shorttrini said: daPrettyman said: I heard David's version for the first time when I got the GH compilation that has all of the solo hits of the temptations. I was really impressed with it. I especially David's emotional delivery of the song. Let's face it. David was crazy, and this is what made his version great. He was the only one that could have done this song, justice. **--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
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Timmy84 said: Teddy Pendergrass timeline
1950 (March 26): Theodore DeReese Pendergrass is born to Ida and Jesse Pendergrass in Philadelphia. Pendergrass' father leaves his only son after a couple of years. 1960 (age 10): Pendergrass was ordained as a junior minister in a North Philadelphian church. He also sings at the church to respective audiences. 1962 (age 12): Teddy's father Jesse Pendergrass, absent for most of his only son's early years, is murdered. Mid-1960s: After catching Jackie Wilson onstage, Teddy begins his dream to become an R&B star. 1967 (age 17): Teddy drops out of the 11th grade to pursue his music star dreams. 1968 (age 18): Teddy eventually auditions and lands a role as drummer for popular 1950s doo-wop group the Cadillacs. Pendergrass experiences life on the road as a road musician. 1970 (age 20): After spotting him playing drums at a show, Harold Melvin, founder of the struggling doo-wop group the Blue Notes, asks him to join their band as a drummer, which he agrees. Within two years, however, Pendergrass is asked to replace a departing lead singer in the group and soon is landed the lead singing role in the Blue Notes. 1972: After a successful audition to Philadelphia International, Kenny Gamble & Leon Huff signs the act, altering the name of the group from The Blue Notes to Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes. Despite this giving Harold top billing, Gamble & Huff began working on songs primarily for lead singer Pendergrass. That September, their first album, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, is released and features the hits "I Miss You" and the title track, which becomes a number-two pop hit. From then on until 1976, Pendergrass and the group score hits such as "The Love I Lost", "Where Are All My Friends", "Hope That We Can Be Together Soon", "Weak for You", "Bad Luck", "Wake Up Everybody" and "Don't Leave Me This Way" becoming a popular pop-soul act. 1976: After a period of tension, Pendergrass abruptly leaves the Blue Notes for a solo career. Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes were essentially dropped from the label. 1977: Pendergrass' debut album, Teddy Pendergrass, becomes double platinum with the releases of "I Don't Love You Anymore" and "The Whole Town's Laughing at Me". He scores some radio airplay with "The More I Get, The More I Want" and "You Can't Hide From Yourself". Within weeks after the album's release, Pendergrass sells out Carnegie Hall. 1978: Life Is A Song Worth Singing is released and hits number-one on the R&B chart brought on by the success of singles "Only You" and his pop breakthrough, "Close the Door". The album sells over two million copies. The same year Pendergrass made music history by hosting women-only concerts in the U.S. The concerts sell out within minutes. 1979: The Teddy album is released and continues Pendergrass' rise yielded by the smash hits "Turn Off the Lights" and "Come Go With Me". The same year, Pendergrass released the popular Live! Coast to Coast album. Both albums go double platinum. 1980: Pendergrass' fifth release, TP, is released and much like the four previous, goes on to sell two million copies making Pendergrass the first black artist to score five multi-platinum albums in a row. The album becomes a hit thanks to the hits "Love TKO" and "Can't We Try?" 1981: Pendergrass' hit streak continues with It's Time for Love, which goes platinum thanks to singles such as "You're My Latest and Greatest Inspiration" and "I Can't Live Without Your Love". 1982 (March 18): Just days before his 32nd birthday, Teddy suffers from a near-fatal car crash while driving to his home in Philadelphia. After the clash, Pendergrass' spinal cord was shattered leaving him paraplegic. His label quickly puts out his seventh album, This One's for You, but it flops, sparking the beginning of the end of his tenure with Philadelphia International. 1983: Philadelphia International puts out Teddy's eighth and final album with the label, Heaven Only Knows, which also flops. Upon Pendergrass' return to the studio to record new material, the singer was dropped from PIR in 1984. 