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Buddy Guy, Larkin Poe, and the Cross-Generational Power of B.B. King’s Blues Summit 100
Music

Buddy Guy, Larkin Poe, and the Cross-Generational Power of B.B. King’s Blues Summit 100

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Joe Bonamassa’s sprawling centennial tribute keeps unfolding – Vol. III reminds us that the blues is still alive, still changing, and still finding new ways to connect generations.

When B.B. King said, “The blues are the roots, the rest are the fruits,” he wasn’t making a slogan. He was describing a foundation that still feeds every branch of popular music. Sixty years on, those roots keep spreading – and B.B. King’s Blues Summit 100, the multi-volume tribute curated by Joe Bonamassa, has become a kind of year-long proof.

The new installment, Vol. III, leans hard on emotional memory. Its centerpiece, “Sweet Little Angel,” pairs 88-year-old Buddy Guy with the ghost of his oldest friend. The accompanying video stitches archival clips of King and Guy onstage with newly restored footage – less a music video than a conversation across time.

“Buddy Guy is obviously the first call you make when putting this project together, and ‘Sweet Little Angel’ was his preferred song,” co-producer Josh Smith said. “This take shows you why Buddy is the living legend he is. Our most important living blues artist. Both his vocal and guitar playing are from the same live track – no messing around, old school. The real deal indeed.”

Then Guy adds a line that lands like a benediction: “I’m remembering you, B. You know that. I can’t do it like you, but I can try.”

Elsewhere, Vol. III spreads the gospel sideways. Larkin Poe rough up “Don’t You Want a Man Like Me” with swagger and slide guitar, while Trombone Shorty and Eric Gales turn “Heartbreaker” into a brass-fueled storm. Texas mainstay Jimmie Vaughan brings an easy shuffle to “Watch Yourself,” and Larry McCray closes with a slow burn take on “When It All Comes Down (I’ll Still Be Around).” Smith called McCray “the greatest contemporary bluesman in the world,” and on this track, it’s hard to argue.

Taken together, the songs feel less like nostalgia and more like continuation – a reminder that King’s influence was never about imitation but interpretation.

The earlier volumes drew from a similar idea. Vol. I gathered Michael McDonald, Susan Tedeschi, Derek Trucks, Bobby Rush, George Benson, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, and D.K. Harrell. Vol. II widened the frame: Gary Clark Jr., Pat Monahan of Train, Keb’ Mo’, Joanne Shaw Taylor, Paul Rodgers, and Aloe Blacc.

Keb’ Mo’ recalled meeting King in the early ’70s: “Did a show with B.B. King and the Average White Band. That’s when I met him, but I’ve been listening to B.B. King my whole life.” Joanne Shaw Taylor remembered the encouragement she got opening for him as a teenager: “He was incredibly encouraging towards me… I’m so thankful Joe asked me to be part of this project in honor of him and this important birthday.”

Now comes the project’s biggest reveal so far: “The Thrill Is Gone” – the song that defined King to the world – will feature Chaka Khan and Eric Clapton, a pairing that feels both obvious and daring. If Buddy Guy’s appearance represents lineage, this collaboration represents reach.

“When B.B. was alive and active, he was the blues – he was the sun which all planets rotated around,” Bonamassa has said. “You only get one shot to do this correctly. And I think we nailed it.”

Whether you buy that or not, Blues Summit 100 is hard to ignore. The 32-track rollout, dropping in monthly waves through February 2026, plays like a serialized history lesson: each song another voice testifying to why the blues still matters. Some artists whisper it, some shout it, but all of them keep the circle unbroken.

