Freddie King
Fred "Freddie" King (September 3, 1934 – December 28, 1976) was an American blues guitarist and singer. He recorded several hits for Federal Records in the early 1960s. His soulful and powerful voice and distinctive guitar style inspired many musicians, particularly guitarists. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012.
Freddie King | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Fred King |
Also known as | Freddy King |
Born | Gilmer, Texas, U.S. | September 3, 1934
Died | December 28, 1976 42) Dallas, Texas | (aged
Genres | Blues |
Occupation(s) | Musician, singer-songwriter |
Instruments | Guitar, vocals |
Years active | 1952–1976 |
Labels | |
Website | Freddie King Official website |
King based his guitar style on Texas blues and Chicago blues influences. His best-known recordings include the early instrumentals "Hide Away" (1961), "San-Ho-Zay," (1961) and "The Stumble" (1962).[1] The album Freddy King Sings showcased his singing talents and included the record chart hits "You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling" and "I'm Tore Down".[2] He later became involved with more rhythm and blues- and rock-oriented producers and was one of the first bluesmen to have a multiracial backing band at live performances.[1]
Biography
Early life
According to his birth certificate he was named Fred King, and his parents were Ella Mae King and J. T. Christian.[3] When Freddie was six years old, his mother and his uncle began teaching him to play the guitar. In autumn 1949, he and his family moved from Dallas to the South Side of Chicago.[3]
In 1952 King started working in a steel mill. In the same year he married another Texas native, Jessie Burnett. They had seven children.[3]
1950s
Almost as soon as he had moved to Chicago, King started sneaking into South Side nightclubs, where he heard blues performed by Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, T-Bone Walker, Elmore James, and Sonny Boy Williamson. King formed his first band, the Every Hour Blues Boys, with the guitarist Jimmie Lee Robinson and the drummer Frank "Sonny" Scott. In 1952, while employed at a steel mill, the eighteen-year-old King occasionally worked as a sideman with such bands as the Little Sonny Cooper Band and Earl Payton's Blues Cats. In 1953 he recorded with the latter for Parrot Records, but these recordings were never released. As the 1950s progressed, King played with several of Muddy Waters's sidemen and other Chicago mainstays, including the guitarists Jimmy Rogers, Robert Lockwood Jr., Eddie Taylor, and Hound Dog Taylor; the bassist Willie Dixon; the pianist Memphis Slim; and the harmonicist Little Walter.
In 1956 he cut his first record as a leader, for El-Bee Records. The A-side was "Country Boy", a duet with Margaret Whitfield.[4] The B-side was a King vocal. Both tracks feature the guitar of Robert Lockwood, Jr., who during these years was also adding rhythm backing and fills to Little Walter's records.[3]
King was repeatedly rejected in auditions for the South Side's Chess Records, the premier blues label, which was the home of Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, and Little Walter. The complaint was that King sang too much like B.B. King. A newer blues scene, lively with nightclubs and upstart record companies, was burgeoning on the West Side, though. The bassist and producer Willie Dixon, during a period of estrangement from Chess in the late 1950s, asked King to come to Cobra Records for a session, but the results have never been heard. Meanwhile, King established himself as perhaps the biggest musical force on the West Side. He played along with Magic Sam and reputedly played backing guitar, uncredited, on some of Sam's tracks for Mel London's Chief and Age labels,[3] though King does not stand out on them.
