Monday, June 1, 2026

Peabo Bryson, Singer of 'Beauty and the Beast' and R&B Classics, Suffers Stroke

Peabo Bryson appears in an undated photo posted to his official Facebook page. Bryson, 75, has suffered a stroke and is under medical care, according to a statement from his representative. (Credit: Peabo Bryson/Facebook)
Peabo Bryson’s voice has lived in slow dances, quiet-storm dedications, wedding receptions and Disney memories shared across generations. Smooth, controlled and unmistakably rooted in R&B, it carried romance with a kind of dignity that never needed to shout.

That made Sunday’s news hit hard.

Bryson, 75, the two-time Grammy-winning singer known for “Beauty and the Beast,” “A Whole New World (Aladdin’s Theme)” and decades of romantic R&B ballads, has suffered a stroke and is under medical care, according to a statement from his representative.


No additional details about Bryson’s condition have been publicly released. His family asked for privacy as he receives treatment. The statement said the ‘thoughts, prayers and love’ of friends and fans are welcomed.

The support began moving through R&B circles quickly. Stephanie Mills, one of Bryson’s contemporaries and a defining voice of her own generation, posted a message of support for him on social media.

“Right now for my friend @peabobryson2,” Mills wrote. “I truly love you. I am here for your family while you recover. ABUNDANT #POWER AND #STRENGTH.”

For casual listeners, Bryson may be most widely known as one of the voices behind two of the most recognizable movie duets of the early 1990s. He won Grammys for “Beauty and the Beast,” performed with Celine Dion, and “A Whole New World (Aladdin’s Theme),” performed with Regina Belle. Both songs won best pop performance by a duo or group with vocal.


Those records made him part of childhood for millions. But R&B audiences knew Bryson long before animated films carried his voice into the pop mainstream.

Born Robert L. Bryson in Greenville, South Carolina, he came through the Southern music circuit before becoming one of contemporary R&B’s premier male vocalists. His catalog includes “Feel the Fire,” “I’m So Into You,” “If Ever You’re in My Arms Again,” “Can You Stop the Rain” and “Tonight, I Celebrate My Love,” his duet with Roberta Flack.

Those records belonged to a tradition that treated romantic ballads as serious craft. Bryson’s best work had polish, but the polish never flattened the feeling. He could make longing sound composed without making it cold, and tenderness sound powerful without turning it theatrical.

That restraint became part of his signature. It let him move from soul radio to adult contemporary and into Disney’s early 1990s run without sounding like a visitor in any room. He brought the grammar of R&B with him — the patience, the breath, the glide, the quiet command.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Two Eras of 1970s R&B Mourn as The Commodores’ Ronald LaPread and The Sylvers’ Foster Sylvers Die

Foster Sylvers, left, and Ronald LaPread are shown in a composite illustration honoring two figures from 1970s R&B and soul. Sylvers, a child star with the Sylvers, died at 64, and LaPread, a founding member and former bassist for the Commodores, died at 75. 
Two R&B bloodlines that helped define the sound of the 1970s were being mourned this weekend, as the deaths of Ronald LaPread of the Commodores and Foster Sylvers of the Sylvers were reported by multiple outlets.

LaPread, a founding member and former bassist for the Commodores, died at 75 after helping anchor one of Motown’s most durable funk and soul machines. Foster Sylvers, the gifted child star whose voice and musicianship helped carry the Sylvers from family act to disco-era hitmakers, died at 64 after a cancer battle.

The losses hit different corners of the same musical universe — one rooted in Tuskegee, Alabama, and Motown’s polished rise through the 1970s; the other in the bright, youthful harmonies of a Los Angeles family group that gave R&B and pop one of the era’s most infectious records.

Soraya LaPread announces the death of her father, Ronald LaPread, a founding member and former bassist for the Commodores, in an Instagram Story. LaPread, whose bass helped anchor the group’s classic funk and soul sound, died at 75. (Credit: Soraya LaPread/Instagram)
LaPread’s daughter, music producer Soraya LaPread, announced his death on social media Saturday. TMZ reported that the New Zealand Herald said LaPread died after a sudden medical event in Auckland, New Zealand, where he had lived for decades.

LaPread was part of the original Commodores lineup with Lionel Richie, Walter “Clyde” Orange, William “WAK” King, Milan Williams and Thomas McClary. The group formed in 1968 at Tuskegee Institute, now Tuskegee University, and became one of Motown’s defining acts of the 1970s and early 1980s, moving easily between hard funk, lush ballads and crossover soul.

As the group’s bassist, LaPread helped give shape to records that became part of the American songbook, including “Brick House,” “Easy” and “Three Times a Lady.” His role was not always the one that drew the spotlight, but it was central to the Commodores’ identity: the pocket, the weight, the movement underneath the melodies that made the band both radio-ready and deeply funky.


The Recording Academy lists the Commodores with one Grammy win and nine nominations. Their lone Grammy win came for “Nightshift,” the 1985 tribute to Marvin Gaye and Jackie Wilson that earned best R&B performance by a duo or group with vocal. By then, the group had already lived through Richie’s departure and the turbulence that followed, but the record showed how much musical force remained in the Commodores name.

LaPread’s death also came days after the Commodores withdrew from the Freedom 250 concert series tied to the Great American State Fair in Washington, D.C., amid backlash over the event’s political connections. That controversy may have placed the group back in the headlines, but LaPread’s legacy rests much deeper — in the grooves that made the Commodores a bridge between Southern musicianship, Motown discipline and the mass appeal of late-20th-century Black popular music.

Hours after LaPread’s death was reported, TMZ reported that Foster Sylvers had died in hospice care. Reports differed on the specific cancer diagnosis, but Leon Sylvers III confirmed to multiple outlets that his brother died after a cancer battle.


Foster Sylvers entered the music world young, and with rare command. His 1973 solo single “Misdemeanor,” written by Leon, became a breakout R&B hit and later took on a second life through hip-hop sampling, including its use on the D.O.C.’s “It’s Funky Enough.” That afterlife matters: Foster’s work did not simply sit in the ’70s. It echoed forward into the sample-based language that helped build hip-hop’s golden age.

With the Sylvers, Foster became part of one of the decade’s most recognizable family groups, a sibling act often remembered alongside the broader wave of Black family bands that included the Jackson 5 and the Five Stairsteps. The Sylvers’ biggest pop moment came with “Boogie Fever,” which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1976. The record was bright, polished and impossible to shake, but beneath its pop sheen was the architecture of a serious family band — harmonies, rhythm, choreography and production moving as one.

The Sylvers also scored with records such as “Fool’s Paradise” and “Hot Line,” while Foster built a reputation beyond the family name as a bassist, singer, songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist. He worked in the same lineage as his brother Leon, whose production and songwriting later helped shape the sound of SOLAR Records and acts including Shalamar and Dynasty.

The deaths of LaPread and Foster Sylvers are not connected beyond timing, but together they mark the passing of two musicians whose work lived inside the machinery of classic Black music rather than outside it. LaPread helped drive a band that could make funk muscular and ballads feel monumental. Foster Sylvers helped bring youthful electricity to a family sound that crossed from soul into disco and later found its fingerprints in hip-hop.

They came from different bands, different regions and different roles. But both belonged to a generation of musicians who built songs strong enough to outlive the charts, the trends and even the eras that first made them famous.

Friday, May 29, 2026

Young MC, the Commodores and Morris Day Back Away From Freedom 250 Concert

An editorial graphic shows Freedom 250’s throwback concert lineup after several announced performers publicly backed away from the Great American State Fair. The controversy turned names tied to “Bust a Move,” “Brick House” and Morris Day’s Minneapolis funk legacy into the center of a dispute over politics, consent and the cost of putting old-school stars on a modern political stage.
A celebration built around nostalgia has become a warning about what happens when old-school music, national symbolism and modern politics collide before the first note is played.

Young MC, Morris Day and the Time, the Commodores, Martina McBride and Bret Michaels are among the artists who have pulled out of or backed away from Freedom 250’s Great American State Fair, a 16-day event scheduled for June 25 through July 10 on the National Mall. The event was promoted as part of the nation’s 250th birthday celebration, with a lineup that leaned heavily on throwback acts, country crossover and patriotic spectacle.

Then the bill started falling apart.

Young MC, Morris Day and The Time, The Commodores, McBride and Michaels are among the artists who have since pulled out of or publicly backed away from the event. The rollout quickly turned into a public dispute over politics, consent and what some artists said they were told before their names appeared on the flyer.


