The Thrill Is Gone: B.B. King Dead at 89.

rainee

New member
My heart is saddened!
But I came here to hear the song in tribute to him...
Yo haven't picked one rendition you like to commemorate him here?
 
My heart is saddened!
But I came here to hear the song in tribute to him...
Yo haven't picked one rendition you like to commemorate him here?
I can't do that from work. While I liked "The Thrill Is Gone", I also liked when he played with U2. I'd have to spend some time on youtube and that is blocked from viewing. There are ways around it, but I won't know what I'm posting.
 

rainee

New member
Well It's just a good thing I wasn't holding my breath since yesterday, that's all I'm sayin :eek:
 

elohiym

Well-known member
Enjoyed your music. Rest in peace, brother. :guitar:

About Lucille:

Lucille's beginnings date to 1949, when King, then in his early 20s, was performing at a nightclub in Twist, Arkansas, in the dead of winter. To heat the cold room, King recalled in a video interview, "they would take something that looked like a big garbage pail, half fill it with kerosene, light that fuel [and] set it in the middle of the dance floor." All well and good, but on this night, a fight broke out between two men, and the pail was knocked over. "It spilled on the floor, it looked like a river fire," the guitarist said. "And everyone started to run for the front door, including B.B. King."

The blueseman managed to make it to safety outside — only to realize he had left his guitar behind. He raced back inside to retrieve it even as the wooden building, he said, "started to fall in around me." The next day, he learned that two men had died in the blaze and that the fight that had set off the tragic chain of events had been over a woman who worked at the club. Her name was Lucille.

B.B., who claimed he "almost lost [his] life" rushing back into the nightclub, christened his guitar after her, he said, "to remind me never to do a thing like that again."​
 

Daniel1611

New member
I'm a huge blues fan. Sadly I never got to see the man in concert. Much like the music of bluesmen like Blind Lemon Jefferson is still influencing people 100 years after it was recorded, so will the music of B.B. King.
 
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