Convoy singer C.W. McCall dead at 93 after cancer battle, son says – New York Post

“Convoy” singer C.W. McCall has died at 93.

He had been battling cancer and was in hospital care in his Colorado home when he died on Friday, April 1.

The death has been confirmed by his son, Bill Fries III, reports the Washington Post.

McCall rose to fame as a country music star with songs about driving 18-wheelers and big-rigs, including 1976 number one hit “Convoy.”

His real name was Bill Fries and he was an ad executive turned singer.

He created the character of C.W. McCall, a truck driver in a series of commercials for a Midwestern bread company.

The goal wasn’t to create an alter-ego but to sell bread using catchy, country-sounding jingles.

McCall took on this persona and began recording music about long-haul trucking, even establishing his own CB radio lingo truckers picked up and still use today.

He was well known in the ’70s for his hit country records: “Old Home Filler-Up” and “Keep On-a-Truckin’ Cafe,” “Wolf Creek Pass,” and most famous of all, “Convoy,” which became a No. 1 pop and country hit in 1976.

The novelty hit “Convoy” was a type of spoken-word storytelling that topped bother the country and pop charts, according to Rolling Stone.

Country singer C.W. McCall in 1978.
Country singer C.W. McCall died in his Colorado home, according to his son.
Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Not only did it sell over 2 million copies, but it also inspired a 1978 movie of the same name starring Kris Kristofferson.

McCall is survived by his wife of 70 years, Rena Bonnema Fries.

The pair have three children, Bill, Mark, and Nancy.

The couple also has four grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, and one great-great-grandson, according to Taste of Country.

This story originally appeared on The Sun and has been reproduced here with permission.