Bill Pinkney, Last Of The ‘Drifters’, Died At 81

The last survivor of the original members of the musical group The Drifters, Bill Pinkney, died Wednesday at the age of 81. Pinkney, who was scheduled for a performance in daytona Beach for the Fourth of July, was found dead at the Hilton Daytona Beach Oceanfront Resort where he was staying.

Police spokesman Jimmie Flynt said that the death was not considered suspicious. Pinkney’s manager, Maxine Porter, declined to discuss his cause of death, but said Pinkney had had health problems.

The Drifters, whose hits include “Under the Boardwalk,” “Up on the Roof,” and “Save the Last Dance For Me,” still performed Wednesday night. An announcement about Pinkney’s death was made after the show, said the group’s publicist, Donnie Lowery.

Pinkney, born in Dalzell, S.C., wasn’t with The Drifters when they recorded their biggest hits. He left in the band in 1958 because of an argument over cash. His distinctive bass voice can be heard on the group’s version of the holiday classic “White Christmas.”

The Drifters were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988. Pinkney was a World War II veteran and pitched for the New York Blue Sox of the Negro Baseball League in the late 1940s and early ’50s. Porter said funeral arrangements were pending but that he would be buried in South Carolina.

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