Blues Biographies
Brownie McGhee
Born: November 30, 1915, Knoxville, Tennessee
Died: February 23, 1996, Oakland, California
Also known as: Walter McGhee
Brownie McGhee played blues guitar in a style that was heavily
influenced by Blind Boy Fuller, a North Carolina native
whose repertoire included a complicated finger picking style
characteristic of a regional genre known as Piedmont blues.
Early in his career, McGhee worked as a traveling performer.
When he made it to North Carolina he met Blind Boy Fuller
and his manager, J.B. Long, and it was Long who helped McGhee
make his first recordings. McGhee later moved to New York
where he teamed up with harmonica player Sonny Terry. With
the help of legendary singer/songwriter Lead Belly, McGhee
and Terry became an important part of the city's folk scene,
working with such artists as Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie.
As a duo they were enormously popular performers and prolific
recording artists for almost four decades. McGhee also opened
a music school in Harlem where he offered guitar lessons.
Both individually and in his partnership with Sonny Terry,
McGhee had a lasting influence on both blues and folk. He
was an accomplished and versatile guitarist and vocalist
whose mastery as a musician included R&B, electric blues
and vintage country blues, in addition to the Piedmont style
he helped preserve.
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