Carl Carlton’s story was never just about chart positions; it was about a boy from Detroit who refused to let circumstance define his ceiling. As Little Carl Carlton, he pushed his way into studios before he was even a teenager, his early singles echoing across the Atlantic into the Northern Soul clubs that first understood his power. Each reinvention – from “Everlasting Love” to “She’s a Bad Mama Jama” – proved he could bend with the times without breaking his identity.Behind the stage lights, he weathered industry contracts, changing tastes, and, later, fragile health. Yet he kept touring, kept singing, kept saying yes when other veterans quietly slipped away. Collaborating with Smokey Robinson, Stevie Wonder, Chaka Khan and more, he became a bridge between eras of Black music. His passing after a 2019 stroke closes a remarkable chapter, but the joy and swagger in those records ensure his spirit keeps dancing long after the final fade-out.
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