As Guy puts it on “Sweet Little Angel,” the job is simple and impossible: try to do it like B.B., knowing you never quite can. The mission is just to play and that’s where the blues lives.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Buddy Red. (Credit: Quadir Thomas)
Music

Buddy Red Gets the Blues

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The 2018 film Bohemian Rhapsody had a profound effect on Buddy Red, who was 18 years old when the Oscar-winning Queen biopic came out. “Once I saw the movie, it’s like a lightbulb just flickered on in my mind. I said, ‘This is what I’m looking for,’” the shy, soft-spoken Red recalls on a day off at home in Atlanta, although he still looks like he’s dressed to perform in a sharp wide-collared dress shirt. “My musical taste, all the things that I listen to, the fact that Freddie Mercury was a nobody and a little bit of a weirdo until he became Freddie Mercury. And I always feel, y’know, a little out of place. Maybe all this stuff is for a reason, maybe I’m supposed to be on a stage somewhere and really showing people something that they haven’t seen before.”

Quickly, he became a man on a mission. “That’s when I realized I have to play an instrument, because I was producing, making hip-hop beats, before I saw the movie,’” he says. “I said, ‘Let me hurry up and buy a guitar before I talk myself out of it.” The result is a series of singles including “Sold His Soul,” released in August, that feature Red ripping bluesy riffs and psychedelic solos that instantly bring to mind a young Jimi Hendrix.

(Credit: Quadir Thomas)

Buddy Red comes from a musical family, but he’s operating in a different genre from the other performers in his household. He was born Messiah Harris, the eldest child of rap superstar Clifford “T.I.” Harris. His stepmother is Tameka “Tiny” Cottle of the ’90s R&B hitmakers Xscape, and two of his brothers, King and Domani, are also rappers. 

In fact, I interviewed T.I. for SPIN five years ago, singling out the Messiah Harris-produced track “Family Connect” as one of the best songs on the rap veteran’s 2020 album The L.I.B.R.A. The self-proclaimed King of the South recalled how he was spurred to work with the producer 9th Wonder because his son was a fan. “I just kinda linked him with 9th, and they got together. 9th came down, him and Messiah hooked up and exchanged some of their techniques, they use the same machine,” T.I. told me at the time.

As Messiah Harris fell in love with classic rock bands like Pink Floyd as well as ’80s synth pop, he started to feel a little isolated. “Very early on I realized in my musical journey, I’m gonna be on my own a lot, because a lot of people around me don’t hear things that I hear the way that I hear them,” he says, recalling the musical education he received from his family. “They’re only playing me 2Pac, they’re only playing me TLC or New Edition. Of course I’m gonna ask you, why haven’t you played me Rick Astley or Alphaville or Queen?”

(Credit: Quadir Thomas)
(Credit: Quadir Thomas)

Red, who was in college at Georgia State when he bought his first guitar, resembles his father more closely than any of his siblings do, the same distinctive, handsome features framed by a thicker mane of hair and a scruffy beard. But he speaks a lot more slowly and cautiously than T.I., at times seeming more like a nervous teenager than the worldly bluesman, wise beyond his 25 years, that he seems like onstage. When he went to New York City for the studio session to record “Sold His Soul,” he was overwhelmed by the difference from the deep south he grew up in. “I was immediately intimidated by my surroundings. I’m by myself, it’s my first time in New York alone, I don’t know any of these people, the subway looks scary as hell.” 

Red does, however, dress as loudly as many of his musical idols, favoring vests, neckerchiefs and flowing scarves. “My fashion sense, didn’t start to come about until I started collecting records. That’s when I started looking at the people that I was listening to,” he says. “That’s when I started looking at what Robert Plant was wearing, that’s when I started looking at the crazy outfits the Jimi Hendrix Experience was wearing.” 

Soon, he started to work out a stage name to go with his guitar-driven songs, taking inspiration from the members of Pink Floyd, who had combined the names of two of their favorite blues singers, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. “I said, ‘Okay, how can I do that?’ And I’m thinking about my grandfather on my father’s side, his name’s Buddy,” he says. “And I’m thinking about my mother’s side of the family, she says that the way that I dress and the music I listen to, always reminds her of her brother Red, my Uncle Red. I’m thinking Buddy… Red… Buddy Red, that’s how it came to be.”

