Blues
music icon B.B. King will begin hosting his own weekly music show
for XM Radio beginning in September 2008. The program will feature
a broad range of Blues and Gospel music hand-selected by King, along
with stories about the artists and other personal anecdotes from
the Bluesman’s epic career. In anticipation of King’s
hosting debut, this week XM relaunched its dedicated Blues channel
Bluesville as BB King’s Bluesville (XM 74).
“I love the Blues and am looking forward
to sharing my passion, stories and my favorite music with all the
folks who listen to XM, one of the few places where the vibrant
sounds of the blues still thrives,” said B.B. King in a statement.
For more than 60 years, Riley B. King - better
known as B.B. King - has defined the Bblues for a worldwide audience.
Since he started recording in the 1940s, he has released over 50
albums, many of them classics, won 14 Grammy Awards, been inducted
into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame and the Rock & Roll Hall
of Fame, and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the National
Medal of the Arts, the Kennedy Center Honors, the Grammy Lifetime
Achievement Award, and the NARM (National Association of Recording
Merchandisers) Chairman’s Award, among many other awards.
In a special ceremony at the Library of Congress, Librarian of Congress,
James H. Billington presented B.B. with a “Living Legend”
medal in honor of his achievements as a musician and ambassador
for the Blues. After 10,000 concerts, B.B. King continues to bring
his music to audiences around the globe spending the better part
of each year on the road with his beloved guitar “Lucille.”
On August 26, Geffen Records will release
B.B.’s newest T Bone Burnett-produced album, One Kind Favor,
and, on September 13, King—one of few living musicians in
the world to be so honored--will preside at the opening B.B. King
Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in his hometown of Indianola,
Mississippi.
B.B. King was born September 16, 1925, on
a plantation in Itta Bene, Mississippi, near Indianola. In his youth,
he played on street corners for dimes, and would sometimes play
in as many as four towns a night. In 1947, he hitchhiked to Memphis,
Tennessee, to pursue his music career. Memphis was where every important
musician of the South gravitated, and which supported a large musical
community where every style of African-American music could be found.
B.B. stayed with his cousin Bukka White, one of the most celebrated
Blues performers of his time, who schooled B.B. further in the art
of the Blues.
B.B.’s
always been the mayor of XM’s Bluesville, now he is the King!
Long Live The King!
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