Federal Records
In 1959 King got to know Sonny Thompson, a pianist, producer, and A&R man for Cincinnati's King Records. King Records' owner, Syd Nathan, signed King to the subsidiary Federal Records in 1960. King recorded his debut single for the label on August 26, 1960: "Have You Ever Loved a Woman" backed with "You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling" (again credited as "Freddy" King). From the same recording session at the King Studios in Cincinnati, Ohio, King cut the instrumental "Hide Away", which the next year reached number five on the R&B chart and number 29 on the Pop chart, an unprecedented accomplishment for a blues instrumental at a time when the genre was still largely unknown to white audiences. It was originally released as the B-side of "I Love the Woman". "Hide Away" was King's melange of a theme by Hound Dog Taylor and parts by others, such as "The Walk", by Jimmy McCracklin, and "Peter Gunn", as credited by King. The title of the tune refers to Mel's Hide Away Lounge, a popular blues club on the West Side of Chicago.[5] Willie Dixon later claimed that he had recorded King performing "Hide Away" for Cobra Records in the late 1950s, but such a version has never surfaced.[6] "Hide Away" became a blues standard.
After their success with "Hide Away," King and Thompson recorded thirty instrumentals, including "The Stumble," "Just Pickin'," "Sen-Sa-Shun," "Side Tracked," "San-Ho-Zay," "High Rise," and "The Sad Nite Owl".[7][8] They recorded vocal tracks throughout this period but often released the tunes as instrumentals on albums.
During the Federal period, King toured with many notable R&B artists of the day, including Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, and James Brown.
Cotillion, Shelter, RSO Records
King's contract with Federal expired in 1966, and his first overseas tour followed in 1967. His availability was noticed by the producer and saxophonist King Curtis, who had recorded a cover of "Hide Away", with Cornell Dupree on guitar, in 1962. Curtis signed King to Atlantic in 1968, which resulted in two LPs, Freddie King Is a Blues Master (1969) and My Feeling for the Blues (1970), produced by Curtis for the Atlantic subsidiary Cotillion Records.[9]
In 1969 King hired Jack Calmes as his manager, who secured him an appearance at the 1969 Texas Pop Festival, alongside Led Zeppelin and others,[10] and this led to King's signing a recording contract with Shelter Records, a new label established by the rock pianist Leon Russell and the record producer Denny Cordell. The company treated King as an important artist, flying him to Chicago to the former Chess studios to record the album Getting Ready and providing a lineup of top session musicians, including Russell.[11] Three albums were made during this period, including blues classics and new songs, such as "Going Down", written by Don Nix.[12]
King performed alongside the big rock acts of the day, such as Eric Clapton[13] and Grand Funk Railroad (whose song "We're an American Band" mentions King in its lyrics), and for a young, mainly white audience, along with the white tour drummer Gary Carnes, for three years, before signing with RSO Records. In 1974 he recorded Burglar, for which Tom Dowd produced the track "Sugar Sweet" at Criteria Studios in Miami, with the guitarists Clapton and George Terry, the drummer Jamie Oldaker and the bassist Carl Radle. Mike Vernon produced the other tracks.[14] Vernon also produced a second album for King, Larger than Life,[15] for the same label. Vernon brought in other notable musicians for both albums, such as Bobby Tench of the Jeff Beck Group, to complement King.[16]
Death
Nearly constant touring took its toll on King—he was on the road almost 300 days out of the year. In 1976 he began suffering from stomach ulcers. His health quickly deteriorated, and he died on December 28 of complications from this illness and acute pancreatitis, at the age of 42.
