Albert King is truly a "King of the Blues," although he doesn't hold that title (B.B. does). Along with B.B. and Freddie King, Albert King
is one of the major influences on blues and rock guitar players.
Without him, modern guitar music would not sound as it does -- his style
has influenced both black and white blues players from Otis Rush and Robert Cray to Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan. It's important to note that while almost all modern blues guitarists seldom play for long without falling into a B.B. King guitar cliché, Albert King never does -- he's had his own style and unique tone from the beginning.
Albert King
plays guitar left-handed, without re-stringing the guitar from the
right-handed setup; this "upside-down" playing accounts for his
difference in tone, since he pulls down on the same strings that most
players push up on when bending the blues notes. King's
massive tone and totally unique way of squeezing bends out of a guitar
string has had a major impact. Many young white guitarists -- especially
rock & rollers -- have been influenced by King's playing, and many players who emulate his style may never have heard of Albert King,
let alone heard his music. His style is immediately distinguishable
from all other blues guitarists, and he's one of the most important
blues guitarists to ever pick up the electric guitar.
Born in Indianola, MS, but raised in Forrest City, AR, Albert King (born Albert Nelson)
taught himself how to play guitar when he was a child, building his own
instrument out of a cigar box. At first, he played with gospel groups
-- most notably the Harmony Kings -- but after hearing Blind Lemon Jefferson, Lonnie Johnson,
and several other blues musicians, he solely played the blues. In 1950,
he met MC Reeder, who owned the T-99 nightclub in Osceola, AR. King
moved to Osceola shortly afterward, joining the T-99's house band, the
In the Groove Boys. The band played several local Arkansas gigs besides
the T-99, including several shows for a local radio station.
After enjoying success in the Arkansas area, King moved to Gary, IN, in 1953, where he joined a band that also featured Jimmy Reed and John Brim. Both Reed and Brim were guitarists, which forced King to play drums in the group. At this time, he adopted the name Albert King, which he assumed after B.B. King's "Three O'Clock Blues" became a huge hit. Albert met Willie Dixon shortly after moving to Gary, and the bassist/songwriter helped the guitarist set up an audition at Parrot Records. King
passed the audition and cut his first session late in 1953. Five songs
were recorded during the session and only one single, "Be on Your Merry
Way" / "Bad Luck Blues," was released; the other tracks appeared on
various compilations over the next four decades. Although it sold
respectably, the single didn't gather enough attention to earn him
another session with Parrot. In early 1954, King returned to Osceola and re-joined theIn the Groove Boys; he stayed in Arkansas for the next two years.
In 1956, Albert moved to St. Louis, where he initially sat in with local bands. By the fall of 1956, King was headlining several clubs in the area. King
continued to play the St. Louis circuit, honing his style. During these
years, he began playing his signature Gibson Flying V, which he named
Lucy. By 1958, Albert
was quite popular in St. Louis, which led to a contract with the
fledgling Bobbin Records in the summer of 1959. On his first Bobbin
recordings, King
recorded with a pianist and a small horn section, which made the music
sound closer to jump blues than Delta or Chicago blues. Nevertheless,
his guitar was taking a center stage and it was clear that he had
developed a unique, forceful sound. King's
records for Bobbin sold well in the St. Louis area, enough so that King
Records leased the "Don't Throw Your Love on Me So Strong" single from
the smaller label. When the single was released nationally late in 1961,
it became a hit, reaching number 14 on the R&B charts. King Records
continued to lease more material from Bobbin -- including a full album,
Big Blues,
which was released in 1963 -- but nothing else approached the initial
success of "Don't Throw Your Love on Me So Strong." Bobbin also leased
material to Chess, which appeared in the late '60s.
Albert King
left Bobbin in late 1962 and recorded one session for King Records in
the spring of 1963, which were much more pop-oriented than his previous
work; the singles issued from the session failed to sell. Within a year,
he cut four songs for the local St. Louis independent label Coun-Tree,
which was run by a jazz singer named Leo Gooden.
Though these singles didn't appear in many cities -- St. Louis,
Chicago, and Kansas City were the only three to register sales -- they
foreshadowed his coming work with Stax Records. Furthermore, they were
very popular within St. Louis, so much so that Gooden resented King's success and pushed him off the label.
Following his stint at Coun-Tree, Albert King signed with Stax Records in 1966. Albert's
records for Stax would bring him stardom, both within blues and rock
circles. All of his '60s Stax sides were recorded with the label's house
band, Booker T. & the MG's, which gave his blues a sleek, soulful sound. That soul underpinning gave King
crossover appeal, as evidenced by his R&B chart hits -- "Laundromat
Blues" (1966) and "Cross Cut Saw" (1967) both went Top 40, while "Born
Under a Bad Sign" (1967) charted in the Top 50. Furthermore, King's style was appropriated by several rock & roll players, most notably Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton, who copied Albert's "Personal Manager" guitar solo on the Cream song, "Strange Brew." Albert King's first album for Stax, 1967's Born Under a Bad Sign,
was a collection of his singles for the label and became one of the
most popular and influential blues albums of the late '60s. Beginning in
1968, Albert King
was playing not only to blues audiences, but also to crowds of young
rock & rollers. He frequently played at the Fillmore West in San
Francisco and he even recorded an album, Live Wire/Blues Power, at the hall in the summer of 1968.
Early in 1969, King recorded Years Gone By, his first true studio album. Later that year, he recorded a tribute album to Elvis Presley (Blues for Elvis: Albert King Does the King's Things) and a jam session with Steve Cropper and Pops Staples (Jammed Together), in addition to performing a concert with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra. For the next few years, Albert toured America and Europe, returning to the studio in 1971, to record the Lovejoy album. In 1972, he recorded I'll Play the Blues for You, which featured accompaniment from the Bar-Kays, the Memphis Horns, and the Movement. The album was rooted in the blues, but featured distinctively modern soul and funk overtones.
By the mid-'70s, Stax was suffering major financial problems, so King left the label for Utopia, a small subsidiary of RCA Records. Albert
released two albums on Utopia, which featured some concessions to the
constraints of commercial soul productions. Although he had a few hits
at Utopia, his time there was essentially a transitional period, where
he discovered that it was better to follow a straight blues direction
and abandon contemporary soul crossovers. King's subtle shift in style was evident on his first albums for Tomato Records, the label he signed with in 1978. Albert stayed at Tomato for several years, switching to Fantasy in 1983, releasing two albums for the label.
In the mid-'80s, Albert King announced his retirement, but it was short-lived -- Albert continued to regularly play concerts and festivals throughout America and Europe for the rest of the decade. King
continued to perform until his sudden death in 1992, when he suffered a
fatal heart attack on December 21. The loss to the blues was a major
one -- although many guitarists have tried, no one can replace King's distinctive, trailblazing style. Albert King is a tough act to follow.
Source: All Music.com.
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