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Boogie Chillen'

"Boogie Chillen'" or "Boogie Chillun"[c] is a blues song first recorded by John Lee Hooker in 1948. It is a solo performance featuring Hooker's vocal, electric guitar, and rhythmic foot stomps. The lyrics are partly autobiographical and alternate between spoken and sung verses. The song was his debut record release and in 1949, it became the first "down-home" electric blues song to reach number one in the R&B records chart.

"Boogie Chillen'"
Single by John Lee Hooker
B-side"Sally May"
ReleasedNovember 1948 (1948-11)[1]
RecordedSeptember 1948[1][a]
StudioUnited Sound Systems, Detroit, Michigan
GenreBlues
Length3:11
LabelModern
Songwriter(s)John Lee Hooker[b]
Producer(s)Bernard Besman

Hooker's song was part of a trend in the late 1940s to a new style of urban electric blues based on earlier Delta blues idioms. Although it is called a boogie, it resembles early North Mississippi Hill country blues rather than the boogie-woogie piano-derived style of the 1930s and 1940s. Hooker gave credit to his stepfather, Will Moore, who taught him the rhythm of "Boogie Chillen'" ("chillen'" is a phonetic approximation of Hooker's pronunciation of "children") when he was a teenager. Some of the song's lyrics are derived from earlier blues songs.

Hooker's guitar work on the song inspired several well-known guitarists to take up the instrument. With its driving style and focus on rhythm, it is also considered a forerunner of rock and roll. Music critic Cub Koda calls the guitar figure from "Boogie Chillen'" "the riff that launched a million songs".[4] Several rock musicians have patterned successful songs either directly or indirectly on Hooker's many versions of "Boogie Chillen'". These include songs by boogie rock band Canned Heat, who also recorded a well-received version with Hooker. One of ZZ Top's best-known hits, "La Grange", allegedly uses elements of the song, which led to legal action by the song's publisher and resulted in changes to American copyright law.

Background edit

In 1943, Hooker moved to Detroit, Michigan, for employment opportunities in the city's wartime vehicle manufacturing factories.[5] There he was attracted to the music clubs along Hastings Street in Black Bottom/Paradise Valley, the cultural center of the city's black community.[6] He recounts his experience in the narrative to "Boogie Chillen'":[7]

When I first come to town people, I was walkin' down Hastings Street
I heard everybody talkin' about, Henry's Swing Club
I decided I'd drop in there that night, and when I got there
I say "Yes, people!", yes they was really havin' a ball!
Yes, I know
Boogie chillen'!

By 1948, Hooker came to the attention of Elmer Barbee, a local record shop owner.[8] Barbee arranged to have several demos recorded.[8] He or Hooker later presented them to Bernard Besman, who ran the Detroit area's only professional record company.[3] Although Hooker had played mostly with an ensemble at that time, Besman decided to record him solo.[9] This put the attention solely on the singer/guitarist,[1] in contrast to the prevailing jump blues style, which emphasized ensemble instrumentation. Recent hit singles by Muddy Waters and Lightnin' Hopkins had also used this stripped-down, electrified Delta blues-inspired approach.[10]

Composition and lyrics edit

"Boogie Chillen'" is described by music critic Bill Dahl as "blues as primitive as anything then on the market; Hooker's dark, ruminative vocals were backed only by his own ringing, heavily amplified guitar and insistently pounding foot".[6] In an interview, Hooker shared how he came up with "Boogie Chillen'":

I wrote that song in Detroit when I was sittin' around strummin' my guitar. The thing come into me, you know? I heard [my stepfather] Will Moore done [sic] it years and years before. I was a little kid from down South, and I heard him do a song like that, but he didn't call it "Boogie Chillen". But it had that beat, and I just kept that beat up and I called it "Boogie Chillen".[11]

He performed the song in clubs before recording it and called it "Boogie Woogie" before settling on "Boogie Chillen'".[12] According to musicologist Robert Palmer, "The closest thing to it on records is 'Cottonfield Blues', recorded by Garfield Akers and Joe Callicott, two guitarists from the hill country of northern Mississippi, in 1929. Essentially, it was a backcountry, pre-blues sort of music—a droning, open-ended stomp without a fixed verse form that lent itself to building up to a cumulative, trancelike effect".[13]

 
Hooker performing in 1972

Hooker's vocal alternates between sung and spoken sections.[14] Commenting on Hooker's vocal sections, music historian Ted Gioia notes, "The song has almost no melody. Even less harmony. In fact, it is hard to call it a song. It's more like a bit of jive stream of consciousness in 4/4 time."[15] Some of the lyrics are borrowed from earlier songs that date back to the beginning of the blues.[16] The opening line "My mama she didn't allow me to stay out all night long" has origins in "Mama Don't Allow", an old dance song.[16] Several songs were recorded in the 1920s with similar titles.[17] "Boogie No. 3" by boogie-woogie pianist Cow Cow Davenport has sung and spoken sections and includes the lines, "I don't care what Grandma don't allow, play my music anyhow, Grandma's don't 'llow no music playin' in here".[18] Hooker's first and second takes of the song include similar verses and the narrative about Henry's Swing Club, but do not include the crucial mid-song hook "Boogie, chillen'!" before the guitar break, which gives the song its lyrical identity.[19]

