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Remembering Ike Turner, Rock Pioneer and R&B Giant (1931-2007)

12/12/07, 8:15 pm EST


Ike Turner an essential and largely undervalued figure in the history of both rhythm & blues and rock & roll, died in his home in San Marcos, California, earlier today. He was seventy-six years old. The cause of his death is unknown at this time.

To the public, Turner was best known as half of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue, a hard-hitting R&B band that tore off a string of hits in the Sixties and early Seventies — most notably a torrid version of Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Proud Mary” that cracked the Top Ten and became a pop-culture staple on the basis of Tina’s smoldering spoken introduction to the song (“We never, ever do nothin’ nice and easy”). Influential far beyond its hits, the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991.

But Ike Turner had been a musical innovator for years before he met Anna Mae Bullock, the singer who would eventually become his wife and, as Tina Turner, propel him to international fame. Born in Clarksdale, Mississippi, in 1931 and raised on a steady diet of the blues, Turner eventually became an important songwriter, producer, guitarist, pianist, band leader and talent scout. “Rocket 88,” a blistering R&B hit in 1951 that is often cited as the first rock & roll song, may have been credited to Jackie Brenston and the Delta Cats. But Brenston, who sang the song, was simply the saxophonist in Turner’s band, the Kings of Rhythm, who performed the song under Turner’s leadership. Turner played piano on the track, and may well have written it, though that, too, was credited to Brenston at the time. It would not be the last time Ike Turner was overlooked.

But without becoming a star in his own right, Turner thrived in the free-wheeling days of the independent record industry in the South in the 1950s. A propulsive pianist who first learned his style from the bluesman Pinetop Perkins, whom he met as a child, Turner eventually became an outstanding guitarist. His rhythmic sense was at once rough and impeccable, while his tremolo-laden solos rippled with excitement. His skills as a musician — he played on tracks by the likes of Howlin’ Wolf, Otis Rush and Buddy Guy — were matched by his abilities as a talent scout (a role he played for Sam Phillips, among others) and band leader.

Turner met Anna Mae Bullock in St. Louis, where he had moved in 1956, and, renamed Tina, she soon joined his band. (The couple would not marry until 1962.) The Ike and Tina Turner Revue gained a strong reputation on the R&B circuit on the strength of Tina’s electrifying on-stage presence and the daunting bands and arrangements Ike put together. English musicians obsessed with American R&B eventually helped call attention to the group — Ike and Tina opened for the Rolling Stones on that band’s legendary 1969 tour — and they became extremely successful.

Things slowed down for the group in the Seventies, however, and Ike and Tina split up in 1976. After Tina published her autobiography, I, Tina, in 1986 (co-written with then-Rolling Stone staffer Kurt Loder, and generated by a feature Loder had written for the magazine), the story of Ike’s scarifying physical and emotional abuse of her became widely known, much to the detriment of Ike’s reputation. The enormous success of What’s Love Got To Do With It, the 1993 film based on the book, only solidified the image of Ike as a brutal demon. To say the couple never reconciled would be a vast understatement. Tina Turner issued the following statement today: “Tina is aware that Ike passed away earlier today. She has not had any contact with him in thirty-five years. No further comment will be made.” At various points, Ike was arrested for drugs and weapons possession, and he was jailed in the early Nineties.

Still, Ike Turner had begun to perform and record again in the past decade, and earlier this year he was awarded a Grammy in the category of “Best Traditional Blues Album” for his 2006 release, Risin’ With The Blues. He played piano on the Gorillaz’ track, “Every Planet We Reach Is Dead,” and he had planned to release a collaboration with the Black Keys, produced by Danger Mouse, next year. “To me, Ike Turner was a man of many myths and legends,” Danger Mouse said today. “I was fortunate enough to discover his many gifts to rock & roll and modern music, but also his great redemption as a man. I learned so much from Ike, and I’m very, very sad he’s gone.”

Ike Turner never displayed the requisite regret required for rehabilitation in the public’s eyes, and so he never fully reclaimed the spotlight. A kind of cultural precursor to O.J. Simpson, he often seemed more mystified by his former wife’s indictment of him than either sorrowful or in denial. Musically, however, his importance cannot be denied — and his discovery of Tina Turner is only one of the reasons why. Finally, that reputation may well have been what he cared about the most.

[Photo: Getty]


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Comments

countryfeedback | 12/12/2007, 4:48 pm EST

ike turner was an asshole

scolegro | 12/12/2007, 5:06 pm EST

What an important, influential musician. Love those early, pre-Tina Kings of Rhythm sides. RIP Ike.

Rainbo | 12/12/2007, 5:25 pm EST

In my opinion, Ike Turner is the SINGLE MOST UNDER-VALUED and Under-appreciated seminal rock and roll and rhythm and blues figure in American Musical history, period.

