Chess Records
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Assorted References
- Berry
- In Chuck Berry
…Chess signed him for their Chess label, and in 1955 his first recording session produced “Maybellene” (a country-and-western-influenced song that Berry had originally titled “Ida Red”), which stayed on the pop charts for 11 weeks, cresting at number five. Berry followed this success with extensive tours and hit after hit,…
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- In Chuck Berry
- Chess
- In Leonard Chess
…Phil as partner, renamed it Chess. As fans of the electric blues, a style being heard in Chicago after World War II, they signed such artists as Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, Chuck Berry, Howlin’ Wolf, Etta James, Koko Taylor, and Bo Diddley and played a major role in introducing black…
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- In Leonard Chess
- Diddley
- In Bo Diddley
…the legendary blues record company Chess as Bo Diddley (a name most likely derived from the diddley bow, a one-stringed African guitar popular in the Mississippi Delta region). Diddley scored few hit records but was one of rock’s most influential artists nonetheless, because he had something nobody else could claim,…
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- In Bo Diddley
- Guy
- James
- In Etta James
After signing (1960) with Chess Records, James became its first major female star, with such songs as “All I Could Do Was Cry,” “Trust in Me,” “At Last,” and “Something’s Got a Hold on Me.” In 1967 she hit the charts again with the searing soul song “Tell Mama.”…
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- In Etta James
- Taylor
- In Koko Taylor
…came to the attention of Chess Records producer Willie Dixon, who promptly signed her to that label.
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- In Koko Taylor
- Waters
- In Muddy Waters
By 1948 Aristocrat had become Chess Records (taking its name from Leonard and Phil Chess, the Polish immigrant brothers who owned and operated it), and Waters was recording a string of hits for it that began with “I Feel Like Going Home” and “I Can’t Be Satisfied.” His early, aggressive,…
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- In Muddy Waters
SIDEBAR
- Chess Records: From Muddy to “Maybellene”
- In Chess Records: From Muddy to “Maybellene”
In 1947 brothers Leonard and Phil Chess became partners with Charles and Evelyn Aron in the Aristocrat Record Company. The Chesses had operated several taverns on Chicago’s South Side—the last and largest of which was the Mocamba Lounge—and their desire to record one of the…
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- In Chess Records: From Muddy to “Maybellene”