Colonel Abrams: US House singer dies aged 67
The musician scored his biggest
hit in 1985 with the club single Trapped, which reached number three in the UK.
Last year, it emerged he was living
homeless in New York. Friends then launched a fundraising campaign to help him
obtain vital diabetes medication.
His death was announced on Facebook by DJ Tony "Tune" Herbert,
who said: "Now he is at peace."
He added: "Our condolences
go out to his family and fans world wide. He is no longer suffering or
Trapped."
Colonel Abrams - his real name -
was born in Detroit, the home of Motown, in 1949.
He said his music was a blend of
those melodies and the hard street rhythms of New York, where he moved as a
child.
"I studied all the people on
Motown, and I studied the music and listened to the lyrics Smokey Robinson used
to write, and just craved the opportunity to be on Motown," he told the
Associated Press news agency in the 1980s.
"But after my family moved
to New York, I studied street music, and I sort of combined them both: The
Detroit sound and the street sounds of New York."
Prince connection
Abrams was in the group
Conservative Manor with his brother Morris in the late 1960s, then sang lead
vocals for 94 East in 1976.
They briefly featured Prince on
guitar, and recorded his song Just Another Sucker in 1977.
The band dissolved once Prince's
solo career took off, and Abrams joined Surprise Package, a New Jersey group.
He scored a small hit in 1984
with the ballad Leave the Message Behind the Door but it was the follow-up, a
soulful house mantra called Music Is The Answer, which finally propelled him
into the limelight.
An international dance hit, it
earned him a record deal with MCA - which led to the chart hits Trapped and I'm
Not Going to Let You.
Abrams continued to feature on
the US dance and R&B charts into the mid-1990s, and performed around the
world into the new century.
However, he fell upon hard times
in his final years, prompting Herbert and house DJ Marshall Jefferson to launch
a crowdfunding campaign.
"The Colonel is very ill with
no permanent place of his own to live at this time and limited financial
resources," they said at the time.
"Those of us who have
listened to his awesome music and know of his plight, have banded together to
try and help him through this rough patch."
According to Herbert, the
musician died on Thanksgiving.
Joey Negro, Dave Pearce and Swizz
Beatz are among those to have paid tribute online.
"It's a sad day for the
House Music community," wrote Jellybean Benitez, a producer who worked on
Madonna's Holiday and Whitney Houston's Love Will Save The Day.
"Just learned Colonel Abrams
passed away," added Jefferson. "Never to be forgotten, R.I.P."

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