San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Rockabilly performer hit Top 10 in 1956 with ‘Fool’

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JOPLIN, Mo. — Rockabilly and country performer Sanford Clark, who had a Top 10 hit with “The Fool” in 1956, has died in a Missouri hospital from COVID19. He was 85.

Clark died last Sunday at Mercy Hospital in Joplin, where he had been receiving cancer treatment before he contracted the coronaviru­s, his publicist and fellow performer Johnny Vallis said Monday.

Clark was born on Oct. 24, 1935, in Tulsa, Okla., and raised in Phoenix, where he first began performing in the early 1950s. “The Fool” reached No. 7 on the Billboard Top 100. The song was later recorded by several other wellknown artists, including Elvis Presley and the Animals.

Presley actually recorded the song twice, the first time as part of his personal recordings while he was serving in the Army, then again for profession­al release in the 1970s, Vallis said.

“You can hear that he’s trying to emulate Sanford’s sound,” Vallis said. “You know, most people I know want to impersonat­e Elvis, and here Elvis was trying to impersonat­e him.”

Clark recorded several other songs in the 1950s and 1960s that saw minor success before he left the music business to work in constructi­on, though he occasional­ly recorded in later decades on his own label, Desert Sun Records.

Sanford is survived by his wife, Marsha, and several children.

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