Big Bill Broonzy
1903 – 1958 (55)

Big Bill Broonzy was the bridge. Country blues to urban Chicago, acoustic to electric, American juke joint to European concert hall. He wrote Key to the Highway -- a song so sturdy that Eric Clapton, Derek and the Dominos, and a hundred others have covered it without improving on the original.

He was a fiddle player before he took up guitar, and he brought a melodic sophistication to the blues that nobody else had. He recorded hundreds of sides under dozens of names, backed just about every blues singer who passed through Chicago, and became the blues ambassador to Europe -- playing folk clubs and concert halls for audiences who'd never seen a Black American musician in person.

When the folk revival came calling, Broonzy adapted -- playing acoustic again, telling stories between songs, becoming an elder statesman to a generation of young white folksingers who'd never set foot in a juke joint. He was the most recorded bluesman of the 1930s and the most important bridge figure in blues history. Key to the Highway is the sound of a man who'd been everywhere and knew the way.

Big Bill Broonzy was the bridge between country blues and Chicago, between the juke joint and the concert hall. Key to the Highway has been covered by everyone and topped by no one. The blues ambassador before there was such a thing.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

Big Bill Broonzy

1903 – 1958 (55)

Big Bill Broonzy was the bridge. Country blues to urban Chicago, acoustic to electric, American juke joint to European concert hall. He wrote Key to the Highway -- a song so sturdy that Eric Clapton, Derek and the Dominos, and a hundred others have covered it without improving on the original.

He was a fiddle player before he took up guitar, and he brought a melodic sophistication to the blues that nobody else had. He recorded hundreds of sides under dozens of names, backed just about every blues singer who passed through Chicago, and became the blues ambassador to Europe -- playing folk clubs and concert halls for audiences who'd never seen a Black American musician in person.

When the folk revival came calling, Broonzy adapted -- playing acoustic again, telling stories between songs, becoming an elder statesman to a generation of young white folksingers who'd never set foot in a juke joint. He was the most recorded bluesman of the 1930s and the most important bridge figure in blues history. Key to the Highway is the sound of a man who'd been everywhere and knew the way.

Big Bill Broonzy was the bridge between country blues and Chicago, between the juke joint and the concert hall. Key to the Highway has been covered by everyone and topped by no one. The blues ambassador before there was such a thing.

The Blues (1958) The Blues (1958)
Big Bill Broonzy Sings Folk Songs (1962) Big Bill Broonzy Sings Folk Songs (1962)
Big Bill's Blues (1988) Big Bill's Blues (1988)
Big Bill Broonzy (2011) Big Bill Broonzy (2011)
Mississippi River Blues (1956)
Big Bill Broonzy Sings Country Blues (1957)
The Blues (1958)
Blues With Big Bill Broonzy · Sonny Terry · Brownie McGhee (1959)
Big Bill Broonzy Sings Folk Songs (1962)
Big Bill Broonzy and Washboard Sam (1962)
Big Bill's Blues (1988)
Blues for Ever (1991)
The 1955 London Sessions (1994)
The Southern Blues (1996)
St. Louis Blues (1998)
Blues Is My Business (2003)
Get Back (2004)
Big Bill Broonzy (2011)
Big Bill Blues (2011)
An Evening With Big Bill Broonzy (2018)
Bill Broonzy
Sonny Terry
Brownie McGhee
Black
Brown and White
1952-05-13: Alan Lomax Tapes: Paris
Ville-de-Paris
Ile-de-France
France
Treat Me Right
Key to the Highway
bluescountry bluesfolk
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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

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