Blood, Sweat and Tears Singer David Clayton-Thomas Dead at 84
David Clayton-Thomas, who fronted Blood, Sweat, and Tears during their most popular period, died “peacefully,” according to a press notice, in Toronto on Tuesday. A cause of death was not made public. He was 84.
With a deep baritone and a flair for hyperbolic sentimentality, Clayton-Thomas’ melodrama fueled a string of hits for Blood, Sweat, and Tears in the late Sixties and early Seventies. It’s almost impossible not to read song titles like “You’ve Made Me So Very Happy” and “Spinning Wheel” and not hear Clayton-Thomas’ saccharine-yet-corpulent declarations of love in your mind’s ear.
Clayton-Thomas is a Canadian Music Hall of Fame inductee. He achieved a special Juno recognizing his contributions to Canadian culture and has a star on the country’s Walk of Fame. “Spinnin Wheel” has been recognized by the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame.
The son of Fred Thomsett, a Canadian soldier, and Freda, an English music student, the singer was born David Henry Thomsett in Surrey, England, on Sept. 13, 1941, but grew up in a Toronto suburb. A difficult relationship with Fred led David to homelessness as a teenager. Legend has it he found a discarded guitar in a jail or reformatory and taught himself the instrument, rocking jailhouses with his talent until his release from jail for vagrancy in ’62.
He ensconced himself in Toronto’s music scene and adopted the pseudonym David Clayton-Thomas when fronting a group called the Fabulous Shays. With the Bossmen, a bluesy rock group that flirted with jazz, he earned a Canadian radio hit with “Brainwashed” in 1966. Within a couple of years, Judy Collins heard him singing in New York City and recommended him to Bobby Colomby, drummer for Blood, Sweat, and Tears, which had ousted their founding frontman, Al Kooper, in ’68. Clayton-Thomas joined the group, which boasted a brass section and, like the Bossmen, drew inspiration from jazz.
Clayton-Thomas’ first album with the band, Blood, Sweat, and Tears (1968), included arrangements and songs by composer Erik Satie, Billie Holiday, Laura Nyro, Steve Winwood, and Berry Gordy Jr. It was a Number One hit for seven weeks the following year, selling more than four million copies. Each of its singles — including “You’ve Made Me So Very Happy,” “And When I Die,” and Clayton-Thomas’ own composition, “Spinning Wheel” — hit Number Two on Billboard. In 1970, the album won the Album of the Year Grammy over the Beatles’ Abbey Road, Johnny Cash’s Live at San Quentin, and Crosby, Stills and Nash’s self-titled debut.
That year, Blood, Sweat, and Tears, which were playing Madison Square Garden and the Hollywood Bowl at their peak, aligned with the U.S. State Department for a goodwill tour of Yugoslavia, Romania, and Poland, making them one of the first music groups to pierce the Iron Curtain. That chapter of the band’s career was the focus of the 2023 documentary, What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears? “We went over there with the idea of just how much so-called Communist fascism is American propaganda,” Clayton-Thomas told Rolling Stone in 1970. “And I found that the propaganda is pretty damn close to the truth. It’s scary.”
The band’s next album, Blood, Sweat & Tears 3 (1970), also hit Number One on the Billboard chart, going gold thanks to the singles “Hi-De-Ho” and the Clayton-Thomas–penned “Lucretia MacEvil.” After the group’s next LP, B, S, & T 4 (1971) underperformed (it was still a gold-selling album, though it peaked at Number 10 as similar sounding groups like Chicago saturated the charts), Clayton-Thomas quit for a solo career in 1972.
The singer released David Clayton-Thomas! in 1969, and it peaked at Number 159 in the U.S. His first post-B,S,&T album, David Clayton-Thomas fared worse, petering out at Number 184, and the dozen-plus solo albums that followed in his lifetime failed to make a chart impact, though his 1974 single, “Anytime … Babe,” was a minor hit in Canada.
Fortuitously, Clayton-Thomas’ return to Blood, Sweat, and Tears in 1974 helped get the band back on the middle of the charts, though Columbia dropped them after More Than Ever petered out at Number 165 in ’76. Around that time, the band started billing itself as Blood, Sweat, and Tears featuring David Clayton-Thomas and played Las Vegas residencies. Two more albums followed but the band dissolved in 1981.
Clayton-Thomas retained co-ownership of the band’s name and catalog and entered into A&R and TV reporting while carrying on with his solo career. He fronted various reunions of Blood, Sweat, and Tears between 1984 and 2004. In 2010, he survived heart surgery. That same year, he released the autobiography, Blood, Sweat, and Tears.
Outside of the entertainment industry, Clayton-Thomas campaigned for Peacebuilders Canada, which seeks to aid at-risk youth. He also made appearances at benefits and galas for similar causes.
Clayton-Thomas is survived by his daughters, Ashleigh Clayton-Thomas and Christine Graham. A memorial concert, benefiting Peacebuilders Canada is in the works.
In 2013, Clayton-Thomas reflected on how the first time he sang with Blood, Sweat, and Tears, it felt like lightning struck. “We were just, holy shit, this is some kind of band, and we knew it,” he told Rock Cellar. “It wasn’t arrogance. It was just amazing confidence. And sure enough, within about three weeks after we opened at the Go Go — we weren’t even in the studio yet — there would be a thousand people lined up down Bleecker St. to get into a 200-seat club.”
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