I actually sang Albert King's "Born Under A Bad Sign" before I ever heard the original, back at the age of 19, lead singer with the legendary Phoenix Blues Band on the Vineyard, actually covering a cover of the original by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. It wasn't until decades later cassette-diving in a mega music store closeout bin, coming up with the REAL "Born", which is actually a collection of his greatest hits, that I realized the extent of his talents. Albert's legacy ranks him as one of the "Three Kings" of the blues- BB King, Albert King and Freddie King.
The late bluesman cast a long shadow - literally. The guitarist stood 6' 4 " tall and weighed 250 pounds. His nickname was the " Velvet Bulldozer" , which stemmed - not from his size - but from the fact that he drove a bulldozer to earn money at different points in his career.
King was born Albert King Nelson in April 1923 on a cotton plantation in Indianola, Mississippi. His first exposure to music was singing in a family gospel group at a local church where his father also played guitar. King's professional career started with a band called "In The Groove Boys" from Arkansas. He spent time in Gary, Indiana and St. Louis, briefly playing drums on several Jimmy Reed recordings.
King's first "hit" was a tune by Little Milton - "I'm a Lonely Man" - which Albert cut in 1959, but his first major release went to Number 14 on Billboard's R & B chart in 1961, called "Don't Throw Your Love on Me So Strong". He had adapted the Gibson "Flying V" guitar as his trademark. King recorded with several regional labels, but his career took off when he signed with the legendary Stax label in Memphis in 1966. The guitarist cut several tunes with Booker T and The MGs, including "Crosscut Saw."Stax released "Born Under A Bad Sign" a year later, which was actually a collection of all the "sides" King cut for the label.
His signature tune has been covered not only by Paul Butterfield, but Cream,. Jimi Hendrix, Bad Company's Paul Rodgers and Homer Simpson (?). King was a superstar at the age of 44.
Albert King was also unique because of his linkage to San Francisco's legendary Fillmore Auditorium, as he played several gigs for Bill Graham,and cut a couple of live albums there. The legendary collaboration with Stevie Ray Vaughan also propelled King into the mainstream, Vaughan identifying King as his greatest influence. Ironically - to me, anyway - Albert King had an influence on Albert Collins - both of them do what I call blue collar blues. After all, King has a whole song about his baby cheating on him, by heading down to the laundromat to meet up with her lover, right up there with Collins' "The Lights Are On". Albert King also dabbled unsuccessfully in trying to sound like the African American Perry Como with mixed success.
Bottom line, when King died December 21, 1992, musicians like Mick Taylor, Joe Walsh, Mike Bloomfield, Eric Clapton, Derek Trucks, Warren Haynes paid him homage along with numerous others proving convincingly that Albert King wasn't just Born Under A Bad Sign -he was Born Under A SUPERBAD Sign!
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment