By TIM WEINER
Blues Guitarist B.B. King Dies
at 89
B. B. King, whose world-weary voice and wailing guitar lifted him from
the cotton fields of Mississippi to a global stage and the apex of American
blues, died on Thursday at his home in Las Vegas. He was 89.
John Fudenberg, the coroner of Clark County, Nev., said the cause was
a series of small strokes attributable to Type 2 diabetes, The Associated Press
reported. Mr. King, who was in hospice care, had been in poor health but had
continued to perform until October, when he canceled a tour, citing dehydration
and exhaustion stemming from the diabetes.
Mr. King married country blues to big-city rhythms and created a sound
instantly recognizable to millions: a stinging guitar with a shimmering
vibrato, notes that coiled and leapt like an animal, and a voice that groaned
and bent with the weight of lust, longing and lost love.
“I wanted to connect my guitar to human emotions,” Mr. King said in
his autobiography, “Blues All Around Me” (1996), written with David Ritz.
In performances, his singing and his solos flowed into each other as
he wrung notes from the neck of his guitar, vibrating his hand as if it were
wounded, his face a mask of suffering. Many of the songs he sang — like his
biggest hit, “The Thrill Is Gone” (“I’ll still live on/But so lonely I’ll be”)
— were poems of pain and perseverance.
The music historian Peter Guralnick once noted that Mr. King helped
expand the audience for the blues through “the urbanity of his playing, the
absorption of a multiplicity of influences, not simply from the blues, along
with a graciousness of manner and willingness to adapt to new audiences and
give them something they were able to respond to.”
B. B. stood for Blues Boy, a name he took with his first taste of fame
in the 1940s. His peers were bluesmen like Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf, whose
nicknames fit their hard-bitten lives. But he was born a King, albeit in a
shack surrounded by dirt-poor sharecroppers and wealthy landowners.
Mr. King went out on the road and never came back after one of his
first recordings reached the top of the rhythm-and-blues charts in 1951. He
began in juke joints, country dance halls and ghetto nightclubs, playing 342
one-night stands in 1956 and 200 to 300 shows a year for a half-century
thereafter, rising to concert halls, casino main stages and international
acclaim.
He was embraced by rock ’n’ roll fans of the 1960s and ’70s, who
remained loyal as they grew older together. His playing influenced many of the
most successful rock guitarists of the era, including Eric Clapton and Jimi
Hendrix.
B.B. King, Bluesman of
Distinction
Jon Pareles reflects on the rawness and finesse of B.B. King, whose
musical style made him approachable to audiences and propelled him to fame.
By Natalia V. Osipova on Publish Date May 15, 2015. Photo by Doug
Mills/The New York Times.
Mr. King considered a 1968 performance at the Fillmore West, the San
Francisco rock palace, to have been the moment of his commercial breakthrough,
he told a public-television interviewer in 2003. A few years earlier, he
recalled, an M.C. in an elegant Chicago club had introduced him thus: “O.K.,
folks, time to pull out your chitlin’s and your collard greens, your pigs’ feet
and your watermelons, because here is B. B. King.” It had infuriated him.
When he saw “longhaired white people” lining up outside the Fillmore,
he said, he told his road manager, “I think they booked us in the wrong place.”
Then the promoter Bill Graham introduced him to the sold-out crowd: “Ladies and
gentlemen, I bring you the chairman of the board, B. B. King.”
“Everybody stood up, and I cried,” Mr. King said. “That was the
beginning of it.”
By his 80th birthday he was a millionaire many times over. He owned a
mansion in Las Vegas, a closet full of embroidered tuxedos and smoking jackets,
a chain of nightclubs bearing his name (including a popular room on West 42nd
Street in Manhattan) and the personal and professional satisfaction of having
endured.
Through it all he remained with the great love of his life, his
guitar. He told the tale a thousand times: He was playing a dance hall in
Twist, Ark., in the early 1950s when two men got into a fight and knocked over
a kerosene stove. Mr. King fled the fire — and then remembered his $30 guitar.
He ran into the burning building to rescue it.
He learned thereafter that the fight had been about a woman named
Lucille. For the rest of his life, Mr. King addressed his guitars — big
Gibsons, curved like a woman’s hips — as Lucille.
He married twice, unsuccessfully, and was legally single from 1966
onward; by his own account he fathered 15 children with 15 women. But a Lucille
was always at his side.
Riley B. King (the middle initial apparently did not stand for
anything) was born on Sept. 16, 1925, to Albert and Nora Ella King,
sharecroppers in Berclair, Miss., a hamlet outside the small town of Itta Bena
in the Mississippi Delta. His memories of the Depression included the sound of
sanctified gospel music, the scratch of 78 r.p.m. blues records, the sweat of
dawn-to-dusk work and the sight of a black man lynched by a white mob.
