 Barry White was an American singer-songwriter and composer. A three-time Grammy Award winner known for his distinctive bass-baritone voice and romantic image, White's greatest success came in the 1970s as a solo singer and with the Love Unlimited Orchestra, crafting many enduring soul, funk and disco songs such as his two biggest hits, You're the First, The Last, My Everything and Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe. During the course of his career in the music business, White achieved 106 gold albums worldwide, 41 of which also attained platinum status. White had 20 gold and 10 platinum singles, with worldwide record sales in excess of 100 and NBSP, million, White is one of the world's best-selling artists of all time. His influences included Reverend James Cleveland, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin and Elvis Presley plus Motown artists The Supremes, The Four Tops, and Marvin Gaye. Early Life White was born Barry Eugene Carter in Galveston, Texas on September 12, 1944, and grew up in South Central Los Angeles. White was the older of two children. His brother Daryl was 13 months younger than Barry. He grew up listening to his mother's classical music collection and first took to the piano, emulating what he heard on the records. White has often been credited with playing piano, at age 11, on Jesse Belvin's 1956 hit single, Good Night My Love. However, in a 1995 interview with Larry Katz of the Boston Herald, White denied writing or arranging the song. He believed the story was an exaggeration by journalists. While White and Belvin lived in the same neighborhood, Belvin was 12 years older than White. White also stated that he had no involvement with Bob and Earl's 1963 hit single Harlem Shuffle, a song he is credited with producing and in his 1999 autobiography, White confirmed the song had been produced by Gene Page, who had worked with him on many of White's 1970s successes. White's voice deepened suddenly when he was 14.White recalled, as a child, I had a normal squeaky kid voice. Then as a teenager, that completely changed. My mother cried because she knew her baby boy had become a man. Gang life and jail sentence. His brother Daryl was murdered in a clash with a rival gang, and White himself was jailed at the age of 16 for stealing $30,000 worth of Cadillac tires. While in jail, White listened to Elvis Presley singing It's Now or Never on the radio, an experience he later credited with changing the course of his life. Music career. The 1960s. After his release from jail, White left gang life and began a musical career at the beginning of the 1960s in singing groups. He first released Too Far to Turn Around in 1960 as part of the Up France before working for various small independent labels in Los Angeles. He also recorded several singles under his own name in the early 1960s, backed by vocal groups The Atlantics, for the Rampart and Feral Labels, and the Majestics, for the Linda and Jordan labels. Bob Keen of Delphi Records the man who discovered Richie Valens hired him as an ondar man in the mid-1960s, and White started working with the label's artists, including Viola Wills and the Bobby Fuller Four, as a songwriter, session musician and arranger. He discovered singer Felice Taylor and arranged her song I Feel Love Comin' On. C.O. written with his friend Paul Politi it became a big hit in the UK.Other charting hits written by White and Politi for her included It May Be Winter Outside, But In My Heart It's Spring, and Under the Influence of Love. White also wrote Doin' the Banana Split for TV Bubblegum Act The Banana Splits in 1968. The 1970s as producer. In 1972, White got his big break producing a girl group he had discovered called Love Unlimited. Formed an imitative style of the Motown Girl group The Supremes, the group members had gradually honed their talents with White for two years previously until they signed contracts with Uni Records. His friend Paul Politi hooked him up with music industry businessman Larry Noons, who helped to finance their album. After it was recorded, Noons took the recording to Russ Reagan, who was the head of the Uni label owned by MCA. The album, 1972s from a girl's point of view we give to you. Love Unlimited, became a million album seller and the first of White's string of long-titled albums and singles. White produced, wrote and arranged their classic Soul Ballad Walkin' in the Rain with The One I Love, which climbed to number 14 in the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart and number six on the Billboard R&B chart in late 1972. This single also reached number 12 in the UK chart. White's voice can clearly be heard in this piece as he plays the lover who answers the phone call of the female lead. Soon after, Reagan left Uni for 20th century records. Without Reagan, White's relationship with Uni soured. With his relationship with Uni over and Love Unlimited contract bound with the label, White was able to switch both his production deal and the group to 20th century records. They recorded several other hits throughout the 1970s, I Belong To You, which spent over five months on the Billboard R&B chart in 1974 including A Week at Number One and Under the Influence of Love, which hit number three on the Billboard Pop album charts. White married the lead singer of the group, Glodian James, on July 4, 1974. The 1970s as solo artist. White wanted to work with another act but decided to work with a solo male artist. While working on a few demos for a male singer, he made three song demos of himself singing and playing, but Noons heard them and insisted that he re-record and release them himself as a solo recording artist. After arguing for days about it, White was finally persuaded to release the songs himself although he was initially reluctant to step out in front of the microphone. He then wrote several other songs and recorded them for what eventually became an entire album of music. He was going to use the name White Heat, but decided on using his given name instead. White was still hesitating up to the time the label copy was made. It eventually became White's first solo album, 1973's I V E Got So Much To Give. It included the title track and his first solo chart hit, I'm Gonna Love You Just A Little More Baby, which also rose to number one on the Billboard R&B charts as well as number three on the Billboard pop charts in 1973 and stayed in the top 40 for many weeks. Other chart hits by White included Never, Never Gonna Give You Up, number two R&B, number seven pop in 1973, can't get enough of your love, babe, number one pop and R&B in 1974, you're the first, the last, my everything, number one R&B, number two pop in 1974, what am I gonna do with you, number one R&B, number eight pop in 1975, let the music