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Blood Sweat and Tears Frontman David Clayton-Thomas Dies at 84
Remembering Blood Sweat and Tears' Classic-Era Frontman David Clayton-Thomas
David Clayton-Thomas, the Grammy-winning singer of "Spinning Wheel" and "You've Made Me So Very Happy" with Blood Sweat and Tears, has died. The 84-year-old's death at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto was confirmed by his publicist.
He arrived just in time to save Blood Sweat and Tears, which had fractured after their gold-selling 1968 debut, Child Is Father to the Man. Judy Collins recommended Clayton-Thomas to group leader Bobby Colomby after catching an embryonic performance in New York City.
Their self-titled first collaboration, released later the same year, became a four-times platinum U.S. chart-topping blockbuster. "The first time I walked in and sang with that band, we were in shock," Clayton-Thomas told Rock Cellar in 2013. "It was one of those electrical things that happen."
READ MORE: Top 70 Hard Rock + Metal Albums of the 1970s
Blood Sweat and Tears remained at No. 1 for an astonishing seven weeks. Among its five Grammy wins was album of the year, besting the Beatles' Abbey Road. "And When I Die" joined "You've Made Me So Very Happy" and Clayton-Thomas' original "Spinning Wheel" at No. 2 in the U.S.; all of them were gold-certified.
But Blood Sweat and Tears would become a shooting star. They only had three more Top 40 singles and none after 1971.
David Clayton-Thomas' Troubled Early Years
Born David Henry Thomsett on Sept. 13, 1941, in Surrey, England, he was the son of a Canadian soldier and an English music student who met as she entertained troops. Clayton-Thomas grew up in Willowdale, a suburb of Toronto, and had a difficult childhood. At various points, he was jailed and homeless.
A discarded guitar found in a cell turned things around – but hard times informed the music. "Blood, Sweat and Tears, without me, was basically a jazz band," Clayton-Thomas told Songfacts in 2015. "I think my contribution to the band was the rhythm and blues and the soul I brought into it."
Listen to David Clayton-Thomas at Woodstock
Ronnie Hawkins later became a mentor, just as he did with members of the Band. Clayton-Thomas started playing along Toronto's Yonge Street strip, already experimenting with a mixture of rock and jazz that would power Blood Sweat and Tears up the charts. "Brainwashed," an anti-war anthem, was an early hit in Canada.
With Blood Sweat and Tears, Clayton-Thomas played Woodstock, the Royal Albert Hall, the Hollywood Bowl and Madison Square Garden. The follow-up to Blood Sweat and Tears, 1970's Blood Sweat and Tears 3, also topped the U.S. charts. Blood Sweat and Tears struck gold again with 1971's B S & T 4.
They also made history by becoming the first rock group to play behind the Iron Curtain, appearing across Eastern Europe on a tour sponsored by the U.S. State Department. The historic trek was chronicled in the well-received 2023 documentary What the Hell Happened to Blood Sweat and Tears?
What Was David Clayton-Thomas' Cause of Death?
Clayton-Thomas left in 1972, as the aptly named New Blood became Blood Sweat and Tears' final Top 40 LP. A subsequent self-titled solo project stalled at No. 184 in the U.S., however, and Clayton-Thomas had returned to the band by the mid-'70s.
He remained through 1981, then led several incarnations from 1984 through 2004. "I kept it going as long as I could sanely and physically do it," Clayton-Thomas told Rock Cellar. "One by one they drifted away and by the ‘90s, I pretty much found myself the only one left."
Clayton-Thomas is a member of the Canadian Music Hall of Fame; "Spinning Wheel" has also been honored by the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame. Latter-era solo projects included 2015's Combo, recorded with a quintet of Canadian jazz musicians. Clayton-Thomas' most recent LP was 2019's Say Somethin.'
No cause of death was given, though Clayton-Thomas had serious heart surgery in 2010. A memorial concert is reportedly in the works with proceeds benefiting Peacebuilders Canada, a Toronto-based charity that works with troubled youth.
Watch David Clayton-Thomas Perform ‘You’ve Made Me So Very Happy’
Below, see some of the other rockers we've lost in 2026.
Rockers We've Lost in 2026
The year has already seen the loss of some amazing talents from the rock and metal world.
Gallery Credit: Chad Childers, Loudwire