| Las fechorias de Chuck Berry contra Keith Richards |
|
|
|
| Musika - Musika |
|
El "bueno" de Chuck le echó del escenario al mísmisimo Keith Richards. Otra vez, le puso un ojo a la virulé o le quemó la camisa. Sin embargo, Keith R. ha reconocido siempre su influencia y admiración por su manera de tocar rock and roll. De hecho, Chuck B. le debió enseñar a tocar sus canciones. Un listado de sus andanzas, aquí:
======================== The Rolling Stones have crossed paths with Chuck Berry many times. He has had a profound effect on Keith Richards who claims to have stolen most of his licks from Berry. A brief chronology of the Stones' relationship with the "founder" of rock n' roll might look like this: 1960: Keith Richards bumps into Mick Jagger at Dartford Station. Under Mick's arm is Rockin At The Hops by Chuck Berry. 1962: Ian Stewart meets Keith Richards. Ian's first words: "You're the Chuck Berry artist." 1963: The Rolling Stones release their first single - "Come On" by Berry. 1964: After having snubbed the Stones while he was in England, Berry welcomes the boys to Chess Records. 1972: Berry throws Keith off the stage in Hollywood. 1981: Berry gives Keith a black eye at the Ritz in New York. 1983: Berry drops a lit match down Keith's shirt at the LAX. 1987: During the filming of Hail! Hail! Rock & Roll, Berry decides to teach Keith how to play his songs. After all the crap that Keith has taken from Berry one would think that he wouldn't want anything to do with Berry. Yet Keith is still a fan: "Aretha Franklin, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry....If you're offered the chance to work with people like that, to me there's no question; you say, 'Yeah.' 'How much do I owe you?' you say later. All those little things - you dream it, it comes true, if you stick at it and if you hang in for the course." Chuck Berry is the quitar hero's guitar hero. If anyone can be said to have invented rock and roll, it's Chuck Berry. Berry mixed country & western guitar with rhythm & blues in his very first single, "Maybellene" and started rock rolling in the right direction. His double entendre lyrics about girls and cars had people guessing. Berry created what was to become the typical "bad boy" pose which became mandatory for every rebel without a pause. Charles Edward Berry was born in St. Louis on October 18, 1926. At the beginning of his career, Berry played with a blues trio by night and worked as a beautician by day. He met Muddy Waters, who introduced him to Leonard Chess, head of Chicago-based Chess Records. "Maybellene" was released on August 20, 1955 and went to Number 5 in Billboard. Berry was one of the first black artists who crossed over to the white pop charts. When asked why he had been so successful Berry replied: "I think it had a lot to do with The copyright of the article Chuck Berry (1926 - ) in The Rolling Stones is owned by FactoryGirl. Permission to republish Chuck Berry (1926 - ) in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
Read more at Suite101: Chuck Berry (1926 - ) http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/rolling_stones/11018/1#ixzz0kUfp2rrJ my diction. The pop fan could understand what I was saying better than many other singers." A lot of his success had to do about what he wrote. Teens growing up in the '50s heard something they could grab onto in Berry's songs. About his lyrics Berry has said: "Everything I wrote about wasn't about me, but about the people listening."
Berry only had one Number 1 hit, "My Ding-a-Ling." While once accompanied by piano player Johnnie Johnson and members of the Chess Records house band, including Willie Dixon, by 1972 he preferred to recruit pickup musicians in each new town. If you knew how to play rock and roll, it was a given that you'd learned your stuff from the songs of Chuck Berry. Berry never had any problem picking up a backup band. Recommended Listening: After School Session (1957) The first album. Die hard fans love this one. The London Chuck Berry Sessions (1972) Features a live version of "My Ding-A- Ling" Check out Chuck on the WWW:
The copyright of the article Chuck Berry (1926 - ) in The Rolling Stones is owned by FactoryGirl. Permission to republish Chuck Berry (1926 - ) in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
Read more at Suite101: Chuck Berry (1926 - ) http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/rolling_stones/11018/2#ixzz0kUftyeVA
|
