NOISE: Father of The Beat

Legendary Bo Diddley sounds off on the Clash, crooked lawyersand his latest song

Richard Abowitz

Bob Seger may have once called us all Chuck's children. But ever since the British invasion 40 years ago, there have been those who were just as inspired by Bo Diddley. But even in rock 'n' roll, parents just don't understand.


"That was sick," Bo Diddley says. He is recalling 1979, when he was hired on to be the opening act for a leg of the Clash's first U.S. tour. "I can't explain it when I say it was sick. But they just played too loud. You see, I am about professionalism and knowing what to do on the stage, not about getting up there and trying to blow people's eardrums out."


Or, ask Bo Diddley what he thinks about Warren Zevon's brilliant vamp on "Bo Diddley is a Gunslinger" and the man cuts you off with: "No! No! No! I don't know nothing about that. A lot of things went down back in the '60s and '70s where I didn't get paid for stuff, so I don't know. When you get paid you know about it."












MUSIC BOX

What else to listen to





Bo Diddley only had a few hits, but his influence on rock has been greater than almost any other artist. His signature beat became one of rock's foundations and his guitar stylings demonstrated the immense range of the instrument. If you haven't heard these samplings, then you don't know Bo.



Bo Diddley


Bo Diddley—His Best

A perfect gathering, His Best includes all of the highlights of Diddley's career distilled to 20 tracks. Among the inclusions: "Mona," which was covered by the young Rolling Stones; "Pretty Thing," which gave another band its name; and "Bring It on Jerome," which offers a vamp beat while Diddley and his maraca player taunt each other.



Bo Diddley


Bo Diddley Is A Gunslinger

Expanded and reissued earlier this year, Bo Diddley Is A Gunslinger from 1960 wasn't commercially successful. But looking back, these recordings find Diddley in top form on tracks like "Sixteen Tons" (which he famously refused to play on the Ed Sullivan Show) and "Ride on Josephine." Though none of his hits are here, that proves a plus by offering listeners tracks which are not worn out from constant anthologizing and cover versions.



The Animals


The Complete Animals

Back in 1964, Eric Burdon mixed a humorous narrative with the Bo Diddley beat into the effulgent tribute "The Story of Bo Diddley." At the song's climax, Burdon tells how Diddley walked into a club and heard the Animals performing the song. According to Burdon, Diddley said to them, "That sure is the biggest load of rubbish that I've ever heard in my life"



Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band


Live Bullet

Before Hollywood Bob became known for his night moves, he made one of the greatest live albums of the '70s, and this sweaty, gritty performance is the perfect place for a Bo Diddley cover. Seger, though, wasn't satisfied with just one, so his version of "Bo Diddley" segues right into "Who Do You Love?" Killer.




Richard Abowitz





Of course, at Chess records, Diddley recorded a handful of songs backed by Jerome Green's maracas and that distinctive beat which have become immortal, starting with his brilliant 1955 debut single "Bo Diddley" / "I'm a Man." His other oft-covered classics quickly followed, including "Who Do You Love?" "Diddley Daddy" "Mona" and "Pretty Thing." But at Chess, Diddley felt cheated by the music business, and as a result, has even less interest in discussing his heyday recordings than in reflecting on the effect the songs had on other musicians. "I won't get into that, because it's nasty," is all he says.


In fact, though he is in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and is a direct influence on everyone from the Rolling Stones to the White Stripes, Bo Diddley says he never listens to rock. "I listen to a lot of country." Still, despite his loathing for the business side of the music he helped create, Diddley has been touched and surprised by his status as an icon. "It's weird, but it's great that I am still here doing my thing," he says. "I've been blessed."


Now well into his 70s, Diddley also is aware that his peers are few and dwindling quickly. Interviewing him on the day of Ray Charles' funeral, Diddley reflects, "Ray was a great man. He was a real person. We've lost a great man."


Regardless of his age, Diddley is still writing, recording and touring. "I am working on a new thing. I am trying to revive the original Bo Diddley beat and make it more forceful." Though he won't say much more about the new songs, Diddley does offer this: "I've written a song and now I am trying to get a girl to sing it. It is called 'Leave.' It is a bad tune, strictly for a girl to sing. A man could sing it too, but it was written for a woman to sing." So, whom does Bo Diddley hear singing this new one? "I've got my granddaughter singing it. I don't know how it is going to sound. But it is a hot number."


After all his negative experiences in the world of rock, why is Diddley bringing another generation of his family—one of his daughters is already part of his band—into the business? "I teach 'em how to stay away from the crooks. You got to get a bunch of lawyers to watch things, and then you better hope you don't get a crooked lawyer. I mean, if they're straight, they're straight. But you got bad ones. It's like cops."


Just one more lesson to be learned if you are a child of a legend.

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