On May 9, 2020, Little Richard died at the age of 87, leaving behind one of the loudest, boldest, and most influential legacies in American music. Born Richard Wayne Penniman, Little Richard became one of the architects of rock and roll. Before the genre became polished, packaged, and sold across the world, he helped make it wild, urgent, and impossible to ignore. His voice did not simply enter a song. It exploded through it. With gospel fire, rhythm and blues roots, and a performance style full of electricity, Little Richard helped shape the sound of a new era. Songs like “Tutti Frutti,” “Long Tall Sally,” and “Good Golly Miss Molly” became more than hit records. They helped define the early spirit of rock and roll. His sound influenced generations of artists across rock, soul, funk, pop, and beyond. His story also reminds us of something important. Black artists were not just participants in rock and roll. They were builders of it. The music grew from Black traditions, including gospel, blues, rhythm and blues, and boogie-woogie. Little Richard brought those sounds together with a style that was loud, dramatic, joyful, and fearless. He was flashy. He was funny. He was spiritual. He was complicated. He challenged what performers were expected to look like, sound like, and act like. He was not trying to blend in. He was the lightning strike. Even when others became more commercially celebrated, his influence remained underneath the music. You can hear pieces of Little Richard in artists who came long after him. Little Richard did not just sing rock and roll. He helped give it a face, a scream, a rhythm, and an attitude. On May 9, we remember the man who made music louder, freer, and impossible to sit still through. #BlackHistory #LittleRichard #RockAndRollHistory #OnThisDay #MusicLegends