Robert Lee "Bobby" Hatfield (August 10, 1940 – November 5, 2003) was an American singer, best known as one half of the Righteous Brothers singing duo.
Early life
Hatfield was born in
Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, and moved with his family to
Anaheim, California when he was four. A 1958 graduate of
Anaheim High School, he sang in the school choir and played
baseball. He briefly considered signing as a professional ballplayer, but his passion for music led him to pursue music while attending high school. He would eventually encounter his singing partner
Bill Medley while attending
California State University Long Beach. Hatfield was noted for his "soaring tenor" and vocal range.
Career
The pair began singing as a duo in 1962 in the Los Angeles area as part of a five-member group called the Paramours. Their first charted single as the Righteous Brothers was "Little Latin Lupe Lu" and their first top-ten hit was "
You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'," produced by
Phil Spector in 1964. Follow-up hits included "(You're My) Soul and Inspiration" and "
Unchained Melody", the latter of which was actually a Hatfield solo performance. The duo broke up in 1968 but returned with another hit in 1974, "Rock and Roll Heaven." The duo were inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March 2003 by one of their biggest fans,
Billy Joel.
Death
On
November 5 2003 Hatfield died at the Radisson, in the middle of downtown
Kalamazoo, Michigan, apparently in his sleep. In January 2004, a toxicology report concluded that an overdose of
cocaine had precipitated a fatal
heart attack.
The Sun, a
UK based
tabloid daily
newspaper caused controversy with its reporting of Hatfield's death, namely with the
front page headline of: '''You've lost that livin' feeling'
Bibliography
External links