biography
| name: |
Waters, Muddy
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originally McKinley Morganfield
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1915–83)
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| biography:
| Musician, born in Rolling Fork, Mississippi, USA. One of the last of the great country blues singers and a primary innovator of modern Chicago blues, he was raised on the Stovall Plantation in Clarksdale, MS, where he began playing harmonica and guitar while working as a sharecropper. During 1941–2 he was recorded by Alan Lomax, the folklorist of the Library of Congress, and emboldened by this experience he moved to Chicago (1943), seeking a career in music. Over the next several years he gradually developed an ensemble blues style while performing in neighbourhood bars in Chicago's South Side ghetto. In 1946 he recorded an unissued session for Columbia, and for the next three years he recorded in a country blues style for Aristocrat Records. He gained his first national success with ‘Rolling Stone’ (1950) the inaugural release of Chess Records, the rhythm-and-blues label with which his name was virtually synonymous for the next 25 years. In 1952 he made his first recordings with his six-piece combo, which pioneered the electronically-amplified Chicago blues style. Featuring Little Walter, Jimmy Rogers, and Otis Spann, this group released several rhythm-and-blues hits, including ‘Hoochie Coochie Man’ and ‘Got My Mojo Working’, and toured extensively on the black nightclub circuit throughout the 1950s. He made the first of several annual tours of England in 1958, during which he exerted a profound influence on the early British rock scene. He appeared at the Newport Jazz Festival (1960) and was a central figure in the folk-blues revival of the mid-1960s. By the late 1960s his songs were widely covered in rock, and several headlining bands, including the Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton, featured him on their tours. A perennial Grammy winner throughout the 1970s, his appearance in The Band's farewell concert, filmed as The Last Waltz, was widely hailed. He was inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. |
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