Wednesday, 16 September 2020

B.B. King born 16 September 1925


Riley B. King (September 16, 1925 – May 14, 2015), known professionally as B.B. King, was an American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and record producer who was the most influential blues musician of his generation and the music’s most potent symbol. He represented the blues as Louis Armstrong once represented jazz, a single performer who could nevertheless stand, and speak, for the whole genre.

Son of Albert and Nora Ella, Riley B King was born near Itta Bena, Mississippi, and grew up with the limited prospects of an African-American agricultural worker, a barrier he gradually worked to overcome as he learned the basics of guitar from a family friend and honed his singing with a quartet, the St John Gospel Singers of Indianola. In his early 20s he moved to Memphis, at first staying with the blues singer and guitarist Booker White, his cousin.

Within a couple of years, thanks to some help from Sonny Boy Williamson, he had secured a residency at the Sixteenth Street Grill in West Memphis, Arkansas. He also became a disc jockey, presenting a show on the Memphis radio station WDIA. His billing, “The Beale Street Blues Boy”, was whittled down to “Blues Boy King” and thence to “BB”. After a single session in 1949 for the Nashville label Bullet, King began recording for the West Coast-based Modern Records in 1950.


                              

He had his first hit in 1952, with a dramatic rearrangement of Lowell Fulson’s Three O’Clock Blues, which topped the R&B chart for 15 weeks; it headed a list of successes such as Please 
Love Me, You Upset Me Baby, Ten Long Years, Sweet Little Angel and Sweet Sixteen. On these and his dozens of other recordings, most of them his own compositions, King developed a style that was both innovative and rooted in blues history.

Throughout the 1950s, King was the leading blues artist on the circuit of black-patronised theatres and clubs, wearing out buses, if not bandsmen, on interminable series of one-nighters. In 1956 he is supposed to have filled 342 engagements. He ventured to change that working pattern in 1962, rather like Ray Charles, by signing with a major label, ABC, but the first records under that contract, which tried to reshape him as a mainstream pop singer, were as unsatisfactory to his admirers as they were to ABC’s accountants.

The 1965 album Live at the Regal, however, proved the durability of King’s core blues repertoire as well as his magisterial stage presence, and has become iconic, a turning-point in the early listening of many younger musicians. He had further R&B hits with blues numbers including How Blue Can You Get?, Don’t Answer the Door and Paying the Cost to Be the Boss, and in 1969 he hit the upper reaches of the pop charts – territory where no blues artist had stepped for many years – with the subtly orchestrated The Thrill Is Gone.

It took him a while to establish himself with a rock audience, for whom the blues was largely defined by the Chicago school of Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf, but he was brought forcibly to their attention by musicians who admired him. He acquired further rock credibility with the 1970 album Indianola Mississippi Seeds, on which he collaborated with Carole King and Joe Walsh and scored another enduring hit with Leon Russell’s song Hummingbird.


From then on, King was immovably established as “the chairman of the board of blues singers”. Imaginatively steered by his manager Sidney Seidenberg, he embarked on international concert tours that took him to Japan and Australia, and eventually to China and Russia. He also gave concerts to prisoners at the Cook County jail in Chicago and at San Quentin, experiences that led to his long involvement in rehabilitation programmes.

The “chitlin circuit” now far behind him, he appeared at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, won approving notices from Playboy magazine, sang the theme-song for the television sitcom The Associates and the title number of the 1985 film Into the Night, 
was elected an honorary doctor of music at Yale and received innumerable awards from blues and guitar magazines. He recorded prolifically with luminaries in other fields, from the Crusaders, Branford Marsalis and Stevie Wonder to the Rolling Stones, Van Morrison, Willie Nelson and U2, with the last of whom he made the exuberant When Love Comes to Town in 1988.

In 1990, King was diagnosed with diabetes and cut back his touring, but not so much that his followers outside the US could not catch up with him every year or two. Though he would now deliver most of his act seated, the strength of his singing and the fluency of his playing were only very gradually diminished. The celebrations 
for his 80th birthday in 2005 included a Grammy award-winning album of collaborations with Clapton, Mark Knopfler, Roger Daltrey, Gloria Estefan and others, a garland of tributes from musicians as diverse as Bono, Amadou Bagayoko and Elton John, and a “farewell tour” that proved not to be a farewell at all.

Iin 2009 King received a Grammy award, for best traditional blues album, for One Kind Favor. In 2012 he was celebrated in the documentary The Life of Riley; and also performed at a concert at the White House, where the US president, Barack Obama, joined him to sing Sweet Home Chicago.


The remaining eight shows of his 2014 tour were cancelled because of health problems caused by complications from high blood pressure. King died in his sleep on May 14, 2015, at the age of 89, from vascular dementia caused by a series of small strokes as a consequence of his type 2 diabetes.

