24.9 C
New York
Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Beloved Rock Legend Dead at 76

The voice behind some of the 1970s’ most enduring soft rock hits has died. Dennis Locorriere, co-founder and lead vocalist of Dr. Hook, passed away at the age of 76 after a long and courageous battle with kidney disease.

Representatives of the band confirmed the death in a statement. “Dennis faced his illness with remarkable strength, dignity, and resilience throughout, and remained deeply cherished by all who knew him. He will be remembered for his warmth, love, and the lasting impact he had on those around him. We would like to thank everyone who supported Dennis during his journey and ask for privacy for his loved ones as they grieve this profound loss.”

The musician’s death came just six months after he announced in November 2025 that he was retiring from touring.

Chart Success and Vocal Partnership

Locorriere’s warm, soulful voice powered transatlantic hits including “Sylvia’s Mother,” “When You’re in Love with a Beautiful Woman” and “Sexy Eyes.” The band’s commercial peak arrived with 1979’s Sometimes You Win, which spawned “When You’re in Love with a Beautiful Woman,” “Better Love Next Time” and the disco-tinged “Sexy Eyes,” a transatlantic hit in 1980.

Locorriere took the leading vocal on “When You’re in Love with a Beautiful Woman,” an up-tempo disco-pop track about romantic paranoia that spent three weeks at U.K. No. 1 in 1979 during a remarkable 17-week chart run. Their hit “Sharing the Night Together” returned them to the U.S. Top 10 in 1978, while their cover of Sam Cooke’s “Only Sixteen” became another chart success.

Although Locorriere shared lead vocal duties with the cowboy-hatted, eye patch-sporting Ray Sawyer, who died in 2018, the band’s appeal rested on their gorgeous multi-voiced harmonizing, Locorriere’s boyish yet soulful tenor paired with Sawyer’s slightly more grizzled country tones. The pairing, however, sometimes frustrated Locorriere, who said audiences often mistook the eye-catching Sawyer as the band’s frontman. “That used to really hurt my feelings,” he admitted.

Early Days and Shel Silverstein Collaboration

Born in Union City, New Jersey, in 1949, Locorriere was still in his late teens when he sat in with a group of more experienced musicians a decade older than he, performing vocals, bass, guitar and harmonica. That fateful jam session would eventually evolve into one of the era’s most distinctive country-rock outfits.

“I just knew that I didn’t want to have a regular job because at that time I was a hippy,” Locorriere once recalled. “I would go to bars at night and play until 3 a.m., playing and having fun with my friends and I really wasn’t thinking too much about it.”

He co-founded Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show in 1969, initially serving as the band’s bassist and lead singer. That carefree attitude soon gave way to serious success. After signing with Columbia Records in 1971, the band partnered with legendary children’s book author and songwriter Shel Silverstein, who wrote all but one song on the group’s first two albums: 1972’s Doctor Hook and 1973’s Sloppy Seconds.

Those records produced the Locorriere-sung “Sylvia’s Mother,” which went top five in both the U.S. and U.K. in 1972, along with “Carry Me, Carrie” and the group’s signature smash “The Cover of ‘Rolling Stone,” sung by Sawyer, which reached the U.S. Top 10 that same year.

Name Change and Peak Success

After shortening their name to simply Dr. Hook in the mid-1970s, the band’s commercial fortunes exploded. A cover of “A Little Bit More” spent five weeks at No. 2 in the U.K. during the summer of 1976, famously held off the top spot by Elton John and Kiki Dee’s duet “Don’t Go Breaking My Heart.”

Beyond the chart hits, Locorriere proved himself a gifted songwriter. He co-wrote “A Couple More Years” with Silverstein for Dr. Hook’s 1976 album A Little Bit More. The tender ballad would later be covered by Willie Nelson for 1978’s Waylon & Willie, and Bob Dylan’s own version eventually appeared on The Bootleg Series Vol. 16. Another Locorriere composition, “You Ain’t Got the Right,” was later covered by Olivia Newton-John.

Band’s Dissolution and Later Career

Tensions and creative fatigue eventually caught up with the group, as Locorriere later reflected. Sawyer departed in 1983, complaining he’d become a product with a patch and a hat, and the band soldiered on with Locorriere as sole frontman before a 1985 farewell tour. “We found that Dr Hook had started to become a bit of a re-tread and so we decided to call it a day,” Locorriere said.

Following the split, Locorriere retained the rights to the group’s moniker and continued touring as Dr. Hook, while Sawyer licensed the band name and toured with his own outfit, Dr. Hook with Ray Sawyer. Locorriere eventually toured under his own name with the subtitle the voice of Dr. Hook.

Married three times, Locorriere eventually settled with his third wife in Sussex, U.K., where he lived out his later years away from the spotlight. He leaves behind a catalog of songs that defined an era of warm, witty, harmony-rich pop, and a voice that, for millions of fans on both sides of the Atlantic, will forever be the sound of Dr. Hook.

- Advertisement -
-Advertisement-

Related Articles

Latest Articles