He found inspiration in the music of the African American church.  He  dreamed of becoming a gospel singer and learned the rudiments of guitar  from his preacher. He arranged with his employer to acquire his first  guitar and taught himself further with mail-order instruction books.  
  In his teens, he dropped out of school and returned to the Delta, where  he drove a tractor on a large plantation. On his off hours, he sang for  small change on street corners in the nearby towns, sometimes visiting  as many as four towns in a single evening. He also joined small gospel  groups and urged the other singers to join him in leaving the plantation  life for the opportunities of the city. In the end, he made the  decision to go on his own, and hitchhiked to Memphis with $2.50 in his  pocket. To a farm boy, the city was an intimidating sight, but he was  able to stay for a time with his cousin, the well-known bluesman Bukka  White, who helped him find his way in the city's music circles.  
  After a year of playing on the street and learning from the other  performers who gathered on Beale Street, he was given an opportunity to  perform on the blues singer Sonny Boy Williamson's popular radio  program. Soon he was playing regularly in local night clubs and was  given a regular spot on a black-run radio station. As a radio  personality he was known as the Beale Street Blues Boy, later shortened  to "Blues Boy" King.  
  He made his first recording in 1949 and released six singles before the  year was out. He was signed to a long-term recording contract and began  to play in the small-town cafes, juke joints, and country dance halls of  the region, as far away as he could travel and still return in time for  his radio program.  
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  In 1951 he recorded his seventh single, "Three O'Clock Blues," which  became a national hit, staying at number one on the Rhythm and Blues  charts for 15 weeks. On the strength of this hit record, he embarked on  his first national tour. Appearing in New York for the first time, he  shortened his stage name to B.B. King, the name under which he and his  music have traveled around the world.  
  He enjoyed a second number one R&B hit with 1952's "You Don't Know  Me." More hit records followed, with  "Please Love Me," and "You Upset  Me, Baby." By 1955, he had given up his radio job to tour full time, and bought a  bus he called "Big Red" to transport his band. B.B. and the band played  342 one-night stands in 1956 alone.  
  Still in his late 20s, he had become one of the leading performers on  the blues circuit. Audiences from the deep South to the large cities of  the North thrilled to his rich, warm voice and reveled in his humor and  depth of feeling. Aspiring guitarists studied his records to emulate his  singing, stinging tone. With his crack horn section, he created a fresh  fusion of gospel, jazz, pop and traditional blues that set a new  standard  
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  It took years for King to repay the debts incurred, and while he  remained popular among black audiences in the late 1950s, he did not  achieve the crossover success with white audiences that contemporaries  like Fats Domino, Chuck Berry and Little Richard enjoyed. A change of  record companies did little to boost King's career, and by the early  '60s his first fans were aging and his audience dwindling, despite  another radio hit, 1960's "Sweet Sixteen, Part I."  
  King's fortunes began to change in the mid-1960s, when a new generation  of musicians on both sides of the Atlantic gratefully cited him as a  major influence on their own music. He recorded a historic live album, Live at the Regal,  in 1965 and returned to the Rhythm and Blues charts with "Don't Answer  the Door, Part I"  in 1966. Young rockers such as George Harrison, Eric  Clapton, Jimi Hendrix and Jeff Beck all displayed his influence in their  playing, and B.B. King won a new audience among young rock fans. King  went from playing smaller blues clubs to larger jazz and rock venues.  
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  His tours now took him to concert halls, universities and amphitheaters,  where audiences clamored for his many favorites, "Payin' The Cost to Be  the Boss," "How Blue Can You Get," "Every Day I Have the Blues," and  "Why I Sing the Blues." In  the '70s and '80s, he played nearly 300  dates per year, taking his band to Europe, Asia, Africa, South America  and Australia.  
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  Over the course of his career, B.B. King has received 18 Grammy Awards,  the Presidential Medal of the Arts and the Kennedy Center Honors. In  1991, he opened B.B. King's Blues Club in Memphis; he has since opened  clubs in New York, Los Angeles and Connecticut. His autobiography, Blues All Around Me,  was published in 1996. His 2000 release, Riding With the King,  paired him with his longtime admirer, Eric Clapton. B.B. continues to  tour extensively, averaging over 250 concerts per year around the world.  He is inarguably the most imitated of living blues guitarists, and his  influence on music around the world is incalculable.  






  
  
  
  


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