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B.B. King - King Of The Blues

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Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: Alex Red   Дата: 27.04.06 23:01:57   
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Понятно. вытупление в тюряге наконец-то вышло в ремастированном виде.
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B.B.'s 80th birthday tour stops at Crown
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 29.04.06 00:05:00   
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By Michael Jaenicke - Features editor
FAYETTEVILLE - The King of Blues isn't ready for a rocking chair quite yet.

B.B. King is celebrating his 80th birthday with a year-long tour that stops Monday at the Crown Theatre.

Before the tour began, word spread that it would be the last nationwide tour for the performer, who has averaged more than 200 concerts a year for 52 years. Blues fans aren't so sure.

“I think he'll be like a retired boxer who can't stay out of the ring,” said John Spivey, a Lumberton guitarist. “It's in his blood. That's about like me saying I'll never play my guitar again. That's just not going to happen.”

King's guitar playing influenced such icons as Eric Clapton, Mike Bloomfield, Jeff Beck, George Harrison and Jimi Hendrix.

“B.B.'s goal has always been to be an American ambassador of blues music to the world, much like Louie Armstrong and Frank Sinatra are to the jazz world,” said Sidney Seindenberg, King's former manager.

King did that by mixing traditional blues with jazz, swing and pop in more than 50 albums.

From the 1950s to 1970s, King's music was huge with R&B and blues aficionados. After his first hit, “Three O'clock Blues” in 1952, King played the chitlin' circuit - small-town cafes, ghetto theaters, jazz clubs, dance halls and honky-tonk bars.

Between 1951 and 1974, 74 of his songs made Billboard R&B charts.

King became a crossover artist shortly after divorcing his second wife when his 1970 hit, “The Thrill is Gone,” went to No. 15 on the Billboard pop charts.

While “Thrill” is his signature song, concert-goers can look for staples such as “Payin' the Cost to be the Boss,” “How Blue Can You Get,” “Every Day I Have the Blues” and “Why I Sing the Blues.”

King has garnered 11 Grammys, including one in 1987 for Lifetime Achievement. He entered the Blues Hall of Fame in 1980 and the Rock Hall of Fame in 1987.

King, whose real name is Riley King, was born outside the Mississippi Delta town of Indianola in 1925. By age 7, he had a reason to sing the blues - his father had abandoned him and his brother was in a Texas prison.

King lived with his mother and grandmother, both struggling sharecroppers. They insisted he attend church, where King joined the St. John's Gospel Singers. He wanted the group to leave Indianola to seek fame and fortune. That didn't sit well with his boss, Johnson Barrett, who wanted King hooked up to a plow.

But King, with his guitar and $2.50, headed to Memphis, where he hooked up with his cousin, Bukka White, who tutored King in the blues played in the city's Beale Street section.

King has been married three times, but his longest relationship is with Lucille, his guitar that was so named in 1955. While King was playing a dance club in Twist, Ark., two men knocked over a kerosene stove, setting the hall on fire and patrons fleeing. King left, but remembering he forgot his $30 guitar, went to retrieve it. Later he found out the two men were fighting over a woman. Her name was Lucille.
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Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 29.04.06 00:42:55   
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On Monday night at his New York City club, B.B. King played his 10,000th show, but the triumphant occasion was marred by deep tragedy. B.B. had driven to the show directly from Mississippi, where he had attended the funeral for his son Leonard, who died of cancer. Earlier in the week, King’s 14-year-old grandson was shot and killed in a convenience storeOn Monday night at his New York City club, B.B. King played his 10,000th show, but the triumphant occasion was marred by deep tragedy. B.B. had driven to the show directly from Mississippi, where he had attended the funeral for his son Leonard, who died of cancer. Earlier in the week, King’s 14-year-old grandson was shot and killed in a convenience store
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Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 23.05.06 21:42:43   
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B.B. King - The Thrill Is Gone


Aretha Franklin, BB King Performing in 1979

Внимание  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 30.05.06 15:29:33   
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Meet the Chairman

B. B. King, the reigning monarch of the blues

By Alan di Perna

When he's onstage singing the blues, B. B. King will often take his hands off his guitar and repeatedly slam his right fist into the open palm of his left hand, in the manner of an old-time gospel preacher. He does this to drive home some particularly poignant or pointed lyrical line. It's one of his trademark stage gestures.

The other one is this: He'll crisscross his hands at his heart, thumbs intertwined, his eight remaining fingers fluttering in the manner of a bird's wings. He usually plays this move for laughs--to impart an ironic undercurrent to some cutely romantic lyric line. But this gesture is actually just as gospel as the Bible-pounding fist--a sign of the Pentecostal dove, Christian believers' heart connection with their savior.

It's an odd thing to encounter onstage at a smoky Vegas lounge or roadside gin mill. But that juxtaposition of the earthy and the sanctified--showbiz glitz with the deepest depths of the soul--lies at the core of the life and music of the man born Riley B. King. He started out as a member of the Famous St. John Gospel Singers out of rural Indianola, Miss. And he never completely lost touch with those church roots--not even once he'd made his way to the bright lights and wicked ways of Memphis, reinventing himself as the Beale Street Blues Boy, or just B. B. for short.