1984: Signed to Elektra's Asylum Records label, Pendergrass releases the popular album, Love Language, which returns him to the pop top 40 going gold thanks to the release of the Whitney Houston duet, "Hold Me". The duet is the first recording to be released by the then-newbie Houston, reaching number 46 pop and number 5 R&B. 1985 (July 7): Three years after his accident, a wheelchair-bound and emotional Pendergrass returns to the stage in front of an audience of a billion in Philadelphia for Live Aid accompanied by Ashford & Simpson. The trio perform the hit "Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand)" to an accepting audience. 1988: Pendergrass releases the Joy album three years after his last album. The title track becomes Pendergrass' second number-one hit as a solo artist on the R&B charts. He had four number-one R&B hits during his work with Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes. He'll score one more R&B number-one, "It Should've Been You" three years later. 1993: The album, A Little More Magic, is released. The album features Pendergrass' final R&B top 40 hit, "Believe in Love". 1996: Pendergrass returns on the road as a cast member of the play, "Your Arm's Too Short to Box With God". 1997: Pendergrass releases his fourteenth album, You and I. 1998: The Christmas album, This Christmas I'd Rather Have Love, become Pendergrass' fifteenth album. 2002: Pendergrass' sixteenth and final album in his lifetime, From Teddy with Love, is from his comeback to live performances following a 19-year absence from the road. 2006: Pendergrass announces his retirement from show business after a career spanning more than 35 years. He briefly performs a year later commemorating the 25th anniversary since the car accident that nearly took his life. 2010 (January 13): After a six-month struggle from colon cancer, Theodore DeReese Pendergrass, Sr. succumbs from his complications at 9:50 p.m. in a Philadelphia hospital. Pendergrass was just 59 years old. Leave it to our Timmy to break it down, til it's completely broke. | |
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TD3 said: Timmy84 said: Teddy Pendergrass timeline
1950 (March 26): Theodore DeReese Pendergrass is born to Ida and Jesse Pendergrass in Philadelphia. Pendergrass' father leaves his only son after a couple of years. 1960 (age 10): Pendergrass was ordained as a junior minister in a North Philadelphian church. He also sings at the church to respective audiences. 1962 (age 12): Teddy's father Jesse Pendergrass, absent for most of his only son's early years, is murdered. Mid-1960s: After catching Jackie Wilson onstage, Teddy begins his dream to become an R&B star. 1967 (age 17): Teddy drops out of the 11th grade to pursue his music star dreams. 1968 (age 18): Teddy eventually auditions and lands a role as drummer for popular 1950s doo-wop group the Cadillacs. Pendergrass experiences life on the road as a road musician. 1970 (age 20): After spotting him playing drums at a show, Harold Melvin, founder of the struggling doo-wop group the Blue Notes, asks him to join their band as a drummer, which he agrees. Within two years, however, Pendergrass is asked to replace a departing lead singer in the group and soon is landed the lead singing role in the Blue Notes. 1972: After a successful audition to Philadelphia International, Kenny Gamble & Leon Huff signs the act, altering the name of the group from The Blue Notes to Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes. Despite this giving Harold top billing, Gamble & Huff began working on songs primarily for lead singer Pendergrass. That September, their first album, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, is released and features the hits "I Miss You" and the title track, which becomes a number-two pop hit. From then on until 1976, Pendergrass and the group score hits such as "The Love I Lost", "Where Are All My Friends", "Hope That We Can Be Together Soon", "Weak for You", "Bad Luck", "Wake Up Everybody" and "Don't Leave Me This Way" becoming a popular pop-soul act. 1976: After a period of tension, Pendergrass abruptly leaves the Blue Notes for a solo career. Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes were essentially dropped from the label. 1977: Pendergrass' debut album, Teddy Pendergrass, becomes double platinum with the releases of "I Don't Love You Anymore" and "The Whole Town's Laughing at Me". He scores some radio airplay with "The More I Get, The More I Want" and "You Can't Hide From Yourself". Within weeks after the album's release, Pendergrass sells out Carnegie Hall. 1978: Life Is A Song Worth Singing is released and hits number-one on the R&B chart brought on by the success of singles "Only You" and his pop breakthrough, "Close the Door". The album sells over two million copies. The same year Pendergrass made music history by hosting women-only concerts in the U.S. The concerts sell out within minutes. 