Business Standard

ROCK ’N’ ROLL PIONEER CHUCK BERRY DIES AT 90

- JON PARELES 19 March

Chuck Berry, who with his indelible guitar licks, brash self-confidence and memorable songs about cars, girls and wild dance parties did as much as anyone to define rock ’n’ roll’s potential and attitude in its early years, died on Saturday. He was 90.

The St Charles County Police Department in Missouri confirmed his death on its Facebook page. Berry died at his home near Wentzville, Mo, about 45 miles west of St Louis. The department said it responded to a medical emergency and he was declared dead after lifesaving measures were unsuccessf­ul.

While Elvis Presley was rock’s first pop star and teenage heartthrob, Berry was its master theorist and conceptual genius, the songwriter who understood what the kids wanted before they knew themselves. With songs like “Johnny B Goode” and “Roll Over Beethoven,” he gave his listeners more than they knew they were getting from jukebox entertainm­ent.

His guitar lines wired the lean twang of country and the bite of the blues into phrases with both a streamline­d trajectory and a long memory. And tucked into the lightheart­ed, telegraphi­c narratives that he sang with such clear enunciatio­n was a sly defiance, upending convention to claim the pleasures of the moment.

In “Sweet Little Sixteen,” “You Can’t Catch Me” and other songs, Berry invented rock as a music of teenage wishes fulfilled and good times (even with cops in pursuit). In “Promised Land,” “Too Much Monkey Business” and “Brown Eyed Handsome Man,” he celebrated and satirised America’s opportunit­ies and class tensions. His rock ’n’ roll was a music of joyful lusts, laughed-off tensions and gleefully shattered icons.

Berry was already well past his teens when he wrote mid-1950s manifestoe­s like “Roll Over Beethoven,” “Rock and Roll Music” and “School Day.” Born Charles Edward Anderson Berry on October 18, 1926, in St Louis, he grew up in a segregated, middle-class neighborho­od there, soaking up gospel, blues, and rhythm and blues, along with some country music.

He spent three years in reform school after a spree of car thefts and armed robbery. He received a degree in hairdressi­ng and cosmetolog­y and worked for a time as a beautician; he married Themetta Suggs in 1948 and started a family. She survives him, as do four children: Ingrid Berry, Melody Eskridge, Aloha Isa Leigh Berry and Charles Berry Jr.

By the early 1950s, he was playing guitar and singing blues, pop standards and an occasional country tune with local combos. Shortly after joining Sir John’s Trio, led by the pianist Johnnie Johnson, he reshaped the group’s music and took it over.

From the Texas guitarist T-Bone Walker, Berry picked up a technique of bending two strings at once that he would rough up and turn into a rock ’n’ roll talisman, the Chuck Berry lick, which would in turn be emulated by the Rolling Stones and countless others. He also recognised the popularity of country music and added some hillbilly twang to his guitar lines. Berry’s hybrid music, along with his charisma and showmanshi­p, drew white as well as black listeners to the Cosmopolit­an Club in St Louis.

In 1955, Berry ventured to Chicago and asked one of his idols, the bluesman Muddy Waters, about making records. Waters directed him to the label he recorded for, Chess Records, where one of the owners, Leonard Chess, heard potential in Berry’s song “Ida Red.”

A variant of an old country song by the same name, “Ida Red” had a 2/4 backbeat with a hillbilly oompah, while Berry’s lyrics sketched a car chase, the narrator “motorvatin’” after an elusive girl. Chess renamed the song “Maybellene,” and in a long session on May 21, 1955, Chess and the bassist Willie Dixon got the band to punch up the rhythm.

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 ??  ?? Chuck Berry’s famous duck walk
Chuck Berry’s famous duck walk

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