From the Archives

Wild Wild Party's Over

Charlie Feathers: 1932-1998

Posted Sep 03, 1998 12:00 AM

Rockabilly -- and, indeed, all outsider rock -- suffered a great loss thisweek when singer-guitarist Charlie Feathers died on Saturday after sufferin amassive stroke earlier in the week.

Feathers, who was sixty-six years old, was one of rock's truest innovators,never losing the primitive edge that made his early recordings (many of which were collected on the just-released two-CD retrospective Get With It) so revered by a rabid cult following that included a vast array of modern-daymusicians.

Although his recording career spanned four decades -- dating back to a stintwith Sun Records, where he cut singles and even wrote a song ("I Forgot toRemember to Forget") for Elvis Presley -- Feathers' propensity for mercurialbehavior and wildly erratic performances hampered his rise. Those sameelements endeared him to rockabilly purists, who reveled in the singer's over-the-top antics and a remarkable vocal delivery that was awash in hiccups, growls and feral noises fierce enough to scare the daylights out of even the most jaded listener.

Most of the Mississippi-born pioneer's finest moments were recorded for tinylabels and issued on singles that trade hands for considerable sums, but hewas coaxed out of semi-retirement by producer Ben Vaughn in the early Nineties to record an album for Elektra's Nonesuch imprint.

He is survived by wife Rosemary, daughter Wanda Vanzant and sons Ricky & Charles 'Bubba' Feathers Jr.
DAVID SPRAGUE


Comments

Photo

More Photos

True grit: the late rockabilly pioneer Charlie Feathers.

Mick Rock


Advertisement

 

Everything:Charlie Feathers

Main | From the Archives | Album Reviews | Discography

 


Advertisement

Advertisement