1979: The Teddy album is released and continues Pendergrass' rise yielded by the smash hits "Turn Off the Lights" and "Come Go With Me". The same year, Pendergrass released the popular Live! Coast to Coast album. Both albums go double platinum. 1980: Pendergrass' fifth release, TP, is released and much like the four previous, goes on to sell two million copies making Pendergrass the first black artist to score five multi-platinum albums in a row. The album becomes a hit thanks to the hits "Love TKO" and "Can't We Try?" 1981: Pendergrass' hit streak continues with It's Time for Love, which goes platinum thanks to singles such as "You're My Latest and Greatest Inspiration" and "I Can't Live Without Your Love". 1982 (March 18): Just days before his 32nd birthday, Teddy suffers from a near-fatal car crash while driving to his home in Philadelphia. After the clash, Pendergrass' spinal cord was shattered leaving him paraplegic. His label quickly puts out his seventh album, This One's for You, but it flops, sparking the beginning of the end of his tenure with Philadelphia International. 1983: Philadelphia International puts out Teddy's eighth and final album with the label, Heaven Only Knows, which also flops. Upon Pendergrass' return to the studio to record new material, the singer was dropped from PIR in 1984. 1984: Signed to Elektra's Asylum Records label, Pendergrass releases the popular album, Love Language, which returns him to the pop top 40 going gold thanks to the release of the Whitney Houston duet, "Hold Me". The duet is the first recording to be released by the then-newbie Houston, reaching number 46 pop and number 5 R&B. 1985 (July 7): Three years after his accident, a wheelchair-bound and emotional Pendergrass returns to the stage in front of an audience of a billion in Philadelphia for Live Aid accompanied by Ashford & Simpson. The trio perform the hit "Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand)" to an accepting audience. 1988: Pendergrass releases the Joy album three years after his last album. The title track becomes Pendergrass' second number-one hit as a solo artist on the R&B charts. He had four number-one R&B hits during his work with Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes. He'll score one more R&B number-one, "It Should've Been You" three years later. 1993: The album, A Little More Magic, is released. The album features Pendergrass' final R&B top 40 hit, "Believe in Love". 1996: Pendergrass returns on the road as a cast member of the play, "Your Arm's Too Short to Box With God". 1997: Pendergrass releases his fourteenth album, You and I. 1998: The Christmas album, This Christmas I'd Rather Have Love, become Pendergrass' fifteenth album. 2002: Pendergrass' sixteenth and final album in his lifetime, From Teddy with Love, is from his comeback to live performances following a 19-year absence from the road. 2006: Pendergrass announces his retirement from show business after a career spanning more than 35 years. He briefly performs a year later commemorating the 25th anniversary since the car accident that nearly took his life. 2010 (January 13): After a six-month struggle from colon cancer, Theodore DeReese Pendergrass, Sr. succumbs from his complications at 9:50 p.m. in a Philadelphia hospital. Pendergrass was just 59 years old. Leave it to our Timmy to break it down, til it's completely broke. Aww thanks. | |
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Teddy Pendergrass Funeral Details
http://www.eurweb.com/ind...hives/3494 Posted by admin on January 16, 2010 Comments (0) Print This Post Print This Post *Funeral arrangements and a public viewing for soul singer Teddy Pendergrass have been set after his death from colon cancer at the age of 59. The singer passed away at a hospital in Philadelphia on Wednesday, eight months after he underwent surgery to treat the disease. A public viewing is scheduled for January 22nd at Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church in Philadelphia. The funeral will be held there the following day with burial services at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in neighbouring Bala Cynwyd. Pendergrass is survived by his wife, a son, two daughters and nine grandchildren. **--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
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daPrettyman said: Teddy Pendergrass Funeral Details
