Chicago Blues harmonica player Carey Bell R.I.P.

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via an e-mail, though there's also an obit in various newspapers

CHICAGO BLUES HARMONICA LEGEND CAREY BELL Nov 14, 1936 - May 6, 2007

It is with a sad heart that we annouce the passing of blues harmonica great, Carey Bell who died of heart failure on May 6, 2007 in Chicago due to complications from diabetes.


CAREY BELL'S FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS ARE AS FOLLOWS:

Friday, May 11 4:00pm 7:00pm Visitation at the Calahan Funeral Home
7030 S. Halsted St. Chicago, IL 60621

Saturday, May 12 10:00am 11:00am Visitation 11:00 ? Service Mt. Carmel Missionary Baptist Church 7023 S. Halsted St.
2:00pm Burial Mt. Hope Cemetery 11500 S Fairfield Ave. (115th & Fairfield)

Carey was scheduled to perform as a duo with his son Lurrie at this years BluesFest.
Lurrie will still perform at the festival the details of the performance will follow.


From Wikipedia

Blues harmonica legend Carey Bell created his own style after learning from the masters: Big Walter, Little Walter, and Sonny Boy II.Soon Bell was mystified by the Blues harmonica greats: DeFord Bailey, Big Walter Horton, Marion "Little Walter" Jacobs, and Sonny Boy Williamson (I and II). Belltaught himself to play, and by the time he was eight he was quite proficient on the instrument. When he was thirteen, Bell joined his godfather Lovie Lee's Blues band.
Bell was born Carey Bell Harrington in Macon, Mississippi. As a child, Bell was intrigued by the music of Louis Jordan. Bell wanted a saxophone in order to be like his hero Jordan; however, Bell's family could not afford a saxophone. Bell had to settle for the "Mississippi saxophone", a harmonica.
In 1956, Lovie Lee convinced Bell to go with him to Chicago, a city then electrified by its own Blues scene and sound. Lee and Bell arrived in Chicago in September of that year. Not long after arriving, Bell went to the Club Zanzibar where Little Walter was putting on a show. Bell met Walter and soon became his student, learning from the master his tricks of the blues harp. To help further his chances of employment as a musician, Bell learned how to play the electric bass (from Hound Dog Taylor). Bell was then fortunate to meet and learn directly from Sonny Boy Williamson II and Big Walter Horton. Horton eventually hired Bell to work with him. Bell learned the inner workings of great blues musicianship and was about to embark upon an often unrecognized and under-appreciated musical career.
Despite Bell's mentorships with some of the greatest blues harp players the genre has ever known, he came into Chicago at an unfortunate time. The demand for harp players was decreasing in Chicago as bands were on the lookout for hot electric guitarists. To pay the bills, Bell continued to play bass and joined several bands as a bassist. Bell scored a gig as Big Walter's bassist, during the time of which he furthered his passionate study of the Mississippisaxophone with Big Walter himself. Soon after, Bell cased up his bass and polished his harp, returning to the scene with his beloved instrument. In 1969, Delmark Records in Chicago released Bell's debut LP, "Carey Bell's Blues Harp". Bell later played with Muddy Waters and Willie Dixon's Chicago Blues All-Stars. In 1972, Bell teamed up with Big Walter and released Big Walter Horton with Carey Bell for Alligator Records. A year later Bell released a solo project for ABC Bluesway. Bell continued to play with Dixon and in 1978 Bell was featured on the Grammy-nominated Living Chicago Blues. Bell played harp and bass for other blues icons for decades, including Earl Hooker, Robert Nighthawk, Lowell Fulsom, Eddie Taylor and Jimmy Dawkins.
During the 1980s Bell continued to record, but he was mostly preoccupied with live performances. In 1990 Bell teamed up with fellow harpists Junior Wells, James Cotton and Billy Branch to record Harp Attack! A modern Blues classic, Harp Attack! became one of Alligator Records's best selling albums. Despite years in the business and work with Alligator, Bell's first full-length solo album for the label was not released until 1995. On the album, titled Deep Down, Bell's signature harp style is on prominent display. A seminal piece of modern blues, Deep Down gave Bell much deserved recognition outside of the blues circles in which he was already legendary.
After Deep Down, Bell released Good Luck Man, an album less raw than its predecessor but nonetheless highly listen-able. After that, Bell released Second Nature, a duet album with his guitarist son, Lurrie Bell (who shared the guitar duties with Carl Weathersby on Deep Down). The overall appeal of Second Nature is that the entire album is a single take with no overdubs. In 1998, Bell was awarded the Blues Music Award for Traditional Male Artist Of The Year.

Carey's most recent release was a Delmark DVD, "Carey & Lurrie Bell, Gettin' Up, Live: at Buddy Guy's Legends, Rosa's & Lurrie's Home"

curmudgeon, Thursday, 10 May 2007 14:50 (eighteen years ago)

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-passings9may09,1,3731391.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california

PASSINGS
Carey Bell, 70; blues harmonica player worked with legends
From Times Staff and Wire Reports
May 9, 2007


Carey Bell, 70, a blues harmonica player who performed with legendary blues figures including Muddy Waters and Willie Dixon, died Sunday in Chicago of heart failure, according to Alligator Records, which released several albums by Bell.

The label's president, Bruce Iglauer, said Bell was a transitional figure between early blues players, such as Marion (Little Walter) Jacobs and Big Walter Horton.

Carey Bell Harrington was born in Macon, Miss. He wanted a saxophone as a boy but his family wasn't able to afford one so his grandfather gave him a harmonica. By the time he was 19, Harrington was performing professionally with his godfather, pianist Lovie Lee.

Bell spent 1971 traveling and recording with Muddy Waters and can be heard on his "London Sessions." He also worked regularly in Chicago with Dixon's Chicago Blues All-Stars. Albums under his own name include "Harp Attack," "Deep Down" and "Good Luck Man."

curmudgeon, Thursday, 10 May 2007 14:52 (eighteen years ago)


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