• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
Milwaukee Times Weekly Newspaper

Milwaukee Times Weekly Newspaper

Journalistic Excellence, Service, Integrity and Objectivity Always

October 31st, 2025
  • Home
  • Services
    • Advertising
  • News
    • Whats Happening?
    • Featured
    • Christian Times
      • Ministries List
    • Health
    • Education
    • Finance & Business
    • Lifestyles
      • Our History
    • Arts and Entertainment
    • Obituaries
  • Editorials
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Editions
  • Tweet
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email

R&B singer Percy Sledge dies at 73

April 16, 2015

percy-sledge

Percy Sledge, the R&B belter whose biggest hit, “When a Man Loves a Woman,” became a cornerstone of soul music, died Tuesday. He was 73.
Sledge died on April 14, 2015, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, said Stephanie Price of the East Baton Rouge Parish Coroner’s Office. Sledge died of natural causes, said East Baton Rouge Parish Coroner Dr. William Clark. He had been in hospice care for cancer, Clark added.
In a career that started in the 1960s, Sledge had a number of hits, including “Take Time to Know Her,” “Warm and Tender Love” and “It Tears Me Up” among them.
But his first and biggest hit, “When a Man Loves a Woman,” towered over them all.
Over a mournful, slowly rising instrumental track provided by organist Spooner Oldham, drummer Roger Hawkins and guitarist Marlin Greene — key musicians of what became the Muscle Shoals sound, heard on countless soul records — Sledge crooned, pleaded and roared his way through the tune. It came directly from the heart: Originally called “Why Did You Leave Me Baby,” he’d written it about a former girlfriend, drawing from a tune that he used to sing to himself as a child.
“I hummed it all my life, even when I was picking and chopping cotton in the fields,” the Alabama-born singer told the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
At the time, Sledge was working as a hospital orderly, picking up gigs at night with a group called the Esquires Combo. In a fit of generosity, he gave the songwriting credit for “Woman” to two of the Esquires, Calvin Lewis and Andrew Wright, who had helped him with a few chords.
Percy Sledge belted out a vocal at his Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony in 2005.
The song was recorded on February 17, 1966, in Sheffield, Alabama. Atlantic Records picked it up and wanted to redo the slightly out-of-tune horns, but the original version ended up being released.
It hit No. 1 on May 28, 1966.
“Southern soul had at last entered the mainstream of pop in the unlikely guise of the ultimate make-out song,” music historian Peter Guralnick wrote. Producer Jerry Wexler called it “a holy love hymn.” Sledge never saw a dime of songwriting royalties. He had some regrets about that, he told Blues and Soul magazine — the song would have helped provide for his children — but he accepted it.
“Worst decision I ever made. But I am not at all bitter. I figure if God wanted me to do what I did, and say what I did to tell those guys they could have the song, then I’ll leave it that away,” he told the magazine.
“When a Man Loves a Woman” became a standard, covered many times — Michael Bolton took it to No. 1 in 1991 — and featured on several movie soundtracks. It was even the title of a 1994 film starring Andy Garcia and Meg Ryan.
Sledge’s version also returned to the charts, hitting the UK top 10 in 1987.
Even with his other hits, he said, it all came back to “When a Man Loves a Woman.”
“The granddaddy to all of my songs. The boss of all of my songs. I have great respect for that song,” he told Blues and Soul. “Always will.”
Sledge was inducted into the Rock Hall in 2005.

  • Tweet
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email

Related Articles:

  • charley-pride
    Charley Pride, a country music Black superstar, dies at 86
  • 20658
    5-month-old baby dies of starvation several days after parents’ overdose deaths
  • hurricane-ida-aftermath
    Hurricane Ida traps Louisianans, shatters the power grid
  • 1_2
    Singing legend Bobby Womack passes at 70
  • New Orleans elects first black female mayor: 300 years in the making
    New Orleans elects first black female mayor: 300 years in the making
  • 17699371-mmmain
    Ben E. King, 'Stand By Me' singer, Drifters frontman, dies at 76

Filed Under: National and Local News

Primary Sidebar

Latest Issue PDF
 

Secondary Sidebar

Privacy Policy | Copyright © 2025 · HT Group, LLC. All Rights Reserved.