According to those who knew him, King's untimely death was due to stress, a legendary "hard-partying lifestyle",[17] and a poor diet of consuming Bloody Marys because as he told a journalist, "they've got food in them."[18]
Playing style and technique
King had an intuitive style, often creating guitar parts with vocal nuances.[19] He achieved this by using the open-string sound associated with Texas blues and the raw, screaming tones of West Side, Chicago blues. King's combination of the Texas and Chicago sounds gave his music a more contemporary feel than that of many Chicago bands who were still performing 1950s-style music, and he befriended the younger generation of blues musicians. In his early career he played a solid-body gold-top Gibson Les Paul with P-90 pickups.[20] He later played several slimline semi-hollow body Gibson electric guitars, including an ES-335, ES-345, and ES-355.[20] He used a plastic thumb pick and a metal index-finger pick.[20]
Recognition and influence
By proclamation of the governor of Texas, Ann Richards, September 3, 1993, was declared Freddie King Day, an honor reserved for Texas legends, such as Bob Wills and Buddy Holly.[21] He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012,[22] and placed 15th in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time.[23]
Several of King's early 1960s instrumentals found their way into the repertoire of surf music bands:[24] "Those instrumental hits Freddy King had – 'Hideaway', 'San-Ho-Zay', 'The Stumble' – [t]he way white kids were relating to it was like surf guitar in a way; instrumental music that you could dance to."[25] One band that mixed R&B and surf instrumentals occasionally included Jerry Garcia.[25] He later explained: "When I started playing electric guitar the second time, with the Warlocks, it was a Freddie King album that I got almost all my ideas off of, his phrasing really. That first one, Here's Freddie King, later it came out as Freddie King Plays Surfin' Music or something like that, it has 'San-Ho-Zay' on it and 'Sensation" and all those instrumentals"[26] (King's 1961 instrumental album, Let's Hide Away and Dance Away with Freddy King, was retitled Freddy King Goes Surfin' for a 1963 re-release).
According to music critic Cub Koda, King has influenced guitarists such as Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Lonnie Mack.[1] In Michael Corcoran's words, King "merged the most vibrant characteristics of both [Chicago and Texas] regional styles and became the biggest guitar hero of the mid-sixties British blues revivalists, who included Eric Clapton, Savoy Brown, Chicken Shack, and Peter Green-era Fleetwood Mac".[27] Clapton said in 1985 that King's 1961 song "I Love the Woman" was "the first time I heard that electric lead-guitar style, with the bent notes ... [it] started me on my path." As Rolling Stone later wrote, "Clapton shared his love of King with fellow British guitar heroes Peter Green, Jeff Beck and Mick Taylor, all of whom were profoundly influenced by King's sharpened-treble tone and curt melodic hooks on iconic singles such as 'The Stumble,' 'I'm Tore Down' and 'Someday, After Awhile.'"[23] King was among many pioneering African-American blues musicians to embrace the British blues scene and tour its club circuit in the late 1960s.[28] Robert Christgau credited King's embrace of Britain with creating his renown as a pioneer of electric blues guitar.[29] In Gary Graff's MusicHound Rock (1996), the entry on King states: "Although his reputation rests with his guitar, King also sang with an underrated, powerful style. His lasting influence has insured Freddie King's recognition as one of the great postwar blues masters."[30]
Appraisal of recording work
Recommending what albums of King's music to hear, MusicHound Rock cited the 1993 Rhino compilation The Best of Freddie King, for focusing on "the fruitful abundance" of his recordings for King Records (1961–66), and the 1995 Black Top CD Live at the Electric Ballroom, 1974, for its "blasting, ripping concert" recording along with "a rare pair of acoustic" performances; Freddie King Is a Blues Master (1969) and My Feeling for the Blues (1970) were named records to avoid, as they "both suffer from thin accompaniment, too little guitar and reedy vocals".[30] John Swenson, writing in The Rolling Stone Jazz & Blues Guide (1999), also recommended the Electric Ballroom recording, along with "Home Cooking's Live at the Texas Opry House (documenting a 1976 show in Houston)", saying they are "the best antidotes to King's lackluster studio work from these years".[31]
