Blues legend B.B. King has named every guitar he played Lucille since one fateful night in the winter of 1949 in an Arkansas dance hall.
B.B. King was already a 20-year veteran bluesman when he began to seep into mainstream America's consciousness during the late '60s, via the praise of rock guitarists like Eric Clapton and Mike ...
‘Live At The Regal,’ recorded in November 1964, remains one of the great live albums of all time, demonstrating why BB is The King of the Blues ... should happen to play one that you remember ...
and currently sits as the resident guitar player for the B.B. King Band featuring Tito Jackson. Crosby, Coleman, Champion and ...
In order to play the correct Blues notes it is ... is not as polished or perfected as that of B. B. King but he is years younger than B.B. and is far more adventuresome. Unlike many contemporary ...
B.B. King. It was in 1967 that Albert King released what many consider to be his standout album, Born Under A Bad Sign, but, I’ll Play The Blues For You is an equally fine record and one that ...
According to the rep, the Peabody date was King’s first show in four weeks and was preceded by a 24-hour drive from his home in Las Vegas to the Gateway City. He also apparently forgot to take ...
It’s your touch and your soul that makes it sound the way it does. “You don’t want to play like B.B. King or somebody else.
While the premiere is happening days before Marthin Luther King Day on Jan. 20, Young’s imagining of events is far from a reverential “what if?” scenario. Instead, the play aims to address ...