Bobby Blue Bland Today I Started Loving You Again Lyrics
Bobby Bland | |
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Background data | |
Birth proper name | Robert Calvin Brooks |
Also known as | Bobby "Bluish" Bland |
Born | (1930-01-27)January 27, 1930 Barretville, Tennessee, U.Southward. |
Died | June 23, 2013(2013-06-23) (aged 83) Germantown, Tennessee, U.S. |
Genres |
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Occupation(due south) |
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Instruments | Vocals |
Labels |
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Associated acts |
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Robert Calvin Bland (born Robert Calvin Brooks; January 27, 1930 – June 23, 2013), known professionally as Bobby "Blueish" Bland, was an American blues vocaliser.
Banal adult a audio that mixed gospel with the dejection and R&B.[1] He was described equally "among the great storytellers of blues and soul music... [who] created tempestuous arias of love, betrayal and resignation, prepare against roiling, dramatic orchestrations, and left the listener drained but awed."[2] He was sometimes referred to as the "Lion of the Blues" and as the "Sinatra of the Blues".[3] His music was also influenced by Nat Male monarch Cole.[iv]
Banal was inducted into the Dejection Hall of Fame in 1981, the Stone and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992, and the Memphis Music Hall of Fame in 2012.[five] He received the Grammy Lifetime Accomplishment Laurels in 1997.[vi] The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame described him every bit "second in stature but to B.B. King as a product of Memphis's Beale Street dejection scene".[3]
Life and career [edit]
Early life [edit]
Banal was built-in Robert Calvin Brooks in the modest boondocks of Barretville, Tennessee.[1] [7] [eight] His father, I. J. Brooks, abandoned the family unit not long after Robert's nascence. Robert later acquired the name "Banal" from his stepfather, Leroy Bridgeforth, who was too called Leroy Banal.[8] Robert dropped out of schoolhouse in third grade to work in the cotton fields and never graduated from school.[9]
With his mother, Bland moved to Memphis in 1947, where he started singing with local gospel groups, including the Miniatures. Eager to expand his interests, he began frequenting the city's famous Beale Street, where he became associated with a circle of aspiring musicians, including B.B. King, Rosco Gordon, Junior Parker and Johnny Ace, who collectively were known as the Beale Streeters.[1] [two] [ten]
Early career [edit]
In 1951, talent picket Ike Turner recorded Banal for Modernistic Records at Tuff Green'due south business firm in Memphis.[eleven] [12] Because Bland was illiterate, they first recorded the one song he knew, "They Call It Stormy Monday."[13] [11] While the recording was never released, Banal later on recorded the song in 1961, which became one of his hit singles.[14] Turner backed Bland on piano for his starting time two records which were released under the name Robert Bland.[14] [xv] Between 1951 and 1952, Banal recorded commercially unsuccessful singles for Modern and Sun Records (which licensed its recordings to Chess Records).[5] However, these records caught the attention of Duke Records.[12] [16] Bland's recordings from the early 1950s show him striving for individuality, only his progress was halted for ii years while he served in the U.S. Ground forces, during which time he performed in a band with the singer Eddie Fisher.[17]
When Bland returned to Memphis in 1954, several of his former assembly, including Johnny Ace, were enjoying considerable success. He joined Ace's revue and returned to Duke Records, which was then beingness run by the Houston entrepreneur Don Robey. According to his biographer Charles Farley, "Robey handed Bobby a new contract, which Bobby could not read, and helped Bobby sign his proper noun on it". The contract gave Banal only one-half a cent per record sold, instead of the manufacture standard of 2 cents.[sixteen]
Bland released his first single for Duke in 1955.[x] In 1956 he began touring on the Chitlin' Circuit with Junior Parker in a revue chosen Dejection Consolidated, initially doubling as Parker'southward valet and driver.[18] He began recording for Duke with the bandleader Bill Harvey and the arranger Joe Scott, asserting his feature vocal style and, with Harvey and Scott, beginning to craft the melodic large-ring blues singles for which he became famous, frequently accompanied past the guitarist Wayne Bennett.[xvi] Unlike many dejection musicians, Bland played no instrument.[3]
Commercial success [edit]
