Singer Betty Davis, ‘Queen Of Funk,’ Has Died At 77

Singer Betty Davis, ‘Queen Of Funk,’ Has Died At 77
Betty Davis

 

 

Betty Davis, the legendary artist often referred to as the queen of funk, has died at age 77. News was confirmed to Rolling Stone by Davis’ close friend Danielle Maggio, an ethnomusicologist whose work focused on Betty’s music and life. The Allegheny County communications director Amie Downs said Davis died of natural causes.

 

Born in North Carolina, Davis moved to New York City at 16 to go to fashion school, which spawned a modelling career also highlighted by her appearances in spreads for magazines like Glamour and Seventeen. After marrying jazz pioneer Miles Davis in 1968, Betty went on to record three solo albums: her 1973 self-titled

 

 

debut, 1974’s They Say I’m Different, and 1975’s Nasty Gal. She scored two singles on the Billboard R&B Singles chart, with the No. 66 single “If I’m in Luck I Might Get Picked Up” and 1975’s “Shut Off the Lights, which peaked at No. 97. Betty and Miles Davis divorced after a year of marriage due, which she attributed to his violent, jealous temper. Speaking to

 

 

the New York Times in 2018 about her too-brief career, Betty said, When I was told that it was over, I just accepted it. And nobody else was knocking at my door. She went on to say her father’s death changed her priorities. I went to another level, Davis explained. It was no longer about the music or anything, it was about me losing a part of myself. It was devastating.