B. B. King: Difference between revisions
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In July 2008, Sirius/XM Radio's Bluesville channel was re-named B. B. King's Bluesville. |
In July 2008, Sirius/XM Radio's Bluesville channel was re-named B. B. King's Bluesville. |
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On December 3, 2008 King, along with John Mayer, was the closing act at the [[51st Grammy Awards|51st Grammy Nomination Concert]], playing "[[Let the Good Times Roll (Louis Jordan song)|Let the Good Times Roll]]" by [[Louis Jordan]]. |
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he is the greatest legend ever and is so nice i think that he great he's been a insperation to me that i was crazy enoght to pay for his medical bills. |
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==Farewell tour== |
==Farewell tour== |
Revision as of 15:51, 17 February 2009
B. B. King |
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B. B. King (born Riley B. King, September 16, 1925) is an American blues guitarist and singer-songwriter. Critical acclaim and widespread popularity have cemented his reputation as one of the most respected and successful blues musicians. Rolling Stone magazine named him the third-greatest guitarist of "the 100 greatest guitarists of all time".[1]
Career
B. B. King arrived in Memphis for the first time in 1946 to work as a musician, but after a few months of hardship he left, going back to Mississippi. There he decided to prepare himself better for the next visit and returned to Memphis two years later. Initially he worked at the local R&B radio channel WDIA as a singer and disc jockey, where he gained the nickname "Beale Street Blues Boy", later shortened to "B. B.". It was there that he first met T-Bone Walker - "Once I'd heard him for the first time, I knew I'd have to have [an electric guitar] myself. Had to have one, short of stealing!"[2] In 1949, King began recording songs under contract with Los Angeles-based RPM Records. Many of King's early recordings were produced by Sam Phillips, who later founded Sun Records. Before his RPM contract, King had debuted on Bullet Records by issuing the single "Miss Martha King" (1949), which got a bad review in Billboard magazine and did not chart well.
"My very first recordings [in 1949] were for a company out of Nashville called Bullet, the Bullet Record Transcription company," King recalls. "I had horns that very first session. I had Phineas Newborn on piano; his father played drums, and his brother, Calvin, played guitar with me. I had Tuff Green on bass, Ben Branch on tenor sax, his brother, Thomas Branch, on trumpet, and a lady trombone player."[3]
In the 1950s, B. B. King became one of the most important names in R&B music, amassing an impressive list of hits including "You Know I Love You," "Woke Up This Morning," "Please Love Me," "When My Heart Beats like a Hammer," "Whole Lotta Love," "You Upset Me Baby," "Every Day I Have the Blues," "Sneakin' Around," "Ten Long Years," "Bad Luck," "Sweet Little Angel," "On My Word of Honor," and "Please Accept My Love." In 1962, B. B. King signed to ABC-Paramount Records, which was later absorbed into MCA Records, and then his current label, Geffen Records.
In November 1964, King recorded the Live at the Regal album at the Regal Theater in Chicago, Illinois.
King's first success outside the blues market was his 1969 remake of Roy Hawkins' tune "The Thrill Is Gone." King's version became a hit on both pop and R&B charts, which was rare for an R&B artist. It also gained the number 183 spot in Rolling Stone magazine's "500 Greatest Songs of All Time". He gained further rock visibility as an opening act on The Rolling Stones' 1969 American Tour. King's mainstream success continued throughout the 1970s with songs like "To Know You Is to Love You" and "I Like to Live the Love."
The 1980s, 1990s and 2000s saw King recording less and less. Yet throughout this time he maintained a highly visible and active career, appearing on numerous television shows and performing 300 nights a year. In 1988 King reached a new generation of fans with the single “When Love Comes to Town”, a collaborative effort between King and the Irish band U2 (on their Rattle and Hum album). In 2000, King teamed up with guitarist Eric Clapton to record Riding With the King. In 1998 B. B. King appeared in The Blues Brothers 2000, playing the part of the lead singer of the Louisiana Gator Boys, along with Clapton, Dr. John, Koko Taylor and Bo Diddley.
