/ 21 March 2007

‘His instrument was his voice’

Luther Ingram, the R&B and soul singer-songwriter best known for his hit If Loving You Is Wrong (I Don’t Want to Be Right) has died. He was 69.

Ingram died on March 19 at a Belleville, Illinois, hospital after suffering for years from diabetes, kidney disease and partial blindness, his wife, Jacqui Ingram, said. He had lived in nearby O’Fallon, Illinois, outside St Louis, for 10 years.

Born on November 30 1937 in Jackson, Tennessee, Ingram wrote and sang music his whole life, starting as a boy in a sibling group, the Midwest Crusaders, after his family moved in 1947 to Alton, Illinois.

He roomed with Jimi Hendrix when each was recording in New York, performed with Ike Turner at clubs in East St. Louis, Ill., and was the opening act for Isaac Hayes. He recorded through the 1980s and performed in concert until the mid-1990s when his health began declining.

”His instrument was his voice; his heart and head were his inspiration,” said friend Bernie Hayes, a St Louis journalist, DJ and author of The Death of Black Radio.

”He was a big name until [singer] Luther Vandross came on to the scene,” when younger audiences started to confuse them, he said.

Ingram recorded with Decca Records in New York and in 1965 wrote and sang I Spy for the FBI with his brothers in their group, Luther Ingram and the G-Men, for Smash Records, part of the Mercury label. He eventually had a five-year association with Memphis-based Stax Records during the height of its commercial success.

In 1971, Ingram and songwriter-performer Sir Mack Rice (Mustang Sally) co-wrote Respect Yourself for the Staple Singers, the biggest hit Stax ever had.

The song evolved from Ingram’s concern that young black men needed to respect themselves more. Rice said he thought it would be a great idea for a song, said Tim Sampson, spokesperson at Soulsville USA, the nonprofit group that built the Stax Museum of American Soul Music in Memphis.

Ingram recorded If Loving You Is Wrong (I Don’t Want to Be Right) in 1972 on Koko Records, which Stax distributed. The song placed number one on Billboard magazine’s R&B chart in 1972.

He stayed with the Stax family until Stax was forced into bankruptcy in 1975.

”Luther was constantly in the studio, working with writers and arrangers,” said Deanie Parker, who spent her career at Stax and Soulsville. ”He was a soft-spoken, quiet, person that I think relished peace. He was a very intense singer; he took it very seriously. When he was rehearsing, he’d go over it and over it and seek perfection.”

His other popular songs include Ain’t That Loving You (For More Reasons than One), I’ll Be Your Shelter and You Never Miss Your Water.

Ingram was one of the performers in Wattstax, a 1972 documentary based on a concert by Stax artists to raise funds for rebuilding the Watts area of Los Angeles after the 1965 race riot.

He is survived by his wife of 46 years, Jacqui, as well as by sons Eric Luther and Kenneth Knight and two grandsons. — Sapa-AP