Donny Hathaway (
October 1,
1945 –
January 13,
1979) was an
American soul musician. He signed with
Atlantic Records in 1969, and with his first single "
The Ghetto, Part I" (1970),
Rolling Stone magazine "marked him as a major new force in soul music."
[Rolling Stone. March 8 1979, p. 17.] His collaborations with
Roberta Flack took him to the top of the charts and won him the
Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal for the duet "
Where Is the Love" in 1973. On
January 13,
1979, his body was found outside the luxury hotel
Essex House in
New York City; his death was ruled a
suicide.
Biography
Early career
Hathaway, the son of Drusella Huntley, was born in
Chicago, but spent most of his youth in
St. Louis. He lived with his grandmother, Martha Pitts, also known as Martha Crumwell, in the Carr Square
housing project. Hathaway began singing in a church choir with his grandmother, a professional gospel singer, at the age of 3. He also played the
ukulele and, fascinated by
Liberace, began studying
piano as a child. Hathaway began singing professionally as "Donny Pitts, The Nation's Youngest Gospel Singer". By the time he was a student at
Vashon High School, he was known as a piano prodigy, which earned him a fine-arts scholarship to
Howard University in 1964 where he was initiated into
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. He attended Howard for three years and performed with The Ric Powell Trio, a jazz trio. Hathaway received so many job offers that he left Howard without a degree in 1967.