In June 2006, King was present at a memorialization of his first radio broadcast at the Three Deuces Building in Greenwood, Mississippi, where an official marker of the Mississippi Blues Trail was erected.
In late October 2006, he recorded a live CD and DVD, B.B. KING LIVE, at his B.B. King Blues Clubs in Nashville and Memphis. The four night production featured his regular B.B. King Blues Band and captured his show as he performs it nightly around the world. It was his first live performance recording in 13 years.
B. B. King also made an appearance at the Crossroads Guitar Festival II, established by Eric Clapton in Chicago Illinois on July 28, 2007. On the DVD, he plays "Paying the Cost to Be the Boss" and "Rock Me Baby" with Robert Cray, Jimmie Vaughan and Hubert Sumlin. In the live broadcast, he offered a toast to the concert's host, Eric Clapton, and philosophized about his age and life. This never made it in its entirety to the subsequently released PBS broadcast or Crossroads II DVD.
In June 2006, a groundbreaking was held for a new B. B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in Indianola, Mississippi. The museum opened on September 13, 2008.
B. B. King was also the final performer at the 25th annual Chicago Blues Festival on June 8, 2008.
In June 2008, B. B. King was inducted into the Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame alongside Liza Minnelli and Sir James Galway.
In July 2008, Sirius/XM Radio's Bluesville channel was re-named B. B. King's Bluesville.
he is the greatest legend ever and is so nice i think that he great he's been a insperation to me that i was crazy enoght to pay for his medical bills.
Farewell tour
Aged 80 at the time, on March 29, 2006, King played at Sheffield's Hallam Arena. This was the first date of his UK and European farewell tour. He played this tour supported by ex-shredder/rocker turned bluesman Gary Moore, with whom King had previously toured and recorded, including the song "Since I Met You Baby". The British leg of the tour ended on 4 April with a final UK concert at Wembley Arena.
In July King went back to Europe, playing twice (July 2 and 3) in the 40th edition of the Montreux Jazz Festival and also in Zürich at the Blues at Sunset on July 14. During his show in Montreux at the Stravinski Hall he jammed with Joe Sample, Randy Crawford, David Sanborn, Gladys Knight, Lella James, Earl Thomas, Stanley Clarke, John McLaughlin, Barbara Hendricks and George Duke. The European leg of the Farewell tour ended in Luxembourg on September 19, 2006 at the D'Coque Arena (support act: Todd Sharpville).
In November and December, King played six times in Brazil. During a press conference on November 29 in São Paulo, a journalist asked King if that would be the actual farewell tour. He answered: "One of my favorite actors is a man from Scotland named Sean Connery. Most of you know him as James Bond, 007. He made a movie called Never Say Never Again."
On July 28, 2007, King played at Eric Clapton's Crossroads Guitar Festival with 20 other guitarists to raise money for the Crossroads Centre for addictive disorders, located in Antigua.
In June 2008, King played at the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in Manchester, Tennessee, and on August 1, 2008, he performed at the South Shore Music Circus in Cohasset, Massachusetts.
In June 2008, King played the final set of the Monterey, California Blues Festival following Taj Mahal.
On December 30, 2008 King played at The Kennedy Center Honors Awards Show. His performance was in honor of Morgan Freeman.
Legacy
Over 52 years B. B. King played at least 15,000 performances.[4]
He has made guest appearances in numerous popular television shows, including The Cosby Show,[5] The Young and the Restless,[5] General Hospital,[6] The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,[5] Sesame Street,[7] Married With Children[5] and Sanford and Son.[5]
King is the subject of a biography, B. B. King: There is Always One More Time, by the noted New York-based music writer David McGee.
In the Beatles' song "Dig It" from the Let It Be sessions, John Lennon states "Like the FBI...and the CIA...and the BBC...BB King...and Doris Day...Matt Busby...Dig it..."
