
Jerry ‘Ice Man' Butler, soul singer whose hits included ‘Only the Strong Survive,' dead at 85
Jerry Butler, a premier soul singer of the 1960s and after whose rich, intimate baritone graced such hits as 'For Your Precious Love,' 'Only the Strong Survive' and 'Make It Easy On Yourself,' has died at age 85.
Butler's niece, Yolanda Goff, told the Chicago Sun-Times that Butler died Thursday at his home in Chicago, the Associated Press reported Friday. Butler was a former Cook County board commissioner who would still perform on weekends and identify himself as Jerry 'Iceman' Butler, a show business nickname given for his understated style.
A member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and a three-time Grammy Award nominee, Butler was a voice for two major soul music hubs: Chicago and Philadelphia. Along with childhood friend Curtis Mayfield, he helped found the Chicago-based group Impressions and sang lead on the breakthrough hit 'For Your Precious Love,' a deeply emotional, gospel-influenced ballad that made Butler a star before the age of 20. A decade later, in the late '60s, he joined the Philadelphia-based production team of Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff, who worked with him on 'Only the Strong Survive,' 'Hey Western Union Man' and other hits. His albums 'Ice on Ice' and 'The Iceman Cometh' are regarded as early models for the danceable, string-powered productions that became the classic 'Sound of Philadelphia.'
Butler was an inspired songwriter who collaborated with Otis Redding on 'I've Been Loving You Too Long,' a signature ballad for Redding; and with Gamble and Huff on 'Only the Strong Survive,' later covered by Elvis Presley among others. His credits also included 'For Your Precious Love,' 'Never Give You Up' (with Gamble and Huff) and 'He Will Break Your Heart,' which Butler helped write after he began thinking about the boyfriends of the groupies he met on the road.
'You go into a town; you're only going to be there for one night; you want some company; you find a girl; you blow her mind,' Butler told Rolling Stone in 1969. 'Now you know that girl hasn't been sitting in town waiting for you to come in. She probably has another fellow and the other fellow's probably in love with her; they're probably planning to go through the whole thing, right? But you never take that into consideration on that particular night.'
Butler was the son of Mississippi sharecroppers who moved north to Chicago when Butler was 3, part of the era's 'Great Migration' of Black people out of the South. He loved all kinds of music as a child and was a good enough singer that a friend suggested he come to a local place of worship, the Traveling Souls Spiritualist Church, presided over by the Rev. A.B. Mayfield. Her grandson, Curtis Mayfield, soon became a close friend. (Mayfield died in 1999).
In 1958, Mayfield and Butler along with Sam Gooden and brothers Arthur and Richard Brooks recorded 'For Your Precious Love' for Vee-Jay Records. The group called itself the Impressions, but Vee-Jay, anxious to promote an individual star, advertised the song as by Jerry Butler and the Impressions, leading to estrangement between Butler and the other performers and to an unexpected solo career.
'Fame didn't change me as much as it changed the people around me,' Butler wrote in his memoir 'Only the Strong Survive,' published in 2000.
One of his early solo performances was a 1961 cover of 'Moon River,' the theme to 'Breakfast at Tiffany's.' Butler was the first performer to hit the charts with what became a pop standard, but 'Moon River' would be associated with Andy Williams after the singer was chosen to perform it at the Academy Awards, a snub Butler long resented. His other solo hits, some recorded with Mayfield, included 'He Will Break Your Heart', 'Find Another Girl' and 'I'm A-Telling You.' By 1967, his formal style seemed out of fashion, but Butler was impressed by the new music coming out of Philadelphia and received permission from his record label (Mercury) to work with Gamble and Huff. The chemistry, Butler recalled, was so 'fierce' they wrote hits such as 'Only the Strong Survive' in less than an hour.
'Things just seem to fall into place,' Butler told Ebony magazine in 1969. 'We lock ourselves in a room, create stories about lovers, compose the music, then write the lyrics to match the music.'
By the 1980s, Butler's career had faded and he was becoming increasingly interested in politics. Encouraged by the 1983 election of Harold Washington, Chicago's first Black mayor, he ran successfully for the Cook County Board in 1985 and was re-elected repeatedly, even after supporting a controversial sales tax increase in 2009. He retired from the board in 2018.
Butler was married for 60 years to Annette Smith, who died in 2019, and with her had twin sons. Many of his generational peers had struggled financially and he worked to help them. He chaired the Rhythm & Blues Foundation, which provides a wide range of assistance to musicians, and pushed the industry to provide medical and retirement benefits. Butler considered himself relatively lucky, even if he did pass on the chance to own a part of Gamble and Huff's Philadelphia International recording company.
'You know, I have lived well. My wife probably would say I could've lived better,' Butler told the Chicago Reader in 2011. 'Did I make 40, 50 million dollars? No. Did I keep one or two? Yes. The old guys on the street used to say, 'It's not how much you make. It's how much you keep.''
