Friday May 18th 2012
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T-Bone Walker – The Electric Guitar Pioneer

The Best of T-Bone Walker
You could be forgiven for not looking into T-Bone Walker if you’re not a Texas Blues or early Chicago blues fan. The time of his appearance on the blues scene and name could easily have you lumping him in with others who you may have listened to and maybe not appreciated at the time. That’s what I did. But I was wrong and you would be too.

B.B. King himself has stated that T-Bone Walker was his primary influence. Even that only scratches the surface of what T-Bone Walker gave us. T-Bone popularized the lead electric guitar. His blues spanned jazz, swing, doo wop and early rock. His riffs echo in the playing of Freddie King, Chuck Berry and Jimmy Rogers. Make no mistake, T-Bone Walker changed the world of blues and left an indelible mark on many modern music genres. He also played his guitar in a way cool way horizontally out in front of his body. Here’s a great example.

T-Bone was a consummate musician who wrote musical scores. His blues do not sound like those handed down through the ages. I find it fascinating that one of my favorite blues songs of all time was “borrowed” by Jimmy Rogers and in fact was a T-Bone Walker tune. Check this out

Yeah, Jimmy Rogers “Walkin’ By Myself” is really different lyrics to a T-Bone Walker song called “Why Not”! In just those first few bars you can hear more music than most of us generate in a lifetime. Another great T-Bone tune is Stormy Monday. Stormy Monday has been covered by almost every blues and jazz musician as well as almost any rock band from the early 70′s. As a matter of fact if you search for an MP3 of Stormy Monday on Amazon.com you’ll get 645 hits.

OK so the list of T-Bone Walker recommended recordings is pretty long but here are just a few:
T-Bone Blues- 1959 (great coverage of his work in the 50′s and great sound too considering the vintage)
The Complete Recordings of T-bone Walker 1940-1954
– this is a 6 CD set that covers from 1940 to 1954.
Blues Masters: The Very Best of T-Bone Walker
– this is single CD collection for those wanting the abridged version of The Complete Recordings. It comes highly recommended by Club Koda co-author of Blues for Dummies.

Here is a real treat for blues fans – this video is 25 minutes of a TV concert featuring T-Bone Walker and a young B.B. King.
T-Bone Walker and B.B. King

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5 Responses to “T-Bone Walker – The Electric Guitar Pioneer”

  1. [...] This post was Twitted by worldofblues – Real-url.org [...]

  2. hairylarry says:

    WorldOfBlues,

    T-Bone Walker wrote the most covered Blues song of all time, “Stormy Monday Blues”.

    Based on that song here’s is my advice to songwriters on how to get your songs covered.

    Write a change that musicians like to play. “Stormy Monday Blues”, with the ninths and minor sevenths, sounds great and is fun to play. It’s a slow blues but not just another slow blues.

    Write a lyric that’s easy to remember. In “Stormy Monday Blues” the verses go Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, …

    Easy to remember.

    Thanks,

    Hairy Larry

  3. [...] T-Bone Walker – The Electric Guitar Pioneer [...]

  4. [...] T-Bone Walker – The Electric Guitar Pioneer | WorldofBlues.com worldofblues.com/Blog/2009/05/06/t-bone-walker-the-electric-guitar-pioneer – view page – cached Welcome to World of Blues .com a community dedicated to bringing the world of blues music together., You could be forgiven for not looking into T-Bone Walker if you’re not a Texas Blues or early Chicago blues fan. The time of his appearance on the blues scene — From the page [...]

  5. Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by worldofblues: one of my favs http://is.gd/2wjjc RT @zenuuatu T-Bone Walker At The Philharmonic (1966) http://bit.ly/4kZ8LH #music #blues #jazz…

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