In his only review of a King album, The Best of Freddie King (1975) by Shelter Records, Christgau wrote in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981) that the 1971–73 recordings are "a bunch of Leon Russell and Don Nix boogies, [King's] voice blurred, his guitar all fake and roll." He added that, while the guitarist had recorded some "acute R&B" singles early in his career, he later "coast[ed] for years".[29] However, in a review of King's 1974 album Burglar for AllMusic, Joe Viglione called it "entertaining and concise" and believed the album "stands as a solid representation of an important musician which is as enjoyable as it is historic".[32]
Discography
Studio albums
Year | Title | Label | Peak chart position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
R&B | US | |||
1961 | Freddy King Sings | King 762 | ||
Let's Hide Away and Dance Away with Freddy King | King 773 | |||
1962 | Boy – Girl – Boy Freddy King, Lulu Reed & Sonny Thompson |
Federal 777 | ||
1963 | Bossa Nova and Blues | Federal 821 | ||
Freddy King Goes Surfin' | Federal 856 | |||
1965 | Bonanza of Instrumentals | Federal 928 | ||
Freddie King Sings Again | Federal 931 | |||
1969 | Freddie King Is a Blues Master | Cotillion SD 9004 | ||
1970 | My Feeling for the Blues | Cotillion SD 9016 | ||
1971 | Getting Ready | Shelter SW8905 | ||
1972 | The Texas Cannonball | Shelter SW8913 | ||
1973 | Woman Across the River | Shelter SW8921 | 54 | 158 |
1974 | Burglar | RSO SO4803 | 53 | |
1975 | Freddie King Larger Than Life | RSO SO4811 |
Selected compilation albums
Year | Title | Label | Peak chart position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
R&B | US | |||
1965 | All His Hits | King 5012 | ||
1976 | Freddie King 1934–1976 | Polydor 831817-2 | ||
1987 | Freddie King 17 Original Greatest Hits | Federal Records | ||
1989 | Just Pickin' | Modern Blues | ||
1993 | Hide Away: The Best of Freddie King | Rhino | ||
1995 | King of the Blues | EMI/Shelter | ||
1997 | Staying Home with the Blues | Universal/Spectrum | ||
2000 | The Best of Freddie King: The Shelter Records Years | The Right Stuff | ||
2008 | The Best of Freddie King | MCA | ||
2009 | Taking Care of Business | Bear Family | ||
2010 | Texas Flyer 1974–1976 | Bear Family | ||
2012 | The Complete King Federal Singles | Real Gone Music |
Charting singles
Year | Title (A-side / B-side) | Label | Peak chart position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
R&B[33] | US[33] | |||
1956 | "Country Boy" / "That's What You Think" | El-Bee 157 | ||
1960 | "Have You Ever Loved a Woman" | Federal 12384 | ||
"You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling" | Federal 12384 | 92 | ||
1961 | "Hide Away" / "I Love the Woman" | Federal 12401 | 5 | 29 |
"Lonesome Whistle Blues" / "It's Too Bad (Things Are Going So Tough)" |
Federal 12415 | 8 | 88 | |
"San-Ho-Zay" | Federal 12428 | 4 | 47 | |
"See See Baby" | Federal 12428 | 21 | ||
"I'm Tore Down" / "Sen-Sa-Shun" | Federal 12432 | 5 | ||
"Christmas Tears" / "I Hear Jingle Bells" | Federal 12439 | 28 |
References
- Koda, Cub. "Freddie King: Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
- O'Neal, Jim (2008). "2008 Hall of Fame Inductees: Freddy King Sings – Freddie (Freddy) King (King, 1961)". The Blues Foundation. Retrieved September 10, 2010.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- "Freddie King – Bio". freddiekingsite.com (Estate & Foundation). Retrieved March 24, 2019.
- O'Neal, Jim; Van Singel, Amy. The Voice of the Blues: Classic Interviews from Living Blues Magazine. Routledge. p. 359.
- Dahl, Bill. "Hideaway". AllMusic. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
- Dixon, Willie; Snowden, Don. I Am the Blues: The Willie Dixon Story. Da Capo.
- Pruter, Robert. Chicago Soul. University of Illinois Press. p. 236.
- "Freddie King: Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
- Hardy, Laing, Barnard and Perretta. Texas Music. Schirmer Books. p. 251.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- Hayner, Richard.C. "The Texas Pop Festival". texaspopfestival.com. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
- "Freddie King, Getting Ready ...: Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
- Kosta, Rick. Texas Music. St. Martin's Press. p. 187.