A key feature of the song is the driving guitar rhythmic figure centered on one chord, with "accents that fell fractionally ahead of the beat".[5] Music journalist Charles Shaar Murray describes it as a "rocking dance piece ... its structure is utterly free-form, its basic beat is the jumping, polyrhythmic groove which he [Hooker] learned in the Delta".[20] In an interview with B.B. King, Hooker confirmed that he used an open G guitar tuning technique for his guitar,[21] although he usually used a capo, raising the pitch to B (1948), A (1959), or A (1970).[22] He also employed hammer-on and pull-off techniques, which are described as "a slurred ascending bass line played on the fifth string [tonic]" by music writer Lenny Carlson.[22] Although it is titled a "boogie", it does not resemble the earlier boogie-woogie style.[5] Boogie-woogie is based on a left-hand piano ostinato or walking-bass line and, as performed on guitar, forms the popular 1940s instrumental "Guitar Boogie".[5][d] Rather than being derivative, Hooker's boogie becomes "as overwhelmingly personal a piece as anything ever done in the blues".[23]

Recording and release edit

In September 1948, Besman arranged recording sessions for Hooker at United Sound studios in Detroit.[1] Several songs were recorded with Hooker's vocals and amplified guitar.[3] To make the sound fuller, a microphone was set up in a pallet that was placed under Hooker's foot.[24] According to Besman's account, a primitive echo-chamber effect was created by feeding Hooker's foot-stomp rhythm into a speaker in a toilet bowl, which in turn was miked and returned to a speaker in the studio in front of Hooker's guitar, thus giving it a "big" or more ambient sound.[24] Three takes of Hooker's performance were recorded, the last providing the master for "Boogie Chillen'".[25]

Even though Besman had his own record label, Sensation Records, he licensed "Boogie Chillen'" to Los Angeles-based Modern Records.[3] On November 3, 1948, it was released nationally and Hooker commented on its immediate appeal: "The thing caught afire. It was ringin' all around the country. When it come out, every juke box you went to, every place you went to ... they were playing it there".[5] Because of the response, Nashville, Tennessee, radio station WLAC, a 50,000 watt clear-channel station that reached fifteen states and Canada, played the song ten times in a row during one broadcast night.[26] "Boogie Chillen'" entered the Billboard Race Records chart on January 8, 1949, where it remained for eighteen weeks, and reached number one on February 19, 1949.[27]

The Detroit Free Press, Hooker's hometown newspaper, published a favorable review on January 22, 1949:

An unusual blues item is "Boogie Chillen'" by John Lee Hooker on Modern 20-627. Hooker's singing is remarkable for vocal coloring and phrasing; his improvised lyrics aren't much—even if he does toss in a couple references to Detroit. The guitar accompaniment which Hooker plays is even more intriguing than his vocalizing. His dynamic rhythms and subtle nuances on the guitar and his startling disregard for familiar scale and harmony patterns show similarity to the work of Robert Johnson, who made many fine records in this vein.[28]

"Boogie Chillen'" became the most popular race record of 1949[29] and reportedly sold "several hundred thousand"[30] to one million[31] copies.[e] In an experience similar to Muddy Waters' 1950 hit "Rollin' Stone",[33] the song's popularity allowed Hooker to give up his factory job and concentrate on music.[5]

Early influence edit

Besides its commercial success, "Boogie Chillen'" had a big impact on blues and R&B musicians. B.B. King, who was a disc jockey at Memphis, Tennessee, radio station WDIA at the time, regularly featured Hooker's song.[25] He recalled:

[There was] hardly anybody around who was playing at that time didn't play "Boogie Chillen". That's just how heavy it was ... I, for one, and many others [musicians] who would go out and play—if you didn't play "Boogie Chillen'" at that time, people probably look at you and wonder what was wrong with you. It was such a big record.[34]

Murray likens the song to "the R&B equivalent of punk rock" or superficially simple enough not to intimidate beginners.[35] It interested the young Bo Diddley: "I think the first record I paid attention to was John Lee Hooker's 'Boogie Chillen,' ... When I found John Lee Hooker on the radio, I said, 'If that guy can play, I know I can.' I mean John Lee's got a hell of a style".[34] In an interview, Buddy Guy described learning to play "Boogie Chillen'" at age thirteen: "that was the first thing I thought I learned how to play that I knew sounded right when someone would listen."[34] Guy later recorded a version with Junior Wells for their 1981 album Alone & Acoustic. Albert Collins also recalled that it was the first song he learned to play.[34]