play, number four R&B in 1976, it's ecstasy when you lay down next to me, number one R&B, number four pop in 1977, and your sweetness is my weakness, number two R&B in 1978 and others. White also had a strong following in the UK, where he scored five top ten hits and a number one four you're the first, the last, my everything, the Love Unlimited Orchestra. In 1973, White created the Love Unlimited Orchestra, a 40-piece orchestral group to be used originally as a backing band for the girl group Love Unlimited. However, White had other plans, and in 1973 he released a single with Love's Theme, written by him and played by the orchestra, that same track reached number one on the Billboard pop charts. Later, in 1974, he made the first album of the Love Unlimited Orchestra, Rhapsody in White, containing Love's Theme. White is sometimes credited with ushering in the disco sound, seamlessly combining R&B music with classical music. Some also regard Love's Theme as the first hit in the actual disco era. White would continue to make albums with the orchestra, achieving some successes such as Rhapsody in White, Satin Soul, Forever in Love, Midnight Groove, My Sweet Summer Sweet, Remake of Theme from King Kong. The orchestra ceased to make albums in 1983, but continued to support White as a backing band. The 1980s. After six years White left 20th century in 1979 to launch his own label, Unlimited Gold, with CBS slash Columbia Records. Although his success on the pop charts slowed down as the disco era came to an end, he maintained a loyal following throughout his career. Despite several albums over the next three years he failed to repeat his earlier successes, with no singles managing to reach the Billboard Hot 100 except for 1982's Change, climbing into the Billboard R&B Top 20, Number 12. His label venture was exacting a heavy financial cost on White, so he concentrated on mostly touring and finally folded his label in 1983. After four years he signed with Ondem Records, and with the release of 1987's The Right Night and Barry White, the single entitled Show You Right made it to the Billboard R&B Charts, peaking at number 17. In 1989 he released The Man is Back, and with it had three top 40 singles on the Billboard R&B Charts, Super Lover, which made it to number 34, I Wanna Do It Good to Ya, which made it to number 26, and When Will I See You Again, which made it to number 32. The 1990s. A 1970s nostalgia fad allowed White to enjoy a renewed wave of popularity in the 1990s. After participating in the song The Secret Garden, sweet seduction sweet, from Quincy Jones's 1989 album Back on the Block, White mounted an effective comeback with several albums, each more successful than the last. He returned to the top of the charts in 1991 with the album Put Me in Your Mix, which reached number eight on the Billboard R&B Albums Chart and the song by the same name reached number two on the Billboard R&B Singles Chart. In 1994, White released The Icon Is Love, which went to number one on the Billboard R&B Album Charts, and the single Practice What You Preach gave him his first number one on the Billboard R&B Singles Chart in almost 20 years. The album was nominated for a Grammy in the Best R&B Album category, but lost to TLC's Crazy Sexy Cool. In 1996, White recorded the duet In Your Wildest Dreams with Tina Turner. 1996 also saw the release of Space Jam and its soundtrack, on which White had a duet with Chris Rock, called Basketball Jones, a remake of Cheech and Chong's Basketball Jones from 1973. White's final album, 1999's Staying Power, resulted in his last hit song Staying Power, which placed number 45 on the Billboard R&B Charts. The single won him two Grammy Awards in the category's Best Male R&B Vocal Performance and Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance. His autobiography, Love Unlimited, written with Mark Elliott, was published in 1999 by Broadway Books. Acting Career Over the course of his career, White sometimes did voice-over work for TV and movies. He voiced the character Bear in the 1975 film Coonskin and also played the character Samson in the movie's live action segments. White appeared as himself in a few episodes of The Simpsons, and most importantly the episode Wacking Day in which Bart and Lisa used his famous deep bass singing voice, played through loudspeakers placed on the ground, to lull and attract snakes. White was a fan of the show, and had reportedly contacted the staff about wanting to make a guest appearance. White played the role of a bus driver for a Prodigy commercial in 1995, and he also portrayed the voice of a rabbit in a Good Season salad dressing mix commercial, singing a song called You Can't Bottle Love. In addition, he did some work for car commercials, most famously for Oldsmobile, and later on, Jeep. White also provided voice-over for Arby's restaurant commercials on TV and radio to promote their market fresh menu. White's voice can also be heard in Apple's first iBook commercial. White made three guest appearances on the comedy drama TV series Ally McBeal, as his music was often featured on the show in dream sequences. Illness and Death White was overweight for most of his adult life, weighing according to K. C. Kasem and suffered from related health problems. In October 1995, White was admitted to a hospital as a result of high blood pressure. In August 1999, White was forced to cancel approximately a month's worth of tour dates owing to exhaustion, high blood pressure, and a hectic schedule. In September 2002, White was hospitalized with kidney failure attributed to chronic diabetes mellitus and high blood pressure. While undergoing dialysis and awaiting a kidney transplant in May 2003, White suffered a severe stroke, which forced him to retire from public life. At around 9.30 and NBSP, A.M. PDT, on July 4, 2003, 29 years to the day that he married Glodian, White died at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles at the age of 58. His remains were cremated, and the ashes were scattered by his family off the California coast. Tributes On September 20, 2004, White was posthumously inducted into the Dance Music Hall of Fame at a ceremony held in New York. On September 12, 2013, which would have been White's 69th birthday, he was posthumously awarded the 2,506th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6914 Hollywood Boulevard in the category of recording. The show Counting Cars paid tribute to White by restoring the last car he owned for his widow, Glodian. In an obituary affectionately referring to White by his familiar nickname, The Walrus of Love, the BBC recalled the rich timbers of one of the most distinctive soul voices of his generation, about which it was once said, if chocolate fudge cake could sing, it would sound like Barry White.