Il Messaggiere - 'Sugar Man' singer Rodriguez dies at 81

NYSE - LSE
CMSC 0.04% 22.88 $
RBGPF 0.13% 63.18 $
BCE 0.71% 24.1 $
NGG 0.16% 87.64 $
CMSD 0.17% 23.29 $
AZN -1.22% 181.24 $
BTI 1.77% 59.4 $
GSK -1.03% 50.38 $
RIO 1.86% 100.5 $
RYCEF 0.91% 16.5 $
RELX -0.55% 36.16 $
BCC -3.05% 72.13 $
JRI 0.84% 13.04 $
BP -0.95% 46.5 $
VOD -1.97% 15.74 $
'Sugar Man' singer Rodriguez dies at 81
'Sugar Man' singer Rodriguez dies at 81 / Photo: PIERRE ANDRIEU - AFP

'Sugar Man' singer Rodriguez dies at 81

Sixto Rodriguez, the once obscure American singer-songwriter who found a career renaissance after his music developed a cult following abroad, has died at the age of 81, according to his website.

Text size:

"It is with great sadness that we at Sugarman.org announce that Sixto Diaz Rodriguez has passed away" on Tuesday, the statement read, without providing a cause of death for the singer, whose hits included "Sugar Man" and "I Wonder."

Born July 10, 1942 in Detroit to Mexican-American parents, Rodriguez worked on assembly lines while moonlighting as a musician, putting out two albums in the 1970s: "Cold Fact" and "Coming From Reality."

By most metrics they bombed stateside, and Rodriguez quit the music industry and lived a quiet, working-class life in Detroit.

The musician had no idea that his music, and in particular "Sugar Man," found a massive following throughout apartheid-era South Africa as well as New Zealand and Australia.

That he was not a public presence fueled fan beliefs that Rodriguez was dead.

But a group of fans tracked him down online, and he played a 1998 South African tour to sold-out arenas.

The remarkable story was immortalized in a 2012 documentary "Searching for Sugar Man," which went on to win an Oscar as well as give Rodriguez belated success in the United States and a music career resurgence.

Z.Bianchi--IM