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Howlin'
Wolf was born Chester Arthur Burnett on June 10, 1910 somewhere between
West Point and Aberdeen, Mississippi.1
At age 13, his family moved to a plantation on the Mississippi River Delta
near Ruleville, Mississippi. Prior to this move, Burnett's musical
experience had been confined to singing in the Baptist church on Sundays.
At age 18, his father gave him a guitar and around the
same time he met Charley Patton, an influential blues performer. Taking a
liking to the young man, Patton showed Burnett the basics of the Delta
Blues style. For the next five years, Burnett farmed full time with his
family while occasionally singing and playing at weekend fish fries and
Saturday night parties. In 1933, the Burnett family moved onto a
plantation near Parkin, Arkansas, where Burnett learned to play harmonica
from Sonny Boy Williamson, another influential Delta blues musician. He teamed up with Williamson, abandoned
farming, and began moving around the Delta. Playing in bars and on the
streets, Burnett became "well known amongst the itinerant musicians
of Mississippi...." During his wanderings, Burnett crossed paths with
"almost every major
Burnett continued to roam the Delta,
singing and playing until 1941 when he was drafted. After his discharge in
1945, Burnett returned to Parkin for a brief period of time. He then
farmed on his own in Penton, Mississippi for two years. In 1948, Burnett
moved to West Memphis, Arkansas, formed a band of his own, and gave up
farming in favor of a career in music. Touring Arkansas and Mississippi,
Burnett and his band "built a solid reputation for themselves in the
Delta jukes." Burnett's career-making break came at age
38, when he was given the chance to perform a weekly show on a West
Memphis radio station, KWEM. In between songs, the program advertised grain and farm implements. The show was so successful, that Burnett was offered a job selling advertising to local store owners, a job he held until leaving for Chicago in 1952. It was during his stint at KWEM that
Burnett first began using the name, Howlin' Wolf, which he had heard on a
Funny Papa Smith record Up until that time, Burnett performed under
various stage names, including Big Foot Chester and Bull Cow. However, the name Howlin' Wolf was particularly suited to
his "fierce singing style, which was punctuated with falsetto whoops
and howls.” The success of the radio program opened the
door for Wolf's first phonograph recording, made in Memphis in 1950, and
released on the Chess record label. The 78 RPM record, How
Many More Years and Moanin' at Midnight sold 60,000 copies,
a major hit at the time. The success drew the attention of a rival record
label, RPM, and for a period of 18 months, both the Chess
and RPM labels fought over the rights to Wolf's recordings. A
contractual agreement was finally reached, and in the fall of 1952 Wolf
settled down in Chicago, where he recorded exclusively for Chess
for the remainder of his career.
Toward the end of his career, Wolf was
plagued with chronic kidney trouble and would perform only in cities where
he had access to a dialysis machine. A friend recalled, "after each
exhaustive treatment, he'd go straight to his gig." Chester Arthur Burnett, a.k.a. The Howlin' Wolf, passed away
on January 10, 1976, at the Hines Veterans Administration Hospital in
Chicago, Illinois. Howlin' Wolf was a seminal figure in the
development of the Chicago blues style. His fierce, growling voice,
punctuated by his trademark falsetto 'howl,' carried with it the primitive
energy of the country blues he learned as a young man on the Delta. He successfully made the transition between the country style and the urban style, and in doing so, he was one of a handful of artists who shaped and defined the emerging urban blues sound Literally hundreds of artists (his contemporaries included) have claimed him as an influence, and equal numbers have recorded their own versions of his songs. ALBUMS 1959: Moanin' in the Moonlight 1962: Howlin' Wolf Sings the Blues; Howlin' Wolf 1964: 'Rockin' The Blues - Live In Germany 1965: The Real Folk Blues 1966: Live In Cambridge 1966: The Super Super Blues Band 1967: More Real Folk Blues 1969: The Howlin' Wolf Album 1971: Message to the Young 1971: The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions 1972: Live and Cookin' (At Alice's Revisited) 1973: Evil - Live at Joe's Place 1973: The Back Door Wolf 1974: London Revisited |
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