http://www.eurweb.com/ind...hives/3494 Posted by admin on January 16, 2010 Comments (0) Print This Post Print This Post *Funeral arrangements and a public viewing for soul singer Teddy Pendergrass have been set after his death from colon cancer at the age of 59. The singer passed away at a hospital in Philadelphia on Wednesday, eight months after he underwent surgery to treat the disease. A public viewing is scheduled for January 22nd at Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church in Philadelphia. The funeral will be held there the following day with burial services at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in neighbouring Bala Cynwyd. Pendergrass is survived by his wife, a son, two daughters and nine grandchildren. My uncle used to live on the street where the church is located and my brother is buried in that cemetery...If I were still in Philly I'd sure pay my respects to TP. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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mcw00 said: SoulAlive said: This song is sheer perfection....one of Gamble and Huff's greatest compositions....Talkin' bout a 50/50 love....yeah
Teddy's music will live on forever. This is my second favorite song by him, beat only by Love TKO. His voice was so warm and effortless. And in his later years, seeing him perform was a wonderful inspiration for those of us with disabilities. I remember the first time I saw him after his accident and I was so proud. i love this song, too. takes me back to when i would listen to it on my little radio. sometimes, though, i think about the time joe frazier was on the howard stern show and serenaded robin with it! he was all off key and everything, and it was sooo funny. robin said she had never heard the song before, which i found hard to believe. | |
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RIP Teddy
I was surprised that nobody has mentioned his book, Truly Blessed. I had a hard time finding it years ago cause its out of print. Excellent book!!!! he is so honest in it. It came out in 1998.
I've read Teddy's book too and I definitely recommend it. Someone posted his Behind The Music on Vimeo
http://vimeo.com/6704800 Thanks for the link, can't remember seeing the Behind the Music about Teddy so will check that out. [Edited 1/19/10 15:23pm] | |
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thetimefan said: RIP Teddy
I was surprised that nobody has mentioned his book, Truly Blessed. I had a hard time finding it years ago cause its out of print. Excellent book!!!! he is so honest in it. It came out in 1998.
I've read Teddy's book too and I definitely recommend it. Someone posted his Behind The Music on Vimeo
http://vimeo.com/6704800 Thanks for the link, can't remember seeing the Behind the Music about Teddy so will check that out. [Edited 1/19/10 15:23pm] | |
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thetimefan said: RIP Teddy
I was surprised that nobody has mentioned his book, Truly Blessed. I had a hard time finding it years ago cause its out of print. Excellent book!!!! he is so honest in it. It came out in 1998.
I've read Teddy's book too and I definitely recommend it. Someone posted his Behind The Music on Vimeo
http://vimeo.com/6704800 Thanks for the link, can't remember seeing the Behind the Music about Teddy so will check that out. [Edited 1/19/10 15:23pm] I have never seen this behind the music so thanks for posting link Life has a way of making you live it. . . . | |
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thetimefan said: RIP Teddy
I was surprised that nobody has mentioned his book, Truly Blessed. I had a hard time finding it years ago cause its out of print. Excellent book!!!! he is so honest in it. It came out in 1998.
I've read Teddy's book too and I definitely recommend it. Someone posted his Behind The Music on Vimeo
http://vimeo.com/6704800 Thanks for the link, can't remember seeing the Behind the Music about Teddy so will check that out. [Edited 1/19/10 15:23pm] His book was pretty good. I loved the story of when he left the BlueNotes and also when the Jacksons came over to his home and played basketball when they were recording in Philly. **--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose! http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad | |
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http://www.cnn.com/2010/S...=T2]source
Editor's note: Teddy Pendergrass II, 35, is a financial consultant who lives near Philadelphia. He is also father of two children, Alaynna and Teddy III. A public viewing of Teddy Pendergrass Sr. will be held on Friday at Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church in Philadelphia, with a private funeral the next day.