Personal life
The son of Alfred King and Nora Ella King, B. B. King has had two wives to date: Martha Lee Denton, 1946 to 1952, and Sue Carol Hall, 1958 to 1966. Both marriages ended because of the heavy demands made on the marriage by King's 250 performances a year. It is reported that he has fathered 15 children by different women.[8] King is a licensed pilot, a known gambler, a vegetarian, non-drinker, and non-smoker.[9] He has lived with Type II Diabetes for over twenty years and is a visible spokesman in the fight against the disease, appearing in advertisements for diabetes-management products.
His favorite singer is Frank Sinatra. In his autobiography King speaks about how he was, and is, a "Sinatra nut" and how he went to bed every night listening to Sinatra's classic album In the Wee Small Hours. King has credited Sinatra for opening doors to black entertainers who weren't given the chance to play in "white dominated" venues. Sinatra got B. B. King into the main showrooms in Vegas during the 1960s.[10]
Each year, during the first week in June, a B. B. King homecoming festival is held in Indianola, Mississippi.[11]
Famed Delta Blues artist Bukka White was King's first cousin.
Boxer Sonny Liston was King's uncle.[12]
By his own admission, he cannot play chords very well[13] and always relies on improvisation.
Lucille
In the mid-1950s, while B. B. was performing at a dance in Twist, Arkansas, a few fans became unruly. Two men got into a fight and knocked over a kerosene stove, setting fire to the hall. B. B. raced outdoors to safety with everyone else, then realized that he left his beloved $30 acoustic guitar inside, so he rushed back inside the burning building to retrieve it, narrowly escaping death. When he later found out that the fight had been over a woman named Lucille, he decided to give the name to his guitar to remind him never to do a crazy thing like fight over a woman. Ever since, each one of B. B.'s trademark Gibson guitars has been called Lucille. The original Lucille was stolen from the trunk of B.B.'s car in Brooklyn NY.[when?] He put an ad in the paper offering a $20,000 reward for the return of the guitar but no one ever came forward. He says today he would give $100,000 for the return of his beloved guitar.
Discography
Videography
- The Electric B. B. King - His Best (1960)
- Great Moments with B. B. King (1981)
- Rattle and Hum (1988) B.B. King appeared in the film playing lead guitar for the song "When Love Comes to Town".
- The King of the Blues: 1989 (1988)
- Got My Mojo Working (1989)
- King of the Blues (Box Set, 1992)
- Why I Sing the Blues (1992)
- Blues Brothers 2000 (1998)
- Live in The Jazz Channel (2001)
- Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues: B. B. King (2003)
- Ultimate Collection (2005)
- B. B. King: Live (2008)
Honors and awards
- On May 27, 2007, King was awarded an honorary doctorate in music by Brown University.[14] Thirty years earlier, in May 1977, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by Yale University.
- On December 15, 2006, President George W. Bush awarded King the Presidential Medal of Freedom.[15]
- In 2004, he was awarded an honorary Ph.D from the University of Mississippi and the Royal Swedish Academy of Music awarded him the Polar Music Prize, for his "significant contributions to the blues".[16]
- King was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1990.[17]
- He was officially inducted in 1987 into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, becoming one of the first artists to be honored by the museum.[18]
- Grammy Awards - King was given a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1987.[19] As of 2009, he has won 15 Grammy Awards, of which ten have been the Grammy award for Best Traditional Blues Album: in 2009 (for One Kind Favor), 2006 (for B.B. King & Friends: 80), 2003 (for A Christmas Celebration of Hope), 2001 (for Riding with the King), 2000 (for Blues on the Bayou), 1994 (for Blues Summit), 1992 (for Live at the Apollo), 1991 (for Live at San Quentin), 1986 (for My Guitar Sings the Blues) and 1984 (for Blues 'N' Jazz). In 1982, he won the Grammy for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording (for There Must Be a Better World Somewhere). The Grammy for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk was last given in 1986; the Grammy for Best Traditional Blues Album was first given in 1983. In 1997, he won a Grammy for Best Rock Instrumental Performance (with other artists, for "SRV Shuffle"). In 1971, he won the Grammy for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance (for "The Thrill is Gone"). A Grammy Hall of Fame Award was given to "The Thrill is Gone" in 1998, an award given to recordings that are at least 25 years old and that have "qualitative or historical significance."[20]
- King was awarded the Kennedy Center Honors in 1995. This is given to recognize "the lifelong accomplishments and extraordinary talents of our Nation's most prestigious artists."[21]
- In 1991, B. B. King was awarded the National Heritage Fellowship from the NEA.[22]
- On May 14, 2008, King was presented with the keys to the City of Utica, New York.
