the UK charts.
Although born in Batley, Yorkshire, he spent much of his childhood in Malta before moving back to the UK at the age of 19. Later on he spent time living in New York, the Bahamas and Switzerland, but also stayed close to his roots.
Rock journalist Paul Lester, from Uncut magazine, said Palmer rose from northern clubs to become "elegant and sophisticated" and the master of several styles. "He was kind of a pioneer of blue-eyed soul, which is white men doing black music and R&B pretty well," Lester told BBC News Online. "He had two or three careers - from pub rock stomping with Elkie Brooks in '72 to electronic pop music to smooth, suave R&B balladry, to blues to hardcore rock funk."
Palmer filmed his parts for a regional TV show, My Kinda People, about his musical influences, for Yorkshire TV on Wednesday. "We're shocked and saddened to hear of Robert Palmer's death," a Yorkshire TV spokesman said. "At the moment, no decision has been made regarding the future of this programme as everyone's thoughts are with Robert's family and friends."
Suzanne Parkes, who worked as Palmer's publicist for Power Station's Living in Fear album in 1996, told BBC News Online: "He was something really rare in the music industry. His offstage persona was even nicer than that onstage, he was an absolute gent. I'm really sad, but I remember the times with Robert as just so much fun. I remember going to him to this secret karaoke club in Soho once - and he actually got up on stage and did karaoke to his own songs, to Addicted to Love, just for a laugh."
(Bron)

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