
Kool & The Gang's Michael Sumler killed in horror crash at the age of 71
Kool & The Gang's Michael Sumler has reportedly died at the age of 71 after getting into a car crash over the weekend.
Sumler passed away in Cobb County, Georgia, after the vehicle he was driving in collided with another car, according to Fox 5.
The crash occurred right before midnight on Saturday on Veterans Memorial Highway, close to Buckner Road. He reportedly died at the scene.
DailyMail.com has contacted representatives for Kool & The Gang for comment.
The mayor of Mableton, Michael Owens, praised Sumler - who is also known as ' Chicago Mike' - in a statement released following his death.
He said: 'We are saddened by the death of musician Michael Sumler. 'Chicago Mike' contributed so much to the music and entertainment communities.
'His style and energy added flare and excitement to Kool and the Gang for decades. The city of Mableton, council members and I join his family, friends and fans in mourning his loss.'
Kool & The Gang formed in 1964 in Jersey City, New Jersey, and by 1969, the group had their self-titled first album.
Some of their top songs were Ladies Night, Too Hot, Jungle Boogie, Celebration and Cherish.
A longtime member of the band, Sumler joined Kool & The Gang in 1985 after getting introduced by a member of the group's security team.
He told the Kelly Talk Show in 2018: 'I had a local band out of Chicago called Power Pac.
'One of the Kool & The Gang security guys caught our act in the club in Chicago and we became friends, and he decided... he said, "Hey, you'd like to meet my group?" And I said "Sure".'
Sumler then travelled to Minneapolis to meet with the band at Prince's soundstage before joining the group as a stylist choreographer.
He said: 'I started out as a stylist choreographer, because he introduced me as that. But once they saw that I could do some other things, they said, we need to have you on stage.'
His role with the band evolved from opening for the group by dancing to Kool & The Gang music with a boombox on his shoulder before he did background singing.
He said: 'So I started off doing moves on the stage, and so that was the opening for the band. And then they said, "Well we need you a little more".
'So I started coming on doing background singing and just working the whole show... just creating even more moves for the band.'
Kool & The Gang has had many members join its ranks ever since it first began, but it was originally founded by seven musicians, the majority of whom are now deceased.
The group was launched by brothers Robert 'Kool' Bell (bass) and Ronald Bell (keyboards), Dennis Thomas (saxophone), Robert Mickens (Trumpet), Ricky West (keyboards), George Brown (drummer), and Charles Smith (guitarist).
Robert 'Kool' Bell is the only surviving founding member of the band left.
'I know they're looking down and having a happy time also, so I'm thankful that we finally got in,' Robert told NJ.com last year of his late bandmates ahead of the group's induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
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