Sixto Rodriguez.Photo:Roberto Serra - Iguana Press/Getty

Roberto Serra - Iguana Press/Getty
Sixto Rodriguez, the Detroit singer known professionally as Rodriguez, has died at age 81.
He died on Tuesday, according to an announcement on hissocial mediaandwebsite.
“It is with great sadness that we at Sugarman.org announce that Sixto Diaz Rodriguez has passed away earlier today,” the official statement reads. “We extend our most heartfelt condolences to his daughters — Sandra, Eva and Regan — and to all his family.”
Sixto Rodriguez in ‘Searching for Sugar Man’.Sony Pictures Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection

Sony Pictures Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection
The singer-songwriter found success later in his career and was the subject of the 2012 documentarySearching for Sugar Man, which won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
According toVariety, Rodriguez was born to Mexican immigrants on July 10, 1942 in Detroit and recorded two albums —Cold Factin 1970 andComing to Realityin 1971 — which were released on former Motown Records chairman Clarence Avant’s new label Sussex.
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Searching for Sugar Man, the documentary about his career from the late Swedish filmmaker Malik Bendjelloul, chronicles two Cape Town fans’ journey in the late 1990s as they tried to find out whether Rodriguez was still alive and his whereabouts. The success of the documentary led to even more fans discovering his music and led to him having late career success.
Rodriguez was performing up until 2020 when several of his live appearances were canceled due to the pandemic, perUSA TODAY.
In 2018, the folk artistspoke to KEXPabout what he learned from his delayed success. “No matter how cerebral your ideas and thoughts are, no matter how celestial your ideas and thoughts are or how ethnocentric — you only have so much time to figure it out,” he said.
“He conquers who conquers himself. I got a degree in philosophy but there’s a whole lot you don’t learn in school. Youthfulness doesn’t guarantee longevity. You only got so much time to figure it out. That’s my direction,” he continued. “I tell people to get a passport and get a bank account. I want to live to be 100 — no, 350 years! But like you I can only do it one day at a time. If you do one good day, that’s what it is."
source: people.com