King was a major R&B star of the '50s and went on to play a key role in bringing the blues out of chitlin-circuit blues joints and into rock 'n' roll concert halls during the pivotal years of the '60s. He was a key influence on blues guitar icons like Michael Bloomfield and Eric Clapton, not to mention just about anyone who's ever picked up an axe and assayed the 12-bar idiom. He has become the blues' goodwill ambassador to the world, treasured by the music's aficionados, but also loved by those who know absolutely nothing about the blues. Heck, most people are even on a first-name basis with B. B.'s signature Gibson guitar, Lucille.
Advertiser Links

Last year B. B. King celebrated his 80th birthday with the release of B. B. King and Friends: 80, an album of duets that pairs the legendary bluesman with greats like Clapton, Elton John, Mark Knopfler, Roger Daltrey, John Mayer and Sheryl Crow. Bullfinch Press brought out a lavish 'coffee'-table book, The B. B. King Treasures, and Gibson issued a special commemorative edition of the Lucille guitar. Despite the challenges of diabetes and assorted other maladies of advanced age, B. B. King still maintains a full touring schedule. The road has been his home for more than half a century, and, come Friday, May 26, it brings him to the Sonoma Jazz + festival.

Bohemian: Was the B. B. King and Friends album inspired by your guest appearance with Ray Charles on his Genius Loves Company, not long before Ray passed?
B. B. King: No, not really. And I'm hoping the outcome ain't the same! I told the record company, 'Ray did that just before he died. But I ain't ready to go yet. So don't put all these people on my album expecting me to leave tomorrow.' But I'll tell you this, we had fun doing it.
Although you started out as a gospel singer, you made your recording debut as a blues singer, with "Miss Martha King" in 1949.
That was my very first session. I did four sides for Bullet Records. Funny thing was, I started recording for them, and about six or eight months after that they went bankrupt.

But those early sides definitely introduced your sound to the record-buying public.
That's right. Let me explain how I got the guitar and amp on that record. One night, I was coming out of Tennessee in my old Mercury coupe. When I say "coupe," that means it was supposed to hold five people. I must have had eight or 10 in there. Musicians had a hard way to go back then, tryin' to get transportation. And I'll never forget how a transport truck--one of those big gas trucks--run into the back of me when I slowed down to cross a bridge. The driver said he wasn't payin' much attention. So the insurance money is what bought that guitar for me. First Gibson guitar I ever had. First amp I ever had.

What we think of as the signature B. B. King vocal and guitar style really starts to emerge on "Three O'Clock Blues" from 1951, which was your first No. 1 record and one of many classics you cut for Modern Records and its subsidiary labels.
At that time, they called me a rhythm and blues singer. Wasn't till much later they started calling my music blues. Guess I must've lost the rhythm somewhere! And back then, there were only two or three small labels that was releasin' R&B. There was Don Robey [proprietor of the Peacock and Duke labels] out of Houston, the Chess brothers [Leonard and Phil] in Chicago and the Bihari brothers [Lester, Jules and Joe] who ran Modern Records out of Los Angeles. If a company like that could sell 100,000 records, man, that was a good thing going. And I did that many times. "Three O' Clock Blues" was the first one.

Another landmark recording of yours is the Live at the Regal album from your years at ABC Records. Many consider this the greatest B. B. King record of all time. What was so magical about that November afternoon in 1964 at Chicago's Regal Theatre?
To be honest, I don't know what happened! The crowd was all hyper like that as soon as we started playing. There was no "applause" signs or anything like that. Me and the band just went on and did what we always do. We just had the right crowd at the right time. They have voted that that was one of the 10 best recorded live albums. I won't dispute that. But then they say it's my best. And as long as they're positive, I won't dispute that. But if you ask me personally, I'd say no, I don't think it's the best. I think it's pretty good.

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Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 30.05.06 15:29:47   
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I made almost 90 LPs and CDs. But I don't think I ever made a perfect one. But I do think in each one of them, there's some good work. I don't like to rehearse too much, where you milk something to death so it loses what made it good in the first place. I want a good sound, a strong sound--not a perfect sound. And when I play "The Thrill Is Gone" tonight, I'm not gonna try to play it like I'm recording it in '69. I wanna play it like I'm playing it today. Right now.

It's great that "The Thrill Is Gone" is still in your repertoire. It's the one B. B. King song that everyone knows--probably your greatest hit.
"The Thrill Is Gone" is a [1951] song by [California bluesman] Roy Hawkins that I rewrote and carried around for three or four years, or maybe even longer. Any time I would try to record it, I could never get what I wanted. But then one night in New York, about 2:30 or a quarter to 3 in the morning, I had [drummer] Herbie Lovelle and [pianist] Paul Harris together with Hugh McCracken on [rhythm] guitar and Gerald Jemmott on bass. And we just hit it. I said, "Yeah, this is it." They were just four people that fitted me. I never played like that again.