He will be GREATLY missed.

charliemapleton(aka CM Funk) | 12/12/2007, 5:41 pm EST

Ike Turner was one of the original architects of this spectacular, state-of-the-art establishment we all know and love called rhythm & blues. Despite the fact everything wasn’t all sugar & spice with the eternally faboulous Tina Turner, that real funky ish they brought from way beyond the Mason-Dixon line truthfully was the exeption. Ike will seriously be remembered for revolutionizing it.

In the meantime, lighters up for another legend.

STLer | 12/12/2007, 6:06 pm EST

Ike was a mothafvcker, but he could also play a mothafvckin’ guitar. He was on the Miles Davis level of musical proficiency, and personal drama. People rarely mention Miles’ mistreatment of his wives when discussing his genius but they always dog out Ike for it.

Ike Turner’s impact on music will never be acknowledged to the level it deserves, which is a real shame.

wrecksracer | 12/12/2007, 6:30 pm EST

If we are going to hold our artists to some kind of high moral values, I guess we can stop listening to half of the great country, blues, and rock artists. Many of the great country blues artists were murderers. The impact Ike Turner had on the blues and rock are immeasurable….(not defending him beating Tina, though)

Marty P. | 12/12/2007, 6:46 pm EST

What else was Ike supposed to do?? He HAD to keep Tina in line!! RIP Ike !!

Gummybear | 12/12/2007, 8:30 pm EST

its a shame to loose another great soul legend. He is extremely under appreciated and will always be known for abusing Tina rather that for his musicianship. RIP brother

Night Torn Mad Wuth Footsteps | 12/12/2007, 9:05 pm EST

Good riddance. He would’ve never as successful as became if it weren’t for Tina. And he couldn’t do ayuthing after she left. This bullshit about him being some great guitarist is way overblown! Fuck him. Rot in hell, jagoff!

RIP | 12/12/2007, 9:38 pm EST

This A LEGEND, REALLY A ROCK AND ROLL PIONEER, SUPER UNDERVALUED
PEOPLE LIKE LED ZEPPELIN SHOULD THANK HIM

Shaw | 12/12/2007, 10:33 pm EST

Nice tribute, but Ike Turner did not play on “River Deep, Mountain High”

That and I really wish that you had the ORIGINAL version of Rocket 88 instead of this way too slick 90’s update….

Chuck Prophet | 12/12/2007, 11:42 pm EST

Maybe Ike never had much success after they split up, but what did Tina do? Record a bunch of dreary Mark Knopfler middle-of-the-road tunes, had a hit with “what’ love gut 2 du w/it” and that was about it. wouldnt it have been great if Dave Letterman had gotten them on the show like he did with Sonny and Cher, and they could get up with Paul Shaffer’s band and sing Proud Mary together again – and maybe Ike could take a swing at her for old times’ sake.

john dallas | 12/13/2007, 12:25 am EST

Ike Turner had as much to do with what we now call Rock ‘n Roll as anyone. From the years of 1948 thru 1954, he was one of the most important musicians in the Memphis area…where electric rock ‘n roll was born. His involvement is music during those early years were not only as a pianist and bandleader, but also as a talent scout, songwriter, booking agent, producer, etc. When he decided to play guitar (around 1952), he became a killer player. you could (and someone should) write a book about his pre-Tina years. He is easily one of the greatest Strat players of all time.

mikeky | 12/13/2007, 10:01 am EST

you know, you really shouldn’t talk shit about a man who’s gone now. you don’t talk ill of the dead. it’s in bad form.

so hats off to ike turner, the…well, creator of rock ‘n’ roll.
much respect.

Shakes, England says | 12/13/2007, 10:09 am EST

RIP Ike, not 1 of us knew what happened between you n Tina, we can only speculate, from interveiws and the media, none of us have been your position so we don’t know how we would have dealt with it either.
We do know that you discovered Tina- fine, props to you. You helped EACH OTHER become known worldwide. But, you abused that power through fear and inexperience. You too have your place in Music and its a shame its tarnised.
Tina said ‘no comment’- I’m not surprised, she above all others will right now be thinking of all you guys had and lost. In her own way, i know she’s grieving- not because of leaving you but because she’s lost someone who helped define who she has become. Wherever your spirit is i pray that you too will finally be at rest.
Sleep Ike and take your rest. God Bless.

Come on | 12/13/2007, 10:15 am EST

Everybody fights. But you don’t put hands on each other. Real simple!

GeneSnake 7's | 12/13/2007, 10:36 am EST

re: Shakes, England says | 12/13/2007, 10:09 am EST

“RIP Ike, not 1 of us knew what happened between you n Tina, we can only speculate, from interveiws and the media, none of us have been your position so we don’t know how we would have dealt with it either.”

I don’t take Tina as a liar. If you’ve seen “what’s love got to do with it” it seem to ring really true.