The success of "Boogie Chillen'" brought numerous offers for John Lee Hooker to record for other record companies. Because he received little remuneration from the sales of his record, Hooker readily accepted the opportunities to generate income.[36] This led to his recording using a variety of pseudonyms, including Texas Slim, Little Pork Chops, Delta John, Birmingham Sam, the Boogie Man, Johnny Williams, John Lee Booker, John Lee Cooker, and others for such labels as King, Danceland, Regent, Savoy, Acorn, Prize, Staff, Gotham, Gone, Chess, and Swing Time.[6]

Later Hooker versions edit

The demand for "Boogie Chillen'" remained high enough for Hooker to re-record the song several times.[16] In 1950, he recorded a faster version with different lyrics as "Boogie Chillen' #2" for Bernie Besman's Sensation label (also issued by Regal).[37] Modern Records released an edited version in 1952 titled "New Boogie Chillun". After Hooker began his association with Vee-Jay Records, he recorded "Boogie Chillun" in 1959, which closely follows the original single.[38] Because of the similarity, the 1959 version is sometimes misidentified as the 1948 version and vice versa (at 2:36, the Vee-Jay version is about a half a minute shorter than the original).[39]

 
Hooker 'n Heat album cover (front)[f]

The first two takes from the September 1948 Detroit recording session began appearing on various compilation albums in the 1970s, sometimes with the titles "John Lee's Original Boogie" and "Henry's Swing Club".[3] Meanwhile, Modern and its associated labels including Kent and Crown reissued the song several times.

From the 1960s onwards, Hooker recorded several studio and live renditions of "Boogie Chillen'",[40] with guest musicians such as Eric Clapton and the Rolling Stones. In 1970, he recorded an updated version of the song, titled "Boogie Chillen' No. 2", with the blues rock group Canned Heat for their joint album, Hooker 'n Heat.[41] Blues historian Gerard Herzhaft describes the performance as a "memorable one".[16] It combines Hooker's vocal and Canned Heat's signature boogie rock backing, as heard in the group's jam song "Fried Hockey Boogie" (itself an adaptation of "Boogie Chillen'").[4] Despite being over eleven minutes long with extended guitar and harmonica solos, it remains as "full of the same swagger as the original".[41]

Recognition and legacy edit

In 1985, Hooker's 1948 recording of "Boogie Chillen'" was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame. Writing for the Foundation, blues historian Jim O'Neal noted it was "the first down-home electric blues record to achieve No. 1 chart status and its success, together with that of the Hooker hits that followed, inspired record companies to search out the new electric generation of country bluesmen".[42] In 1999, it received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award[43] and is included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame list of the "500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll".[44] "Boogie Chillen'" was added to the U.S. National Recording Registry in 2008, which noted that "the driving rhythm and confessional lyrics have guaranteed its place as an influential and enduring blues classic".[45] Authors Jim Dawson and Steve Propes included it in their 1992 book What Was the First Rock 'n' Roll Record?, identifying it among the precursors of rock and roll.[46]

"Boogie Chillen'" has inspired several songs, beginning in 1953, when Junior Parker recorded his interpretation titled "Feelin' Good".[47] It became Parker's first hit for Sun Records and was subsequently recorded by James Cotton in 1967 and by Magic Sam as "I Feel So Good (I Wanna Boogie)" for his influential 1967 album West Side Soul.[4] A version by Slim Harpo, titled "Boogie Chillun", appeared on his 1970 album Slim Harpo Knew the Blues using a similar arrangement to his 1966 hit "Shake Your Hips".[48]

Other songs that borrow from "Boogie Chillen'" or "Boogie Chillen' No. 2", either directly or indirectly, include the radio hits "On the Road Again" by Canned Heat in 1968, "Spirit in the Sky" by Norman Greenbaum in 1970, and "La Grange" by ZZ Top in 1973, "Shake your Hips" by The Rolling Stones in 1972.[4][49]

Copyright issues edit

In 1991, Bernie Besman, as the song's publisher, La Cienega Music, brought legal action against ZZ Top for copyright infringement for their song "La Grange".[36] Writer Timothy English notes that of the various Hooker recordings of "Boogie Chillen'", the one released in 1971 with Canned Heat "has the most elements in common with 'La Grange', including the guitar pattern and the 'howl, howl, howl' vocal line".[50] The case wound its way through the American legal system (including an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court).[51] When the ruling did not favor the publisher, the U.S. Congress was persuaded to amend the Copyright Act in 1998 to protect many songs recorded before 1978 from entering the public domain.[52] ZZ Top settled out of court in 1997,[52] but Hooker again gained no financial reward from his song—Besman had obtained Hooker's rights to the song years earlier.[51] However, Gioia noted, "Nonetheless, his [John Lee Hooker's 1948] spontaneous performance in a recording studio had led to a substantial change in U.S. intellectual property law".[51]