And after the session, producer Bill Szymczyk decided to add that famous string section.
That's right. I was living in New York at the time. So after that session, I went home to bed. And at about 5:30, 6 o'clock in the morning, Bill calls me. We'd only stopped recording close to 4 or so. And now here's Bill on the phone, all excited. "B," he says, "'The Thrill is Gone' is good!" See, he didn't like it at first, but then he got a chance to listen to it by himself. He said, "What would you think if I put strings on it?" I told him, "Go ahead." He was telling me, with the strings, it may go pop. So they got Bert DeCoteaux to do the string arrangement, which I caught hell for, incidentally. People said it wasn't the blues.

Everybody says that's the first time I had strings on a tune. But that's not right. "My Heart Belongs Only to You" had strings. There were quite a few things that Maxwell Davis, who was my arranger at Modern Records, put strings on.

By the late '60s, you'd broken through to a new audience. Young white listeners were getting turned on to the blues. What was it like the first time you played the Fillmore West in 1967?
When we first pulled up, I thought we'd come to the wrong place! I'd never played for a bunch of longhaired white kids before. I said to Bill Graham, "I gotta have something to drink." Bill looked at me strange and said, "We don't sell liquor here." I said, "I don't care. I want me a drink!" So he sent out and got a small bottle of some kind of liquor. I don't remember what. He sat me down in the dressing room and said, "B, when it's time to go on, I'll come back and get you." I was still very nervous. There was no tables or chairs in there, which I'd never seen before in a place where I played. People in there, they sittin' on the floor or standin'. They was body to body. I couldn't understand that. I had never ever seen people together like that before. They was really . . . I think serene is a good word.

So finally Bill Graham did come back to get me. Walking behind him to the stage, I had to watch not to step on anyone. People was sittin' everywhere, just talkin' quietly among themselves. When I got to the stage, Bill gave me the best, and shortest, introduction I ever had. "Ladies and gentlemen . . ."

He said that and everybody got so quiet you could hear a pin drop. He say, "I bring you the chairman of the board, B. B. King." And they all stood up and applauded. And I cried. 'Cause it was very emotional to me. I ain't never had this happen before in my life. If there's any such thing as a crossover, that was the night it happened.
Любовь  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 03.06.06 21:41:47   
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0.15 Канал КУЛЬТУРА. Концерт БиБи в Штутгарте. 1997 г.0.15 Канал КУЛЬТУРА. Концерт БиБи в Штутгарте. 1997 г.
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Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: Alex Red   Дата: 03.06.06 22:03:43   
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SergeK
И что, это что-нибудь особенное или всё как обычно?
Вопрос  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 03.06.06 22:10:37   
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2Alex Red:
Особенное, это ЧТО?
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Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: Alex Red   Дата: 03.06.06 22:12:18   
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Ну, что мы не видели, Сережа.
Улыбка  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 03.06.06 22:17:36   
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Разве такое возможно?! :)))
Концерт, он и есть концерт! :)
Я тащусь!  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 03.06.06 23:25:20   
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Cмотрящие концерт в Сибири, говорят, что Клёво!
Ждем!
Я тащусь!  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: Rosco   Дата: 04.06.06 00:40:15   
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2SergeK:

>0.15 Канал КУЛЬТУРА. Концерт БиБи в Штутгарте.
>1997 г.

ДА!

Мощь!
Здорово!  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: JohnLenin   Дата: 04.06.06 00:42:35   
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Это и в самом деле КЛЁВО !!! Я это смотрю (и слушаю!) впервые...
Улыбка  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 04.06.06 00:54:05   
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2JohnLenin:
А у меня уж лет 7 есть.
Улыбка  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: JohnLenin   Дата: 04.06.06 00:58:20   
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2SergeK:

>2JohnLenin:
>А у меня уж лет 7 есть.

Ну, ещё бы! Что ж тут удивительного!..
Улыбка  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 04.06.06 01:04:27   
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2JohnLenin:
:)
Раньше, стоял дяденька на Горбухе (старой) и продавал ТВ программы со спутника. Вот это оттуда :)
Вымученная улыбка  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: Simon   Дата: 04.06.06 01:24:48   
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А я про себя не могу сказать, что пришел в восторг от увиденного и услышанного. Конечно, B.B. King - мастер, а мастерство, как известно, не... утаишь, но мне показалось, что он как-то особенно на этом концерте не выкладывался. Наверное, все-таки годы берут свое. 72 года - не шутка!
Добрый профессор  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: SergeK   Дата: 04.06.06 01:27:32   
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Я думаю, что дело в публике. Я не видел ни одного концерта в Германии (кроме Берлина), который прошел хорошо.
Там видно, что он недоволен. Публика замороженная.
Улыбка  
Re: B.B. King - King Of The Blues
Автор: Simon   Дата: 04.06.06 01:40:31   
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2SergeK
Да, мне тоже показалось, что публика на этом концерте была какая-то вялая, а от обратной связи с аудиторией очень многое зависит. Видимо, дельта-блюз не для немецкой аудитории. :)))
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