Banal's first chart success came in 1957 with "Farther Upwardly the Road", which reached number 1 on the R&B chart and number 43 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was followed by a series of hits on the R&B chart, including "Picayune Male child Bluish" (1958).[19] He also recorded an album with Parker, Dejection Consolidated, in 1958.[2] Bland'south arts and crafts was about conspicuously heard on a series of early on-1960s releases, including "Cry Cry Cry", "I Pity the Fool" (number 1 on the R&B chart in 1961) and "Plow On Your Love Lite", which became a much-covered standard by many bands. Despite credits to the opposite—often claimed by Robey—many of these archetype works were written by Joe Scott.[1] Bland also recorded a striking version of T-Bone Walker's "Call It Stormy Mon (But Tuesday Is Simply equally Bad)", which was erroneously given the title of a different song, "Stormy Monday Blues".[2]
His terminal record to reach number i on the R&B nautical chart was "That's the Way Love Is", in 1963,[nineteen] but he connected to produce a consistent run of R&B chart entries through the mid-1960s. He barely broke into the mainstream marketplace; his highest-charting vocal on the pop nautical chart, "Ain't Nothing You Tin Practice", peaked at number 20 in 1964, in the same week in which the Beatles held downwardly the acme 5 spots. Bland's records mostly sold on the R&B market rather than achieving crossover success. He had 23 Pinnacle Ten hits on the Billboard R&B chart. In the book Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942–1995, by Joel Whitburn, Bland was ranked number 13 of the all-time peak-charting artists.[19]
Later career [edit]
Financial pressures forced the singer to cutting his touring band and in 1968 the group broke up.[20] He suffered from low and became increasingly dependent on booze,[1] but he stopped drinking in 1971.[20] His tape visitor, Knuckles Records, was sold to the larger ABC Records group.[twenty] This resulted in several successful and critically acclaimed gimmicky blues and soul albums including His California Anthology and Dreamer,[20] bundled by Michael Omartian and produced by ABC staffer Steve Barri. The albums, including the after "follow-up" in 1977, Reflections in Blue, were recorded in Los Angeles and featured many of the city'due south top session musicians at the time.
The showtime single released from His California Album, "This Time I'm Gone for Good" took Bland back into the pop Top 50 for the starting time time since 1964 and made the R&B top ten in late 1973. The opening track from Dreamer, "Ain't No Honey in the Center of the City", was a potent R&B hit. A version of it was released in 1978 by the difficult-rock band Whitesnake, featuring the vocaliser David Coverdale. Much later it was sampled past Kanye West on Jay-Z'southward hip-hop anthology The Pattern (2001). The song is also featured on the soundtrack of the crime drama The Lincoln Lawyer (2011), starring Matthew McConaughey.[21] The follow-up, "I Wouldn't Treat a Domestic dog" was his biggest R&B hit for some years, climbing to number 3 in tardily 1974, but as usual his strength was never the popular chart (on which information technology reached number 88). Subsequent attempts at adding a disco flavor were by and large unsuccessful.[20] A render to his roots in 1980 for a tribute album to his mentor Joe Scott, produced by music veterans Monk Higgins and Al Bell, resulted in the album Sugariness Vibrations, but information technology failed to sell well outside of his traditional "chitlin circuit" base of operations.
In 1985, Bland signed a contract with Malaco Records,[20] specialists in traditional Southern black music, for which he made a series of albums while continuing to tour and announced at concerts with B. B. King. The two had collaborated on two albums in the 1970s. Despite occasional age-related sick health, Bland continued to tape new albums for Malaco and perform occasional tours alone, with the guitarist and producer Angelo Earl and too with B. B. Rex, and performed at blues and soul festivals worldwide. In 1985, the anthology Members Only on Malaco reached number 45 on Billboard's R&B albums nautical chart, and the title song reached number 54 for R&B singles. It was his concluding chart single, and became Bland's signature song for the rest of his career. Bland was inducted into the Rock and Coil Hall of Fame in 1992. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame described him as "2d in stature only to B. B. King equally a product of Memphis's Beale Street dejection scene".[three]
Collaborations and tributes [edit]
The Irish gaelic singer-songwriter Van Morrison was an early adherent of Bland, roofing "Turn On Your Love Light" while with the band Them (he later covered "Ain't Nothing You Can't Do" on his 1974 live album Information technology'southward Besides Tardily to Cease Now), and Bland was an occasional guest singer at Morrison'southward concerts. He likewise included a previously unreleased version of a March 2000 duet of Morrison and Bland singing "Tupelo Dear" on his 2007 compilation album, The Best of Van Morrison Book 3.
