Who is Bo Diddley

Ranked #12,856 in Music, #353,224 overall | Donates to KIVA

Master of the Rock and Roll Guitar Who Grew from the Blues

From his first hit in 1955 to his last breath in 2008, Bo Diddley stood at the crossroads between the Chicago blues tradition and the future of rock and roll. His songs have been covered and imitated by musicians around the world. The Bo Diddley sound permeates rock, from punk to indie bands to heavy metal, and he's played with (and been recognized by) the greats of the music industry.

Bo Diddley has shrouded his past in conflicting stories and perpetuated his legend with anecdotes that feed into his image. His sound has permeated rock and his lyrical tricks have inspired and influenced artists from many genres, including rap and hip-hop. You can't be a fan of music without loving some artist or group that takes its deepest influence from Diddley's innovations.

Learn more about Bo Diddley, watch some music videos, sample some of his songs, and express your appreciation for The Originator on this lens. I'd love to hear how his sound has impacted your life, as it has so many.

Bo Diddley Brought Chicago Blues to Rock and Roll

Jungle Drums and Howling Guitars Made the Bo Diddley Sound

Bo Diddley is a self-invented man, when it comes to his history. If you read interviews from the past several decades, you'll find him telling many different stories in response to the same questions about his influences and sources. Some details, however, seem to remain constant. He went from a boxer to a singer to a violin player before he got hooked on blues guitar, in part through the influence of John Lee Hooker. And then Bo Diddley discovered rock and roll. With all of that history, how could he not be a legend in his own time (and beyond, since his death in June, 2008)?

Bo Diddley toured with The Everly Brothers, Little Richard, and the brand-new Rolling Stones in 1963. He played with The Grateful Dead in 1972, The Clash in 1979, and The Rolling Stones again in 1994. Muddy Waters wrote Mannish Boy in response to his hit I'm a Man. Who Do You Love was so amazing that was covered by the Doors, the Grateful Dead, Carlos Santana, the Band, and the Yardbirds, and George Thorogood had a massive hit with the song. Rolling Stone Magazine named him twentieth on their list of the hundred greatest artists of all time, with a fabulous tribute from Iggy Pop. Heck, the Jesus and Mary Chain recorded a song called Bo Diddley Is Jesus.

Through four wives, four children, and thousands of performances, Bo Diddley kept inventing and creating. His success came through clean living and nasty lyrics. While steering clear of drugs and alcohol, he wrote raw, in-your-face music that never pulled any punches and preceded the later rap and hip-hop tactics of talking about yourself and your way with women. And all of the while, the songs were fun--fun to hear, fun to dance to, fun to try your luck at playing.

Sample Some Bo Diddley Songs

From Across His Half-Century Career

The hits, from Say, Man and Hey, Bo Diddley to I'm a Man and Road Runner and Pills, and so many, many more. I tried to catch glimpses from across his career. If I've missed one of your favorites or completely forgotten a major hit, please let me know and I'll add it.

Bo Diddley Music Videos

Discover How the Blues Helped Create Rock and Roll

Blues, funk, and rock: Bo Diddley showed generations of musicians and music fan how to do it all. Here, you can see him, in videos spanning fifty years of his fabulous music career. I particularly recommend Dueling Guitars with Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley Is a Lunatic. The Tom Petty video also rocks.
Tom Petty, Bo Diddley - Mona
by marcoloetscher | video info

939 ratings | 421,886 views
curated content from YouTube

Bo Diddley the Inventor

Creating His Sound through His Own Creations

Not only did Bo Diddley popularize his famous back-beat and playing style, but he learned how to make instruments and taught himself to make and tweak various electric embellishments that made them sound just the way he wished. To his iconic rectangular guitars he added buttons, knobs, and switches that changed the music to suit his mood and lyrics. He claims to have invented the gadget that have the rock world tremolo and allowed folks like Jimi Hendrix to develop their own signature sound.

Bo Diddley also pioneered the home recording studio and modified equipment to do exactly what he wanted. Diddley was a man not satisfied with the status quo in instrumentation and gadgetry--he knew what he wanted and taught himself how to get it, at least where his guitar was concerned. He went from a street musician to one of the icons of rock and roll by knowing exactly what his instruments could do and by playing and singing anything it took to get audiences moving at his live performances.

How Much Do You Love Bo Diddley?

Was he the real King, or just a good guitar player?

Loading poll. Please Wait...

Bo Diddley Albums

From Blues Roots to Rock and Roll

Loading

Share Your Love for Bo Diddley!

Which of his songs is your favorite?

Tell me anything you like about Bo Diddley, even how much you think other people are silly for being so impressed by him.

  • GetFactsnotHype Jun 20, 2011 @ 7:33 pm | delete
    Bo Diddley did a commercial in my state of Virginia for a pawn shop called "Jefferson Loan."

    Also Bo did a song that was reused by many other people over the years. I am not sure off the top of my head who did it first, but the song is called "Mannish Boy", aka I'm a Man", which was also done by Muddy Waters and I believe Jimi Hendrix did it in 1964.

    Just some FYI tidbits.
  • traveller27 Mar 19, 2011 @ 10:40 am | delete
    Very nice tribute.
  • Not-Pop Jul 12, 2009 @ 8:29 am | in reply to Oosquid | delete
    They did, indeed, and thus the lyrical back-and-forth. Then again, you could never be sure when Bo Diddley was spinning a tale or even if he believed what he was saying (at least while he was saying it). But the two did have a widely-publicized rivalry, masters though they both were.
  • Oosquid Jun 29, 2009 @ 3:31 pm | delete
    "Muddy Waters wrote Mannish Boy in response to his hit I'm a Man."

    I didn't know that. I thought those two greats spent years accusing each other of stealing the song and riff?

    Whatever, Ellas/ Bo was indeed one of the greats. his music had guts. Great lens, 5 stars.
  • JenOfChicago Jun 4, 2009 @ 6:02 pm | delete
    A true original! Please feel free to add to the All Things Chicago group at http://www.squidoo.com/groups/allthingschicago
  • mysticmama Mar 21, 2009 @ 10:18 pm | delete
    sweet lens...my parents were musicians, so I grew up listening to the subjext of a lot of your lenses 5*
  • Margo_Arrowsmith Feb 7, 2009 @ 12:00 pm | delete
    I was very little when Bo Diddley was first on the radio, so I literally grew up with him. Thank you so much for honoring him with this lens! Its important that great people be done justice here on Squidoo. 5*

The Latest Yahoo News on Bo Diddley Blues

Loading

by

Not-Pop

It's all about music - my song recommendations blog, cover songs, lyrics, and artist profiles. I also write about jazz and blues standards and include... more »

Feeling creative? Create a Lens!