His reign as King of the Blues has been as long as that of any monarch on earth.
Blues History B.B. King
His reign as King of the Blues has been as long as that of any monarch on earth.
Yet B.B. King continues to wear his crown well.
At age 76, he is still light on his feet, singing and playing the blues with relentless passion.
Time has no apparent effect on B.B., other than to make him more popular, more cherished, more relevant than ever.
Don’t look for him in some kind of semi-retirement; look for him out on the road, playing for people,
popping up in a myriad of T.V. commercials, or laying down tracks for his next album.
B.B. King is as alive as the music he plays, and a grateful world can’t get enough of him.
For more than half a century, Riley B. King – better known as B.B. King – has defined the blues for a worldwide audience.
Since he started recording in the 1940s, he has released over fifty albums, many of them classics.
He was born September 16, 1925, on a plantation in Itta Bena, Mississippi, near Indianola.
In his youth, he played on street corners for dimes, and would sometimes play in as many as four towns a night.
In 1947, he hitchhiked to Memphis, TN, to pursue his music career.
Memphis was where every important musician of the South gravitated,
and which supported a large musical community where every style of African American music could be found. B.B. stayed with his cousin Bukka White,
one of the most celebrated blues performers of his time, who schooled B.B. further in the art of the blues.
B.B.’s first big break came in 1948 when he performed on Sonny Boy Williamson’s radio program on KWEM out of West Memphis.
Secular folk music created by African Americans in the early 20th century, originally in the South.
The simple but expressive forms of the blues became by the 1960s, one of the most important influences on the development of popular music throughout the United States.