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R&B singer Teddy Pendergrass dead at 59

PHILADELPHIA ā€” Teddy Pendergrass, who became R&Bā€™s reigning sex symbol in the 1970s and ā€™80s with his forceful, masculine voice and passionate love ballads and later became an inspirational figure after suffering a devastating car accident that left him paralyzed, died Wednesday at age 59.

The singerā€™s son, Teddy PenderšŸŒƒgrass II, said his father died at a hospital in suburban Philadelphia. The singer underwent colon canceš“°r surgery eight months ago and had ā€œa difficult recovery,ā€ his son said.

ā€œTo all his fans who loved his music, thank you,ā€ his son saiš“†‰d. ā€œHe will live on through his music.ā€

Pendergrass suffered a spinal cord injury and was paralyzed from the ź§’waist down in the 1982 car accident. He spent six months in a hospitalšŸ… but returned to recording the next year with the album ā€œLove Language.ā€

He briefly returšŸŒŒned to the stage at the Live Aid concert in 1985, performing from his wheelchair.

Pendergrass later founded the Teddy Pendergrass Alliance, an organization whose mission is to encourage and help people with spinal cord injuries achieve their maximum potential in education, employment, housing, productivity and indepenšŸ¼dence, according to its Web ā€site.

Pendergrass, who was born in Philadelphia on March 26, 1950, gained popularity first as a member of Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes.

ź§‹In 1971, the group signed a record deal with the legendary writer/producers Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. The group released its first single, ā€œI Miss You,ā€ in 1972 and then released ā€œIf You Donā€™t Know Me by Now,ā€ which was nominated for a Grammy AwaršŸ’Žd.

Gamble remembered Pendeą²Œrgrass fondly and laudešŸ…°d him.

ā€œI think Teddy Pendergrass was really one of a kšŸŒŠind of an artist, and his music kind of speaks for him,ā€ Gamble said in an interview early Thursday. ā€œHe had such aāœƒ powerful voice, and he had a great magnetism.ā€

Pendergrass quit the group in 1975 and embarked on a solo carešŸ„€er in 1976. It was his solo hits that brought him his greatest fame. With songs such as ā€œLove T.K.O.,ā€ ā€œClź¦«ose the Doorā€ and ā€œI Donā€™t Love You Anymore,ā€ he came to define a new era of black male singers with his powerful, aggressive vocals that spoke to virility, not vulnerability.

His lyrics were never coarse, as those of later male R&B stars would be, but they had a sensual nature that bordered on erotic without being explicit.

ā€œTurn Off the Lightsā€ was a tune that perhaps best represented the many moods of Pendergrass ā€” tender and coaxing yet strong as the song rź§’eached its climax.

Pendergrass, the first black maź¦¦le singer to record five consecutive multi-platinum albums, made women swoon with each note, and his concerts were a testament to that adulation, with infamous stories of women throwing their underwear on stage for his affection.

But his career was derailed by the car accidentź§‘, Gamble saąµ©id.

ā€œHe šŸŒhad a tremendous career ahead of him, and the accident sort of got in the way of many of those plans,ā€ Gamble said.

However, Pendergrassā€™ cašŸ»reer did not end. He continued to sing and recorded several albums, receiving Grammy nominations; perhaps his best-known hit after his crash was the inspirational song ā€œLife is a Song Worth SinšŸ¼ging.ā€

It was 19 years before Pendergrass resumed performing at his own concšŸŽ¶erts. He made his return on Memorial Day weekend in 2001, with two soldź¦-out shows in Atlantic City, N.J.

Pendergrass is surviveš”‰d by his son, two daughters, his wife, his mothšŸ’™er and nine grandchildren.