Billy Paul, the jazz and soul singer best known for the chart-topping ballad Me And Mrs Jones, has died.

Billy, 80, whose career spanned for more than 60 years, died at his home in Blackwood, New Jersey, his co-manager Beverly Gay said. He had been diagnosed recently with pancreatic cancer.

Billy Paul
Billy Paul in Cannes in 2005 (Sipa Press/REX/Shutterstock)

Known in the 70s for his beard and large glasses, Billy was one of many singers who found success with the writing and producing team of Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff, whose Philadelphia International Records also released music by the O’Jays, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, and Lou Rawls.

Me And Mrs Jones was an extramarital confession and a characteristic Gamble and Huff production, setting Billy’s thick tenor against a lush and sensuous arrangement.

Many fans best remember the moment when Billy’s otherwise subtle vocals jump as they reach the title words, stretching out “Me” and “And” into multiple syllables and repeating “Mrs Jones, Mrs Jones, Mrs Jones, Mrs Jones” (Billy himself was married to the same woman for decades).

The song was one of the top singles of 1972 and brought Billy a Grammy the following year for best male rhythm ‘n’ blues performance, with runners-up including Ray Charles and Curtis Mayfield. Billy remained identified with the song for the rest of his life.

He continued to perform live until he fell ill and his manager said he had been lining up numerous appearances at the time of his death. Among his favourites to perform in concert was a cover of Prince’s Purple Rain. Prince, 57, died last Thursday.

Billy was born Paul Williams but later agreed to his manager’s suggestion that he change his name to Billy Paul to avoid confusion with songwriter Paul Williams and other musicians with the same name.

A Philadelphia native, he sang for much his life, performing with such jazz stars as Charlie Parker and Dinah Washington and being featured on a handful of singles while still in his teens.

He was drafted into the military in his early 20s, and found himself on the same base in Germany with a couple of famous showbusiness names, Elvis Presley and Gary Crosby, Bing Crosby’s son.

“We said we’re going to start a band, so we didn’t have to do any hard work in the service,” Billy told bluesandsoul.com in 2015.

“We tried to get Elvis to join but he wanted to be a Jeep driver. So me and Gary Crosby, we started it and called ourselves the Jazz Blues Symphony Band.”

By the mid-1960s, the Beatles had inspired him to incorporate more rhythm ‘n’ blues into his singing and he had found a new home for his recordings after meeting Gamble at a Philadelphia music shop.

Billy’s early albums with Gamble and Huff, including Ebony Woman and Going East, sold modestly, before Me And Mrs Jones briefly made him a superstar.

Billy faced numerous obstacles following his biggest hit. Radio stations resisted his more socially conscious follow-up song, Am I Black Enough For You, and the Rev Jesse Jackson was among those who objected to the explicit Let’s Make A Baby.

Years later, Billy sued Gamble and Huff and other industry officials over unpaid royalties and was awarded 500,000 US dollars by a Los Angeles jury in 2003.

Although he endured many difficult moments with Gamble and Huff, he would look back on those years as a lost golden age.

“It was like a family full of music,” he told bluesandsoul.com.

“It was like music round the clock, you know. And I reminisce and I still wish those days were here.”

Paul’s voice made him “one of the great artists to come out of Philly and to be celebrated worldwide”, Gamble and Huff said.

“Our proudest moment with Billy was the recording of the salacious smash Me And Mrs Jones. In our view, it is one of the greatest love songs ever recorded.”

Billy is survived by his wife Blanche Williams, with whom he had two children.