In 2008 the British vocalizer and lead vocalist of Simply Red, Mick Hucknall, released the anthology Tribute to Bobby, containing songs associated with Bland. The album reached eighteen in the UK Albums Chart.[22] [23]
Death [edit]
Banal connected performing until before long before his decease. He died on June 23, 2013, at his dwelling house in Germantown, Tennessee, a suburb of Memphis, afterward what family members described as "an ongoing illness." He was 83.[8] [24] [25] [26] He is interred at Memorial Park Cemetery in Memphis.[27] He is survived by his married woman, Willie Martin Banal, and his son Rodd, who is also a musician.[2] After his death, his son Rodd told news media that Banal had recently told him that the blues musician James Cotton was Bland'due south half-brother.[8]
Accolades [edit]
Bland was nominated for seven Grammy Awards in the course of his career.[28]
He received the following honors:
- Blues Hall of Fame - inducted 1981
- Rhythm and Dejection Pioneer Accolade - 1992
- Stone and Roll Hall of Fame - inducted 1992[29]
- Grammy Lifetime Achievement Honour - 1997[28]
- Grammy Hall of Fame - "Turn On Your Lovelight" (1999)[thirty]
- Memphis Music Hall of Fame - inducted 2012[5]
Discography [edit]
Studio albums [edit]
- Two Steps from the Blues, 1961 (Knuckles Records), 2002 (MCA)
- Hither'south the Human being!, 1962 (Knuckles Records)
- Phone call on Me/That's the Way Love Is, 1963 (Duke Records)
- Ain't Nothing Y'all Tin Do, 1964 (Duke Records)
- The Soul of the Man, 1966 (Knuckles Records)
- Bear on of the Blues, 1967 (Knuckles Records)
- Spotlighting the Man, 1969 (Duke Records)
- His California Anthology, 1973 (Dunhill Records)
- Dreamer, 1974 (Dunhill Records)
- Get On Down, 1975 (ABC Records)
- Reflections in Blue, 1977 (ABC Records)
- Come Wing with Me, 1978 (ABC Records)
- I Feel Good, I Feel Fine, 1979 (MCA 3157)
- Sweet Vibrations, 1980 (MCA 5145), tribute to Joe Scott
- Endeavor Me, I'chiliad Real, 1981 (MCA 5233)
- Here Nosotros Go Once again, 1982 (MCA 5297)
- Tell Mr Bland, 1983 (MCA 5425)
- Y'all've Got Me Loving You, 1984 (MCA 5503)
- Members Simply, 1985 (Malaco Records)
- After All, 1986 (Malaco Records)
- Blues You Can Use, 1987 (Malaco Records)
- Midnight Run, 1989 (Malaco Records)
- Portrait of the Blues, 1991 (Malaco Records)
- Years of Tears, 1993 (Malaco Records)
- Sad Street, 1995 (Malaco Records)
- Memphis Monday Morning time, 1998 (Malaco Records)
- Dejection at Midnight, 2003 (Malaco Records)
Alive albums [edit]
- Together for the First Time, with B. B. Male monarch, 1974 (ABC)
- Bobby Bland and B. B. King Together Again...Alive, 1976 (ABC)
- Live on Beale Street, 1998 (Malaco Records)
Collaborative album [edit]
- Blues Consolidated, 1958 (Duke Records) (with Inferior Parker)
Compilations [edit]
- The All-time of Bobby Banal, 1967 (Knuckles Records)
- The Best of Bobby Bland, vol. 2, 1968 (Knuckles Records)
- First Class Blues, 1987 (Malaco Records)
- The Anthology, 2001 (MCA)
- I Pity the Fool: The Duke Recordings, vol. one, 1992 (MCA)
- Turn on Your Love Light: The Duke Recordings, vol. 2, 1994 (MCA)
- That Did Information technology!: The Duke Recordings, vol. three, 1996 (MCA)
- Greatest Hits, Vol. 1: The Knuckles Recordings, 1998 (MCA, Duke/Peacock)
- Greatest Hits, Vol. 2: The ABC–Dunhill/MCA Recordings, 1998 (MCA)
- Unmatched: The Very All-time of Bobby Banal, 2011 (Malaco)
- Angel in Anguish: The Deep, Deep Soul of Bobby Bluish Banal, 2013 (Fingertips)
Singles [edit]
