He was one of the most influential blues musicians ever. His hoarse voice and the vibrato of his guitar defined the genre, from Keith Richards to Buddy Guy, thousands of musicians tried to imitate him.

“He is undoubtedly the most important artist that the blues brought up,” wrote Eric Clapton in his biography, “and also the most modest and sincere person you can imagine.”

BB King was always there with all my heart

Regardless of whether it was about food, women (supposedly he had 15 children with 15 different women) or gave way to gambling (in 1975 he even moved to Las Vegas): King didn’t do anything half -heartedly. The bluesman could also not show anything musically.

Years later, Bono remembered her together duet “When Love Comes to Town” from 1988: “I really gave everything at this howling at the beginning of the song. And then BB King opened his mouth and I suddenly felt like a little girl. We all learned from him, but the more we tried to sound how BB sounded, the less convincing.”

BB King was born on September 16, 1925 as Riley B. King in Itta Bena, Mississippi. His young parents divorced when he was only five. His mother died four years later and Riley came to his grandmother. He left the school early (which did not change the fact that he was interested in math and languages ​​all his life) and tied as a cotton picker.

At 17 he married. “I guess I was looking for love because I believed that there was no one who really brought me sincere affection,” he told the Rolling Stone in an interview in 1988.

It was the first of two failed marriages. “I have had a problem opening since my childhood. Please help me open! Look inside! I can’t, I don’t know how to do it.”

From 1948 King earned his money in Memphis as a tractor driver. By chance he ended up in the radio broadcast of Sonny Boy Williamson, which in turn brought him an engagement in a speluna in West Memphis, where he played the blues six days a week.

He met artists such as Louis Jordan and T-Bone Walker-and heard the sound of an electric guitar for the first time. “T-Bone was the sound of heaven for me,” he recalled years later.

One night in 1949, King performed at a dance event in Arkansas when a fight for a woman named Lucille broke out between two men in the audience. In the course of the dispute, a kerosinent was knocked over and the club caught fire.

All those present left the building as soon as possible, only King ran back again to save his guitar. From then on he called his instrument Lucille, like any guitar that came into possession afterwards.

Lucille remained his great love

“When I play her, it almost sounds like she could speak and I often hear her cry. Sometimes a conversation seems to be coming up between us. She communicates me to tell me something,” said King.

BB King landed his first number one hit in 1951 with “3 O ‘Clock Blues.” The British bands of the 1960s also contributed to his good reputation, which King worshiped. Musicians like the Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton made him known to a white audience. His biggest works are still his live albums, on which his masterful game and his show talent of the old school is transported with rousing.

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In the late 1960s, he teamed up with the manager Sid Seidenberg, who helped him bring his gambling addiction under control and brought him to the studio with more well-known producers. This resulted in hits like “Paid the Cost to Be the Boss” (1968), his razor-sharp social criticism “Why I Sing the Blues” (1969) or “Thrill is Gone” (in the original by Roy Hawkins from 1951), with which King won his first Grammy award.

King was on tour without 65 years

In the 1970s, King recorded Platten with his old friend Bobby Bland. Stevie Wonder produced the song “To Know You Is To Love You” in 1973. King remained commercially successful. In 1991 his BB King’s Blues Club opened in Memphis. Soon the once armed musician had venues across the country, which he was able to visit regularly.

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Rolling-Stone author Gerri Hirshey already estimated in 1998 that King had to have played around 15,000 concerts. King spent over 65 years of “on the road”. Outside the stage, he always remained the likeable entertainer and joined concerts to the fans and the “Guitar Kids”, as he called them to chat.

In private, he was an enthusiastic reader and internet enthusiast who once taught a young reporter how best to convert vinyl albums to MP3. He said about the computer: “My God, I have no idea how I could live without the thing!”

In 2013 he regretted in an interview with the Rolling Stone that he would slow down with age: “But fans treat me like a king. When I come on stage, they get up. I never asked them to just do it. They have no idea how much that means to me.”

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