Notes edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Several sources list the recording date as November 1948,[2][3] which is the date Murray uses for the record release by Modern Records.[1]
  2. ^ The original Modern Records single listed the songwriter as "John Lee Hooker". Detroit record company owner Bernard Besman's name was later added to the credit.
  3. ^ Both spellings have appeared on Hooker's original singles.
  4. ^ Besman later claimed that he suggested that Hooker record a boogie and played a few bars on the piano; Hooker denied that he ever heard Besman play piano or remembered a piano player in the studio.[20]
  5. ^ Besman later called these figures "a crock of shit", but admitted "everybody in the record business was crooked".[32]
  6. ^ Canned Heat member Alan Wilson, who played harmonica on "Boogie Chillen' No. 2", died before the Hooker 'n Heat album cover photo was taken. His image appears as a portrait on the wall to the right of the window.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Murray 2002, p. 118.
  2. ^ Gioia 2008, p. 237.
  3. ^ a b c d e Sax 1991, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c d Koda, Cub. "John Lee Hooker: Boogie Chillen' – Song review". AllMusic. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Palmer 1982, p. 243.
  6. ^ a b c Dahl 1996, pp. 115–116.
  7. ^ Murray 2002, p. 90.
  8. ^ a b Gioia 2008, p. 241.
  9. ^ Gioia 2008, p. 244.
  10. ^ Gioia 2008, pp. 242–243.
  11. ^ Obrecht 2000, p. 427.
  12. ^ Obrecht 2000, pp. 406, 426–427.
  13. ^ Palmer 1982, p. 243–244.
  14. ^ Murray 2002, p. 129.
  15. ^ Gioia 2008, p. 238.
  16. ^ a b c d Herzhaft 1992, p. 440.
  17. ^ "Mama Don't Allow – Song search results". AllMusic. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  18. ^ "Cow Cow Davenport: Boogie No. 3". AllMusic. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  19. ^ Murray 2002, p. 131.
  20. ^ a b Murray 2002, p. 127.
  21. ^ Kostelanetz & King 2005, p. 100.
  22. ^ a b Carlson 2006, p. 138.
  23. ^ Murray 2002, p. 128.
  24. ^ a b Murray 2002, pp. 121–122.
  25. ^ a b Gioia 2008, p. 245.
  26. ^ Sullivan 2013, p. 609.
  27. ^ Whitburn 1988, p. 194.
  28. ^ Wilson, Jim (January 22, 1949). "Artists Get Workout in Bopping Old Tune". The Detroit Free Press. p. 14.
  29. ^ Whitburn 1988, p. 597.
  30. ^ Fancourt 1988, p. 1.
  31. ^ Shadwick 2007, p. 303.
  32. ^ Murray 2002, p. 135.
  33. ^ Gordon 2002, p. 101.
  34. ^ a b c d Murray 2002, pp. 133–135.
  35. ^ Murray 2002, p. 134.
  36. ^ a b English 2007, p. 52.
  37. ^ Murray 2002, p. 133.
  38. ^ Murray 2002, p. 131 fn.
  39. ^ Boogie Chillun (Single label). John Lee Hooker. Vee-Jay Records. 1959. VJ 319.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  40. ^ Unterberger 1996, p. 117.
  41. ^ a b Planer, Lindsay. "Hooker 'n Heat (Infinite Boogie) – Album review". AllMusic. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  42. ^ O'Neal, Jim (November 10, 2016). "1985 Hall of Fame Inductees: Boogie Chillen – John Lee Hooker (Modern, 1948)". The Blues Foundation. Retrieved February 9, 2017.
  43. ^ . Grammy.org. 1999. Archived from the original on January 22, 2011. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  44. ^ . Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. 1995. Archived from the original on May 2, 2007. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  45. ^ "Complete National Recording Registry Listing". U.S. Library of Congress. Retrieved June 19, 2013.
  46. ^ Dawson & Propes 1992, eBook.
  47. ^ Palmer 1982, p. 244.
  48. ^ "Slim Harpo Knew the Blues – Overview". AllMusic. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  49. ^ Carson 2006, p. 167.
  50. ^ English 2007, pp. 52–53.
  51. ^ a b c Gioia 2008, p. 251.
  52. ^ a b English 2007, p. 53.