(CNN) -- Many knew my father, Teddy Pendergrass, as the dynamic, smoky soul singer who sold millions of albums, wooed crowds and made women swoon. He was the man who would "Wake Up Everybody," then "Turn Out The Lights" and "Close the Door." But to me, he was just Dad. He was the gentle man who bought me my first baseball glove. He was the guy who took the brand new baseball and scuffed it up on the ground so it was easier to handle. He was the man who would wrap that ball in a belt and slap it in my glove to break it in. That was my dad. Dad loved his cars. They were his toys. He would collect them and play with them, alternating between his Corvette, his Ferrari and his Rolls-Royce. In fact, it was in the Rolls that, on March 18, 1982, while driving on a winding Lincoln Drive near our home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, he hit a guardrail and crashed into a tree. That accident severed his spinal cord, left him paralyzed from the chest down and changed his life forever. But I choose to remember him as he was long before the accident, driving around in his red Ferrari. I could hear him coming home all the way from the Gladwyne exit in that loud sports car. It would make me excited because, in those years before the accident, he wasn't home much. I guess he traveled a lot. So when he did come home, when we heard that engine of the Ferrari, we knew it would be special. Dad was a cowboy. He loved to wear his boots and hat. He had a very adventurous spirit. One summer day when I was about 6 or 7, he proved it. Whenever he left the house he would grab his Louis Vuitton pouch. That was my signal that he was going somewhere. And on that day, that somewhere was our favorite toy store, Ardmore Hobbies. I ran out to the car and got in on the passenger side of his T-top Corvette. If you knew my dad you knew he loved to drive fast, making the shifting noises as he navigated the neighborhood. On this day, we drove down a street with a big dip in it. Dad would drive as fast as he could and get the car in the air, off of all fours. As we went airborne, he'd scream "Yeeee Haahhh," like he was Bo Duke on "The Dukes of Hazzard." But this time, on the way down, Dad hit an oil slick. He had to cut the wheel hard and we spun twice, ending up on the other side of the road, just six inches from a big tree. If anyone ever wondered why my head has a lump at the top, it's because, as we were spinning around, I hit it and cracked the glass T-top of the 'Vette. Needless to say, he was upset. It was the last day we did the big jump together. But still, that was the best trip to the toy store I had ever been on. Dad was a chef. He loved to cook and had a true passion for food. He loved to eat, too. If lamb chops were anywhere on the menu, they might as well as put in two orders for him when he walked through the door. But his favorite dish would be what became known in our family as "Umi Goomi." Umi Goomi was his name for the collection of food left in the fridge from the last two weeks. Most people would throw it away. Not my dad. He would put everything that he wanted in one frying pan, and add rice (we always had rice around). He would take that and stir everything around until it was sizzling hot with steam rising from it. Then he'd add some hot sauce -- you know the one with the big hot pepper on the label. Hot sauce was the magic ingredient for anything he ate. iReporter remembers meeting Pendergrass And Dad loved being dad. He never really knew his own father when he was growing up. They only met when he was 10 years old. So when he would be with my sisters and me, he wanted to make sure it was special. I remember another time, after the accident, when I was about 15 years old. He came by and told me he was going to take me out, just him and me. We got in the car and drove about 45 minutes. I had no idea where we were going. As I looked up, we pulled into a parking lot. Staring at me was a giant mouse with a purple hat. Low and behold, it was Chuck E. Cheese! Wow, Chuck E. Cheese, for a 15-year-old. I played and played and played, like I was 6 again. Who cared what it looked like? This was a gift from my Dad. That day he thought he had conquered the world. I can still remember the smile on his face. "Son," he said, "I just wanted to spend some quality time with you." Dad, who died at the age of 59 after battling colon cancer, always wanted to move to a place on a beach and watch the warm water, feel the cool breeze. But, after the accident, he never did. I know, right now, he has finally made it to that beach, and is sitting with his face turned to the sun. And maybe he is eating some Umi Goomi, with hot sauce. | |
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Timmy84 said: http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/Music/01/21/teddy.pendergrass.remembrance/index.html?hpt=T2]source
Editor's note: Teddy Pendergrass II, 35, is a financial consultant who lives near Philadelphia. He is also father of two children, Alaynna and Teddy III. A public viewing of Teddy Pendergrass Sr. will be held on Friday at Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church in Philadelphia, with a private funeral the next day.