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
2 hours ago
- CBS News
Thousands partake in 47th annual Run for the Zoo at Lincoln Park Zoo
Thousands in Chicago hit the pavement at Lincoln Park Zoo Sunday morning for the annual Run for the Zoo. It was the 47th year for the event, which brings together zoo community members to support wildlife in Chicago and around the world while raising money for the zoo's wildlife conservation efforts. This year's theme was the pygmy hippopotamus, inspired by Annie and Pogo at the zoo. Organizers said 4,500 runners and walkers participated in the 5K run and walk and 10K run, which featured views of Lake Michigan, the city's skyline, and protected natural areas and habitats throughout the zoo. Over 100 others also completed the virtual 5K and 10K. This year's event raised over $20,000 for the zoo. Lincoln Park Zoo is free to the public but relies on private donations and guests' purchases, which make up 85% of its funding.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Everything old is old again — like Putin playing with Stalin's handbook
Everything old is old again Contrary to popular belief, I have thoughts. Putin. Playing us in the Ukraine like Stalin played us in Korea. The USA negotiated that Korean armistice for years — but fighting continued. The armistice? Not signed until Stalin died. Putin is playing with Stalin's handbook. Now, we speak of the Great White Way. Broadway is shrinking to narrow way. Current productions shrivel and there's yesteryear's reruns like 'Cabaret,' 'Chicago,' 'The Music Man' and 'Othello.' OK, so maybe a $2 bill isn't returning, but white powdery round doughnuts have been making their moves. And young people are moving back in with their parents. Cinema? Besides an upjuiced Tom Cruise still smashing, bashing and trashing, there's maybe a 600th 'Star Wars' and soon maybe Shirley Temple outfitted in some shmatta from a consignment shop. Next up? Garter belts, stockings and boobs INSIDE bras. Coming next? Sitting in a rumble seat it'll be Tom Hanks playing a teen and De Niro chasing one. Forget Christmas. We'll re-see 'Miracle on 33rd Street,' a silent 'It's a Wonderful Life' and campaign buttons that say 'Vote for Thomas E. Dewey for President.' Want more? How's corduroy, plaids, chunky sweaters, vinyl records, recorders, vintage cameras, hairpieces. Watch. Before you know it we'll get a cloned Richard Nixon back again. Don't forget convertible cars or retro office buildings getting reborn into cozy apartments. Year by year, bit by bit, day by day, what's NOT going back is the way you used to look good in that magnifying mirror. Contrary to popular belief, I have thoughts. Giving back to alma mater WHAT's going forward is the top women's college — Barnard. Graduates include Greta Gerwig, Helen Gahagan Douglas, Eileen Ford, Twyla Tharp, Sheila Nevins, Erica Jong, Cynthia Nixon, Jeane Kirkpatrick — and philanthropist Francine LeFrak who last week opened the Francine A. LeFrak Center for Well-Being. It provides holistic support across key dimensions of health and wellness — physical, mental, financial. She previously opened the Samuel J. and Ethel LeFrak Theater which seats 2,300. At the opening, Brian Stokes Mitchell sang 'The Impossible Dream' to honor the late Ethel who had a big crush on Brian Stokes Mitchell long back — when he had just two names. ALSO changed? The medical fraternity. Tell your doctor: 'Oh, I'm suddenly so grateful to you. I'm just beginning to suddenly feel a bit better. How can I ever repay you for taking care of me?' Doctor: 'By check, cash or money order.' FOR sure mostly in New York, kids, mostly in New York.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Jameson Taillon shares hilarious story about Yankees teammate Anthony Rizzo's
Jameson Taillon shares hilarious story about Yankees teammate Anthony Rizzo's originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Former New York Yankees pitcher Taillon has faced much tougher challenges than pitching in big games. Now a Chicago Cubs starter, Taillon battled testicular cancer when he was with the Pirates early in his career. He bonded with former Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo, a Hodgkin's Lymphoma survivor, over that during their time in the Bronx. Advertisement But it wasn't always a somber connection, Taillon admitted, telling a pretty hilarious story on the "Diggin Deep" podcast. Former Yankees pitcher Jameson Taillon in 2022.© Tim Heitman-Imagn Images Taillon recalled a game against the Tampa Bay Rays, somewhere around the eighth inning, when his velocity started to dip and he found himself behind a hitter. That's when Rizzo, spotting his struggling pitcher buddy, stepped in with some classic Rizzo wisdom. 'I think it was like the eighth inning and my velo starts dropping a little bit. I'm like, following behind the guy. Rizz comes out and, like, we had talked about how we both had cancer and stuff,' Taillon said. 'So he comes out, and he's like, 'Hey, I know you only have one nut, but like, I want you to pitch right here. Like you have two let 'em hang out.'' Advertisement Taillon said he was kind of stunned on the mound. "I didn't know how to feel about that," Taillon said, laughing. Rizzo was notorious for his pep talks on the mound with struggling pitchers. In fact, the Los Angeles Dodgers mocked the Yankees for it after the 2024 World Series. Taillon's story, however, gives a glimpse of Rizzo's attempt to keep things light when the pressure was on. It's one reason he was so well-liked by his teammates. Rizzo was a beloved Yankee, and Taillon shows us why. Related: Yankees Should Flip Struggling Closer at the Deadline Related: Giancarlo Stanton's New Comeback Timeline Has Yankees Planning Lineup Changes This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 7, 2025, where it first appeared.