References edit

boogie, chillen, boogie, chillun, blues, song, first, recorded, john, hooker, 1948, solo, performance, featuring, hooker, vocal, electric, guitar, rhythmic, foot, stomps, lyrics, partly, autobiographical, alternate, between, spoken, sung, verses, song, debut, . Boogie Chillen or Boogie Chillun c is a blues song first recorded by John Lee Hooker in 1948 It is a solo performance featuring Hooker s vocal electric guitar and rhythmic foot stomps The lyrics are partly autobiographical and alternate between spoken and sung verses The song was his debut record release and in 1949 it became the first down home electric blues song to reach number one in the R amp B records chart Boogie Chillen Single by John Lee HookerB side Sally May ReleasedNovember 1948 1948 11 1 RecordedSeptember 1948 1 a StudioUnited Sound Systems Detroit MichiganGenreBluesLength3 11LabelModernSongwriter s John Lee Hooker b Producer s Bernard BesmanHooker s song was part of a trend in the late 1940s to a new style of urban electric blues based on earlier Delta blues idioms Although it is called a boogie it resembles early North Mississippi Hill country blues rather than the boogie woogie piano derived style of the 1930s and 1940s Hooker gave credit to his stepfather Will Moore who taught him the rhythm of Boogie Chillen chillen is a phonetic approximation of Hooker s pronunciation of children when he was a teenager Some of the song s lyrics are derived from earlier blues songs Hooker s guitar work on the song inspired several well known guitarists to take up the instrument With its driving style and focus on rhythm it is also considered a forerunner of rock and roll Music critic Cub Koda calls the guitar figure from Boogie Chillen the riff that launched a million songs 4 Several rock musicians have patterned successful songs either directly or indirectly on Hooker s many versions of Boogie Chillen These include songs by boogie rock band Canned Heat who also recorded a well received version with Hooker One of ZZ Top s best known hits La Grange allegedly uses elements of the song which led to legal action by the song s publisher and resulted in changes to American copyright law Contents 1 Background 2 Composition and lyrics 3 Recording and release 4 Early influence 5 Later Hooker versions 6 Recognition and legacy 7 Copyright issues 8 Notes 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 Citations 8 3 ReferencesBackground editIn 1943 Hooker moved to Detroit Michigan for employment opportunities in the city s wartime vehicle manufacturing factories 5 There he was attracted to the music clubs along Hastings Street in Black Bottom Paradise Valley the cultural center of the city s black community 6 He recounts his experience in the narrative to Boogie Chillen 7 When I first come to town people I was walkin down Hastings Street I heard everybody talkin about Henry s Swing Club I decided I d drop in there that night and when I got there I say Yes people yes they was really havin a ball Yes I know Boogie chillen By 1948 Hooker came to the attention of Elmer Barbee a local record shop owner 8 Barbee arranged to have several demos recorded 8 He or Hooker later presented them to Bernard Besman who ran the Detroit area s only professional record company 3 Although Hooker had played mostly with an ensemble at that time Besman decided to record him solo 9 This put the attention solely on the singer guitarist 1 in contrast to the prevailing jump blues style which emphasized ensemble instrumentation Recent hit singles by Muddy Waters and Lightnin Hopkins had also used this stripped down electrified Delta blues inspired approach 10 Composition and lyrics edit Boogie Chillen is described by music critic Bill Dahl as blues as primitive as anything then on the market Hooker s dark ruminative vocals were backed only by his own ringing heavily amplified guitar and insistently pounding foot 6 In an interview Hooker shared how he came up with Boogie Chillen I wrote that song in Detroit when I was sittin around strummin my guitar The thing come into me you know I heard my stepfather Will Moore done sic it years and years before I was a little kid from down South and I heard him do a song like that but he didn t call it Boogie Chillen But it had that beat and I just kept that beat up and I called it Boogie Chillen 11 He performed the song in clubs before recording it and called it Boogie Woogie before settling on Boogie Chillen 12 According to musicologist Robert Palmer The closest thing to it on records is Cottonfield Blues recorded by Garfield Akers and Joe Callicott two guitarists from the hill country of northern Mississippi in 1929 Essentially it was a backcountry pre blues sort of music a droning open ended stomp without a fixed verse form that lent itself to building up to a cumulative trancelike effect 13 nbsp Hooker performing in 1972Hooker s vocal alternates between sung and spoken sections 14 Commenting on Hooker s vocal sections music historian Ted Gioia notes The song has almost no melody Even less harmony In fact it is hard to call it a song It s more like a bit of jive stream of consciousness in 4 4 time 15 Some of the lyrics are borrowed from earlier songs that date back to the beginning of the blues 16 The opening line My mama she didn t allow me to stay out all night long has origins