(CNN) -- Many knew my father, Teddy Pendergrass, as the dynamic, smoky soul singer who sold millions of albums, wooed crowds and made women swoon. He was the man who would "Wake Up Everybody," then "Turn Out The Lights" and "Close the Door." But to me, he was just Dad. He was the gentle man who bought me my first baseball glove. He was the guy who took the brand new baseball and scuffed it up on the ground so it was easier to handle. He was the man who would wrap that ball in a belt and slap it in my glove to break it in. That was my dad. Dad loved his cars. They were his toys. He would collect them and play with them, alternating between his Corvette, his Ferrari and his Rolls-Royce. In fact, it was in the Rolls that, on March 18, 1982, while driving on a winding Lincoln Drive near our home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, he hit a guardrail and crashed into a tree. That accident severed his spinal cord, left him paralyzed from the chest down and changed his life forever. But I choose to remember him as he was long before the accident, driving around in his red Ferrari. I could hear him coming home all the way from the Gladwyne exit in that loud sports car. It would make me excited because, in those years before the accident, he wasn't home much. I guess he traveled a lot. So when he did come home, when we heard that engine of the Ferrari, we knew it would be special. Dad was a cowboy. He loved to wear his boots and hat. He had a very adventurous spirit. One summer day when I was about 6 or 7, he proved it. Whenever he left the house he would grab his Louis Vuitton pouch. That was my signal that he was going somewhere. And on that day, that somewhere was our favorite toy store, Ardmore Hobbies. I ran out to the car and got in on the passenger side of his T-top Corvette. If you knew my dad you knew he loved to drive fast, making the shifting noises as he navigated the neighborhood. On this day, we drove down a street with a big dip in it. Dad would drive as fast as he could and get the car in the air, off of all fours. As we went airborne, he'd scream "Yeeee Haahhh," like he was Bo Duke on "The Dukes of Hazzard." But this time, on the way down, Dad hit an oil slick. He had to cut the wheel hard and we spun twice, ending up on the other side of the road, just six inches from a big tree. If anyone ever wondered why my head has a lump at the top, it's because, as we were spinning around, I hit it and cracked the glass T-top of the 'Vette. Needless to say, he was upset. It was the last day we did the big jump together. But still, that was the best trip to the toy store I had ever been on. Dad was a chef. He loved to cook and had a true passion for food. He loved to eat, too. If lamb chops were anywhere on the menu, they might as well as put in two orders for him when he walked through the door. But his favorite dish would be what became known in our family as "Umi Goomi." Umi Goomi was his name for the collection of food left in the fridge from the last two weeks. Most people would throw it away. Not my dad. He would put everything that he wanted in one frying pan, and add rice (we always had rice around). He would take that and stir everything around until it was sizzling hot with steam rising from it. Then he'd add some hot sauce -- you know the one with the big hot pepper on the label. Hot sauce was the magic ingredient for anything he ate. iReporter remembers meeting Pendergrass And Dad loved being dad. He never really knew his own father when he was growing up. They only met when he was 10 years old. So when he would be with my sisters and me, he wanted to make sure it was special. I remember another time, after the accident, when I was about 15 years old. He came by and told me he was going to take me out, just him and me. We got in the car and drove about 45 minutes. I had no idea where we were going. As I looked up, we pulled into a parking lot. Staring at me was a giant mouse with a purple hat. Low and behold, it was Chuck E. Cheese! Wow, Chuck E. Cheese, for a 15-year-old. I played and played and played, like I was 6 again. Who cared what it looked like? This was a gift from my Dad. That day he thought he had conquered the world. I can still remember the smile on his face. "Son," he said, "I just wanted to spend some quality time with you." Dad, who died at the age of 59 after battling colon cancer, always wanted to move to a place on a beach and watch the warm water, feel the cool breeze. But, after the accident, he never did. I know, right now, he has finally made it to that beach, and is sitting with his face turned to the sun. And maybe he is eating some Umi Goomi, with hot sauce. What a touching account by someone who knew Teddy well. | |
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Timmy84 said: souls1999 said: I was surprised that nobody has mentioned his book, Truly Blessed. I had a hard time finding it years ago cause its out of print. Excellent book!!!! he is so honest in it. It came out in 1998. and is co-written with Patricia Romanowski
