Gregg Foreman, the Delta 72 founder and Cat Power collaborator, dead at 53
Gregg Foreman, the founder of the influential blues-punk band the Delta 72 and a longtime collaborator with Cat Power and other acts, has died. He was 53.
News of Foremanβs death on Tuesday was confirmed by Cat Powerβs label, Matador Records. No cause of death was given.
Foreman, born in Philadelphia, formed the Delta 72 in Washington, D.C., in the mid-β90s, putting a soulfully-scuzzy blues twist on the cityβs post-hardcore sound of the era. Foreman was a distinctly charismatic frontman, pairing the flamboyant stage presence of his beloved β60s and β70s R&B acts with the live-wire tension of punk. The band released three albums before dissolving in 2001.
For two decades, he played in Cat Powerβs backing ensemble, the Dirty Delta Blues band, and became the projectβs musical director. He also collaborated with Pink Mountaintops, Suicideβs Alan Vega and Martin Rev, the Gossip, Lydia Lunch and Death Valley Girls, along with singer-songwriters Lucinda Williams and Linda Perry.
Outside of his live-band career, Foreman was a prolific DJ and a deeply knowledgeable music journalist. He most recently played on Cat Powerβs βRedux,β Januaryβs three-song EP celebrating the 20th anniversary of the bandβs beloved LP βThe Greatest.β
Music and cultural figures like director Jim Jarmusch, Kid Congo Powers, and Cold Caveβs Wesley Eisold mourned Foremanβs death on social media. Eisold wrote on Instagram that βLike others, he bounced in and out of our lives and changed each one he visited. For better or for worse, he lived a life that others only claim to have lived and he was one of one. His love for music was as genuine as the pain he harbored.β