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Thursday March 28, 2024

Country music legend Kenny Rogers dies at 81

By AFP
March 22, 2020

LOS ANGELES: Country music legend Kenny Rogers, whose career spanned six decades and helped bring the genre into the mainstream, has died at the age of 81, his family announced.

With hits like "The Gambler," "Lucille" and the duet "Islands in the Stream" with Dolly Parton, the three-time Grammy winner left an indelible mark on American music.

"Rogers passed away peacefully at home from natural causes under the care of hospice and surrounded by his family," the family said in a statement late Friday.

The family said they were planning a small private service "out of concern for the national COVID-19 emergency."

Tributes poured in from across the world of showbiz.

"You never know how much you love somebody until they´re gone," Parton said.

"I´ve had so many wonderful years and wonderful times with my friend Kenny, but above all the music and the success I loved him as a wonderful man and a true friend."

Country star Blake Shelton said: "I can´t express on Twitter the impact Kenny Rogers the artist and the man had on me. He was always very kind and funny to be around. Rest In Peace Gambler."

Rogers, who sold tens of millions of records worldwide, had 20 albums go platinum, according to his website.

"I´ve never considered myself a great singer, but I do have a certain way as a storyteller," he told the Irish Examiner in 2013.

"I´ve been very lucky in finding many great songs that have had a staying power, and have lingered longer in the heart."

Released in 1978, his album "The Gambler" was a huge international hit, going multi-platinum. The title track became his signature song.

"I do two kinds of songs," he told NPR in 2015.

"There´s story songs that have social significance, or they´re ballads that say what every man would like to say and every woman would like to hear."

One of those emotional ballads was "Lady," written by Lionel Richie and released in 1980. It was an instant crossover hit.

In 1985, he sang a solo on "We Are The World," the Grammy-winning star-studded charity single to raise money to help alleviate famine in Africa.

Rogers starred in a series of made-for-television movies based on "The Gambler" through the 1980s and 1990s, but he liked to joke that he wasn´t much of a gambler himself.

"I learned a long time ago, I can´t win enough money to excite me, but I can lose enough to depress me," he told NPR. "So I don´t gamble."

He played his final concert at Nashville in October 2017, where he was joined by Parton, his long-time friend and collaborator, and Richie.

In April 2018, Rogers scrapped the final dates of his farewell tour due to health concerns.

"I didn´t want to take forever to retire," the singer said.

"I´ve thoroughly enjoyed this opportunity to say farewell to fans over the course of the past two years," he said, adding that he could "never properly thank them for the encouragement and support they´ve given me throughout my career."

Born in a housing project in Houston, Texas, Rogers started his career in the late 1950s and quickly became active in rockabilly, jazz and other genres that he brought into his country style.

He went on to have 24 number one hits and was a six-time Country Music Association award winner. In 2013, Rogers was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, which said he had "parlayed a distinctive, husky voice and laid-back sex appeal into durable superstardom."