in Mama Don t Allow an old dance song 16 Several songs were recorded in the 1920s with similar titles 17 Boogie No 3 by boogie woogie pianist Cow Cow Davenport has sung and spoken sections and includes the lines I don t care what Grandma don t allow play my music anyhow Grandma s don t llow no music playin in here 18 Hooker s first and second takes of the song include similar verses and the narrative about Henry s Swing Club but do not include the crucial mid song hook Boogie chillen before the guitar break which gives the song its lyrical identity 19 A key feature of the song is the driving guitar rhythmic figure centered on one chord with accents that fell fractionally ahead of the beat 5 Music journalist Charles Shaar Murray describes it as a rocking dance piece its structure is utterly free form its basic beat is the jumping polyrhythmic groove which he Hooker learned in the Delta 20 In an interview with B B King Hooker confirmed that he used an open G guitar tuning technique for his guitar 21 although he usually used a capo raising the pitch to B 1948 A 1959 or A 1970 22 He also employed hammer on and pull off techniques which are described as a slurred ascending bass line played on the fifth string tonic by music writer Lenny Carlson 22 Although it is titled a boogie it does not resemble the earlier boogie woogie style 5 Boogie woogie is based on a left hand piano ostinato or walking bass line and as performed on guitar forms the popular 1940s instrumental Guitar Boogie 5 d Rather than being derivative Hooker s boogie becomes as overwhelmingly personal a piece as anything ever done in the blues 23 Recording and release editIn September 1948 Besman arranged recording sessions for Hooker at United Sound studios in Detroit 1 Several songs were recorded with Hooker s vocals and amplified guitar 3 To make the sound fuller a microphone was set up in a pallet that was placed under Hooker s foot 24 According to Besman s account a primitive echo chamber effect was created by feeding Hooker s foot stomp rhythm into a speaker in a toilet bowl which in turn was miked and returned to a speaker in the studio in front of Hooker s guitar thus giving it a big or more ambient sound 24 Three takes of Hooker s performance were recorded the last providing the master for Boogie Chillen 25 Even though Besman had his own record label Sensation Records he licensed Boogie Chillen to Los Angeles based Modern Records 3 On November 3 1948 it was released nationally and Hooker commented on its immediate appeal The thing caught afire It was ringin all around the country When it come out every juke box you went to every place you went to they were playing it there 5 Because of the response Nashville Tennessee radio station WLAC a 50 000 watt clear channel station that reached fifteen states and Canada played the song ten times in a row during one broadcast night 26 Boogie Chillen entered the Billboard Race Records chart on January 8 1949 where it remained for eighteen weeks and reached number one on February 19 1949 27 The Detroit Free Press Hooker s hometown newspaper published a favorable review on January 22 1949 An unusual blues item is Boogie Chillen by John Lee Hooker on Modern 20 627 Hooker s singing is remarkable for vocal coloring and phrasing his improvised lyrics aren t much even if he does toss in a couple references to Detroit The guitar accompaniment which Hooker plays is even more intriguing than his vocalizing His dynamic rhythms and subtle nuances on the guitar and his startling disregard for familiar scale and harmony patterns show similarity to the work of Robert Johnson who made many fine records in this vein 28 Boogie Chillen became the most popular race record of 1949 29 and reportedly sold several hundred thousand 30 to one million 31 copies e In an experience similar to Muddy Waters 1950 hit Rollin Stone 33 the song s popularity allowed Hooker to give up his factory job and concentrate on music 5 Early influence editBesides its commercial success Boogie Chillen had a big impact on blues and R amp B musicians B B King who was a disc jockey at Memphis Tennessee radio station WDIA at the time regularly featured Hooker s song 25 He recalled There was hardly anybody around who was playing at that time didn t play Boogie Chillen That s just how heavy it was I for one and many others musicians who would go out and play if you didn t play Boogie Chillen at that time people probably look at you and wonder what was wrong with you It was such a big record 34 Murray likens the song to the R amp B equivalent of punk rock or superficially simple enough not to intimidate beginners 35 It interested the young Bo Diddley I think the first record I paid attention to was John Lee Hooker s Boogie Chillen When I found John Lee Hooker on the radio I said If that guy can play I know I can I mean John Lee s got a hell of a style 34 In an interview Buddy Guy described learning to play Boogie Chillen at age thirteen that was the first thing I thought I learned how to play that I knew sounded right when someone would listen 34 Guy later recorded a version with Junior Wells for their 1981 album Alone amp Acoustic Albert Collins also recalled that it was the first song he learned to play 34 The success of Boogie Chillen brought numerous offers for John Lee Hooker to record for other