Sugarhill Records executive Joseph Robinson Jr. dies from cancer at age 53
Joseph Robinson Jr., an executive at Sugarhill Records and a son of Sylvia Robinson, known as the Mother of Hip-Hop, died from cancer. He was 53.
Family spokesman Greg Walker said Wednesday that Robinson, better known as Joey, died at his home Saturday in Tenafly, New Jersey.
Robinson's mother founded Sugarhill Records. She released the 1979 seminal rap song, "Rapper's Delight," on her label. The song from the Sugarhill Gang became hip-hop's first hit. It was released as hip-hop began to emerge as a genre, making its way into the Top 40 on the Billboard pop charts. She died in 2011.
Robinson was the executor of Sugarhill Music Publishing. He handled deals with artists who sampled music from Sugarhill Records' catalog.
In 1985, he replaced Sugarhill Gang's Guy O'Brien and performed with the rap group. Big Bank Hank, one of the group's original members, died last year.
He is survived by his brother, Leland Robinson, and other family members. A funeral will be held July 21 in Englewood, New Jersey, where the Sugarhill Gang was formed.