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Bo Diddley
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| Biography: | |
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Born in McComb, Mississippi in 1928, the boy known as Ellas Bates McDaniel became Bo Diddley when he took up boxing following his family?s move to Chicago in the mid-1930s. At first, music was only as a hobby for Diddley, but after playing places like
the 708 Club in the early 1950s, Diddley went looking for a recording contract. He
used ?Uncle John,? a raunchy song in the ?Dirty Dozens? tradition, for his demo,
and brothers Leonard and Phil Chess of Chess Records thought it had potential.
Diddley revised the lyrics ? naming the song after himself ? and used maracas to
emphasize the beat and the sound he was trying to create. It took 35 takes, but
they got the sound they wanted, and ?Bo Diddley?/?I?m A Man? became a
double-sided hit in 1955. The distinctive syncopated rhythm of his self-titled
song captured the primal spirit of restless youth of those times. Songs like ?Mona,? ?Who Do You Love?," "Road Runner," and "You Don't Love Me" were among the earliest examples of rock and roll close to its source material in rhythm and blues. The excitement Diddley generated onstage was noted by a young Elvis Presley, bands like the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds covered his songs, and the Animals lionized him in ?The Story of Bo Diddley.? The now classic album Bo Diddley Is a Gunslinger(digitally remastered and expanded with five bonus tracks, reissued in 2004) came out in 1960. Diddley recorded nine originals--the self-mythologizing ?Gun Slinger?; ?Ride On Josephine,? a Berry-like slice of auto-erotica; the spelling-bee rocker ?Cadillac?; the comic narratives ?Cheyenne? and ?Whoa Mule (Shine)?; the doo-wop ballads ?Somewhere? and ?No More Lovin??; the beat-ific instrumental ?Diddling,? and ?Doing The Crawdaddy,? the incentive for a would-be dance craze. The lone cover was Tennessee Ernie Ford?s 1955 hit ?Sixteen Tons.? In July 1964,
Two Great Guitars, credited to Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry, was
released. It included two lengthy guitar jams between the two rock and roll
legends.
The Super Super Blues Band, a collaboration between Muddy Waters, Bo Diddley
and Little Walter, was released on Checkers Records in 1969. BoDiddley's music has appeared on major films and TV shows, including Trading Places (1983), Hail! Hail! Rock ?n? Roll (1987), Blues Brothers 2000 (1998) and "The Sopranos." In
2004, Bo Diddley was inducted in the Blues Hall of Fame. |
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| Blues, Rock, Guitar - Electric | |
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