How many members of creedence clearwater revival are still alive

By 1972, you’d be hard-pressed to find a group as dysfunctional and internally fractured as Creedence Clearwater Revival. Once at the forefront of popular music, Creedence were now splintered beyond repair. Guitarist Tom Fogerty had quit the year before, the band’s rhythm section, bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford, were sick of lead singer John Fogerty’s dictator-like hold on the group and issues were spiralling out of control. What happened next is up for debate, depending on which side you ask, but the result was an unequivocal disaster.

If you ask the question to Fogerty, then Cook and Clifford demanded that they be allowed to write and sing on an equal share of the band’s next album, something that they had never done or requested on any previous LP by the band. According to Cook and Clifford, all they wanted was more say in the overall decisions, and they simply wanted the opportunity to contribute more before Fogerty forced them to step into roles they weren’t prepared for, all in a blatant attempt to torpedo the good ship known as Creedence Clearwater Revival. There seem to be elements of truth in both sides, but whatever really went down, what the public got was Mardi Gras.

Mardi Gras is ten songs, four of which were sung by Fogerty, with the remaining six being split evenly between Cook and Clifford. Fogerty’s songs are solid, if relatively unmemorable. ‘Someday Never Comes’ is a wonderful late period CCR song, and ‘Sweet Hitch Hiker’ is fun and rowdy in their signature style, but the uninspired Everly Brothers cover of ‘Hello Mary Lou’ and plodding album opener ‘Looking For a Reason’ are abysmal additions to the band’s catalogue. Fogerty was clearly checked out by this point, and most of his playing on the album reflects that.

What’s more baffling is the addition of the other members’ material. Cook has a voice that could peel paint off a wall, while Clifford affects a bumpkin-esque drawl that almost breaks your brain. To call these songs slogs is an insult to slogs. They each trudge along with a weird country shuffle that speeds up and slows down but never actually does anything. I’m sure Cook and Clifford believed in their material, but they couldn’t have been delusional enough to hear these results and feel as though they had put out something worthy of the Creedence moniker.

There’s not much fun to be had on Mardi Gras, but there is one aspect that’s interesting: the fact that the band members openly talk shit about each other in the lyrics. Or rather, that Cook openly talks shit about Fogerty in a few of his songs. ‘Take It Like a Friend’ and ‘Sail Away’ are thinly-veiled swipes at Fogerty, and they play as the pettiest and bitter writings from somebody whose side you can’t take because the songs are so bad. If Cook had interesting melodies to carry those critiques, it would have been excusable, but the fact that he nearly coughs up a lung trying to get his words out is not a good sign.

Mardi Gras just might be the most poorly performed, bizarrely sequenced, self-sabotaging record ever put out by a professional rock band. It’s enough to make you think Cook and Clifford were telling the truth when they say the whole situation was forced upon them so that Fogerty could find a way out of the band. Fogerty did, of course, find his way out, but not before a lawsuit from his former label head put a hold on his solo career for nearly a decade. Cook and Clifford went on to form Creedence Clearwater Revisited, and the band happily tour third rate casinos these days.

The surviving members of the band (Tom Fogerty died in 1990) maintain a strong antagonism towards each other that hasn’t dulled in the slightest over the course of 50 years. Next April, Mardi Gras will celebrate its 50th anniversary, but you won’t be hearing any deluxe reissues. Mardi Gras was a desperate and fool headed attempt to save a band that was already beyond saving. The results are an embarrassment to the Creedence Clearwater Revival name, and everyone involved, no matter their level of singing or songwriting talent, should be ashamed of it.

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Tom Fogerty

Donaldson Collection/Getty Images

Former Creedence Clearwater Revival guitarist Tom Fogerty's tragic death in 1990 was officially caused by tuberculosis, according to The New York Times, but the respiratory failure caused by the disease was yet another unfortunate event in the musician's life. Later, it would be reported that Fogerty's tuberculosis was a complication from the AIDS virus, which he acquired from a tainted blood transfusion during a back surgery in the 1980s, per Ultimate Classic Rock.

Tom Fogerty and his brother John Fogerty were in bands with Stu Cook and Doug Clifford through most of the 1960s. The group tried out different band names — "The Blue Velvets" and "The Golliwogs" among them. During those years Tom, the older brother, was the frontman, per Ultimate Classic Rock.

By the time the band changed their name for the last time to Creedence Clearwater Revival, they had found major success from 1968 to 1970. NPR called their sudden popularity "torrid, almost paranormal, in hindsight," a meteoric rise during those years with four top-five singles on the Billboard Hot 100 and three top-10 albums on the Billboard 200. Even as they achieved popular success, the dynamic in the band had shifted, and it was John on lead vocals fronting the band.

Egos clashed, and Tom left the band in 1971 at the height of its popularity. The band broke up entirely at the end of 1972.

The brotherly feud ended in forgiveness after Tom Fogerty died

Creedence Clearwater Revival

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In the subsequent decades after CCR disbanded, the siblings and other band members were embroiled in lawsuits and disagreements, but by the time Tom died at the age of 48, John said he and Tom had tried to make amends (via loudersound), especially after his brother had contracted a relatively new virus in the 1980s.

Early in that decade, the human immunodeficiency virus and acquired immune deficiency syndrome — aka HIV and AIDS — had made its way to the United States. During the early days of that pandemic, "blood became a vector for HIV infection and transmitted a fatal illness to approximately half of the 16,000 hemophiliacs in the United States and to over 12,000 blood transfusion recipients," according to HIV And The Blood Supply: An Analysis Of Crisis Decisionmaking. Tom Fogerty was among those blood transfusion recipients during a time when there was little to no treatment for HIV or AIDS.

John said he visited Tom a few times toward the end of his brother's life. According to Loudersound, John said, "I was sad that life had been taken from Tom. That sadness was mixed with other emotions. But I've forgiven Tom. I'm not angry any more.

"I love my brother. I sure loved the old family days, the way we were as kids. It's resolved, and somehow Tom knows it's all right, wherever he is."

Tom Fogerty admired his brother's talent, but John believed he was jealous

Creedence Clearwater Revival

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If John Fogerty's sadness about his brother Tom's death was mixed with other emotions, Tom had mixed emotions about John as well. In a 1986 interview with Music Vault (posted on YouTube), Tom said he was really impressed by his brother's talent as a musician.

"I think that he had one of the most unique voices," Tom said. "Like, I used to tell him and I guess it's okay for me to say it. I was the first one that heard it. So I used to have to reinforce him and say, I think it's right up there with Ray Charles and Van Morrison, you know, it's a voice that's distinct and everybody already really liked that voice. And I had no idea that he would go on to write such great songs too, though. So I think he's great." All that said, Tom told the interviewer he never even listened to his brother's 1985 critically acclaimed comeback album, Centerfield, an album that made it to number one on the album charts, according to Sun-Sentinel, because it was too painful.

John has continued to record and perform

John Fogerty, 2019

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Tom said, "the last album was really painful for me because it sounded — "The Old Man Down the Road" — sounded so much like Creedence that it was hard for me to get past that. So ultimately, I never bought the album and never heard it."

From John's point of view, Tom was always jealous of his talent — and so were CCR bandmates Cook and Clifford.

In 2000 John told The Guardian, "I have very confused feelings for my brother because there was a time when things were happy. The best I can say in Tom's case is he was the older brother and the younger brother had a lot more talent, therefore he was jealous even to a greater degree than the other two in Creedence Clearwater Revival." One of those two, Stu Cook, was also quoted by The Guardian, saying, "It's the saddest story in rock and one of the longest ongoing stupid feuds."

What happened to John Fogerty's brother Tom?

In 1990, his brother Tom died from respiratory failure following a long struggle with tuberculosis. The five Fogerty boys had been brought up by their single mother in California, and Tom had been Creedence's rhythm guitarist, but not even their family bond could survive John's feelings of betrayal.

Why did CCR break up?

Once at the forefront of popular music, Creedence were now splintered beyond repair. Guitarist Tom Fogerty had quit the year before, the band's rhythm section, bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford, were sick of lead singer John Fogerty's dictator-like hold on the group and issues were spiralling out of control.

Where is John Fogerty now?

John Fogerty is currently touring across 1 country and has 6 upcoming concerts. Their next tour date is at Encore Theater at Wynn Las Vegas in Las Vegas, after that they'll be at Encore Theater at Wynn Las Vegas again in Las Vegas.

Is Doug Clifford still alive?

Douglas Raymond Clifford (born April 24, 1945) is an American drummer, best known as a founding member of Creedence Clearwater Revival for which he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. ... .