As people started to learn that one of T.I.’s sons is a rocker, some other Southern hip-hop greats who’ve dabbled in playing the guitar have taken an interest in Buddy Red. “People like Andre 3000 speak to my pops about me, Lil Wayne has spoken to my pops about me,” Red says. “I think once he started seeing the effect that I’m having on people, that’s when he started doing his best to guide me creatively. It’s been times before that, where he said, ‘If you want me to be honest, I don’t know what to do with you, I don’t know anything about this, I gotta do my research.’”

The Buddy Red discography is small so far—just five solo tracks released over the last three years, plus a guest appearance on Atlanta singer ilypicasso’s track “Attachments” earlier this year. “1958” is his most popular song, and it’s also the only time so far that he’s operated as a one-man band, playing all the guitar, bass, and drums on the self-produced track. “I wanna get more into that going forward, because I think I sound pretty good,” he says.

Buddy Red has written other songs that fill out his live set, and in the last few weeks he’s performed at the Butter Fine Arts Fair in Indianapolis and the Neon Prairie Festival in Tulsa, backed by a drummer and bassist. But he’s worked with a variety of different producers and musicians in the studio so far, and really wants to lock down a consistent sound and personnel before he makes a full-length album. “It’s not really cohesive, so before I start thinking about how to put this project out, I want a team that wants to put one type of project out, and I’m still looking for it,” he says. “I have a couple of meetings later this week with some producers to talk about what it is that I wanna do.”

Red’s Indianapolis performance featured the debut of a new cover in his repertoire that reflects how he’s still seeking out different corners of rock history: “No Fun” by the Stooges. “I discovered the Stooges for myself maybe a few months ago, and when I did, I said, ‘Wow, this is what I’ve been looking for,’” he says. “I love Iggy Pop’s voice and how he doesn’t really care, he can screech, he can do this Midwestern drawl, he’s not taking himself so seriously up there. I wish I didn’t take myself so seriously, so when I played ‘No Fun’ for the first time, it felt really liberating, and I discovered a new style for myself right then and there.”

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Sonny Curtis, member of Buddy Holly’s Crickets, dead at 88 - National
Celebrity News

Sonny Curtis, member of Buddy Holly’s Crickets, dead at 88 – National

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Sonny Curtis, a vintage rock ‘n’ roller who wrote the raw classic I Fought the Law and posed the enduring question “Who can turn the world on with her smile?” as the writer-crooner of the theme song to The Mary Tyler Moore Show, has died at 88.

Curtis, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of The Crickets in 2012, died Friday, his wife of more than a half-century, Louise Curtis, confirmed to The Associated Press. His daughter, Sarah Curtis, wrote on his Facebook page that he had been suddenly ill.

Curtis wrote or co-wrote hundreds of songs, from Keith Whitley’s country smash I’m No Stranger to the Rain to the Everly Brothers’ Walk Right Back, a personal favourite Curtis completed while in Army basic training. Bing Crosby, Glen Campbell, Bruce Springsteen and the Grateful Dead were among other artists who covered his work.

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Early days with Buddy Holly

Born during the Great Depression to cotton farmers outside of Meadow, Texas, Curtis was a childhood friend of Buddy Holly’s and an active musician in the formative years of rock, whether jamming on guitar with Holly in the mid-1950s or opening for Elvis Presley when Elvis was still a regional act. Curtis’ songwriting touch also soon emerged: Before he turned 20, he had written the hit Someday for Webb Pierce and Rock Around With Ollie Vee for Holly.

Curtis had left Holly’s group, the Crickets, before Holly became a major star. But he returned after Holly died in a plane crash in 1959 and he was featured the following year on the album In Style with the Crickets, which included I Fought the Law (dashed off in a single afternoon, according to Curtis, who would say he had no direct inspiration for the song) and the Jerry Allison collaboration More Than I Can Say, a hit for Bobby Vee, and later for Leo Sayer.