According to an article I read, there's a film in plans with Tyrese playing Teddy... Lord Tyrese will have to grow a beard and Afro, something I can't imagine him with. We'll see how that'll go along with the James Brown and Marvin Gaye biopics lol I heard this on the radio today. Can't wait to see Tyrese with all that hair. "Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack | |
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noimageatall said: Timmy84 said: According to an article I read, there's a film in plans with Tyrese playing Teddy... Lord Tyrese will have to grow a beard and Afro, something I can't imagine him with. We'll see how that'll go along with the James Brown and Marvin Gaye biopics lol I heard this on the radio today. Can't wait to see Tyrese with all that hair. I found this on Youtube "Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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shorttrini said: noimageatall said: I heard this on the radio today. Can't wait to see Tyrese with all that hair. I found this on Youtube that was so nice!!! Tyrese is looking very yummy with hair on his head I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince. | |
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missfee said: shorttrini said: I found this on Youtube that was so nice!!! Tyrese is looking very yummy with hair on his head I think he will do fine in the role of Teddy. He my look like a lizard, but he can carry a tune. "Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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Good article about the funeral...makes me a little homesick. Philly has lost one of it's jewels.
http://www.philly.com/phi...20817.html Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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shorttrini said: missfee said: that was so nice!!! Tyrese is looking very yummy with hair on his head I think he will do fine in the role of Teddy. He my look like a lizard, but he can carry a tune. I'm like u. He might can pull this off. If he grows his hair out a little more and they do his makeup a bit differently, he might can pull off the TP role for sure. That performance was HOT as HELL! **--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
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Philly Producer Remembers Teddy Pendergrass As 'Uncle Teddy'
January 22, 2010 Theodore Pendergrass died Wednesday, Jan. 13, at Bryn Mawr Hospital in Philadelphia due to complications following colon cancer diagnosis last year. The Philadelphia Inquirer called him “a gruff-voiced bedroom balladeer to whom every R&B love man from R. Kelly to Usher owes a seducer's debt.” Teddy’s lover’s stripes were earned back in the ’70s when he worked it as lead in Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes. Soul heads know that Teddy’s smooth transition from Harold Melvin to solo sex symbol is largely thanks to Berry Gordy’s Philly rivals, Gamble and Huff. The songwriting and producing duo behind Philadelphia International records crafted and massaged Philadelphia soul music until it made outsiders jealous. They mentored, wrote and produced for The O’Jays, The Jacksons, Patti Labelle, Phyllis Hyman, Harold Melvin and Teddy. Eventually, Teddy and Kenny Gamble became so close, their kids grew up together. Teddy, whom his friends called “Teddy Bear,” stayed on Philadelphia International from his Harold Melvin days to 1981’s It’s Time For Love. On Friday (Jan. 22) at a public memorial in Philadelphia, hundreds of fans made their way out to Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church to remember Pendergrass as the soul king who fought the good fight of faith. But to Kenny Gamble’s 31-year-old son, a local Philly hip-hop producer named Isa Salahdeen, Pendergrass was more like “Uncle Teddy.” In his own words, Salahdeen recalls growing up around the man who changed soul music forever: I remember growing up and seeing Uncle Teddy. My dad used to always bring me to the studio and talk about how Teddy was one of his best artists. Because he was always was around, I started calling him Uncle Teddy. He was one of [Gamble & Huff’s] main artists, and he definitely laid down a lot of stuff for Philly International. By the time I was born, he’d had his accident. And it was like slow motion for him because he was rehabilitating himself and just coming back. I remember being around him when he did [the album] Joy. That was like a comeback record for him after being paralyzed— he was still showing people he could put out a hit record. Right now where I live, he used to live right on the top of the hill in this area called Gladwyne. It’s 15 minutes away from Philly. I remember going to middle school and if I came home and my mom wasn’t there, I