Ray Peterson, the Texas pop-country singer whose 1960 recording of "Tell Laura I Love Her" was one of the most successful entries in a short-lived pop music subgenre known as teenage tragedy, has died of cancer.
Most sources list his age as 65, but a writer in San Antonio, where Peterson grew up, said the singer had shaved four years off his age for publicity purposes and would have turned 70 this year.
Peterson, who spent the most successful part of his recording career in Los Angeles in the mid-1950s and early '60s, died Tuesday at his home in Smyrna, Tenn., outside Nashville.
"Tell Laura I Love Her," which was written by Jeff Barry and Ben Raleigh, was the tear-stained story of a teenage boy who dies in a fiery crash while racing his stock car in an attempt to win a $1,000 prize so he can buy his girlfriend a wedding ring.
"You know, that song still sells 2 to 3 million copies a year," Peterson told an interviewer in 2000. "I make a few thousand dollars a year off of that song, and I only get a quarter-cent" per copy.
Peterson's recording, with the signature catch in his voice, was one of the most successful entries on the list of sad songs that seemed to grow out of James Dean's premature death in a car crash in 1955.
Tragic tales that subsequently hit the pop airwaves included Jody Reynolds' 1958 hit "Endless Sleep," Mark Dinning's 1959 No. 1 hit "Teen Angel," Johnny Preston's 1960 single "Running Bear," Dickie Lee's 1962 song "Patches," and the Shangri-Las' "Leader of the Pack" and J. Frank Wilson's "Last Kiss," both from 1964.
Such songs gave voice to the high drama of star-crossed lovers who were -- by parents, society or other circumstances -- prevented from being together. The trend largely faded after Bobbie Gentry's 1967 hit, "Ode to Billie Joe."
"Tell Laura" was Peterson's biggest hit, reaching No. 7 nationally, but pop-music aficionados usually cite his 1961 follow-up single "Corrina, Corrina," as his best. It was his version of an old folk song, an aching lament for a faraway lover, that had been recorded by bandleader Red Nichols in 1931 and became an R & B hit for Joe Turner in 1956.
Peterson made his first chart appearance in 1959 with "The Wonder of You," a song that peaked at No. 25 but became a hit again for him when it reentered the charts in 1964, reaching No. 70 its second time around.