Chuck Berry (1926-2017)
Chuck Berry (1926-2017)
Charles Edward Anderson Berry was an American singer and
songwriter, and one of the pioneers of rock and roll music. With songs such as
"Maybellene" (1955), "Roll Over Beethoven" (1956),
"Rock and Roll Music" (1957) and "Johnny B. Goode" (1958),
Berry refined and developed rhythm and blues into the major elements that made
rock and roll distinctive. Writing lyrics that focused on teen life and
consumerism, and developing a music style that included guitar solos and showmanship,
Berry was a major influence on subsequent rock music.
Born into a middle-class African-American family in St.
Louis, Missouri, Berry had an interest in music from an early age and gave his
first public performance at Sumner High School. While still a high school
student he was convicted of armed robbery and was sent to a reformatory, where
he was held from 1944 to 1947. After his release, Berry settled into married
life and worked at an automobile assembly plant. By early 1953, influenced 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
when he traveled to Chicago in May 1955 and met Muddy Waters, who suggested he
contact Leonard Chess, of Chess Records. With Chess, he recorded
"Maybellene"—Berry's adaptation of the country song "Ida
Red"—which sold over a million copies, reaching number one on Billboard
magazine's rhythm and blues chart. By the end of the 1950s, Berry was an
established star, with several hit records and film appearances and a lucrative
touring career. He had also established his own St. Louis nightclub, Berry's
Club Bandstand. However, he was sentenced to three years in prison in
January 1962 for offenses under the Mann Act—he had transported a 14-year-old
girl across state lines. After his release in 1963, Berry had several
more hits, including "No Particular Place to Go", "You Never Can
Tell", and "Nadine". But these did not achieve the same success,
or lasting impact, of his 1950s songs, and by the 1970s he was more in demand
as a nostalgic performer, playing his past hits with local backup bands of
variable quality. However, in 1972 he reached a new level of achievement
when a rendition of "My Ding-a-Ling" became his only record to top
the charts. His insistence on being paid in cash led in 1979 to a four-month
jail sentence and community service, for tax evasion. His reputation took a
nosedive in the early 1990s, when the FBI seized home videos of him urinating
in women's eyes, farting in their mouths, and having them defecate into his
mouth and played them in court.
Berry was among the first musicians to be inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on its opening in 1986; he was cited for having
"laid the groundwork for not only a rock and roll sound but a rock and
roll stance." Berry is included in several of Rolling Stone magazine's
"greatest of all time" lists; he was ranked fifth on its 2004 and
2011 lists of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time. The Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame's 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll includes three of Berry's:
"Johnny B. Goode", "Maybellene", and "Rock and Roll
Music". Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" is the only rock-and-roll
song included on the Voyager Golden Record. He was nicknamed by NBC as the
"Father of Rock and Roll".
Achievements:
A pioneer of rock and roll, Berry was a significant
influence on the development of both the music and the attitude associated with
the rock music lifestyle. With songs such as "Maybellene" (1955),
"Roll Over Beethoven" (1956), "Rock and Roll Music" (1957)
and "Johnny B. Goode" (1958), Berry refined and developed rhythm and
blues into the major elements that made rock and roll distinctive, with lyrics
successfully aimed to appeal to the early teenage market by using graphic and
humorous descriptions of teen dances, fast cars, high school life, and consumer
culture, and utilizing guitar solos and showmanship that would be a major
influence on subsequent rock music. Thus Berry, the songwriter, according to
critic Jon Pareles, invented rock as "a music of teenage wishes fulfilled
and good times (even with cops in pursuit)." Berry contributed three
things to rock music: an irresistible swagger, a focus on the guitar riff as
the primary melodic element and an emphasis on songwriting as storytelling. His records are a rich storehouse of the essential lyrical, showmanship and
musical components of rock and roll. In addition to the Beatles and the Rolling
Stones, a large number of significant popular-music performers have recorded
Berry's songs. Although not technically accomplished, his guitar style is
distinctive—he incorporated electronic effects to mimic the sound of bottleneck
blues guitarists and drew on the influence of guitar players such as Carl
Hogan, and T-Bone Walker to produce a clear and exciting sound that many
later guitarists would acknowledge as an influence in their own style. Berry's showmanship has been influential on other rock guitarists, particularly his one-legged hop routine, and the "duck walk", which he first used as a child when he walked "stooping with full-bended
knees, but with my back and head vertical" under a table to retrieve a
ball and his family found it entertaining; he used it when "performing in
New York for the first time and some journalist branded it the duck
walk."
He has been cited as a major reference to a variety of some
of the most influential acts of all time:
Elvis Presley has covered “Memphis, Tennessee”, Too Much
Monkey Business", “Johnny B. Goode” and Promised Land”
Jimi Hendrix has covered "Johnny B. Goode"
The Beatles have covered "Rock And Roll Music",
"Roll Over Beethoven" and "Memphis, Tennessee" to name a
few
The Rolling Stones have covered "Come On" and
"Let It Rock" among others
The Beach Boys used the melody from "Sweet Little
Sixteen" for “Surfin’ U.S.A."
Carl Perkins has covered "Roll Over Beethoven" and
"Johnny B. Goode"
Electric Light Orchestra have covered "Roll Over
Beethoven"
Status Quo have covered "You Never Can Tell" and
"Carol"
AC/DC have covered "School Days"
Bryan Adams, Keith Richards and Dave Edmunds have covered
"Run Rudolph Run"
Faces have covered "Memphis, Tennessee"
David Bowie slightly altered "Around and Around"
The Yardbirds covered "Guitar Boogie" as
"Jeff's Boogie"
The Kinks have covered "Too Much Monkey Business"
Buddy Holly covered "Brown Eyed Handsome Man"
On July 29, 2011, Berry was honored in a dedication of an
eight-foot, in-motion Chuck Berry Statue in the Delmar Loop in St. Louis,
Missouri, right across the street from Blue Berry Hill. Berry said, "It's
glorious--I do appreciate it to the highest, no doubt about it. That sort of
honor is seldom given out. But I don't deserve it."
The rock critic Robert Christgau considers Berry "the
greatest of the rock and rollers", while John Lennon said, "if
you tried to give rock and roll another name, you might call it 'Chuck
Berry'." Ted Nugent said, "If you don't know every Chuck Berry
lick, you can't play rock guitar." Bob Dylan called Berry "the
Shakespeare of rock 'n' roll". Springsteen tweeted, "Chuck Berry
was rock's greatest practitioner, guitarist, and the greatest pure rock 'n'
roll writer who ever lived."
When asked what caused the explosion of the popularity of
rock 'n roll that took place in the 1950s, with him and a handful of others,
mainly him, Berry said, "Well, actually they begin to listen to it, you
see, because certain stations played certain music. The music that we, the blacks,
played, the cultures were so far apart, we would have to have a play station in
order to play it. The cultures begin to come together, and you begin to see one
another's vein of life, then the music came together."
Among the honors Berry received were the Grammy Lifetime
Achievement Award in 1984 and the Kennedy Center Honors in 2000. He was
ranked seventh on Time magazine's 2009 list of the 10 best electric guitar
players of all time. On May 14, 2002, Berry was honored as one of the first
BMI Icons at the 50th annual BMI Pop Awards. He was presented the award along
with BMI affiliates Bo Diddley and Little Richard. In August 2014, Berry
was made a laureate of the Polar Music Prize.
Berry is included in several of Rolling Stone magazine's
"Greatest of All Time" lists. In September 2003, the magazine ranked
him number 6 in its list of the "100 Greatest Guitarists of All
Time". In November his compilation album The Great Twenty-Eight was
ranked 21st in Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. In March
2004, Berry was ranked fifth on the list of "The Immortals – The 100
Greatest Artists of All Time". In December 2004, six of his songs
were included in "Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time":
"Johnny B. Goode" (#7), "Maybellene" (#18), "Roll Over
Beethoven" (#97), "Rock and Roll Music" (#128), "Sweet
Little Sixteen" (#272) and "Brown Eyed Handsome Man"
(#374). In June 2008, his song "Johnny B. Goode" was ranked
first in the "100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time".
The journalist Chuck Klosterman has argued that in 300 years
Berry will still be remembered as the rock musician who most closely captured
the essence of rock and roll. Time magazine stated, "There was no one
like Elvis. But there was 'definitely' no one like Chuck Berry." Rolling Stone magazine called him "the father of rock & roll" who
"gave the music its sound and its attitude, even as he battled racism -
and his own misdeeds - all the way," reporting that Leonard Cohen said,
"All of us are footnotes to the words of Chuck Berry." Kevin
Strait, curator of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
in Washington, DC, said that Berry is "one of the primary sonic architects
of rock and roll."
On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed Chuck
Berry among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the
2008 Universal Studios fire.
Charity: Blues Foundation
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