Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Jimmy Hughes obit

R.I.P. Soul music legend Jimmy Hughes

 

He was not on the list.


We have just received the bad news that Southern Soul pioneer Jimmy Hughes has died at age 88. Hughes was one of the foundational voices of the genre, a singer whose brief but important recording career helped put Muscle Shoals, Alabama, on the national music map. Born and raised in Leighton, Alabama, Hughes began singing in a gospel quartet called The Singing Clouds before moving into secular R&B, bringing with him a church-bred intensity that gave his records both intimacy and fire.

His breakthrough came in 1964 with “Steal Away,” a powerful ballad he recorded for Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. The song became a major R&B and pop hit, reaching No. 17 on the Billboard Hot 100, and is widely viewed as one of the records that established the signature Muscle Shoals sound.

Hughes followed with a string of strong recordings for FAME, including “Neighbor, Neighbor” and “Why Not Tonight.” His voice was earthy and pleading, with the kind of controlled ache that would also mark the work of his cousin Percy Sledge, as well as Wilson Pickett and Clarence Carter.

By the early 70s the hits stopped coming for Hughes, and so he retired from the music business on his own terms and he reportedly limited his singing to church from that time on, while taking a job in the nuclear power industry.

Though his time in the spotlight was relatively short, Hughes’ impact was lasting. He was among the first artists to show that Muscle Shoals could produce soul music with national reach and a distinct regional flavor. For many fans of deep soul, Jimmy Hughes remains an essential figure: not just the man behind “Steal Away,” but a singer who helped open the door for one of the great recording centers in American music

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