- Tony Stewart, NME. "Crystal Palace Bowl Concert". pattofan.com. Retrieved January 23, 2010.
- Viglione, Joe. "Burglar". AllMusic. Retrieved May 8, 2009.
- "Freddie King, Larger Than Life". AllMusic. Retrieved May 8, 2009.
- Deming, Mark. "Bob Tench". AllMusic. Retrieved May 8, 2009.
- "Freddie King: Patriarch of Blues Rock". NPR.org. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
- "Freddie King And The Harsh 'Business' Of The Blues". NPR.org. July 14, 2010. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
- Corcoran, Michael (2005). All Over the Map: True Heroes of Texas Music. University of Texas Press. p. 54.
- Gress, Jesse (2006). Guitar Licks of the Texas Blues-rock Heroes. San Francisco, California: Backbeat Books. p. 35. ISBN 978-0879308766.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Van Beveren, Amy. "Freddie King". tshaonline.org.
- "Freddie King". Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
- "100 Greatest Guitarists. No: 15 Freddie King". rollingstone.com. Archived from the original on September 6, 2013. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
- Dahl, Bill. "Freddie King: Hide Away – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved May 7, 2019.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Jackson, Blair (2000). Garcia: An American Life. New York City: Penguin Books. p. 66. ISBN 978-1101664063.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Garcia, Jerry; Reich, Charles A.; Wenner, Jann (1972). Garcia. Straight Arrow Books. p. 122. ISBN 978-0879320300.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Corcoran, Michael (2005). All Over the Map: True Heroes of Texas Music. University of Texas Press. p. 51. ISBN 0292709552.
- Schwartz, Roberta Freund (2013). How Britain Got the Blues: The Transmission and Reception of American Blues Style in the United Kingdom. Ashgate Publishing. p. 220. ISBN 1409493768.
- Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: K". Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Robertchristgau.com. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 089919026X. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
- Graff, Gary, ed. (1996). MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 0787610372.
- Swenson, John (1999). "Freddie King". The Rolling Stone Jazz & Blues Album Guide. Random House. ISBN 0-679-76873-4.
- Viglione, Joe. "Freddie King: Burglar – Album Review". AllMusic. Retrieved May 6, 2019.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Whitburn 1988, p. 216.
Bibliography
- Busby, Mark (2004). The Southwest. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-32805-3.
- Clapton, Eric (2007). Clapton: The Autobiography. Broadway Books. Digitized September 4, 2008. ISBN 978-0-385-51851-2.
- Corcoran, Michael (2005). All Over the Map: True Heroes of Texas Music. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-70976-8.
- Forte, Dan (2000). "Freddie King". In Rollin' and Tumblin': The Postwar Blues Guitarists. Jas Obrecht, ed. San Francisco: Miller Freeman Books. pp. 275–280. ISBN 0-87930-613-0, 978-0-87930-613-7.
- Hardy, Phil; Laing, Dave; Stephen, Barnard; Perretta, Don (1988). Encyclopedia of Rock. 2nd ed., rev. Schirmer Books. Digitized December 21, 2006. ISBN 978-0-02-919562-8.
- Koster, Rick (2000). Texas Music. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-25425-4.
- Lawrence, Robb (2008). The Early Years of the Les Paul Legacy 1915–1963. Hal Leonard. ISBN 978-0-634-04861-6.
- O'Neal, Jim; Van Singel, Amy (2002). The Voice of the Blues: Classic Interviews from Living Blues Magazine. 10th ed. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-93653-8.
- Pruter, Robert (1992). Chicago Soul. 5th ed., reprint. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-06259-9.
- Whitburn, Joel (1988). Joel Whitburn's Top R&B Singles 1942-1988. Record Research, Incorporated. ISBN 0898200695.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
External links
- Freddie King discography at Discogs