record companies Because he received little remuneration from the sales of his record Hooker readily accepted the opportunities to generate income 36 This led to his recording using a variety of pseudonyms including Texas Slim Little Pork Chops Delta John Birmingham Sam the Boogie Man Johnny Williams John Lee Booker John Lee Cooker and others for such labels as King Danceland Regent Savoy Acorn Prize Staff Gotham Gone Chess and Swing Time 6 Later Hooker versions editThe demand for Boogie Chillen remained high enough for Hooker to re record the song several times 16 In 1950 he recorded a faster version with different lyrics as Boogie Chillen 2 for Bernie Besman s Sensation label also issued by Regal 37 Modern Records released an edited version in 1952 titled New Boogie Chillun After Hooker began his association with Vee Jay Records he recorded Boogie Chillun in 1959 which closely follows the original single 38 Because of the similarity the 1959 version is sometimes misidentified as the 1948 version and vice versa at 2 36 the Vee Jay version is about a half a minute shorter than the original 39 nbsp Hooker n Heat album cover front f The first two takes from the September 1948 Detroit recording session began appearing on various compilation albums in the 1970s sometimes with the titles John Lee s Original Boogie and Henry s Swing Club 3 Meanwhile Modern and its associated labels including Kent and Crown reissued the song several times From the 1960s onwards Hooker recorded several studio and live renditions of Boogie Chillen 40 with guest musicians such as Eric Clapton and the Rolling Stones In 1970 he recorded an updated version of the song titled Boogie Chillen No 2 with the blues rock group Canned Heat for their joint album Hooker n Heat 41 Blues historian Gerard Herzhaft describes the performance as a memorable one 16 It combines Hooker s vocal and Canned Heat s signature boogie rock backing as heard in the group s jam song Fried Hockey Boogie itself an adaptation of Boogie Chillen 4 Despite being over eleven minutes long with extended guitar and harmonica solos it remains as full of the same swagger as the original 41 Recognition and legacy editIn 1985 Hooker s 1948 recording of Boogie Chillen was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame Writing for the Foundation blues historian Jim O Neal noted it was the first down home electric blues record to achieve No 1 chart status and its success together with that of the Hooker hits that followed inspired record companies to search out the new electric generation of country bluesmen 42 In 1999 it received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award 43 and is included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame list of the 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll 44 Boogie Chillen was added to the U S National Recording Registry in 2008 which noted that the driving rhythm and confessional lyrics have guaranteed its place as an influential and enduring blues classic 45 Authors Jim Dawson and Steve Propes included it in their 1992 book What Was the First Rock n Roll Record identifying it among the precursors of rock and roll 46 Boogie Chillen has inspired several songs beginning in 1953 when Junior Parker recorded his interpretation titled Feelin Good 47 It became Parker s first hit for Sun Records and was subsequently recorded by James Cotton in 1967 and by Magic Sam as I Feel So Good I Wanna Boogie for his influential 1967 album West Side Soul 4 A version by Slim Harpo titled Boogie Chillun appeared on his 1970 album Slim Harpo Knew the Blues using a similar arrangement to his 1966 hit Shake Your Hips 48 Other songs that borrow from Boogie Chillen or Boogie Chillen No 2 either directly or indirectly include the radio hits On the Road Again by Canned Heat in 1968 Spirit in the Sky by Norman Greenbaum in 1970 and La Grange by ZZ Top in 1973 Shake your Hips by The Rolling Stones in 1972 4 49 Copyright issues editIn 1991 Bernie Besman as the song s publisher La Cienega Music brought legal action against ZZ Top for copyright infringement for their song La Grange 36 Writer Timothy English notes that of the various Hooker recordings of Boogie Chillen the one released in 1971 with Canned Heat has the most elements in common with La Grange including the guitar pattern and the howl howl howl vocal line 50 The case wound its way through the American legal system including an appeal to the U S Supreme Court 51 When the ruling did not favor the publisher the U S Congress was persuaded to amend the Copyright Act in 1998 to protect many songs recorded before 1978 from entering the public domain 52 ZZ Top settled out of court in 1997 52 but Hooker again gained no financial reward from his song Besman had obtained Hooker s rights to the song years earlier 51 However Gioia noted Nonetheless his John Lee Hooker s 1948 spontaneous performance in a recording studio had led to a substantial change in U S intellectual property law 51 Notes editFootnotes edit Several sources list the recording date as November 1948 2 3 which is the date Murray uses for the record release by Modern Records 1 The original Modern Records single listed the songwriter as John Lee Hooker Detroit record company owner Bernard Besman s name was later added to the credit Both spellings have appeared on Hooker