Bo Diddley

Guitarist / Rock Musician
Date Of Birth:
30 December 1928
Date Of Death:
2 June 2008
heart failure
Place Of Birth:
McComb, Mississippi
Best Known As:
The early rock 'n' roll inventor nicknamed "The Originator"

Name at birth: Ellas Bates

Bo Diddley was born in Mississippi and raised in Chicago, where he was exposed to music and the blues. After studying violin and trombone, he took up the electric guitar. Diddley's flamboyance, square (often homemade) guitars and distinctive backbeat (sometimes described as "shave-and-a-hair-cut") earned him a record contract with Chess Records, and in 1955 he had his first hit with the two-sided "Bo Diddley/I'm A Man." Although he had several hits in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and appeared on TV with Dick Clark and Ed Sullivan, Diddley's aggressive beat, suggestive lyrics and raw performances ended up making him more influential than rich and famous. Still, he continued performing into the 21st century, and was recognized as an influence on artists ranging from Buddy Holly to The Rolling Stones. He was inducted into the Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.

Extra Credit

He was born Ellas Bates but later took the last name of Gussie McDaniel, a cousin who helped raise him… The exact origin of his stage name is unknown; some sources say he picked it up while boxing as a young man, others that it came from a one-string instrument called a diddley bow… “Who Do You Love” (written by Diddley and later covered by George Thorogood) and the Who song “Magic Bus” are two songs with the distinctive Bo Diddley beat.

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