B.B. King’s Take on a Blues
Standard
By early 1940 Mr. King’s mother was dead and his father was gone. He
was 14 and on his own, “sharecropping an acre of cotton, living on a borrowed
allowance of $2.50 a month,” wrote Dick Waterman, a blues scholar. “When the
crop was harvested, Riley ended his first year of independence owing his
landlord $7.54.”
In November 1941 came a revelation: “King Biscuit Time” went on the
air, broadcasting on KFFA, a radio station in Helena, Ark. It was the first
radio show to feature the Mississippi Delta blues, and young Riley King heard
it on his lunch break at the plantation. A largely self-taught guitarist, he
now knew what he wanted to be when he grew up: a musician on the air.
The King Biscuit show featured Rice Miller, a primeval bluesman and
one of two performers who worked under the name Sonny Boy Williamson. After
serving in the Army and marrying his first wife, Martha Denton, Mr. King, then
22, went to seek him out in Memphis, looking for work. Memphis and its musical
hub, Beale Street, lay 130 miles north of his birthplace, and it looked like a
world capital to him.
Mr. Miller had two performances booked that night, one in Memphis and
one in Mississippi. He handed the lower-paying nightclub job to Mr. King. It
paid $12.50.
Mr. King was making about $5 a day on the plantation. He never
returned to his tractor.
He was a hit, and quickly became a popular disc jockey playing the
blues on a Memphis radio station, WDIA. “Before Memphis,” he wrote in his
autobiography, “I never even owned a record player. Now I was sitting in a room
with a thousand records and the ability to play them whenever I wanted. I was
the kid in the candy store, able to eat it all. I gorged myself.”
Memphis had heard five decades of the blues: country sounds from the
Delta, barrelhouse boogie-woogie, jumps and shuffles and gospel shouts. Mr.
King made it all his own. From records he absorbed the big-band sounds of Count
Basie, the rollicking jump blues of Louis Jordan, the electric-guitar styles of
the jazzman Charlie Christian and the bluesman T-Bone Walker.
B. B. King Plays ‘The Thrill
Is Gone’ at Crossroads Guitar Festival
He began a tour of the biggest stages a bluesman could play: the
Apollo Theater in Harlem, the Howard Theater in Washington, the Royal Theater
in Baltimore. By the time his wife divorced him after eight years, he was
playing 275 one-night stands a year on the so-called chitlin’ circuit.
There were hard times when the blues fell out of fashion with young
black audiences in the early 1960s. Mr. King never forgot being booed at the
Royal by teenagers who cheered the sweeter sounds of Sam Cooke.
“They didn’t know about the blues,” he said 40 years after the fact.
“They had been taught that the blues was the bottom of the totem pole, done by
slaves, and they didn’t want to think along those lines.”
Mr. King’s second marriage, to Sue Hall, also lasted eight years,
ending in divorce in 1966. He responded in 1969 with his best-known recording,
“The Thrill Is Gone,” a minor-key blues about having loved and lost. It was
originally recorded in 1951 by Roy Hawkins, one of its writers, but Mr. King
made it his own.
Mr. King is survived by 11 children. Three of them had recently
petitioned to take over his affairs, asserting that Mr. King’s manager, Laverne
Toney, was taking advantage of him. A Las Vegas judge rejected their petition
this month.
The success of “The Thrill Is Gone” coincided with a surge in the
popularity of the blues with a young white audience. Mr. King began playing
folk festivals and college auditoriums, rock shows and resort clubs, and
appearing on “The Tonight Show.”
Though he never had another hit that big, he had more than four
decades of the road before him. He eventually played the world — Russia and
China as well as Europe and Japan. His schedule around his 81st birthday, in
September 2006, included nine cities over two weeks in Denmark, Belgium, the
Netherlands, Germany, France and Luxembourg.
In addition to winning 15 Grammy Awards (including a lifetime
achievement award), having a star on Hollywood Boulevard and being inducted in
both the Rock and Roll and Blues Halls of Fame, Mr. King was among the
recipients of Kennedy Center Honors in 1995 and was given the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in 2006, awards rarely associated with the blues. In 1999, in
a public conversation with William Ferris, chairman of the National Endowment
for the Humanities, Mr. King recounted how he came to sing the blues.
“Growing up on the plantation there in Mississippi, I would work
Monday through Saturday noon,” he said. “I’d go to town on Saturday afternoons,
sit on the street corner, and I’d sing and play.
“I’d have me a hat or box or something in front of me. People that
would request a gospel song would always be very polite to me, and they’d say:
‘Son, you’re mighty good. Keep it up. You’re going to be great one day.’ But
they never put anything in the hat.
“But people that would ask me to sing a blues song would always tip me
and maybe give me a beer. They always would do something of that kind.
Sometimes I’d make 50 or 60 dollars one Saturday afternoon. Now you know why
I’m a blues singer.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/16/arts/music/b-b-king-blues-singer-dies-at-89.html?ref=music&_r=0
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario