B.B King (09-10-1925 / 05-14-2015) |
Riley B. King, the
legendary guitarist known as B.B. King, whose velvety voice and economical,
expressive style brought blues from the margins to the mainstream, died
Thursday night.
His daughter, Patty
King, said he died in Las Vegas, where he announced two weeks ago that he was
in home hospice care after suffering from dehydration.
The Mississippi
native's reign as "king of the blues" lasted more than six decades
and straddled two centuries, influencing a generation of rock and blues
musicians, from Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan to Sheryl Crow and John
Mayer.
His life was the
subject of the documentary "B.B. King: The Life of Riley" and the
inspiration for the the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center, which
opened in Mississippi in 2008.
King's enduring legacy
came from his refusal to slow down even after cementing his status as an
American music icon.
Even with a long list
of honors to his name -- a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame induction, a Presidential Medal of Freedom -- he maintained a
relentless touring schedule well into his 80s.
King smiles as President George W. Bush presents him with the Presidential medal of Freedom in 2006 at the White House |
Throughout his career,
King evolved with the times to incorporate contemporary trends and influences
without straying from his Delta blues roots. Whether he was sharing the stage
with U2 on "When Loves Comes to Town" -- a scene memorialized in the
1988 concert film "Rattle and Hum" -- or playing in the East Room of
the White House with Buddy Guy, Mick Jagger, Jeff Beck and others, King's
single-string guitar notes trilled with an unmistakable vibrato from his
hollow-bodied Gibson affectionately known as Lucille.
Slowing down
King finally started
showing signs of his age last year after decades of living with Type II
diabetes.
A shaky show in St. Louis prompted his reps to issue an apology
for "a performance that did not match Mr. King's usual standard of
excellence." He fell ill in October after a show at Chicago's House of
Blues due to dehydration and exhaustion, prompting
a rare cancellation of the remainder of his tour.
He
was hospitalized for dehydration in April in Las Vegas, a long way from his
modest roots as the son of a sharecropper.
King
was born on September 16, 1925, on a cotton plantation between Indianola and
what is now Itta Bena, Mississippi. He sang with church choirs as a child and
learned basic guitar chords from his uncle, a preacher. In his youth, he played
on street corners for dimes, saying he earned more in one night singing on the
corner than he did in one week working in the cotton field.
Beale Street Blues Boy
B.B King in 1947 |
He enlisted in the
Army during World War II but was released because he drove a tractor, an
essential homefront occupation.
In
1947, he hitchhiked to Memphis, Tennessee, home to a thriving music scene that
supported aspiring black performers. He stayed with his cousin Bukka White, one
of the most celebrated blues performers of his time, who schooled King further
in the art of the blues.
King
took the Beale Street Blues Boy, or BB for short, as a disc jockey for radio
station WDIA-AM Memphis.
He
got his first big break in 1948 by performing on Sonny Boy Williamson's radio
program out of West Memphis, leading to steady engagements at the Sixteenth
Avenue Grill in West Memphis and a 10-minute spot on WDIA.
As
"King's Spot" grew in popularity on WDIA, King shortened "Beale
Street Blues Boy" to "Blues Boy King" and eventually B.B. King.
His
ascent continued in 1949 with his first recordings, "Miss Martha King/Take
a Swing with Me" and "How Do You Feel When Your Baby Packs Up and
Goes/I've Got the Blues." His first hit record "Three O'Clock
Blues" was released in 1951 and stayed on the top of the charts for four
months.
Beloved Lucille
B.B. King, the Beale Street Blues Boy |
It was during this era
that King first named his beloved guitar Lucille. In the mid-1950s, King was
performing at a dance in Twist, Arkansas, when a few fans became unruly and
started a fire. King ran out, forgetting his guitar, and risked his life to go
back and get it.
He later found out
that two men fighting over a woman named Lucille knocked over a kerosene heater
that started the fire. He named the guitar Lucille, "to remind myself
never to do anything that foolish."
King used various
models of Gibson guitars over the years and named them each Lucille. In the
1980s, Gibson officially dropped the model number ES-355 on the guitar King
used, and it became a custom-made signature model named Lucille, manufactured
exclusively for the "King of the Blues."
B.B.KING | Live by Request, New York (United States, 2003)
30 Grammy nominations
In the '50s and '60s,
King was a peripatetic figure, idolized by musicians and R&B fans, known
for putting on some of the best live shows around. By the late '50s, he was
traveling in a chauffeur-driven Cadillac accompanied by a custom Greyhound bus,
called Big Red, which housed his band.
Even after his
bluesier R&B became less commercial -- he observed that "they (once)
called guys like me rhythm and blues, so somewhere along the line, I guess I
lost my rhythm" -- he still maintained a following, this time among white
musicians.
Rock Me Baby-BB King/Eric Clapton/Buddy Guy/Jim Vaughn
Eric Clapton was a
fan. Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac modeled his sound on King's. John Lennon said
he "wanted to play guitar like B.B. King."
In 1967, his changing
fan base was enough to get him booked in San Francisco's Fillmore Auditorium.
"We used to play
the Fillmore all the time, but it was then about 90% black," he told PBS.
"But this time ... it was long-haired white people, men and women, sitting
body to body going up to the door. I told my road manager, 'I think they booked
us in the wrong place.' "
He received a standing
ovation. He returned to the Fillmore several more times.
In 1970, he won his
first Grammy for his trademark song, "The Thrill is Gone." That same
year, he debuted an all-blues show at Carnegie Hall and appeared on "The
Ed Sullivan Show."
Over the years, he racked up 30 Grammy nominations and 15 wins,
including two in 2000: one along with Eric Clapton for Best Traditional Blues
Album for "Riding with the King" and another with Dr. John for Best
Pop Collaboration with Vocals for "Is You Is, or Is You Ain't (My
Baby)."
His
last was in February 2009 for Best Traditional Blues Album for "One Kind
Favor" (2008).
Source CNN
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