David Clayton-Thomas, lead singer of 60s and 70s group Blood, Sweat & Tears has died at 84.
According to his publicist, the Canadian singer died peacefully at a hospital in Toronto with no cause of death given.
Clayton-Thomas wrote the group’s most well-known song Spinning Wheel which reached number two in the US and was nominated for three Grammy awards, winning one.
He was born in England before his family settled in Toronto after the second world war. By the time he was 14, he was homeless and spent a great deal of his teenage years in trouble with the law and living in and out of a number of jails.
In the 1960s, he started to find success as a musician and fronted a band called David Clayton-Thomas and The Fabulous Shays, later moving to New York.
He joined recently broken up band Blood, Sweat & Tears who then reformed and sparked the attention of legendary music executive Clive Davis who later described Clayton-Thomas as a “staggering” musician.
“Blood, Sweat & Tears was such an unusual mix of people,” Clayton-Thomas said in an interview. “We had guys in that band whose background was totally Juilliard. We had other guys who were right out of Berkeley – hard-core be-bop jazzers – and then we had another faction like me who were basically saloon-trained rock and roll R&B Telecaster players.”
His first album with the band was a smash hit, selling 10m copies worldwide, charting for 109 weeks in the US, also winning five Grammy awards. Hit singles also included And When I Die and You’ve Made Me So Very Happy.
When Clayton-Thomas was asked if he knew the band would be as successful as it became, he said: “I don’t mean to sound arrogant, but yeah. The first time I walked in and sang with that band, we were in shock. It was one of those electrical things that happen.”
The band went on a controversial state-sponsored tour of several Eastern Bloc countries during the Cold War which became the focus of 2023 documentary What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears? It was revealed that the tour was arranged so that Clayton-Thomas could receive a green card to live and work in the US.
There were more hit albums including Blood, Sweat & Tears 3 and Blood, Sweat & Tears 4 before Clayton-Thomas left the band in 1972 after being exhausted from life on the road.
“I kept it going as long as I could sanely and physically do it,” he said.
He released a number of solo albums and launched a 10-piece band in Toronto in the 2000s who he would tour with in the subsequent years. He also worked with troubled youth charities and published a memoir in 2010.
A memorial concert is set to take place soon.
