KING, B.B.


Meaning of KING, B.B. in English

born Sept. 16, 1925, Itta Bena, near Indianola, Miss., U.S. King, 1985 byname of Riley B. King African-American guitarist who was a principal figure in the development of blues and from whose style leading popular musicians drew inspiration. King was reared in the Mississippi delta, and gospel music in church was the earliest influence on his singing. To his own impassioned vocal calls, King played lyrical single-string guitar responses with a distinctive vibrato; his guitar style was influenced by T-Bone Walker, by delta blues players (including his cousin Bukka White), and by such jazz guitarists as Django Reinhardt and Charlie Christian. He worked for a time as a disk jockey in Memphis, Tenn., where he acquired the name B.B. (for Blues Boy) King. In 1951 he made a hit record of Three O'Clock Blues, which led to virtually continuous tours of clubs and theatres throughout the country. He often played 300 or more one-night stands a year with his 13-piece band. A long succession of hits, including Every Day I Have the Blues, Sweet Sixteen, and The Thrill is Gone, enhanced his popularity. By the late 1960s rock guitarists acknowledged his influence and priority; they introduced King and his guitar, Lucille, to the white public, who until then had heard blues only in derivative versions. King's autobiography, Blues All Around Me, with David Ritz, was published in 1996.

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