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Indianola Mississippi Seeds is B. B. King's eighteenth studio album. It was released in October 1970 on ABC Records on LP and May 1989 on MCA Records on CD.On this album B. B. King mixed elements of blues and rock music.
B. B. King (1925–2015) was an American blues musician whose recording career spanned 1949–2008. As with other blues contemporaries, King's material was primarily released on singles until the late 1950s–early 1960s, when long playing record albums became more popular.
King of the Blues is a compilation album by American blues musician B. B. King covering the years 1949 through 1991. ... "Chains and Things" - (with Carole King)
Riley B. King (September 16, 1925 – May 14, 2015), known professionally as B. B. King, was an American blues guitarist, singer, songwriter, and record producer. He introduced a sophisticated style of soloing based on fluid string bending , shimmering vibrato , and staccato picking that influenced many later electric guitar blues players.
The Ultimate Collection is a compilation album by B.B. King, released in 2005. Track listing Three ... "Chains & Things" (w/ Carole King) – 4:53 "Ain't Nobody Home ...
His Definitive Greatest Hits is a compilation album by American blues musician B.B. King. It was produced, sequenced & compiled by Richard M. Ganter and released on April 12, 1999, by Polygram Records .
Mr. B.B. King is a box set compilation album by B. B. King. It traces King's career from his first singles for Bullet Records in 1949 to material on his last recorded album in 2008. Crowdfunded by Pledge Music in 2012, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] it was available in a full ten-disc box exclusive through Amazon.com , [ 4 ] and a four-disc "highlights" box ...
King's version is a slow (65 beats per minute) [5] twelve-bar blues notated in 12/8 time in the key of C. [10] Blues historian Robert Palmer sees King's guitar work on the song as showing his T-Bone Walker influences, "though his tone was bigger and rounder and his phrasing somewhat heavier". [11]