s original singles Besman later claimed that he suggested that Hooker record a boogie and played a few bars on the piano Hooker denied that he ever heard Besman play piano or remembered a piano player in the studio 20 Besman later called these figures a crock of shit but admitted everybody in the record business was crooked 32 Canned Heat member Alan Wilson who played harmonica on Boogie Chillen No 2 died before the Hooker n Heat album cover photo was taken His image appears as a portrait on the wall to the right of the window Citations edit a b c d e Murray 2002 p 118 Gioia 2008 p 237 a b c d e Sax 1991 p 1 a b c d Koda Cub John Lee Hooker Boogie Chillen Song review AllMusic Retrieved June 18 2013 a b c d e f Palmer 1982 p 243 a b c Dahl 1996 pp 115 116 Murray 2002 p 90 a b Gioia 2008 p 241 Gioia 2008 p 244 Gioia 2008 pp 242 243 Obrecht 2000 p 427 Obrecht 2000 pp 406 426 427 Palmer 1982 p 243 244 Murray 2002 p 129 Gioia 2008 p 238 a b c d Herzhaft 1992 p 440 Mama Don t Allow Song search results AllMusic Retrieved May 20 2014 Cow Cow Davenport Boogie No 3 AllMusic Retrieved May 20 2014 Murray 2002 p 131 a b Murray 2002 p 127 Kostelanetz amp King 2005 p 100 a b Carlson 2006 p 138 Murray 2002 p 128 a b Murray 2002 pp 121 122 a b Gioia 2008 p 245 Sullivan 2013 p 609 Whitburn 1988 p 194 Wilson Jim January 22 1949 Artists Get Workout in Bopping Old Tune The Detroit Free Press p 14 Whitburn 1988 p 597 Fancourt 1988 p 1 Shadwick 2007 p 303 Murray 2002 p 135 Gordon 2002 p 101 a b c d Murray 2002 pp 133 135 Murray 2002 p 134 a b English 2007 p 52 Murray 2002 p 133 Murray 2002 p 131 fn Boogie Chillun Single label John Lee Hooker Vee Jay Records 1959 VJ 319 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Unterberger 1996 p 117 a b Planer Lindsay Hooker n Heat Infinite Boogie Album review AllMusic Retrieved June 18 2013 O Neal Jim November 10 2016 1985 Hall of Fame Inductees Boogie Chillen John Lee Hooker Modern 1948 The Blues Foundation Retrieved February 9 2017 Grammy Hall of Fame Awards Past Recipients Grammy org 1999 Archived from the original on January 22 2011 Retrieved June 18 2013 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 1995 Archived from the original on May 2 2007 Retrieved June 18 2013 Complete National Recording Registry Listing U S Library of Congress Retrieved June 19 2013 Dawson amp Propes 1992 eBook Palmer 1982 p 244 Slim Harpo Knew the Blues Overview AllMusic Retrieved May 18 2014 Carson 2006 p 167 English 2007 pp 52 53 a b c Gioia 2008 p 251 a b English 2007 p 53 References edit Carlson Lenny 2006 Boogie Chillen In Komara Edward ed Encyclopedia of the Blues New York City Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 92699 7 Carson David A 2006 Grit Noise and Revolution The Birth of Detroit Rock n Roll Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 03190 0 Dahl Bill 1996 John Lee Hooker In Erlewine Michael ed All Music Guide to the Blues San Francisco Miller Freeman Books ISBN 0 87930 424 3 Dawson Jim Propes Steve 1992 What Was the First Rock n Roll Record London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 12939 0 English Tim 2007 Sounds Like Teen Spirit Stolen Melodies Ripped Off Riffs and the Secret History of Rock and Roll iUniverse Star ISBN 978 1 58348 023 6 Fancourt Leslie 1988 John Lee Hooker Boogie Chillen CD notes John Lee Hooker Copenhagen Denmark Official Record 86 029 Gioia Ted 2008 Delta Blues Norton Paperback 2009 ed New York City W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 33750 1 Gordon Robert 2002 Can t Be Satisfied The Life and Times of Muddy Waters New York City Little Brown ISBN 0 316 32849 9 Herzhaft Gerard 1992 Boogie Chillen Encyclopedia of the Blues Fayetteville Arkansas University of Arkansas Press ISBN 1 55728 252 8 Kostelanetz Richard King B B 2005 The B B King Reader Six Decades of Commentary Milwaukee Wisconsin Hal Leonard ISBN 978 0 634 09927 4 Mandel Howard ed 2005 The Billboard Illustrated Encyclopedia of Jazz amp Blues New York City Billboard Books ISBN 0 8230 8266 0 Murray Charles Shaar 2002 Boogie Man The Adventures of John Lee Hooker in the American Twentieth Century New York City Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 27006 3 Obrecht Jas ed 2000 Rollin and Tumblin The Postwar Blues Guitarists San Francisco Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 613 7 Palmer Robert 1982 Deep Blues New York City Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 006223 8 Sax Dave 1991 The Legendary Modern Recordings 1948 1954 CD notes John Lee Hooker Flair Records Virgin Records 7243 8 39658 2 3 Shadwick Keith 2007 John Lee Hooker The Encyclopedia of Jazz amp Blues London Quantum Publishing ISBN 978 0 681 08644 9 Schleimer Joseph D February 1998 Flaws in the La Cienega Fix How New Legislation Affects Pre 1972 Recorded Songs Entertainment Law amp Finance XIII 11 Leader Publications Retrieved June 18 2013 Sullivan Steve 2013 Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 8295 9 Unterberger Richie 1996 John Lee Hooker Hooker amp Heat In Erlewine Michael ed All Music Guide to the Blues San Francisco Miller Freeman Books ISBN 0 87930 424 3 Whitburn Joel 1988 Top R amp B Singles 1942 1988 Menomonee Falls Wisconsin Record Research ISBN 0 89820 068 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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