Year | A-side | B-side | Label | Nautical chart Positions | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The states Singles [31] | US R&B [19] | ||||
1951 | "Crying All Night Long" | "Dry Up Babe" | Modern | – | – |
1952 | "Proficient Lovin'" | "Drifting from Town to Town" | – | – | |
"Crying" | "A Alphabetic character from a Trench In Korea" | Chess | – | – | |
"Lovin' Blues" | "I.O.U. Blues" | Duke | – | – | |
1953 | "Regular army Blues" | "No Blow, No Testify" | – | – | |
1955 | "Time Out" | "It's My Life Baby" | – | – | |
"You or None" | "Woke Up Screaming" | – | – | ||
1956 | "I Can't Put Y'all Down" | "You've Got Bad Intentions" | – | – | |
"I Learned My Lesson" | "I Don't Believe" | – | – | ||
1957 | "Don't Desire No Woman" | "I Scent Problem" | – | – | |
"Farther Up the Road" | "Sometime Tomorrow" | 43 | ane | ||
"Teach Me (How to Love You lot)" | "Bobby's Blues" | – | – | ||
1958 | "You Got Me Where You Want Me" | "Loan a Helping Hand" | – | – | |
"Lilliputian Boy Bluish" | "Last Night" | – | 10 | ||
1959 | "Yous Did Me Wrong" | "I Lost Sight of the World" | – | – | |
"I'grand Non Ashamed" | "Wishing Well" | – | 13 | ||
"Is Information technology Existent" | "Someday" | – | 28 | ||
"I'll Take Intendance of You" | "That's Why" | 89 | 2 | ||
1960 | "Lead Me On" | "Hold Me Tenderly" | – | ix | |
"Cry Weep Weep" | "I've Been Wrong So Long" | 71 | 9 | ||
1961 | "I Pity the Fool" | "Close to You" | 46 | one | |
"Don't Weep No More than" | "Saint James Infirmary" | 71 | 2 | ||
"Plow On Your Dear Light" | "You're the One (That I Demand)" | 28 | 2 | ||
1962 | "Ain't That Loving You" | "Jelly, Jelly, Jelly" | 86 | nine | |
"Who Will the Side by side Fool Be" | "Blue Moon" | 76 | 12 | ||
"Yield Not to Temptation" | "How Does a Cheating Woman Experience" | 56 | ten | ||
"Stormy Monday Blues" | "Your Friends" | 43 | 5 | ||
1963 | "That'south the Way Love Is" | "Call on Me" | 33 / 22 | 1 / 6 | |
"Sometimes Yous Gotta Cry a Trivial" | "You're Worth It All" | 56 | 28 | ||
"The Feeling Is Gone" | "I Tin't Terminate Singing" | 91 / 106 | northward/a[32] | ||
1964 | "Ain't Goose egg Yous Can Do" | "Love Child" | xx | ||
"Share Your Love with Me" | "Later It's Likewise Late" | 42 / 111 | |||
"Own't Doing Too Bad (Part 1)" | "Ain't Doing Too Bad (Function 2)" | 49 | |||
1965 | "Bullheaded Homo" | "Blackness Dark" | 78 / 99 | ||
"Ain't No Telling" | "Dust Got in Daddy'south Eyes" | 93 / 125 | 25 / 23 | ||
"These Easily (Small but Mighty)" | "Today" | 63 | iv | ||
1966 | "I'one thousand Likewise Far Gone (To Turn Around)" | "If You Could Read My Listen" | 62 | 8 | |
"Good Time Charlie" | "Adept Time Charlie (Working His Groove Handbag)" | 75 | 6 | ||
"Poverty" | "Edifice a Burn with Rain" | 65 | 9 | ||
"Dorsum in the Same Erstwhile Bag Again" | "I Ain't Myself Anymore" | 102 | 13 | ||
1967 | "You're All I Need" | "Deep in My Soul" | 88 | 6 | |
"That Did It" | "Getting Used to the Blues" | – | vi | ||
"A Bear on of the Dejection" | "Shoes" | – | 30 | ||
1968 | "Driftin' Blues" | "Y'all Could Read My Mind" | 96 | 23 | |
"Honey Child" | "A Piece of Gilded" | – | – | ||
"Salve Your Beloved for Me" | "Share Your Love With Me" | – | xvi | ||
"Rockin' in the Same One-time Boat" | "Wouldn't You Rather Have Me" | 58 | 12 | ||
1969 | "Gotta Get to Know You" | "Baby, I'm on My Way" | 91 | 14 | |
"Bondage of Love" | "Enquire Me 'Bout Nothing (But the Blues)" | sixty | nine | ||
1970 | "If You've Got a Centre" | "Pitiful Feeling" | 96 | 10 | |
"If Love Ruled the World" | "Lover with a Reputation" | – | xvi / 28 | ||