- On May 18, 2008, the mayor of Portland, Maine, Edward Suslovic, declared the day "B. B. King Day" in the city. Prior to King's performance at the Merrill Auditorium, Suslovic presented King with the keys to the city.[23]
See also
References
- ^ The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time : Rolling Stone
- ^ Helen Oakley Dance and B. B. King, Stormy Monday, p. 164
- ^ Blues Access Interview by Wayne Robins (Spring 1999) – Accessed January 23, 2009
- ^ "Delta Diary" by Charlie Sawyer
- ^ a b c d e IMDB. "B.B. King". Retrieved 2007-02-06.
- ^ YouTube. "BB King Performs At Luke's - [[February 3]], [[1995]]". Retrieved 2007-06-08.
{{cite news}}
: URL–wikilink conflict (help) - ^ Sesame Workshop. "Sesame Street Beat Newsletter Archive". Retrieved 2007-06-08.
- ^ BB King
- ^ http://www.guitarworld.com/allaccess/interviews/bb-king.html
- ^ Blue All Around Me, 1999, BB King and Daniel Ritz. BB King also practiced late night with Don W. of truck 411.
- ^ "The Blues Heritage" Indianola, Mississippi Chamber of Commerce
- ^ The Devil and Sonny Liston by Nick Tosches, 2000, ISBN 0316897752
- ^ U2 Rattle and Hum DVD, 1988
- ^ Brown University to Confer Nine Honorary Degrees May 27
- ^ List of Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients on US Senate website
- ^ Polar Music Prize Winners
- ^ List of National Medal of Arts Recipients on NEA website
- ^ "B. B. King" Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
- ^ Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award Winners
- ^ Grammy Database
- ^ Kennedy Center Records
- ^ 1991 NEA National Heritage Fellowships: Introduction
- ^ "King of Portland" - Portland Press Herald, May 19, 2008
External links
- B.B. King's Blues Clubs
- Official B. B. King-website
- Video: The Thrill Is Gone (Live in Toronto)
- The official signature B. B. King guitar, by Gibson
- World Blues-One of the oldest B. B. King websites on the net
- B. B. King UK Fan Site
- Live in Wembley 2006
- B. B. King at IMDb
- B. B. King discography at MusicBrainz
- 1980 Blues Foundation Hall of Fame induction
- Live Photos 1 2
- B. B. King biographer Charlie Sawyer writes about returning to the Delta and a "charette" on the B. B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in Indianola, Mississippi.
- B. B. King on Velvetpanda
- Memphis blues musicians
- Soul-blues musicians
- American rhythm and blues musicians
- African American guitarists
- American blues guitarists
- American blues singers
- American buskers
- American songwriters
- American vegetarians
- Blues Hall of Fame inductees
- Blues musicians from Mississippi
- American blues singer-songwriters
- Electric blues musicians
- Grammy Award winners
- Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award winners
- Jammy Award Winner
- National Heritage Fellowship winners
- People from Memphis, Tennessee
- People from Tennessee
- Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients
- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees
- Sun Records artists
- United States National Medal of Arts recipients
- Kennedy Center honorees
- 1925 births
- Living people
- Lead guitarists