In, 1951, quite a few years before rock and roll was invented, Ike had what many believe to be the first roch and roll song ever recorded with “Rockin’ 88″. It’s too bad he was a son of a bitch, his legacy wouldn’t be so tarnished.

shaka | 12/13/2007, 11:17 am EST

Ike Turner was THE man. Pure greasy soulful old talent

edmund | 12/13/2007, 11:34 am EST

Extremely undervalued? True, he is but who can we blame for that? No one but him. Ike gave himself a really bad reputation and reputation is everything so he screwed himself up, it’s not Tina or the media who are responsible for his non-acknowledgement from the industry

Meatwad | 12/13/2007, 12:02 pm EST

Very true, that if we were to impose some sort of moral standard on our favorite musicians that we may not like much popular music.
But the important thing is to remember here is the artist’s contribution to his craft. Ike Turner contributed quite a bit to blues, R&B, rock n roll.

sean | 12/13/2007, 2:12 pm EST

someone referenced “river deep mountain high”…i understood that ike and phil spector (who produced “river deep”) hated each other…and that spector wouldn’t permit ike to perform on the song in ‘66, even though ike’s wife tina was all over it…

cshell | 12/13/2007, 3:28 pm EST

Ike was great on guitar and piano, both innovative and skillful. His arrangements were excelled by no one. He recognized Tina’s talent and shaped it. He’s responsible for her stardom. He sacraficed his own career for her fame and his meal ticket. His last 2 cd’s won grammys. His influence is pervasive. Don’t like him? The music you love has him in it and the musician’s that made it love him. Go pick on James Brown for the same shit: probems with drugs and women. From his last CD: “They made a movie bout me and all them things ain’t true”. Shut up and go listen. Last 2 cds are great.

Helvis II | 12/13/2007, 4:04 pm EST

re: sean | 12/13/2007, 2:12 pm EST

“someone referenced “river deep mountain high”…i understood that ike and phil spector (who produced “river deep”) hated each other…and that spector wouldn’t permit ike to perform on the song in ‘66, even though ike’s wife tina was all over it…”

You’re absolutely right about the hatred between the two. They also both turned out to be evil colossal assholes!

You can give Ike all the credit for his influence on R and B and Rock n’ Roll, but he wasn’t nearly the genius that Phil Spector was.

Spector could write orchestrations that Ike couldn’t comprehend. And there was no one better at making incredible sounding records. I think “River Deep, Mountain High” was her best song by far!!!

Anonymous | 12/13/2007, 4:07 pm EST

He’ll never get rid of the reputation he had.

Maybe we can judge him based on his work now he’s dead.

Gwen | 12/13/2007, 4:07 pm EST

He’ll never get rid of the reputation he had.

Maybe we can judge him based on his work now he’s dead.

jano | 12/14/2007, 11:43 am EST

there’s a great obit at moistworks.com. ike sounds like he was a sad man, and an asshole, and a great musician.

david | 12/14/2007, 12:39 pm EST

wot he did to that woman was just not on yes he was good at wot he did but come on tina made him big

nano | 12/14/2007, 6:59 pm EST

if you read Kurt Loder’s book, you’ll see Ike is pictured in a better light than in the movie, where he’s plainly the villain. in Tina’s autobiography he still beats her, but there are other sides to him and both Tina and Loder talk about his music.
about Spector: the book states that Ike admired Spector’s work once he got over the jealousy of being taken out the “River deep, mountain high” sessions.
in fact, Tina says he build his own studio replicating Spector’s work (and sniffed almost as much cocain as him).

Anonymous | 12/14/2007, 7:06 pm EST

Jimi Hendrix Sheit I taught him everthing he knows-IKE Turner

Mahalia | 12/15/2007, 12:41 pm EST

Tired and a bit sickened of folk denigrating Tina to rehabilitate Ike. Facts are that after A Fool In Love the finer moments of their career came courtesy of Tina – Ike was excluded from the SPector sessions (you should check out the underappreciated I’ll Never Need More Than This – the best ever Wall of Sound track?), it was Tina’s idea to cover Proud Mary and she wrote Nutbush City Limits.

And her solo success has been astonishing – at 45 she produced in Private Dancer an album that struck commercial and critical gold and sits as an equal to I Never Loved A Man or Dusty In Memphis, and at an age when most of her peers (Aretha, Diana, Dusty, Dionne) were falling out of favour.

And she’s still in sublime form – check out her cover of Edith and the Kingpin on Herbie Hancock’s The River – a jazzy vocal that Ella would have been proud of.