"Keep On Loving Me (You'll Encounter the Change)" | "I've But Got to Forget Most Y'all" | 89 | 20 | ||
1971 | "I'g Sorry" | "Yum Yum Tree" | 97 | eighteen | |
"Shape Up or Ship Out" | "The Love That Nosotros Share (Is True)" | – | – | ||
1972 | "Exercise What You Set Out to Do" | "Own't Null You Can Practice" | 64 | half dozen | |
"I'm So Tired" | "If You Could Read My Mind" | – | 36 | ||
1973 | "That's All There Is (There Ain't No More than)" | "I Don't Want Another Mountain to Climb" | 42 | 5 | |
"This Time I'1000 Gone for Good" | "Where Babe Went" | Dunhill | 42 | 5 | |
1974 | "Goin' Downwards Boring" | "Up and Down World" | 69 | 17 | |
"Ain't No Dear in the Heart of the Metropolis" | "Xx-Four Hour Blues" | 91 | 9 | ||
"I Wouldn't Treat a Dog (The Fashion You Treated Me)" | "I Ain't Gonna Be (The Offset to Cry)" | 88 | three | ||
1975 | "Yolanda" | "When You Come up to the End of Your Road" | ABC | 104 | 21 |
"I Take It On Home" | "You've Never Been This Far Before" | – | 41 | ||
1976 | "Today I Started Loving Y'all Over again" | "Too Far Gone" | 103 | 34 | |
"It Own't the Existent Thing" | "Who'due south Foolin' Who" | – | 12 | ||
"Let The Proficient Times Roll" Bobby Bland & B. B. Rex | "Strange Things Happening" | ABC Impulse | 101 | xx | |
1977 | "The Soul of a Man" | "If I Weren't a Gambler" | ABC | – | xviii |
1978 | "Sittin' on a Poor Man's Throne" | "I Intend to Take Your Identify" | – | 82 | |
"Love to Encounter You Grinning" | "I'm Just Your Man" | – | 14 | ||
"Come up Fly with Me" | "Ain't God Something" | – | 55 | ||
1979 | "Tit For Tat" | "Come up Wing with Me" | MCA | – | 71 |
1980 | "Shortly As the Weather Breaks" | "To Exist Friends" | – | 76 | |
1981 | "You lot'd Be a Millionaire" | "Swat Vibrator" | – | 92 | |
1982 | "What a Departure a Day Makes" | "Givin' Up the Streets for Love" | – | – | |
"Recess In Heaven" | "Exactly, Where It's At" | – | forty | ||
"Here Nosotros Go Once again" | "You lot're Well-nigh to Win" | – | – | ||
1983 | "Is This the Blues" | "You're Near to Win" | – | – | |
"If It Own't One Thing" | "Tell Mr. Bland" | – | – | ||
1984 | "Looking Back" | "You Got Me Loving You" | – | – | |
"Go Real Clean" | "It's Also Bad" | – | – | ||
"Y'all Are My Christmas" | "New Merry Christmas Babe" | – | – | ||
1985 | "Members Simply" | "I Just Got to Know" | Malaco | – | 54 |
1986 | "Tin Nosotros Brand Love Tonight" | "In the Ghetto" | – | – | |
1988 | "Become Your Money Where You Spend Your Time" | "For the Terminal Time" | – | – | |
"24 Hours a Day" | "I've Got a Problem" | – | – | ||
1989 | "You lot've Got to Hurt Before You Heal" | "I'm Non Aback to Sing the Blues" | – | – | |
"Own't No Sunshine" | "If I Don't Get Involved" | – | – | ||
1990 | "Starting All Over Over again" | "Midnight Run" | – | – | |
"Take Off Your Shoes" | "If I Don't Get Involved" | – | – | ||
1992 | "She'due south Putting Something in My Food" | "Allow Dear Accept Its Way" | – | – | |
1993 | "There's a Stranger in My House" | "Hurtin' Time Again" | – | – | |
1994 | "I Just Tripped on a Piece of Your Broken Heart" | "Hole in the Wall" | – | – | |
1995 | "Double Trouble" | "Double Problem (long version)" | – |
References [edit]
- ^ a b c d eastward "Bobby 'Blue' Banal". Livinblues.com. Archived from the original on 2007-08-24. Retrieved 2007-08-09 .
- ^ a b c d east Russell, Tony (June 24, 2013). "Bobby 'Blueish' Banal Obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved June 26, 2013.
- ^ a b c d "Bobby Bland". BBC News. 2013-06-24. Retrieved 2013-06-25 .
