Listen Live
St Jude banner
CLOSE

Bobby Rogers, a founding member of Motown group The Miracles and a songwriting collaborator with Smokey Robinson, died Sunday at his suburban Detroit home. He was 73.

Motown Museum board member Allen Rawls said Rogers died about 6 a.m. in Southfield. Rogers had been ill for several years.

Rogers formed the group in 1956 with cousin Claudette Rogers, Pete Moore, Ronnie White and Robinson. Their hits included “Shop Around,” `’You’ve Really Got a Hold on Me,” `’The Tracks of My Tears,” `’Going to a Go-Go,” `’I Second That Emotion” and “The Tears of a Clown.”

“Another soldier in my life has fallen. Bobby Rogers was my brother and a really good friend,” Robinson said Sunday in a statement. “He and I were born on the exact same day in the same hospital in Detroit. I am really going to miss him. I loved him very much.”

Roger’s cousin Claudette told the Detroit Free Press that everyone was drawn to his personality.

“People always commented on the tall one with the glasses,” she said. “He was personable, approachable and he loved talking to the women, loved talking to the guys, loved to dance, loved to sing, loved to perform. That was the joy of his life.” Read more

PHOTOS: Remembering Leroy “Sugarfoot” Bonner
LSAP Radio Logo 2020
0 photos