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Donna
Summer,
Queen of
Disco,
dies at
63
By
MESFIN
FEKADU
Associated
Press
NEW YORK
- Disco
queen
Donna
Summer,
whose
pulsing
anthems
such as
"Last
Dance,"
"Love to
Love You
Baby"
and "Bad
Girls"
became
the
soundtrack
for a
glittery
age of
sex,
drugs,
dance
and
flashy
clothes,
has
died.
She was
63.
Her
family
released
a
statement
saying
Summer
died
Thursday
morning
and that
they
"are at
peace
celebrating
her
extraordinary
life and
her
continued
legacy."
The
family
did not
disclose
the
cause of
death.
She had
been
living
in
Englewood,
Fla.,
with her
husband
Bruce
Sudano.
"Words
truly
can't
express
how much
we
appreciate
your
prayers
and love
for our
family
at this
sensitive
time,"
the
statement
said.
Summer
came to
prominence
just as
disco
was
burgeoning,
and came
to
define
the era
with a
string
of No. 1
hits and
her
luxurious
hair and
glossy,
open
lips.
Disco
became
as much
defined
by her
sultry,
sexual
vocals -
her
bedroom
moans
and
sighs -
as the
relentless,
pulsing
rhythms
of the
music
itself.
Elton
John
said in
a
statement
that
Summer
was more
than the
Queen of
Disco.
"Her
records
sound as
good
today as
they
ever
did.
That she
has
never
been
inducted
into the
Rock `n'
Roll
Hall of
Fame is
a total
disgrace
especially
when I
see the
second-rate
talent
that has
been
inducted,"
he said.
"She is
a great
friend
to me
and to
the
Elton
John
AIDS
Foundation
and I
will
miss her
greatly."
"Love to
Love You
Baby,"
with its
erotic
moans,
was
Summer's
first
hit and
one of
the most
scandalous
songs of
the
polyester-and-platform-heel
era. The
song was
later
sampled
by LL
Cool J,
Timbaland
and
Beyonce,
who
interpolated
the hit
for her
jam
"Naughty
Girl."
Unlike
some
other
stars of
disco
who
faded as
the
music
became
less
popular,
Summer
was able
to grow
beyond
it and
later
segued
to a
pop-rock
sound.
She had
one of
her
biggest
hits in
the
1980s
with
"She
Works
Hard for
the
Money,"
which
became
another
anthem,
this
time for
women's
rights.
Soon
after,
Summer
became a
born-again
Christian
and
faced
controversy
when she
was
accused
of
making
anti-gay
comments
in
relation
to the
AIDS
epidemic.
Summer
denied
making
the
comments,
but was
the
target
of a
boycott.
Religion
played
an
important
role in
her life
in later
years,
said
Michael
Levine,
who
briefly
worked
as her
publicist.
"She was
very
committed
to God,
spirituality
and
religion.
Her
passion
in her
life,
besides
music,
was God,
spirituality
and
religion.
She held
a bible
study
class at
her home
every
week,"
he said.
Summer,
real
name
LaDonna
Adrian
Gaines,
was born
in 1948
in
Boston.
She was
raised
on
gospel
music
and
became
the
soloist
in her
church
choir by
age 10.
"There
was no
question
I would
be a
singer,
I just
always
knew. I
had
credit
in my
neighborhood,
people
would
lend me
money
and tell
me to
pay it
back
when I
got
famous,"
Summer
said in
a 1989
interview
with The
Associated
Press.
"Love to
Love You
Baby,"
released
in 1975,
was her
U.S.
chart
debut
and the
first of
19 No. 1
dance
hits
between
1975 and
2008 -
second
only to
Madonna.
The song
was a
breakthrough
hit for
Summer
and for
disco -
a legend
of
studio
ecstasy
and the
genre's
ultimate
sexual
anthem.
Summer
came up
with the
idea of
the song
and
first
recorded
it as a
demo in
1975, on
the
condition
that
another
singer
perform
it
commercially.
But
Casablanca
Records
president
Neil
Bogart
liked
the
track so
much
that he
suggested
to
producer
Giorgio
Morodor
they
re-record
it, and
make it
longer -
what
would
come to
be known
as a
"disco
disc."
Summer
had
reservations
about
the
lyrics -
"Do it
to me
again
and
again" -
but
imagined
herself
as a
movie
star
playing
a part.
So she
agreed
to sing,
lying
down on
the
studio
floor,
in
darkness,
and
letting
her
imagination
take
over.
Solo and
multitracked,
she
whispered,
she
groaned,
she
crooned.
Drums,
bass,
strings
and
keyboards
answered
her
cries.
She
simulated
climax
so many
times
that the
BBC kept
count:
23, in
17
minutes.
Through
the rest
of the
disco
era she
burned
up the
charts:
She was
the only
artist
to have
three
consecutive
double-LPs
hit No.
1, "Live
and
More,"
"Bad
Girls"
and "On
the
Radio."
She was
also the
first
female
artist
with
four No.
1
singles
in a
13-month
period,
according
to the
Rock
Hall of
Fame,
where
she was
a
nominee
this
year but
was
passed
over.
She was
never
comfortable
with the
"Disco
Queen"
label.
Musically,
she
began to
change
in 1979
with
"Hot
Stuff,"
which
had a
tough,
rock `n'
roll
beat.
Her
diverse
sound
helped
her earn
Grammy
Awards
in the
dance,
rock,
R&B and
inspirational
categories.
Summer
said
grew up
on rock
`n' roll
and
later
covered
the
Bruce
Springsteen
song
"Protection."
"I like
the
Moody
Blues,
the
Beatles
and the
Rolling
Stones
as well
as
Aretha
Franklin,
Dionne
Warwick,
the
Supremes
and
Temptations,"
she
said. "I
didn't
know
many
white
kids who
didn't
know the
Supremes;
I don't
know
many
black
kids who
don't
know the
Moody
Blues."
Warwick
said in
a
statement
that she
was sad
to lose
a great
performer
and
"dear
friend."
"My
heart
goes out
to her
husband
and her
children,"
Warwick
said.
"Prayers
will be
said to
keep
them
strong."
Musician
Nile
Rodgers
tweeted:
"For the
last
half
hour or
so I've
been
lying in
my bed
crying
and
stunned.
Donna
Summer
RIP."
Summer
released
her last
album,
"Crayons,"
in 2008.
It was
her
first
full
studio
album in
17
years.
She also
performed
on
"American
Idol"
that
year
with its
top
female
contestants.
Even as
disco
went out
of
fashion,
she
remained
a
fixture
in dance
clubs,
endlessly
sampled
and
remixed.
Her
music
has also
been
sampled
by the
Pussycat
Dolls
and
rapper
Nas.
In a
sign of
her
continued
relevance,
the
Broadway
musical
"Priscilla
Queen of
the
Desert,
The
Musical,"
features
two
versions
of
Summer
songs
with
"Hot
Stuff"
and
"MacArthur
Park."
"It's a
tragedy
to lose
an icon
at such
a young
age,"
actor
and
singer
Nick
Adams,
who
plays
Adam in
the
show,
said in
an
email.
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