114_gpr0218_hero-1

● He could murder all comers in a cutting contest. Eric Clapton once said of performing with the “Texas Cannonball”: “Freddie could be pretty mean,...

114_gpr0218_hero-1

● He could murder all comers in a cutting contest. Eric Clapton once said of performing with the “Texas Cannonball”: “Freddie could be pretty mean, but subtle with it. He’d make you feel at home, and then tear you to pieces.”

● His 1961 single “Hide Away” became a blues standard, and it also broke into the pop charts (reaching #29 on the Billboard Hot 100)—a near miracle at a time when mainstream white audiences had little knowledge of blues music.

● He broke the mold by being one of the first blues artists to employ a multiracial backup band.

● The linebacker-sized bluesman’s ferocious tone was produced by a two-digit fingerpicking technique—using a plastic thumbpick and a metal pick on his index finger—as well as a Fender Quad Reverb cranked to almost heavy-metal volume.

● He was progressive. His songwriting skills infused layered hooks, sonic textures, distinct melodies, bridges, and crafty musical movements into the basic 12-bar blues format.   

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