by JTF » Sat Jul 02, 2005 6:42 am
astonamous,
BRIAN McCOLLUM
FREE PRESS POP MUSIC WRITER
Obie Benson had a personality as big and distinctive as his voice.
Life in a music group, any veteran player will tell you, can be an exercise in long frustration and quick tempers. The outfits that survive are the ones with a handy way to deflate tensions. For the Four Tops, that role belonged to Mr. Benson, a natural cut-up with a comic touch.
Clearly, he excelled at the task: Last year, the Detroit group celebrated its 50th anniversary, heralded as one of the longest-running acts in the history of popular music.
With Mr. Benson's death Friday morning, Detroit lost more than a Motown vocalist. Succumbing at Harper Hospital to what had been an abrupt and overwhelming series of medical problems, Mr. Benson left behind not just a venerable body of songs, but a reputation as one of the most affable folks to pass through Hitsville's halls.
Mr. Benson was in the hospital when he turned 69 last month. He'd been admitted to address a circulation problem in his leg, but all went shockingly bad from there: The leg was amputated, Mr. Benson suffered a heart attack, and within days he was diagnosed with lung cancer. Last week he began intense, stage-four chemotherapy.
His family was nearby -- ex-wife Valaida Benson and adult daughters Eboni and Tobi Benson. His other family was there, too. At his side this past month was Four Tops mate Abdul (Duke) Fakir. Lead singer Levi Stubbs, his mobility severely limited because of a 2002 stroke, insisted that he be on hand.
Fakir was too shaken Friday to speak publicly, relaying through a spokesman: "He enjoyed every moment of his life, and put a smile on everyone's face, including my own."
Fakir and Stubbs are now the sole surviving Tops, the only original members of a quartet that was launched in 1954 when all were high schoolers on Detroit's northeast side. Mr. Benson's boyhood best friend, singer Lawrence Payton, died in 1997.
After signing with Motown Records in 1963, when the group of twentysomethings became instant elder statesmen at Detroit's biggest label, the hits poured out, two dozen of them making it to pop's top 40. While history suggests that the Tops cut just one song with Mr. Benson on lead -- an obscure '64 track called "What You Gonna Do With Me Baby" -- he was no mere backup singer, his rich baritone the foundation of the group's harmonies.
Mr. Benson's light spirit didn't overshadow his serious side. In 1970, he labored with writer Al Cleveland on a song to capture the aura of the turbulent times. The result was "What's Going On," recorded later that year by Marvin Gaye to become one of the most venerated works in American popular music -- and a lasting statement from the versatile Four Tops vocalist who knew better than most how to absorb, and to celebrate, life.
Funeral arrangements are expected to be announced Tuesday.
Copyright © 2005 Detroit Free Press Inc.
astonamous,
BRIAN McCOLLUM
FREE PRESS POP MUSIC WRITER
Obie Benson had a personality as big and distinctive as his voice.
Life in a music group, any veteran player will tell you, can be an exercise in long frustration and quick tempers. The outfits that survive are the ones with a handy way to deflate tensions. For the Four Tops, that role belonged to Mr. Benson, a natural cut-up with a comic touch.
Clearly, he excelled at the task: Last year, the Detroit group celebrated its 50th anniversary, heralded as one of the longest-running acts in the history of popular music.
With Mr. Benson's death Friday morning, Detroit lost more than a Motown vocalist. Succumbing at Harper Hospital to what had been an abrupt and overwhelming series of medical problems, Mr. Benson left behind not just a venerable body of songs, but a reputation as one of the most affable folks to pass through Hitsville's halls.
Mr. Benson was in the hospital when he turned 69 last month. He'd been admitted to address a circulation problem in his leg, but all went shockingly bad from there: The leg was amputated, Mr. Benson suffered a heart attack, and within days he was diagnosed with lung cancer. Last week he began intense, stage-four chemotherapy.
His family was nearby -- ex-wife Valaida Benson and adult daughters Eboni and Tobi Benson. His other family was there, too. At his side this past month was Four Tops mate Abdul (Duke) Fakir. Lead singer Levi Stubbs, his mobility severely limited because of a 2002 stroke, insisted that he be on hand.
Fakir was too shaken Friday to speak publicly, relaying through a spokesman: "He enjoyed every moment of his life, and put a smile on everyone's face, including my own."
Fakir and Stubbs are now the sole surviving Tops, the only original members of a quartet that was launched in 1954 when all were high schoolers on Detroit's northeast side. Mr. Benson's boyhood best friend, singer Lawrence Payton, died in 1997.
After signing with Motown Records in 1963, when the group of twentysomethings became instant elder statesmen at Detroit's biggest label, the hits poured out, two dozen of them making it to pop's top 40. While history suggests that the Tops cut just one song with Mr. Benson on lead -- an obscure '64 track called "What You Gonna Do With Me Baby" -- he was no mere backup singer, his rich baritone the foundation of the group's harmonies.
Mr. Benson's light spirit didn't overshadow his serious side. In 1970, he labored with writer Al Cleveland on a song to capture the aura of the turbulent times. The result was "What's Going On," recorded later that year by Marvin Gaye to become one of the most venerated works in American popular music -- and a lasting statement from the versatile Four Tops vocalist who knew better than most how to absorb, and to celebrate, life.
Funeral arrangements are expected to be announced Tuesday.
Copyright © 2005 Detroit Free Press Inc.