would go to Uncle Teddy’s house. I use to go and knock on his door and if he’d be home he’d be like, "Alright, just take it easy. Pull out your [school] books.' He had an office around City Line Avenue [in Philadelphia] and one day me, my mom, my brother and everyone were all in the office. My mom was like, "Let me talk to your Uncle Teddy for a minute, y’all go out there and sit down." I was a bad little kid and I started playing with his Xerox machine. And he came and saw me playing with his copy machine, and I was making copies of my hands, my face, and he was like, “Boy don’t you know how much I paid for that Xerox machine?! And you playing around on it?!” He did discipline me, I’m not even gon’ lie. He was real stern, and he was in a wheelchair, and he pulled me over to the side and I thought, Man, he nothing to play with after that day! I think I got on his bad side. But he always loved me. His son, Teddy Jr., was a little older than us, but we all grew up together. We went to the same high school. As I got older, he became like a mentor to me. When I started making music, I’d give him a CD and be like, "Uncle Teddy can you listen to this and just tell me what you think?" And he would. He became a father figure. Recently before he died, my dad and I went to go see him in the hospital probably four or five times. Him and my dad talked but Teddy—he really couldn’t talk, he was like…just moving his lips. And he was telling my dad that he wanted to go home, he wanted to get in the studio, he wanted to get back at it and him and my dad were just sitting there. One day my dad kind of took me to the side and said that it doesn’t look like Teddy was gonna be alright. This might have been a month and a half ago. Teddy’s wife had told my father that it wasn’t looking good. And my dad kind of told me to keep my mouth shut about the whole situation. This was before everybody knew something had happened to him. So for like two months, I was basically holding that in without telling anybody about his situation. Uncle Teddy was in the hospital for a long time. That showed me he was fighting, like he really wanted to be here. He was on life support and he had an aid standing next to him all the time. The first time we went up there to the hospital, he was asleep. And then we went up there again and he was coherent. A couple of nights before he died I had [drove past] his house and I was just thinking about him. One day I was dropping off my friend Dutch [from Major Figgas] and listening to the radio. I turned to the slower music on 105.3 [in Philly] and I heard, "Teddy Pendergrass just passed away." I was shocked. It’s like I knew it was going to happen but I didn’t know it would be that day. I called my parents the next morning. My mom gave me information on his funeral…my dad…I can’t really explain how he took it. With my dad it’s closer for him because Teddy was almost like a brother. They were so close. And anytime you work together with anybody in the studio, you don’t just work with the artist— you get to know their family, their kids… I know the impact this is going to have on people, not just in America but all over the world. His music has touched so many. A lot of people were made from his music. Stuff like "Turn Off The Lights" and all that…that was love music back in the day. He was a strong person. He had a great voice. And I want people to just know that he was a loving person, a loving father, a loving friend…a loving everything. --As Told To Linda Hobbs http://www.vibe.com/posts...ncle-teddy | |
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Reading the personal stories from the people who knew him is the saddest part. | |
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Thousands Mourn Philly Soul Legend Janaury 25, 2010 Thousands have paid their respects to R&B legend Teddy Pendergrass at a memorial service in Philadelphia. Pendergrass is best known as the singer of "If You Don't Know Me By Now" and other hits. He died Jan. 13 at age 59 after a battle with colon cancer. A 200-member gospel choir sang at Saturday's service at Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church. Singers such as Melba Moore and Tyrese Gibson performed. About 4,000 people attended, including actor Ben Vereen and singer Stephanie Mills. Pendergrass was later laid to rest at a private burial service. Pendergrass was left paralyzed from the waist down following a 1982 car crash but continued to record music. Music producer Kenny Gamble says after Pendergrass was injured, "His life changed and he started to really give to others." http://abcnews.go.com/Ent...id=9644642 | |
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Identity said: Music producer Kenny Gamble says after Pendergrass was injured, "His life changed and he started to really give to others."
That sounds like a back-handed compliment. | |
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