Sixto Rodriguez, star and subject of Searching for Sugar Man, dead at 81
Musician gained late-career fame after music was smuggled into South Africa
Singer and songwriter Sixto Rodriguez, who became the subject of the Oscar-winning documentary Searching for Sugar Man, has died. He was 81.
Rodriguez's death Tuesday in Detroit was announced on the Sugarman.org website and confirmed Wednesday by his granddaughter, Amanda Kennedy.
A story by The Associated Press in 2013 referred to Rodriguez as "the greatest protest singer and songwriter that most people never heard of."
His albums flopped in the United States in the 1970s, but — unknown to him — he later became a star in South Africa where his songs protesting the Vietnam War, racial inequality, abuse of women and social mores inspired white liberals horrified by the country's brutal racial segregation system of apartheid.
Swedish filmmaker Malik Bendjelloul's documentary Searching for Sugar Man presented Rodriguez to a much larger audience. The film tells of two South Africans' mission to seek out the fate of their musical hero. It won the Academy Award for best documentary in 2013. Bendjelloul died in 2014 at 36.
Rodriguez was "more popular than Elvis" in South Africa, Stephen (Sugar) Segerman said in 2013. The Cape Town record store owner's nickname comes from the Rodriguez song Sugar Man.
As his popularity in South Africa grew, Rodriguez lived in Detroit.
But his fans in South Africa believed he also was famous in the United States. They heard stories that the musician had died dramatically: He'd shot himself in the head onstage in Moscow; he'd set himself aflame and burned to death before an audience someplace else; he'd died of a drug overdose, was in a mental institution, was incarcerated for murdering his girlfriend.
In 1996, Segerman and journalist Carl Bartholomew-Strydom set out to learn the truth. Their efforts led them to Detroit, where they found Rodriguez working on construction sites.
"It's rock-and-roll history now. Who would have thought?" Rodriguez told The Associated Press a decade ago.
Work as manual labourer
Rodriguez said he just "went back to work" after his music career fizzled, raising a family that includes three daughters and launching several unsuccessful campaigns for public office. He made a living through manual labour in Detroit.
Still, he never stopped playing his music.
"I felt I was ready for the world, but the world wasn't ready for me," Rodriguez said. "I feel we all have a mission — we have obligations. Those turns on the journey, different twists — life is not linear."
Rodriguez later pursued royalties he did not receive from his music being used and played in South Africa.
Some of Rodriguez's songs were banned by the apartheid regime and many bootlegged copies were made on tapes and later CDs.