• Aaron Thibeaux "T-Bone" Walker (May 28, 1910 – March 16, 1975) was an American blues musician, composer, songwriter and bandleader, who was a pioneer and...
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  • songwriter and producer T-Bone Slim (1890–1942), pen name for American poet, songwriter and labour activist Matti Valentine Huhta T-Bone Walker (1910–1975), American...
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  • Funky Town is an album by blues guitarist and vocalist T-Bone Walker, released by the BluesWay label in 1968. The Encyclopedia of Popular Music wrote...
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  • electric guitar pioneer T-Bone Walker. It is a slow twelve-bar blues performed in the West Coast blues-style that features Walker's smooth, plaintive vocal...
    32 KB (3,609 words) - 14:29, 2 May 2024
  • Tom Wolk (redirect from Tom "T-Bone" Wolk)
    first met guitarist G. E. Smith (who gave him the nickname T-Bone—for blues guitarist T-Bone Walker—after Wolk played his bass behind his head during a solo)...
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  • Thumbnail for Chuck Berry
    by the guitar riffs and showmanship techniques of the blues musician T-Bone Walker, Berry began performing with the Johnnie Johnson Trio. His break came...
    78 KB (7,739 words) - 11:25, 15 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Carlos Santana
    Tj's and Bátiz turned Carlos on to blues music, especially that of T-Bone Walker, Muddy Waters, B.B. King, Chuck Berry, Howlin' Wolf, and James Brown...
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  • Stormy Monday Blues (album) (category T-Bone Walker albums)
    Stormy Monday Blues is an album by blues guitarist/vocalist T-Bone Walker released by the BluesWay label in 1968. AllMusic reviewer Steve Leggett stated:...
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  • the Blues is a studio album by American electric blues guitar pioneer T-Bone Walker. Originally released in 1969, it was his second solo album of the year...
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  • Michel Sardaby (4 September 1935 – 6 December 2023) was a French jazz pianist. Born in Fort-de-France, Martinique, he moved to Paris, where in March 1967...
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  • Johnson. Future bluesmen such as Lightnin' Hopkins, Lil' Son Jackson, and T-Bone Walker were influenced by these developments. Robert Johnson's two recording...
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  • Thumbnail for Steve Miller (musician)
    record and Steve absorbed much from "greats" such as T-Bone Walker, Charles Mingus, and Tal Farlow. Walker taught Steve how to play his guitar behind his back...
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  • Super Black Blues (category T-Bone Walker albums)
    by the Super Black Blues Band featuring Otis Spann, Joe Turner and T-Bone Walker recorded in Los Angeles in 1969 and originally released by the BluesTime...
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  • Workshop at the Newport Folk Festival the same year. He also played in the T-Bone Walker Blues Band during the early 1970s, including an appearance in the Montreux...
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  • Thumbnail for Johnny "Guitar" Watson
    musician. A flamboyant showman and electric guitarist in the style of T-Bone Walker, his recording career spanned 40 years, and encompassed rhythm and blues...
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  • Good Feelin' (category T-Bone Walker albums)
    (stylised as ...good feelin'...) is an album by blues guitarist/vocalist T-Bone Walker recorded in Paris in 1968 and released by the Polydor label in 1969...
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  • a "salty dog" would be someone dear to the speaker's heart. "Salty dog" also means ornery, as in the T-Bone Walker tune "Ain't Salty No More". v t e...
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  • Mean Old World (category T-Bone Walker songs)
    is a blues song recorded by American blues electric guitar musician T-Bone Walker in 1942. It has been described (along with the single's B-side) as "the...
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  • first instrument to be popularly amplified and used by early pioneers T-Bone Walker in the late 1930s and John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters in the 1940s...
    26 KB (3,366 words) - 00:56, 26 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nick Curran
    American blues/rock and roll singer and guitarist. He has been likened to T-Bone Walker, Little Richard, The Sonics, Doug Sahm, Misfits, and The Ramones [by...
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  • Thumbnail for Lowell Fulson
    for contractual reasons as Lowell Fullsom and Lowell Fulsom. After T-Bone Walker, he was the most important figure in West Coast blues in the 1940s and...
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  • electric guitar, Hooker was influenced by the modern urban styles of T-Bone Walker and Robert Nighthawk. He recorded several singles and albums as a bandleader...
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  • Miller, Marlena Shaw, Richard Evans) 6:02 "Call it Stormy Monday" (T-Bone Walker) 3:01 "Where Can I Go?" (Leo Fuld, Sigment Berland, Sonny Miller) 2:21...
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  • Thumbnail for Big Joe Turner
    1969) with T-Bone Walker and Otis Spann Super Black Blues, Volume II (BluesTime/Flying Dutchman, 1970) with Leon Thomas, T-Bone Walker, Eddie "Cleanhead"...
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  • Thumbnail for Papa John Creach
    Armstrong, Fats Waller, Stuff Smith, Charlie Christian, Big Joe Turner, T-Bone Walker, Nat King Cole and Roy Milton. Following his rediscovery by drummer...
    11 KB (1,003 words) - 09:18, 15 August 2024
  • Blue Mood (category T-Bone Walker tribute albums)
    Blue Mood: The Songs of T-Bone Walker is a tribute album by Duke Robillard, dedicated to the songs of T-Bone Walker. JazzTimes thought that Robillard...
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  • Thumbnail for Kenny Burrell
    Moore, and Django Reinhardt as influences, along with blues guitarists T-Bone Walker and Muddy Waters. Burrell is a professor and Director of Jazz Studies...
    29 KB (1,319 words) - 07:40, 24 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Jazz at the Philharmonic
    Willie Smith, Sonny Stitt, Slim Gaillard, Clark Terry, Tommy Turk, T-Bone Walker, Ben Webster, Lee Young, Lester Young, and Trummy Young. The very first...
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  • Thumbnail for Adolfo de la Parra
    Heat, Parra has performed with blues artists such as The Coasters, T-Bone Walker, Ben E. King, Mary Wells, Etta James, and The Platters. He produced...
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  • moves came from that." Others who perpetuated the duckwalk included T-Bone Walker, who already during the 1930s performed dance moves while playing his...
    6 KB (588 words) - 06:26, 6 March 2024