In terms of his musical skill, the sheer size of his repertoire, the length and variety of his career and his influence on contemporaries and musicians who would follow,
Big Bill Broonzy is among a select few of the most important figures in recorded blues history. Among his hundreds of titles are standards like "All by Myself" and "Key to the Highway." In this country he was instrumental in the growth of the Chicago Blues sound, and his travels abroad rank him as one of the leading blues ambassadors.
Literally born on the banks of the Mississippi, he was one of a family of 17 who learned to fiddle on a homemade instrument. Taught by his uncle, he was performing by age ten at social functions and in church. After brief stints on the pulpit and in the Army, he moved to Chicago where he switched his attention from violin to guitar, playing with elders like
Papa Charlie Jackson.
Broonzy began his recording career with Paramount in 1927. In the early '30s he waxed some brilliant blues and hokum and worked Chicago and the road with great players like pianist
Black Bob, guitarist
Will Weldon and
Memphis Minnie.
During the Depression years
Big Bill Broonzy continued full steam ahead, doing some acrobatic label-hopping (Paramount to Bluebird to Columbia to Okeh!). In addition to solo efforts, he contributed his muscular guitar licks to recordings by
Bumble Bee Slim,
John Lee (Sonny Boy) Williamson and others who were forging a powerful new Chicago sound.
In 1938,
Broonzy was at Carnegie Hall (ostensibly filling in for the fallen
Robert Johnson) for
John Hammond's revolutionary Sprirtuals to Swing Series. The following year he appeared with
Benny Goodman and
Louis Armstrong in George Seldes's film production Swingin' the Dream. After his initial brush with the East Coast cognoscenti, however,
Broonzy spent a good part of the early '40s barnstorming the South with
Lil Green's road show or kicking back in Chicago with
Memphis Slim.
He continued alternating stints in Chicago and New York with coast-to-coast road work until 1951 when live performances and recording dates overseas earned him considerable notoriety in Europe and led to worldwide touring. Back in the States he recorded for Chess, Columbia and Folkways, working with a spectrum of artists from
Blind John Davis to
Pete Seeger. In 1955, Big Bill Blues, his life as told to Danish writer
Yannick Bruynoghe, was published.
In 1957, after one more British tour, the pace began to catch up with
Broonzy. He spent the last year of his life in and out of hospitals and succumbed to cancer in 1958. He survives though; not only in his music, but in the remembrances of people who knew him...from
Muddy Waters to
Studs Terkel. A gentle giant they say...tough enough to survive the blues world...but not so tough he wouldn't give a struggling young musician the shirt off his back. His music, of course, is absolutely basic to the blues experience, and was celebrated in 1999 with the release of the three-disc retrospective
The Bill Broonzy Story. ~ Steve James, All Music Guide