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Willie Kent
The
preeminent Chicago blues bassist of the postwar era, Willie Kent was
the city's last surviving link to the Mississippi Delta tradition,
backing a who's who of immortals including Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf,
and Junior Parker as well as fronting his own long-running band, the
Gents.
Born in Inverness, MS, on February 24, 1936, Kent was the product of a
sharecropping family, and was enlisted to pick cotton at the age of
six. While local musician Dewitt Munson afforded his first exposure to
the blues, as a teen he began dialing in Helena, AR's influential radio
station KFFA, where the King Biscuit Time broadcast served as his
introduction to formative influences including Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup,
Sonny Boy Williamson, and Robert Nighthawk. By age 11, Kent was a
surreptitious fixture at the Highway 61 club the Harlem Inn, catching
acts headlined by Howlin' Wolf and Ike Turner. Two years later, he left
home for Memphis, and after a brief tenure at a Florida gas station, he
migrated to Chicago at the age of 16. There Kent bought his first
guitar, which he loaned to musician Willie Hudson in exchange for
lessons. In 1959, he joined Hudson's band Ralph & the Red Tops
as a chauffeur, occasionally appearing on-stage as a vocalist. Whenever
Hudson's bassist brother showed up for a gig too drunk to perform, Kent
was summoned as his replacement, eventually taking over the position
for good. Upon joining Little Milton's band in 1961, Kent's notoriety
grew, and he became a steady presence at Kansas City Red's legendary
"Blue Monday" parties.
Kent was renowned as much for his talent as for his professionalism, a
rare commodity in the blues world, and he regularly sat in with greats
spanning from Muddy Waters to Little Walter. After leaving Little
Milton, he tenured with Arthur Stallworth & the Chicago
Playboys as the 1960s came to a close, followed by stints in support of
Hip Linkchain and Jimmy Dawkins. After returning from a European tour,
Dawkins relinquished his headlining gig at the West Side blues club Ma
Bea's Lounge to Kent, who for the first time assembled his own band,
Sugar Bear & the Beehives, with guitarist Willie James Lyons
and drummer Robert Plunkett. Ma Bea's would serve as the setting for
Kent's debut LP, 1975's live release Ghetto, and remained his home for
over six years.
In 1982, he returned to sideman duties, joining Eddie Taylor and
contributing to his acclaimed 1985 swan song Bad Boy. After Taylor died
that Christmas, Kent recruited his guitarist Johnny B. Moore and
drummer Tim Taylor to form Willie Kent & the Gents: as their
fellow bluesmen adopted an increasingly slick sensibility inspired by
commercial R&B, the Gents championed the classic Delta 12-bar
tradition, emerging as a favorite of blues purists at home and abroad.
After a series of heart ailments forced Kent to undergo triple bypass
surgery in 1989, he spent his recovery examining his life and career,
finally abandoning his longtime trucking gig in favor of pursuing music
full-time. I'm What You Need, his first solo LP in 14 years, soon
followed on the Big Boy label and proved the first in a flurry of
releases that next included his Delmark debut, Ain't It Nice, which
earned the Library of Congress Award for Best Folk/Blues Album of 1991.
Kent also signed to the Austrian label Wolf for a pair of LPs, 1991's
King of Chicago's West Side Blues and Live at B.L.U.E.S. in Chicago.
With so many new records to his credit, it was inevitable that Kent
finally earned the attention of blues fans and critics across the
globe, and in 1995, he won the W.C. Handy Award for Best Blues
Instrumentalist, Bass. Two years later, he earned the award again, and
went on to claim the prize in nine consecutive years. Kent also notched
five consecutive Most Outstanding Blues Musician, Bass honors from the
magazine Living Blues, and with 1998's Delmark release Make Room for
the Blues took home Chicago's Album of the Year prize.
In early 2005, Kent was diagnosed with cancer, but continued his busy
live schedule in spite of chemotherapy treatments. He lost his battle
with the disease on March 2, 2006, just a week past his 70th birthday.
-Written
by Jason Ankeny
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