Syl Johnson, the Chicago soul singer and blues artist whose 1967 track “Different Strokes” became one of most sampled songs in hip-hop history, has died at the age of 85.
Johnson’s family announced his death Sunday; no cause of death was provided. The singer’s death comes just days after his older brother, Blues Hall of Fame inductee Jimmy Johnson, died at the age of 93, CBS Chicago reports.
“It is with extreme sadness that our family announces the passing of Soul & Blues Hall of Fame Legend, Syl Johnson (born Sylvester Thompson in Holly Springs, MS). Dad, Brother, Grandfather, Great Grandfather, Uncle, Friend & Artist, he lived his life as a singer, musician, and entrepreneur who loved black music,” the family said in a statement.
“A fiery, fierce, fighter, always standing for the pursuit of justice as it related to his music and sound, he will truly be missed by all who crossed his path. His catalog and legacy will be remembered as impeccable and a historical blueprint to all who experience it.”
The Mississippi-born Johnson was the marquee act on the Chicago label Twilight/Twinight in the Sixties, enjoying moderate success during his career with singles like “Come On Sock It to Me” and “Is It Because I’m Black.” After moving to Willie Mitchell’s Memphis-based Hi Records in the Seventies, Johnson had his biggest hit as a singer with his 1975 cover of “Take Me to the River.”
However, his most lasting impact on music would come in the form of his 1967 song “Different Strokes,” a portion of which ended up on the fourth volume of the pioneering sampling compilation Ultimate Breaks and Beats.
Elements from “Different Strokes” would later be heard in Public Enemy’s “Fight the Power” and “Fear of a Black Planet,” Kanye West and Jay-Z’s Watch the Throne bonus track “The Joy,” the Wu-Tang Clan’s “Shame on a Nigga,” Boogie Down Productions’ “Criminal Minded,” Kool G Rap and Polo G’s “Talk Like Sex,” songs by Tupac Shakur, N.W.A, the D.O.C., Das EFX and countless more rappers.
However, Johnson — despite being self-proclaimed as “the most sampled artist ever” — rarely saw royalties from his song being sampled, leading to a notable $29 million lawsuit against Cypress Hill and as well as another lawsuit against West and Jay-Z, who ultimately settled their lawsuit with Johnson in 2012.
Archival record label Numero Group, which released the first retrospective of Johnson’s work, tweeted Sunday, “If any single artist could be considered a mascot for Numero, Mississippi-born soul man Syl Johnson was it. He was the first major artist to give our humble Southside Chicago operation a shot—even if he did threaten to sue us in that first conversation.”