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Freddie King And The Harsh 'Business' Of The Blues


July 14, 2010 · 11:40 AM ET
Heard on Fresh Air

ED WARD

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Taking Care of Business spans most of Freddie King's career.


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Bear Family Records
Texas claims Freddie King as its son. But although he was born on a farm near Gilmer
in 1934, King's real contribution came as one of the young musicians from Chicago's
West Side who challenged the Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf South Side musicians
starting in the late '50s. Guitarists like Otis Rush and Magic Sam played aggressive,
virtuosic blues that attracted a younger crowd. Freddie King ran with them.

King was always an innovator, and on his very first record, made for the tiny El Bee
label in 1956, he used Robert "Big Mojo" Elem on electric bass, an instrument Elem
played in King's band, but few others in town used.

Freddie King's big break came in 1960, when King Records opened an office in
Chicago. Sonny Thompson, a seasoned veteran of postwar rhythm and blues, was the
talent scout, and after learning that Leonard Chess didn't think Freddie King was
worth signing, snapped him up and took him to the label's home in Cincinnati to
record. The very first session in August resulted in "Hide Away," the song that has
been linked with Freddie King's name ever since.

"Hide Away" was a tune everyone on the West Side played, probably written by Hound
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Dog Taylor. King's version, named after one of his favorite clubs (Mel's Hideaway
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Lounge), entered the Top 10 in the rhythm and blues chart, and even got to No. 29 on
the popancharts.
Select amount Freddie King had a white following almost from the beginning. King --
and Sonny Thompson -- wanted to prove that King was also a singer, and his next
$25 $50
session had "I'm Tore Down," the hit to prove it.

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"I'm Tore Down" again rocketed into the rhythm and blues Top 10, but the pop market
ignored it. Freddie King only saw the charts one more time during this period, with a
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Christmas record that charted for one week. But King Records kept recording him, and
more and more he was on the road with revues, barnstorming the country.
Maybe later When he
was home on the West Side, he and his band worked seven days a week if they wanted
to.

The thing was, although Freddie King's records sold steadily, they didn't sell a lot. His
contract was up in 1966, and King parted ways with his label. He'd already moved his
wife and six children to Dallas, and used that as a base from which to tour. Meanwhile,
Eric Clapton recorded "Hide Away" with Mayall's Blues Breakers in England; Clapton
was only the first British guitarist to show his explicit debt to Freddie King. King
returned the favor by going to England and touring, showing the Brits how it was
done.

In 1968, Atlantic Records in New York started a new label, Cotillion, for saxophonist
King Curtis to record who he wanted. He wanted Freddie King, and so in July, King
entered the studio for the first time in two years. Curtis assembled an amazing band,
and they got to work.

It's hard to say why the two singles and two albums on Cotillion didn't sell, unless they
were too sophisticated for the rock market and too old-fashioned for the new soul
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market, but forindependent journalism
me, they remain the peak today.
of Freddie King's output. The valley was to
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signed
Freddie King.
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$25sincere, and King tried, but at their best -- as in the


Russell's intentions were no doubt $50
track "Going Down" -- the recordings were oil-and-water blues-rock, and at their
worst, generic '70s blues sludge.$75
Freddie King stayed with Russell until 1972, then $100

moved on to RSO Records, run by Eric Clapton's manager. These recordings are
among the few not represented on a new retrospective, GIVE A DIFFERENT
Taking AMOUNT
Care of Business,
which spans much of King's career.
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Freddie King was living hard by this point, drinking copiously, and always downing a
couple of Bloody Marys before stepping on stage because, as he told a journalist,
"they've got food in them." In 1976, playing a club in New Orleans, King passed out in
the middle of a solo. He went back up to Dallas and played a gig in New York on
Christmas. But he canceled a show scheduled for the next night, returned to Dallas
and went into the hospital. He died, riddled with ulcers and suffering from
pancreatitis, on Dec. 28, 1976, at the age of 42.

Freddie King

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