The Electric B.B. King
|
|
Your Price:
$8.46
Retail Price:
$9.95
You Save:
$1.49 (15%)
Availability:
Usually ships in 1-3 business days.
Free Shipping on orders of $75 or more |
ORDER BY PHONE
1-800-336-4627
or 1-610-649-7565
Mon-Fri: 7am-9pm ET
Sat: 10am-9pm ET Sun: 10am-8pm ET
Item Number:
MCA 117672 |
Related products:
Customers who purchased this item also bought these:
Personnel includes: B.B. King (vocals, guitar); Maya Angelou (vocals); Billy Butler (guitar); Lawrence Burdine (alto saxophone); Vernon Slater, Johnny Board, Bobby Forte (tenor saxophone); Barney Hubert (baritone saxophone); Carl Adams, Hobart Dotson, John Browning, Henry Boozier, McKinley Johnson, Kenneth Sands (trumpet); Pluma Davis (trombone); Duke Jethro (organ, keyboards); Leo Lauchie, Louis Satterfield (bass); Sonny Freeman (drums).
Reissue producer: Andy McKaie
Recorded between 1965 and 1968. Includes liner notes by Ritchie York.
Digitally remastered by Erick Labson at MCA Music Media Studios, North Hollywood, California.
Mississippi born Riley B. King began playing music on the streets of his native Indianola in the '40s, eventually moving to Memphis to pursue a career as a bluesman. He found a home as a DJ on legendary Memphis radio Station WDIA in the early '50s, a position he used to further his budding reputation as a guitarist/singer to be reckoned with. His on-air moniker, "the Beale Street Blues Boy" ultimately metamorphosed into his stage name. He spent the '50s cementing his legend as an energetic performer, playing with Johnny Ace and Bobby "Blue" Bland and on his own. His very modern, urban style was influenced not only by T-Bone Walker, but by jazz guitarist Charlie Christian. King's gestalt was miles away from the blues' rural beginnings, relying on witty, sophisticated lyrics and almost jazzy rhythms. His signature guitar style, as played on his trademark Gibson hollow-body "Lucille," combined quick vibrato with cutting, single-note lines and aggressively bent notes. His boisterous vocals, entertainment-value showmanship and gregarious personality made him beloved not just to blues aficionados, but to the larger pop audience.
|
|
Trouble listening to samples? Sound Distorted? Download the latest Flash Player to correct an audio bug in the previous version |
Portions of this page © Copyright 1948-2009
For personal non-commercial use only. All rights reserved.
© Copyright 2000-2009 OLDIES.com
and its affiliates and partner companies.
All rights reserved.
About OLDIES.com.
Contact us by Email: Products and Order Questions or
Website Comments.