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  1. 15 de sept. de 2021 · Stylistically, BB King’s first few albums were heavily indebted to his idol T-Bone Walker, but by the early 60s he was his own man, and a powerful influence on a gang of white kids in London that included Peter Green, future Rolling Stone Mick Taylor and those two’s predecessor in John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Eric Clapton.

  2. 16 de sept. de 2018 · BB King with Ringo Starr in London, 1971. (Image credit: Getty) In the meantime, back at the original Fillmore, ... and Peter Green was most definitely a BB King devotee. He learned how to play as little as possible, and most effectively as possible, in the same way that BB can play one note and you know exactly who it is.

  3. 22 de abr. de 2024 · On April 22, 1969, B.B. King ... Fleetwood Mac were coming off their huge instrumental hit “Albatross” and had just released the Peter Green ... went on to play on 1971’s B.B. King In London ...

  4. 15 de may. de 2023 · Born in Bethnal Green in 1946, and inspired by Stateside titans such as Buddy Guy, Freddie King, Otis Rush and BB King, Green had knocked about London playing bass in midtable outfits including Peter B’s Looners, until an epiphany brought him back to six strings.

  5. English guitarist Peter Green in a London recording studio with American blues singer and guitarist B.B. King , June 1971. They are working the album... English guitarist Peter Green performing with Fleetwood Mac at the Royal Albert Hall, London, 22nd April 1969.

  6. 15 de may. de 2015 · B.B. King’s first Royal Albert Hall appearance came on 22 April 1969, at a co-headline performance by the 43-year-old guitarist and Fleetwood Mac.. The evening saw support from fellow blues luminaries Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee and Duster Bennett.. He returned to the capital two years later in 1971 – a period which saw him work with the likes of Ringo Starr, Fleetwood Mac’s Peter Green ...

  7. “I want you to start playing… I want BB King shit,” barks Otis Spann, directing a 1969 Chess Records session that saw the great blues pianist teamed with Fleetwood Mac: and despite the pressure, Green duly obliges, reeling off a minute of unaccompanied soloing through a Silverface Deluxe reverb that’s fragile, piercing, musically adventurous and authentic in equal measure – from a ...