Clarence Carter dead: ‘Strokin’ blues singer was 90
Clarence Carter, the blues and soul singer famous for songs including the raunchy hit βStrokinββ featured in Eddie Murphyβs βThe Nutty Professor,β has died.
Fame Recording Studios in Carterβs native Alabama announced the singer-songwriterβs death Thursday morning. In a statement shared to Facebook, the studio said Carter βwas more than an artist to us,β adding he βwas family.β The post did not disclose additional details about Carterβs passing, including the cause of death. Carter was 90.
The Grammy-nominated musician, who was blind since age 1, was most popular in the late 1960s and early β70s, with chart-busting hits including 1968βs romantic βSlip Away,β 1970βs βPatchesβ and the Christmas hit βBack Door Santa.β He released a steady stream of music through the β90s β Carter released 22 studio albums over the course of his career β and earned two Grammy Award nominations.
Carter received his first nod in 1970 for composing ex-wife Candi Statonβs single βIβd Rather Be an Old Manβs Sweetheart,β which was nominated for the rhythm & blues song category. He received his own nomination in R&B vocal performance the following year for his story-driven βPatches,β about a young man fulfilling his fatherβs expectations.
Former Times pop music critic Robert Hilburn wrote in 1992: βClarence Carter is one of the most overlooked soul stylists of the modern pop era.β
Among Carterβs musical talents was a knack for descriptive lyricism, which he channeled for unapologetically sexual songs βG Spotβ and βStrokinβ.β In these numbers, Carter spares no detail in his approach to lovemaking. βStrokinβ,ββ released in 1986, notably received play in 1996βs βThe Nutty Professorβ as Murphyβs titular character drives over to a date.
Born in 1936 in Montgomery, Ala., Carter took an interest in music in his youth, enjoying the blues records his stepfather bought and learning to play the guitar. βI would lie in my bed and hear those bands playing and say to myself, βOne of these days Iβm going to play just like that,ββ he told The Times in 1987.
He graduated from Alabama State College in 1960 with a bachelorβs in music and worked briefly as a schoolteacher before beginning his professional music career. Carter formed a duo with friend and singer Calvin Scott, but his collaborator was later seriously injured in an automobile accident. Carter then went solo and began recording music with producer Rick Hall and Fame in Muscle Shoals, amid the late-β60s soul boom.
After the success of his early hits in the β70s, Carter struggled to find the same chart success amid discoβs popularity. βNobodyβs gonna keep a hit record all the time,β he told The Times. In the early β80s, his βWorking on a Love Buildingβ was a moderate hit. Carter signed to Ichiban Records to record his 1986 album βDr. C.C.,β which featured βStrokinββ among its tracks.
βBy the time I finished doing that song and walked back up to the control room, [the engineer] was laughing so hard he hadnβt even turned the tape machine off,β he said a year after the hitβs release.
Carter released his final studio album, βSing Along With Clarence Carter,β in 2011 but continued to release live albums and compilations until 2020. He also continued performing live through the 2010s.
The singer-songwriter was married to Staton from 1970 to 1973 and they share a son, Clarence Carter Jr. He married Joyce Jenkins in 2001 and has lived in DeKalb County, Ga., since 1983.
βClarence Carter leaves behind a legacy of timeless music, unforgettable performances, and a friendship we will always cherish,β Fame Studios said in its statement. βWe extend our love and prayers to his family, friends, and fans around the world.β