CROSS CUT SAW
BORN UNDER A BAD SIGN
COLD FEET
I LOVE LUCY
LAUNDROMAT BLUES
Born 25th April 1923 - Indianola, Mississippi
Died 21st December 1992 - Memphis, Tennessee
These tracks by Albert King and and many others were always to be heard at the
Blue
Note Club, Manchester.
Albert's style was a firm favourite there. Although Albert King's music was sometimes played at the
Twisted
Wheel, this location mainly went for the less bluesy more
Motown based sounds.
Albert belongs to an elite group of guitarists and one of the most
influential blues guitarists ever.
Albert was left handed and used bare fingers and always with
the volume turned up high, Albert created his own unique identifiable electric
blues guitar style and it was soulful too. Albert played guitar upside down, so
bending notes in the opposite way to a right handed player, as did Jimmy Hendrix.
He was one of the three Kings of the guitar:
B B
King,
Freddie King
and Albert King.
His first recording was:
Bad Luck Blues, released in 1953. Albert had to drive a bulldozer amongst other jobs for ten years before
attaining any recognition. His first successful single was
Don't Throw Your
Love On Me Too Strong. In 1966 he signed to the Stax label and began working with
Booker T. And The
MGs, a match made in heaven.
Cold Feet,
contained references to several Stax artists, e.g.
Sam and Dave,
Rufus Thomas
and
Carla Thomas.
They ain't the only ones to play
the blues
I play the blues myself
I Love Lucy, paid homage to Al's 'Flying V' guitar -
which he called Lucy. Other e
arly Stax recordings for
Albert included
Born Under A Bad Sign (1967)
and
Personal Manager .
His biggest earlier hit on the UK
soul scene was the fantastic
Cross Cut Saw and later
The Hunter (1968). UK groups such
as Free and
Cream
always included Albert's numbers in their live stage act. Albert King was a
central part of the late 1960s 'blues boom'.
The classic album,
Live Wire/Blues
Power, was recorded at San Francisco's Fillmore Auditorium in 1968 and gained wider
recognition. More great albums followed including
King Does The King's Thing,
a tribute to Elvis Presley,
That's What The Blues Is All About A Top 20 R&B single. 1983 brought about renewed interest in the
blues with artists such as Robert Cray and Stevie Ray
Vaughan paying their dues to Albert.
This helped to bring him back into the spotlight and in 1990 Albert
appeared on Gary Moore 's 'back-to-the-roots'
collection,
Still Got The Blues.
Born in Indianola, MS, but raised in Forrest
City, Arizona, Albert
taught himself how to play guitar when he was a child, building his own
instrument out of a cigar box. He played with gospel groups (the Harmony
Kings). After hearing Blind Lemon Jefferson, Lonnie Johnson, and several other
great bluesmen, he left gospel for the blues. In 1950, he met MC Reeder who
owned the T-99 nightclub in Osceola, Albert moved there becoming a member of
T-99's house band, the ?In The Groove Boys?.
In 1953 he moved to Gary, Indiana and joined a band that
featured
Jimmy Reed and
John Brim both better known guitarists so Albert turned to the drums. He
adopted the name Albert King, after B.B. King's
Three O'Clock
Blues became a hit. Albert met Willie Dixon in 1953 and did five songs
with him at Parrot records,
Be On Your Merry
Way / Bad Luck Blues, was released - others have appeared
many years later on compilations.
In
1956 Albert moved to St. Louis, playing at local clubs where he
began playing 'Lucy' his Gibson Flying V.
He recorded at this time with Bobbin Records until 1959. King Records released the
Don't Throw Your Love on Me So Strong single from the smaller
label. In 1961, it became a hit, reaching
number 14 on the R&B charts. King Records issued more material from Bobbin, including the album,
The Big Blues which was released in 1963. Bobbin also
leased material to Chess, which came out in the late 1960s.
Albert left Bobbin in 1962 and recorded one session for King
Records without success. Louis' independent label CounTree, did some further
recordings with Albert but after a falling out with the owner Albert was
dropped.
Albert signed with Stax Records in 1966. He had R&B chart hits
Laundromat Blues (1966) and
Cross Cut Saw (1967) both Top 40 -
Born Under
a Bad Sign (1967) reached the Top 50.
Jimmy Hendrix followed Albert's guitar playing style and sound and Eric
Clapton, copied Albert's
Personal Manager guitar solo for the Cream
song,
Strange Brew. Albert King's first album with Stax
Born Under a Bad Sign, (1967) was a collection of his singles.
In 1972, he recorded I
'll Play the Blues for You,
with backing from the re-formed the Bar-Kays, the
Memphis Horns, and The Movement.
Later
Stax got into major financial difficulties and he left,
going to Utopia, a subsidiary of RCA Records. In1978 Albert was at Tomato records and Fantasy records in
1983.
In 1986, Albert retired from the business, but made an
instant come back playing concerts and festivals throughout America and Europe
he continued to perform until his sudden death in 1992 from heart attack on
December 21.
He loved Lucy and we loved him.