Young MC, best known for the 1989 hit “Bust a Move,” said he had informed his agents that he would not perform at the Freedom 250 event. In a statement, he said artists were not told about political involvement with the concert and said he hoped to perform in Washington in the future at an event that was not “politically charged.”

Morris Day made his position even clearer. The longtime frontman of the Time posted that he and the band would not perform at the Great American State Fair, adding a short caption that cut through the confusion: “It’s a no for me.”

The Commodores also said they would not appear. The group, whose catalog includes “Brick House,” “Easy” and “Three Times a Lady,” said its music had always been its voice and that it would not publicly affiliate with any single political party.

McBride said she initially believed she had agreed to a nonpartisan celebration of the states. In a statement to fans, the country singer said what she had been told was not what was happening and that she would not perform June 25. Michaels later stepped away as well, saying the event had become more divisive than what he agreed to join and citing threats and safety concerns involving his fans, band, crew and family.

Freedom 250 has described itself as a nonpartisan organization focused on commemorating America’s 250th anniversary. Its official event page bills the Great American State Fair as a national exposition running from the U.S. Capitol to the Washington Monument, with live music, carnival rides and hands-on partner activations meant to showcase the states and territories.

That framing did not stop the backlash.

AP reported that Freedom 250 was launched by President Donald Trump late last year and that Trump appointed Keith Krach, a former under secretary of state, as the organization’s CEO. That connection became central to the controversy as artists faced questions from fans about whether their appearances amounted to support for a Trump-linked event.


The confusion was still visible on the event’s own ticket pages. As of Friday, Freedom 250 pages continued to list McBride, Young MC, C+C Music Factory, Milli Vanilli, the Commodores, Morris Day and the Time, and Michaels even after several of those artists had publicly pulled out, denied involvement or disputed what their participation meant.

For legacy performers, the issue is bigger than one booking. Their names carry decades of audience memory. A listing on a public lineup can imply alignment, endorsement or participation before a performer says a word. In the social media era, that can become a reputational problem almost instantly.

The Milli Vanilli listing carried its own confusion because the name has a complicated history. Rob Pilatus and Fab Morvan were the public faces of the act during its late-1980s pop explosion, but the group’s recordings were performed by studio vocalists. Pilatus died in 1998. Morvan has continued performing and, according to AP, said he would appear at the Great American State Fair.

That does not mean everyone tied to the Milli Vanilli legacy is part of the event. Jodie Rocco, a singer associated with the Real Milli Vanilli side of the group’s history, told AP that she, her sister Linda Rocco and other current group members had not been asked to perform and were surprised to see the name on the bill. The distinction matters: Morvan represents the public-facing Milli Vanilli name most audiences remember, while singers tied to the group’s actual recorded vocals say they are not involved in the Freedom 250 appearance.

The C+C Music Factory listing also became complicated. Freedom Williams, the rapper whose voice helped define the group’s “Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)” era, publicly discussed the booking while distancing himself from Trump politically. Robert Clivillés, who co-founded C+C Music Factory with the late David Cole, has disputed Williams’ authority to represent the group as a whole.

Vanilla Ice appeared to remain on the bill, with a representative telling AP he was proud to help celebrate America’s 250th anniversary. Flo Rida was also listed in the original announcement, though the status of the lineup remained fluid as artists continued responding publicly.

That uncertainty is the story now. A concert series marketed as unity became a test of how quickly nostalgia can turn political when the wrong context surrounds the stage.

Young MC, Morris Day, the Commodores, C+C Music Factory and Milli Vanilli are not just names on a flyer. They are part of the soundtrack of an era when rap, funk, R&B, dance-pop and MTV-driven spectacle crossed into the mainstream in ways that still shape old-school parties and throwback festivals today.

These artists built careers around movement, memory and mass appeal. Their records were made to get people on the floor, not to place them in the middle of a national political argument.

Freedom 250 may still hold the Great American State Fair. It may revise the lineup. It may continue presenting the event as a nonpartisan celebration. But the first wave of music announcements has already become a cautionary tale about transparency, artist consent and the risk of using familiar names to sell a complicated moment.

Before anyone could “Bust a Move” on the National Mall, the question became who knew what, who agreed to what and who wanted no part of the room once the lights came up.

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