HOME    │     BLUES T-SHIRTS     │     FOLK ART     │     POSTERS     │     CONTACT    │     VIEW CART  





SITE NAVIGATION

Blues Apparel
• Blues T-Shirts

Blues Folk Art

Art by Grego

Blues Posters

Silkscreened Prints  
Digital Posters

Personalized

Blues Music
Blues CD's 

View Cart
or Checkout


Blues Video Clips

About Mojohand

Shipping FAQ

Refund/exchanges

Privacy Policy



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Blues Biographies

John Lee Hooker

Born: August 22, 1917, Clarksdale, Mississippi
Died: August 21, 2001, Los Altos, California

John Lee Hooker was a master of "boogie" with haunting, sensuously compelling signature vocals and the ability to create a whole world of sound from a single, repetitive chord. His unique, original style hugely influenced other blues artists and especially rock and roll. The Rolling Stones, the Animals, early Fleetwood Mac and Johnny Winter are just a few of Hooker's admirers. Early on he was influenced by gospel and Delta blues. He learned to play guitar from his stepfather, who reportedly knew blues legend Charley Patton. In 1943 he moved to Detroit, where his sound was a welcome and complete change from the slicker post-war blues. For the next four decades Hooker continued to work with his signature style, performing and recording, and his devotion to his craft never faded, even when his popularity did. The respect he'd long garnered from the blues and rock community was evident in his comeback 1989 release The Healer, which featured a roll call of prestigious names from both genres. As he aged he was known as a living blues legend, and he continued to perform, even when he had to be slowly escorted to the stage.

Click here to return to the blues biographies page



Mojohand.com is the place to find Blues Lyrics, Chords,
Tabs, sheet music and the words to all your
favorite blues songs





Copyright. (c) Mojohand. 2001. All rights reserved.