Country music legend Charley Pride dies from COVID-19 complications

Charley Pride attends the 54th annual CMA Awards at the Music City Center on November 11, 2020 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Jason Kempin/Getty Images for CMA)

Country music legend Charley Pride died Saturday from COVID-19 complications in Dallas.

He was 91and recently performed at the CMA awards last month.

The agency that represents the late singer put out a statement

Many considered Pride to be America’s first black country superstar. According to CMT, he scored 29 No. 1 hits between 1969 and 1983 and charted 67 singles. He also won the CMA Entertainer of the Year award in 1971.

He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2000. He was also the 2020 recipient of the CMA’s Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award.

Pride was born in Sledge, Mississippi in March 1934. He was born on a forty-acre Mississippi cotton farm fifty miles outside of Memphis. Pride picked cotton to buy his first guitar when he was 14 years old.

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When he was 16, he left home to play professional baseball in the Negro American League. He then served in the Army for two years. He then returned to baseball before he pursued singing.

Pride released his first single, “Snakes Crawl at Night” in January 1966. Many didn’t know his race until his first gold-selling album, “Country Charley Pride.”  

In lieu of flowers, the family asks for donations to The Pride Scholarship at Jesuit College Preparatory School, St. Philips School and Community Center, The Food Bank, or the charity of your choice.

According to Johns Hopkins, more than 290,000 Americans have died from the coronavirus since the pandemic began. The country has also seen nearly 16 million positive cases in the same time frame.

But there are signs that the crippling pandemic could begin to end. The nation’s first COVID-19 vaccine will begin arriving in states Monday morning, U.S. officials said Saturday, after the government gave the final go-ahead to the shots needed to end an outbreak.

Initially, about 3 million shots are expected to be shipped nationwide. It was unclear exactly who would receive the first doses of the vaccine, though health workers and nursing home residents were the priority.

The FDA found the vaccine highly protective with no major safety issues. U.S. regulators worked for months to emphasize the rigor and independence of their review, but the Trump administration pressured the agency up until the final announcement.

This Associated Press contributed to this report. This story was reported from Los Angeles.
 

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