Blues Biographies
Sonny Boy Williamson
Born: March
30, 1914, Jackson, Tennessee
Died: June 1, 1948, Chicago, Illinois
Also known as: John Lee Williamson
Sonny Boy Williamson's innovative skill with the harmonica
brought it to center stage as a lead instrument in Chicago
blues. He also popularized the "call and response"
performance technique with the instrument, delivering a
vocal line, answering with his characteristically sharp
harp riffs followed by another vocal delivery. Williamson
acquired his nickname because of the young age at which
he began performing; during those early years he traveled
the South, sometimes in the company of his biggest influence,
Sleepy John Estes, as well as Robert Nighthawk and others.
In the late 1930s he moved to Chicago where he worked as
a session player and became an influential and successful
mainstay of the city's blues scene as a performer and recording
artist. He is credited with composing many original songs
that became blues standards, especially for the harmonica,
and he influenced a long line of superb harmonica players,
including Junior Wells, Little Walter and Rice Miller, who
was also known as Sonny Boy Williamson II.
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