- ^ "Bobby 'Bluish' Banal, Known for 'Further On Up the Route' and 'Turn on Your Honey Light', Dies". Washingtonpost.com. 2013-06-24. Archived from the original on 2013-06-24. Retrieved 2013-06-24 .
- ^ a b c "Bobby "Blueish" Banal | Memphis Music Hall of Fame". memphismusichalloffame.com.
- ^ "Bobby Banal: Biography". AllAboutJazz.com. Archived from the original on December 26, 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-09 .
- ^ Tennessee Historical Commission, historic marking dedicated 1/24/2015, Barretville, Tennessee.
- ^ a b c d Friskics-Warren, Bill (June 24, 2013). "Bobby (Bluish) Banal, Soul and Blues Balladeer, Dies at 83". New York Times.
- ^ "Bobby 'Bluish' Bland dies: Rhythm-and-blues vocalizer was 83". Bangor Daily News . Retrieved 2018-02-26 .
- ^ a b Biography at BobbyBlueBland.com Archived October 21, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved June 26, 2013.
- ^ a b Turner, Ike; Cawthorne, Nigel (1999). Takin' dorsum my name : the confessions of Ike Turner. The Archive of Contemporary Music. Virgin. p. 51.
- ^ a b Cotten, Lee (1995). The Golden Historic period of American Stone 'n Gyre: 1952-1956. Popular Civilization Inc. ISBN9781560750390.
- ^ Selvin, Joe (September 14, 1997). "Popular QUIZ -- Q & A With Ike Turner". SFGATE . Retrieved May 28, 2020.
- ^ a b Farley, Charles (2011). Soul of the Man: Bobby "Blue" Bland. Jackson, Miss.: Academy Press of Mississippi. pp. 38, 111–115. ISBN9781604739206. OCLC 708067743.
- ^ McArdle, Terence (June 25, 2013). "Bobby 'Bluish' Bland dies: Rhythm-and-blues singer was 83". The Washington Postal service.
- ^ a b c "Bobby Bland". The Telegraph. June 24, 2013. . Retrieved June, 26 2013
- ^ "Bobby Blue Bland: November 1973 Interview". SoulMusic.com. Archived from the original on 2013-07-02. Retrieved 2013-06-28 .
- ^ "Bobby Bluish Bland". Pbase.com Soulful Impressions. Retrieved 2007-08-09 .
- ^ a b c d Whitburn, Joel (1996). Meridian R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942–1995. Record Research. pp. 34–35.
- ^ a b c d e f Colin Larkin, ed. (1993). The Guinness Who's Who of Soul Music (Starting time ed.). Guinness Publishing. pp. 21/2. ISBN0-85112-733-9.
- ^ "The Lincoln Lawyer (soundtrack)". blogs.indiewire.com. Archived from the original on 2011-04-07. Retrieved 2011-03-24 .
- ^ "Mick Hucknall Tribute To Bobby Review". BBC. Retrieved 2013-06-24 .
- ^ "United kingdom Official Charts – Simply Red". www.officialcharts.com. Retrieved 2013-06-24 .
- ^ Marshall, Matt (June 23, 2013). "BREAKING: Bobby "Blue" Bland Passes Away". American Blues Scene Magazine. Archived from the original on 2013-12-09. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
- ^ Adrian Sainz, The Associated Printing (1992-01-15). "Bobby 'Blue' Bland, known for 'Farther On Upward the Route' and 'Turn on Your Love Calorie-free,' dies". Windsorstar.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-24. Retrieved 2013-06-24 .
- ^ "Blues legend Bobby "Bluish" Bland dies". WREG-Idiot box. Retrieved 2013-06-24 .
- ^ Wilson, Scott (2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons (3 ed.). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. p. 68. ISBN9780786479924.
- ^ a b "Bobby "Blue" Bland". Recording Academy Grammy Awards.
- ^ "Bobby "Blueish" Bland". Stone & Roll Hall of Fame.
- ^ "Grammy Hall of Fame". Recording Academy Grammy Award.
- ^ Whitburn, Joel (2003). Top Pop Singles 1955–2002 (1st ed.). Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc. pp. 62–63. ISBN0-89820-155-i.
- ^ Billboard did not publish an R&B chart during this catamenia.
External links [edit]
- Bobby Bland at IMDb
- "Bobby Banal". Stone and Roll Hall of Fame.
- Bobby Banal discography
- Bobby Bland at Wenig-Lamonica Assembly
- Bobby Blue Banal at AuthenticBlues.com
pattersondider1995.blogspot.com
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_Bland
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