Iconic Middlesbrough-born musician Chris Rea, who had hits with Driving Home for Christmas, On the Beach and The Road to Hell, has died at the age of 74, a
spokesperson for his family said.
The statement said that he died "peacefully in hospital … following a short illness".
Rea
blended blues, pop, soul and soft rock on 25 studio albums, featuring
hits including The Road to Hell, taken from a UK No 1 album of the same
name; Driving Home for Christmas, a perennial seasonal favourite; and
tracks such as On the Beach and Josephine that earned popularity in the
Balearic dance scene. He sold more than 30 million albums.
He was born in 1951 in Middlesbrough
to an Italian father and Irish mother, and had six siblings. "To be
Irish Italian in a coffee bar in Middlesbrough – I started my life as an
outsider," he later said. As a young man he dabbled in music while working
labouring jobs, including in his father’s ice-cream factory, and
considered being a journalist. He eventually joined a band aged 22,
Magdalene, which had previously featured David Coverdale (later of Deep
Purple). He then joined another band, the Beautiful Losers, but struck
out solo when offered a record deal, releasing his debut single, So Much
Love, in 1974.
His first flush of success
came in the US, where his 1978 song Fool (If You Think It’s Over)
reached No 12 and earned him a Grammy nomination for best new artist. He
struggled to match that achievement for some years – likening industry
machinations in this period to a big manure heap of bubbling stuff. I
had no control over it, I didn't know what to do – though the 1985
album Water Sign was a hit across Europe and helped to turn his fortunes
around.
The late 1980s were his most
commercially successful period: finally embraced in the UK despite often
sitting outside the dominant trends in pop, 1987's Dancing With
Strangers began a run of six UK top 10 albums, two of them reaching No
1.
The 1988 compilation album New Light Through Old
Windows contained his biggest hit, Driving Home for Christmas,
originally recorded in 1986. It made little impact on its first release,
but the gentle, sentimental song about the communal pleasure of its
title has continued to grow in popularity ever since, reaching a chart
high of No 10 in 2021. Rea originally wrote it
at a low ebb when he was without a manager, out of a record contract
and actually banned from driving – he had to be driven home by his wife
from London to Middlesbrough because he couldn't afford the rail fare.
He wrote the lyrics on the car journey, but didn’t complete the song
until a few years later.
Rea's chart success waned somewhat in the 2000s,
when, beginning with 2002's Dancing Down the Stony Road, Rea turned away
from pop and back towards the Delta blues that had originally inspired
him.
Appropriately, given he often fixated on
cars and roads in his songs, Rea was a motor racing enthusiast who raced
models by Ferrari and Lotus, and participated in the 1993 British
Touring Car Championship. For the 1995 Formula One season, he joined the
Jordan team as a pit mechanic. "I really didn't want to do the VIP
thing, so I was in charge of Eddie Irvine’s right-rear tyre," he later
said.
Rea suffered a number of health issues during his life. He was diagnosed
with pancreatic cancer, and eventually had his pancreas removed along
with parts of his stomach and small intestine in 2001. The procedure
caused him to become diabetic.
He had a stroke in 2016, which he described as a "very scary moment … I got it into my head that my perception of pitch
had gone with the stroke. And it took a lot of convincing from people
saying there’s nothing wrong with what you're playing." In 2017, he
collapsed on stage during a concert in Oxford, and was taken to hospital
to recover.
Rea is survived by his wife Joan,
whom he began dating aged 17, and their daughters Josephine and Julia,
both of whom Rea named hit songs after.
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