• B.B. King: The Essential Album Guide
• The 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
The first time you heard electric guitar, it was played
by the reverend in your church. What do you
remember?
It was heaven! Heaven! It was unusual to even have electric light
in the area, and there he was plugging up an electric guitar. It
was new, different — something I can't explain. It was like
he was hitting notes that no one had hit before. I was about seven
years old, and it was so exciting. My mother used to talk about
spanking me to make me go to church, but when we went to Reverend
Archie's church I'd be leading her by the hand because he always
played the guitar.
You popularized the style of single-note guitar solos.
Where did you first hear that kind of playing?
T-Bone Walker was the first that I heard do it on electric guitar.
But if you pick up some of the early Lonnie Johnson, you'll hear
all of that there too. Just not amplified, but you'll hear it all.
And it's just as clear as a crystal. Whatever he hit at, he didn't
miss it, ever.
Neither of those guys bent notes with vibrato the way
you do.
I wanted to be able to do like my cousin Bukka White and some of
the other great slide guitarists. But I have stupid fingers. They
just wouldn't do it with the slide. So I fell in love with the
guitar player for Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys. His name is
Leon [McAuliffe]. On the records, you'd always hear Bob say, "Oh,
Leon!" And the guitar talked!
So I always equated the bottleneck with that sound, as well as records from the islands, like Hawaii. So what I would do is take the neck of the guitar, twirl my hand to get vibrato — and my stupid ears started saying, "That sounds similar to what they were doing." And every time I pick up a guitar, that's still the first thing I try to do.
When did you realize that your style was having a wide
influence?
Well, I was watching TV one night, and the lead singer of the
Beatles — John Lennon — said he wished he could play
like B.B. King. I almost fell out of my chair. And that started me
to thinking, "God, what am I doing? The greatest group on Earth,
and the guy is saying that to me?" I tried not to let it go to my
head. But I sure thought about it. That was like Jesus Christ
coming down and saying, "Yeah, B., you're pretty good."
Unlike a lot of blues players who followed you, you've
never been known for speed or flashiness.
Well, guitar players are kind of like the days of the Wild West.
The one that was the fastest was the one that practiced the most.
But I don't even talk that fast, so why would I play so fast? So,
what I do mostly is try to play the note to make it make sense, not
only to me, but to you, too. If I went on a stage and just started
playing everything I like, you'd probably look at me like, "What
the hell is he doing?"
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.