Bo Diddley(1928-2008)
- Actor
- Composer
- Music Department
Ever heard "I Want Candy" or "Not Fade Away" or "Willie & The Hand
Jive", Shirley & Company's "Shame, Shame, Shame" or
U2's "Desire" or
George Michael's "Faith"? If
you have, then you've heard the "Bo Diddley beat", the most famous beat
in the world! One of the founding fathers of rock 'n' roll, Bo
Diddley's innovative pounding and hypnotic, Latin-tinged beat, his vast
array of electric custom-built guitars, his use of reverb, tremelo and
distortion to make his guitars talk, mumble and roar, his use of female
musicians, his wild stage shows, and his on-record and on-stage
rapping, pre-date all others. Bo Diddley was born Ellas Bates on Sunday
December 30, 1928, on a small farm near the town of McComb,
Mississippi, in rural Pike County, close to the Louisiana border, the
only child of Ethel Wilson and Eugene Bates, he had three half-brothers
and a half-sister. He was adopted by his mother's cousin, Mrs. Gussie
McDaniel, along with his cousins Willis, Lucille and Freddie, and
adopted the name Ellas McDaniel. In the mid-1'30s the family moved to
the south side of Chicago. Soon after, he began to take violin lessons
from Professor O.W. Frederick at the Ebenezer Missionary Baptist
Church. He studied the violin for 12 years, composing two concertos for
the instrument. For Christmas in 1940, his sister Lucille bought him
his first guitar, a cheap Harmony acoustic. It was at this time that he
acquired the nickname "Bo Diddley" (" . . . Bo Diddley is me; to tell
ya the truth, I don't know what it [the name] really is . . . ") from
his fellow pupils at the Foster Vocational High School in Chicago. The
newly named Bo Diddley had long been fascinated by the rhythms that he
heard coming from the sanctified churches. A frustrated drummer, he
tried to translate the sounds that he heard into his own style.
Gradually he began to duplicate what he did with his violin bow by
rapidly flicking his pick across his guitar strings: "I play the guitar
as if I'm playing the drums . . . I play drum licks on the guitar." He
continued to practice the guitar through his early teens. Shortly
before leaving school he formed his first group, a trio named The
Hipsters, later known as The Langley Avenue Jive Cats, after the
Chicago street where he lived. Upon graduation he pursued a variety of
low-paid occupations including truck driving, building site work and
boxing, playing locally with his group to supplement his income. Around
this time he married his first wife, Louise Woolingham, but the
marriage did not survive. A year later he married Ethel "Tootsie"
Smith, a marriage that lasted just over a decade. In 1950 maracas
player Jerome Green joined the group, followed a year later by
harmonica player Billy Boy Arnold. After more than a decade of playing
on street corners and in clubs around Chicago, Bo Diddley finally got
the chance to cut a demo of 2 songs that he had written; "Uncle John"
and "I'm A Man". After various rejections from local record labels
(most notably VeeJay), in the spring of 1955 he took the recordings to
brothers Leonard and Phil Chess, owners of Chess Records, with studios
located at 4750-2 South Cottage Grove Ave. in Chicago. They suggested
that he changed the title and the lyrics of "Uncle John" to more
reflect his own unique personality. The twp songs were re-recorded at
Bill Putnam's Universal Recording Studio at 111 E. Ontario in Chicago
on Wednesday, March 2, 1955, and released as a double A-side disc "Bo
Diddley"/"I'm A Man" on the Chess Records subsidiary label Checker
Records. It went straight to the top of the R&B charts, establishing
him as one of the most exciting and original new talents in American
music. With musical influences of his own ranging from
Louis Jordan to
John Lee Hooker, and from 'Nat
'King' Cole' to
Muddy Waters, Bo Diddley was now set to
help shape and define the sound and presentation of rock music for all
time. From Elvis Presley to
George Thorogood, from
The Rolling Stones to
ZZ Top, from The Doors
to The Clash, from
Buddy Holly to
Prince, and from
The Everly Brothers to Run DMC, all
acknowledged the unique influences of Bo Diddley upon their styles of
music. Now in his early 70s, he is still very much active in the
recording studio and in the clubs and the concert halls around the
world. He performed a rousing version of his classic song "Who Do You
Love" with George Thorogood & The Destroyers in front of a TV audience
of millions at the Live Aid Concert in Philadelphia in 1985. A couple
of years later he was deservedly an early inductee into the Rock 'n'
Roll Hall of Fame. In 1996 he received a Lifetime Achievement Award
from the Rhythm 'n' Blues Foundation and in 1998 received another
Lifetime Achievement Award, this time from The Recording Academy at
that year's annual Grammy Awards Ceremony. In 2000 yet another honor
was justifiably awarded to him when he was inducted into The
Mississippi Musicians Hall of Fame. In the words of one of his many
famous eponymous songs, "Bo Diddley Put The Rock in Rock 'n' Roll", and
remember . . . Bo Knows!