Award-winning R&B and soul legend, D’Angelo has passed away at the age of 51 after a battle with pancreatic cancer.

According to TMZ, the musician whose real name is Michael Eugene Archer died in New York City on Tuesday, October 14.
A source told People that D’Angelo had been in hospice care for two weeks following several months in the hospital.
In a statement, his family said the singer left behind “a legacy of extraordinarily moving music” and asked fans to honor him by celebrating “the gift of song that he has left for the world”.
D’Angelo was a defining voice in neo-soul, a genre that fused R&B, hip-hop, jazz, and funk. Over his career, he earned four Grammy Awards across three albums.
His 2000 hit “Untitled (How Does It Feel)” became famous for its intimate, single-take music video that helped cement his reputation as both an artist and a cultural icon.
Born in Richmond, Virginia, to a Pentecostal minister, D’Angelo began playing piano at age three and was performing in church with his father by the time he was five.
As a child, he played at his grandfather’s church and later formed his first group, Three of a Kind, with his cousins.
By sixteen, he was performing with his brother Luther in a band called Michael Archer and Precise.
His big break came at New York’s Apollo Theater, where he competed in Amateur Night. Though he didn’t win his first attempt, he returned the next year to perform Johnny Gill’s “Rub You the Right Way” and took home the top prize.
He used his winnings to buy a four-track recorder, which he used to create the songs that would appear on his debut album, Brown Sugar.
Released in 1995, Brown Sugar reached No. 4 on Billboard’s Top R&B Albums chart and went platinum within a year. It earned D’Angelo four Grammy nominations and helped shape the neo-soul movement.
His second album, Voodoo (2000), debuted at No. 1 on both the Billboard 200 and R&B charts. It won the Grammy for Best R&B Album, while “Untitled (How Does It Feel)” won Best Male R&B Vocal Performance and received a nomination for Best R&B Song.
Despite his musical success, D’Angelo faced personal struggles with fame, substance abuse, and legal troubles.
He was arrested in 2005 on charges of drug possession and driving under the influence. That same year, he was involved in a serious car accident that nearly took his life.
After a long hiatus, he returned with Black Messiah in 2014 — a powerful, politically charged album that topped the R&B charts and won a Grammy for Best R&B Album. It was hailed by critics as one of the greatest neo-soul records of its time.
Throughout his career, D’Angelo worked with artists such as Questlove, Common, Lauryn Hill, Q-Tip, Raphael Saadiq, J Dilla, and Angie Stone.
In 2024, he collaborated with Jay-Z on “I Want You Forever” for The Book of Clarence soundtrack.
Around that time, Raphael Saadiq revealed in an interview that D’Angelo had been creating new music before his death.
KanyiDaily had also reported how former Arsenal academy striker Billy Vigar died at the age of 21 after a severe head injury sustained during a match.


