Rodriguez

Soundtrack

Popular As Rod Riguez · Sixth Prince · Jesús Rodríguez

Birthday July 10, 1942

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Detroit, Michigan, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2023-8-8, (81 years old)

Nationality United States

#9687 Most Popular

1942

Sixto Diaz Rodriguez (July 10, 1942 – August 8, 2023), mononymously known as Rodriguez, was an American musician from Detroit, Michigan.

Though his career was initially met with little fanfare in the United States, he found success in South Africa, Australia (touring the country twice in his earlier career), and New Zealand.

Unbeknownst to him for decades, his music grew extremely successful and influential in South Africa, where he is believed to have sold more records than Elvis Presley.

Information about him was scarce, and it was incorrectly rumored there that he had died by suicide shortly after releasing his second album.

Sixto Diaz Rodriguez was born on July 10, 1942, in Detroit, Michigan.

He was the sixth child of Mexican immigrant working-class parents.

His mother died when he was three years old.

They had joined a large influx of Mexicans who came to the Midwest to work in Detroit's industries.

Mexican immigrants at that time faced both intense alienation and marginalization.

In most of his songs, Rodriguez takes a political stance on the difficulties that faced the inner-city poor.

1967

In 1967, using the name "Rod Riguez" (given by his record label), he released a single, "I'll Slip Away", on the small Impact label.

He did not record again for three years, until he signed with Sussex Records, then an offshoot of Buddah Records.

He used his preferred professional name, "Rodriguez", after that.

1970

He recorded two albums with Sussex, Cold Fact in 1970 and Coming from Reality in November 1971.

Although Rodriguez remained relatively unknown in his home country, by the mid-1970s his albums were starting to gain significant airplay in Australia, Botswana, New Zealand, Zimbabwe and South Africa.

When imported copies of his Sussex albums were sold out, an Australian record label, Blue Goose Music, bought the Australian rights to his recordings.

However, few details of his life were known to his fans and it was rumored that he had killed himself during a concert in the 1970s.

1971

However, both sold few copies in the U.S. and he was dropped by Sussex two weeks before Christmas 1971, and Sussex itself closed in 1975.

1973

Blue Goose released his two studio albums as well as a compilation album, At His Best, that featured unreleased recordings from 1973 – "Can't Get Away", "I'll Slip Away" (a re-recording of his first single), and "Street Boy".

At His Best went platinum in South Africa, which at one stage was the major disc-press source of his music to the rest of the world.

Rodriguez was compared to contemporaries such as Bob Dylan and Cat Stevens.

Many of his songs carry anti-establishment themes, and therefore boosted anti-apartheid protest culture in South Africa where his work influenced the music scene at the time and was also a considerable influence on a generation drafted, mostly unwillingly, to the then whites-only South African military.

Reportedly, anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko was also a Rodriguez fan.

1976

Rodriguez quit his music career and in 1976 he purchased a derelict Detroit house in a government auction for $50 (US$0 in dollars) in which he still lived as of 2013.

He worked in demolition and production line work, always earning a low income.

1979

Rodriguez was also successful in Australia and performed two concert tours across the country in 1979 and 1981 after Australian concert promoters had tracked him down in Detroit.

At his first performance in Sydney he reportedly mumbled in front of a big audience "eight years later ... and this happens. I don’t believe it."

Rodriguez later stated that after his second tour in Australia he thought it was the highlight of his career, and that "not much happened after that. No calls or anything.”

1989

He remained politically active and motivated to improve the lives of the city's working-class inhabitants and had run unsuccessfully several times for public office: for the Detroit City Council in 1989, for Mayor of Detroit in 1981 and 1993 and for the Michigan House of Representatives in 2000.

1990

In the 1990s, determined South African fans managed to find and contact Rodriguez, which led to an unexpected revival of his musical career.

1991

In 1991, both of his albums were released on CD in South Africa for the first time, which helped preserve his fame.

2012

This was told in the 2012 Academy Award-winning documentary film Searching for Sugar Man and helped give Rodriguez a measure of fame in his home country.

2013

In May 2013, Rodriguez received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from his alma mater, Wayne State University, in Detroit.

Rodriguez lived in Detroit's historic Woodbridge neighborhood, through which he is seen walking in Searching for Sugar Man.

He lived a simple life, possessing no telephone, and occasionally visited bars in the Cass Corridor section of Detroit near Woodbridge and Midtown, such as the Old Miami pub, where he performed live concerts for small local crowds.

While Searching for Sugar Man implied that he was in the process of recording a third album when Sussex dropped him, In 2013 Rodriguez told Rolling Stone magazine that he unsuccessfully lobbied filmmakers to cut a reference to his unfinished third album.

He told the magazine, "To me it distracted. It almost cheapened the film, like it was a promo film.… I’ve written about 30 songs, and that’s pretty much what the public has heard."

In 2013, it was announced that Rodriguez was in discussions with Steve Rowland, the producer of his Coming From Reality album.

"I've written about thirty new songs," Rodriguez told Rolling Stone magazine.

"He told me to send him a couple of tapes, so I'm gonna do that. I certainly want to look him up, because now he's full of ideas."