From left, Sonny Curtis, Bobby Vee, Joe B. Maudlin and Jerry J.I. Allison perform at the Stillman auditorium in Clear Lake, Iowa on Friday Jan. 30, 2009.

AP Photo/The Globe-Gazette, Teresa Prince, File

Meanwhile, it took until 1966 for I Fought the Law and its now-immortal refrain “I fought the law — and the law won” to catch on: The Texas-based Bobby Fuller Four made it a Top 10 song. Over the following decades, it was covered by dozens of artists, from punk (the Clash) to country (Johnny Cash, Nanci Griffith) to Springsteen, Tom Petty and other mainstream rock stars.

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“It’s my most important copyright,” Curtis told The Tennessean in 2014.

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The Mary Tyler Moore Show


Curtis’ other signature song was as uplifting as I Fought the Law was resigned. In 1970, he was writing commercial jingles when he came up with the theme for a new CBS sitcom starring Moore as a single woman hired as a TV producer in Minneapolis. He called the song Love is All Around, and used a smooth melody to eventually serve up lyrics as indelible as any in television history:

“Who can turn the world on with her smile? / Who can take a nothing day, and suddenly make it all seem worthwhile? / Well it’s you girl, and you should know it / With each glance and every little movement you show it.”

The song’s endurance was sealed by the images it was heard over, especially Moore’s triumphant toss of her hat as Curtis proclaims, “You’re going to make it after all.” In tribute, other artists began recording it, including Sammy Davis Jr., Joan Jett and the Blackhearts and Minnesota’s Hüsker Dü. A commercial release featuring Curtis came out in 1980 and was a modest success, peaking at No. 29 on Billboard’s country chart.

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Curtis would recall being commissioned by his friend Doug Gilmore, a music industry road manager who had heard the sitcom’s developers were looking for an opening song.

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“Naturally I said yes, and later that morning, he dropped off a four-page format — you know ‘Girl from the Midwest, moves to Minneapolis, gets a job in a newsroom, can’t afford her apartment etc.,’ which gave me the flavor of what it was all about,” said Curtis, who soon met with show co-creator (and later Oscar-winning filmmaker) James L. Brooks.

“James L. Brooks came into this huge empty room, no furniture apart from a phone lying on the floor, and at first, I thought he was rather cold and sort of distant, and he said ‘We’re not at the stage of picking a song yet, but I’ll listen anyway,’” Curtis recalled. “So I played the song, just me and my guitar, and next thing, he started phoning people, and the room filled up, and then he sent out for a tape recorder.”

Curtis would eventually write two versions: the first used in Season 1, the second and better known for the remaining six seasons. The original words were more tentative, opening with “How will you make it on your own?” and ending with “You might just make it after all.” By Season 2, the show was a hit and the lyrics were reworked. The producers had wanted Andy Williams to sing the theme song, but he turned it down and Curtis’ easygoing baritone was heard instead.

Later life

Curtis made a handful of solo albums, including Sonny Curtis and Spectrum, and hit the country Top 20 with the 1981 single Good Ol’ Girls. In later years, he continued to play with Allison and other members of the Crickets. The band released several albums, among them The Crickets and Their Buddies, featuring appearances by Eric Clapton, Graham Nash and Phil Everly. One of Curtis’ more notable songs was The Real Buddy Holly Story, a rebuke to the 1978 biopic The Buddy Holly Story, which starred Gary Busey.

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Curtis settled in Nashville in the mid-1970s and lived there with his wife, Louise. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1991 and, as part of the Crickets, into Nashville’s Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum in 2007. Five years later, he and the Crickets were inducted into the Rock Hall, praised as “the blueprint for rock and roll bands (that) inspired thousands of kids to start up garage bands around the world.”

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September 20, 2025 0 comments
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