(Edited mainly from an obituary by Tony Russell @ the Guardian)

4 comments:

  1. For” B.B. KING - The Complete Singles As & Bs 1949-62
    (Acrobat 2015)” go here:

    https://pixeldrain.com/u/bSmr5Vkn

    DISC 1:
    1. Miss Martha King
    2. When Your Baby Packs Up and Goes
    3. Got the Blues
    4. Take a Swing with Me
    5. Mistreated Woman
    6. B.B. Boogie
    7. The Other Night Blues
    8. Walkin' and Cryin'
    9. My Baby's Gone
    10. Don't You Want a Man Like Me
    11. B.B. Blues
    12. She's Dynamite
    13. She's a Mean Woman
    14. Hard Working Woman
    15. 3 O'Clock Blues
    16. That Ain't the Way to Do It
    17. Fine Lookin' Woman
    18. She Don't Move Me No More
    19. Shake It Up and Go
    20. My Own Fault, Darling
    21. Gotta Find My Baby
    22. Someday Somewhere
    23. You Know I Love You
    24. You Didn't Want Me
    25. Story from My Heart and Soul

    DISC 2:
    1. Boogie Woogie Woman
    2. Woke Up This Morning
    3. Don't Have to Cry
    4. Please Love Me
    5. Highway Bound
    6. Please Hurry Home
    7. Neighborhood Affair
    8. Why Did You Leave Me
    9. Blind Love
    10. Praying to the Lord
    11. Please Help Me
    12. Love Me Baby
    13. The Woman I Love
    14. Everything I Do Is Wrong
    15. Don't You Want a Man Like Me (1954 Version)
    16. When My Heart Beats Like a Hammer
    17. Bye Bye Baby
    18. You Upset Me Baby
    19. Whole Lotta Love
    20. Everyday I Have the Blues
    21. Sneakin' Around
    22. Jump with You Baby
    23. Lonely and Blue
    24. Shut Your Mouth
    25. Im in Love

    DISC 3:
    1. Boogie Rock
    2. Talkin' the Blues
    3. Ten Long Years
    4. What Can I Do
    5. I'm Cracking Up Over You
    6. Ruby Lee
    7. Crying Won't Help You
    8. Can't We Talk It Over
    9. Sixteen Tons
    10. Did You Ever Love a Woman
    11. Let's Do the Boogie
    12. Dark Is the Night Pt.1
    13. Dark Is the Night Pt. 2
    14. Bad Luck
    15. Sweet Little Angel
    16. On My Word of Honor
    17. Bim Bam
    18. Early in the Morning
    19. You Dont Know
    20. How Do I Love You
    21. You Cant Fool My Heart
    22. I Want to Get Married
    23. Troubles, Troubles, Troubles
    24. Quit My Baby
    25. Be Careful with a Fool

    DISC 4:
    1. I Wonder
    2. I Need You So Bad
    3. The Key to My Kingdom
    4. My Heart Belongs to Only You
    5. You Know I Go for You
    6. Why Do Everything Happen to Me
    7. Days of Old
    8. Don't Look Now, But You Got the Blues
    9. Please Accept My Love
    10. You've Been An Angel
    11. Worry Worry
    12. I Am
    13. The Fool
    14. Come By Here
    15. A Lonely Lover's Plea
    16. Woman I Love
    17. Time to Say Goodbye
    18. Every Day I Have the Blues (1959 Version)
    19. Sugar Mama
    20. Mean Old Frisco
    21. Sweet Sixteen PTS. 1 & 2
    22. Got a Right to Love My Baby
    23. My Own Fault
    24. Partin' Time
    25. Good Man Gone Bad

    DISC 5:
    1. Walking Dr. Bill
    2. You Done Lost Your Good Thing Now
    3. Things Are Not the Same
    4. Fishin' After Me
    5. Bad Luck Soul
    6. Get Out of Here
    7. Hold That Train
    8. Understand
    9. Peace of Mind
    10. Someday
    11. You're Breaking My Heart
    12. Bad Case of Love
    13. My Sometime Baby
    14. Lonely
    15. Gonna Miss You Around Here
    16. Hully Gully Twist
    17. 3 O'Clock Stomp
    18. Mashed Potato Twist
    19. Mashing the Popeye
    20. Tell Me Baby
    21. Going Down Slow
    22. Your Letter
    23. Blues for Me

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi!

    Thanx for this collection. One of Blues Guitar Greats.

    Cheers!
    Ciao! For now.
    rntcj

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yeeeaa Gracias por seguir ahí recopilando y compartiendo tantas joyas

    ReplyDelete