Little Richard, Flamboyant Wild Man of Rock ’n’ Roll, Dies at 87

By Tim Weiner

Richard Penniman, better known as Little Richard, who combined the sacred shouts of the black church and the profane sounds of the blues to create some of the world’s first and most influential rock ’n’ roll records, died on Saturday morning. He was 87.

His death was confirmed by his son, Danny Jones Penniman, who said the cause was cancer. He did not say where his father died.

Little Richard did not invent rock ’n’ roll. Other musicians had already been mining a similar vein by the time he recorded his first hit, “Tutti Frutti” — a raucous song about sex, its lyrics cleaned up but its meaning hard to miss — in a New Orleans recording studio in September 1955. Chuck Berry and Fats Domino had reached the pop Top 10, Bo Diddley had topped the rhythm-and-blues charts, and Elvis Presley had been making records for a year.Read More…https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/09/arts/music/little-richard-dead.html

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