Charlie Gracie 2018 |
Charlie Gracie, 86, the South Philadelphia singer and guitarist whose 1950s hits made him an international star, has died. His music had a major impact on the Beatles and many other British acts of the 1960s, according to Dan DeLuca at the Philly Inquirer.
Gracie died Friday in Aldan, Delaware County, his son, Charlie Gracie Jr., said. Mr. Gracie had been ill with a series of complications since contracting COVID-19, after playing his final two shows in April.
Gracie 1958 |
His song “Butterfly,” written by Bernie Lowe and Kal Mann, topped the Billboard charts and became the first No. 1 hit for Cameo Records, the label that would later produce hits for Philadelphia teen idols like Bobby Rydell and Chubby Checker.
Cameo’s second No. 1 hit was “Fabulous,” which found Gracie a lifelong audience in the United Kingdom, where he was among the first American rock acts to tour after the song written by Harold Land and Mann reached No. 8 on the British charts.
A 15-year-old Paul McCartney saw Gracie perform in England, and recorded “Fabulous” on his 1999 album Run Devil Run. Gracie’s 2014 memoir, Rock & Roll’s Hidden Giant, written with John A. Jackson, has a McCartney quote on the cover: “When we were starting out with the Beatles, the music coming over from America was magical to us — and one of the artists who epitomized this magic was Charlie Gracie.”
Gracie w/friend 2015 |
Mr. Gracie’s time at the top was brief. In a move he said he came to regret, he sued Cameo in a dispute over royalties, and settled out of court, using the money to buy his parents a house in Havertown.
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