Tina’s not just an icon who’s produced art of the highest order for 50 years she’s a woman of grace and decency – some posters on here would do well to take a leaf out of her book.

mlaclair922 | 12/15/2007, 11:06 pm EST

Ike Turner deserves his important place as one of a handfull of rock and roll founders. His unfortunate behavior should never compromise the memory his gift. Much of Ike’s music from the 50’s was original and impeccable. Was he a coked-up asshole who mistreated Tina? Certainly. Now that we all agree on that, let’s listen to Ike’s music. It’ll knock you over.

Garry B. Coston | 12/16/2007, 10:10 am EST

Well, another legend bites the dust. Let’s admit it, Ike made Tina and Tina made Ike, without Ike Tina wouldn’t be Tina Turner, without Tina, Ike wouldn’t have become as well known as he is today. Though I love Tina Turner, and am a fan, I don’t agree with her being quiet or mum regarding his death; that is, she should at least say she is grateful for the opportunity he gave her and without him, she probably wouldn’t be who she is today. Otherwise, I like Ike, didn’t agree with his mistreatment of Tina, but I don’t judge him for that. He is answering for that even as we are posting in this forum!

kirbyforever | 12/17/2007, 4:43 am EST

Yeah he was no nive man, but he was a good actor. Turner and Hooch was a great movie.

Dr Dacapo | 12/18/2007, 11:48 am EST

The Godfather of Rock’n Roll is dead, in my mind he will be greatly missed. Thank god for the legacy he left behind – the greatest of music possible. The very fact that at least a few people now take the the opportunity and show us that they can not see things objectivly is just another sad statement. Leave the man alone for f*** sake, have some decancy

bird | 12/20/2007, 4:19 am EST

it is most saddening to hear of the great Ike Turner’s passing.His private life became very public ( which we all know)and while that side should never be tolerated by anyone , please don’t overlook his incredible contribution to music and other musicians. Learning piano from Pinetop Perkins , what a dream. play on and RIP IKE

arizona mama | 12/22/2007, 12:43 am EST

Never liked the guy-thought he was an arrogant idiot. No great loss. Dont blame Tina for not commenting-not worth the time -he doesnt deserve it after all the abuse-never an excuse for that.

Robert Johnson | 1/15/2008, 11:03 pm EST

To equate Ike Turner with O.J SImpson, a murderer is sick. Did Anthony DeCurtis( a great writer, really go that low???

Tina could have said something kind about his death. It is her problem and weakness that she could not, for Ronnie’s sake (their child together). That she could not is sad. I pray for her. She is so bitter.

LILT | 3/5/2008, 2:44 pm EST

IKE IS GREAT

AA | 5/30/2008, 7:57 pm EST

You Can’t judge a man until you have walked a mile in his shoes,

Have you ever been responsable for paying a staff with families at a cost of eighty thousand a month and then have the one responsable for your main source of income decide to stop performing, and you had to deal with this while on tour and hear this under pressure with very little sleep. How would you react. Unless you had been under the same stressfull situation you can not say.

How can you take a splinter out of another man’s Eye when you have a log in your own.

Have you never done wrong that you can condem someone for doing wrong?

Have you looked in the mirror
before you made your harsh comments.

PJ | 8/22/2008, 1:42 am EST

I love the fact that none of you people know a thing about IKE and TINA’s music. There are tons of ORIGINAL tunes that are Freakin’ AWESOME!!!SUCH AS (Working Together, It Aint Right, Contact High, Feel Good, Hully Gully, Make me Over,Took a Trip, Humpy Dumpty, I Idolize You, and I like it). Ike was a wonderful musician but the drugs got in the way. There is a clip on You Tube that shows how bad is playing got. Its the Live in Mexico Concert. Ike doesn’t even take the solo on “I Smell Trouble.” There are also plenty of recording were Tina’s vocals are not great.(Check out the Album Nuff Said or Let me Touch your Mind). Its sad that he has past, but his music lives on. The Ike and Tina story is spelled out in all of those records. “it aint right lovin to be lovin’”-Ike Turner. “you can take him, cause I don’t love him anymore”-Ike Turner. “When I stumble to my feet I pray your face be the last I see”-Tina Turner Lets appreciate there contibution to music cause they were the Sh*t!! Someone should do a documentary about the musicians that play on the Ike and Tina albums. SOKO RICHARDSON is the best soul funk drummer of all time!!!!

melvin | 2/11/2009, 8:47 pm EST

What was Ike Turner’s jump band called

melvin | 2/11/2009, 8:47 pm EST

What was Ike Turner’s jump band called

Dave D | 10/10/2009, 7:53 pm EST

I’ve heard BB. King call Ike Turner “the Man”. That said it all for me. Besides anyone who is responsible for
1.The first rock song
2.Discovering the Howlin Wolf
3.Discovering Tina Turner.
4.Playing on thousands of classic rock songs as a piano man or guitarist.
5.Inventing many guitar and piano licks
Has contributed more than almost anyone else in the rock hall of fame.
recognise his genius give this man his due.

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