Billy Boy Arnold

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
I Wish You Would 00:00 Tools
I Was Fooled 00:00 Tools
Don't Stay Out All Night 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Got You 00:00 Tools
Prisoner's Plea 02:49 Tools
You Got To Love Me 00:00 Tools
She Fooled Me 00:00 Tools
Been Gone Too Long 00:00 Tools
You Got Me Wrong 00:00 Tools
Shake the Boogie 00:00 Tools
Dirty Mother Fuyer 00:00 Tools
Lowdown Thing or Two 00:00 Tools
Back Door Friend 00:00 Tools
Sunny Road 00:00 Tools
My Heart Is Crying 00:00 Tools
Here's My Picture 00:00 Tools
Too Many Old Flames 00:00 Tools
Ah'W Baby 00:00 Tools
Sweet Miss Bea 00:00 Tools
Rockinitis 00:00 Tools
Christmas Time 00:00 Tools
Rub-A-Dub 00:00 Tools
Sunday Morning Blues 00:00 Tools
Move On Down the Road 00:00 Tools
Catfish 00:00 Tools
Blue And Lonesome 00:00 Tools
WHISKEY, BEER & REEFER 00:00 Tools
It Should Have Been Me 00:00 Tools
Shake Your Hips 00:00 Tools
Just Got To Know 00:00 Tools
Just A Dream 00:00 Tools
Whiskey, Beer and Reefer 00:00 Tools
Worried Life Blues 00:00 Tools
Eldorado Cadillac 00:00 Tools
Fool for You 00:00 Tools
1-2-99 00:00 Tools
Mary Bernice 00:00 Tools
Riding The El 00:00 Tools
No, No, No, No, No 00:00 Tools
I'm A Man 00:00 Tools
Fine Young Girl 00:00 Tools
Loving Mother for You 00:00 Tools
Coal Man 00:00 Tools
Man of Considerable Taste 00:00 Tools
Slick Chick 00:00 Tools
Every Day, Every Night 00:00 Tools
Left My Happy Home 02:34 Tools
Mama's Bitter Seed 00:00 Tools
Bad Luck Blues 03:19 Tools
Young and Evil 00:00 Tools
Woman Stealer 00:00 Tools
Wandering Eye 04:19 Tools
High Fashion Woman 00:00 Tools
School Time 00:00 Tools
How long can this go on 00:00 Tools
Key to the Highway 00:00 Tools
If You Would Just Let Me Love You 03:17 Tools
Kissing at Midnight 00:00 Tools
I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water 00:00 Tools
You Give Me Nothing To Go On 00:00 Tools
It's Great To Be Rich 00:00 Tools
Me and Piney Brown 00:00 Tools
My Little Machine 00:00 Tools
Worried Dream 00:00 Tools
Sonny Boy's Jump 00:00 Tools
Two Drinks Of Wine 00:00 Tools
I Wish You Would (1955) 00:00 Tools
Nadine (Is It You?) 00:00 Tools
Sweet Honey Bee 00:00 Tools
Dirty Mother Fucker 00:00 Tools
Don’t Stay Out All Night 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy's Blues 00:00 Tools
Hello Stranger 00:00 Tools
Streetwise Advisors 00:00 Tools
Ooh Wee 00:00 Tools
You've Got Me Wrong 00:00 Tools
Willie Mae Blues 00:00 Tools
I Love Only You 00:00 Tools
Ain't That Just Like a Woman 00:00 Tools
99 Lbs. 00:00 Tools
Cell No. 13 Blues 00:00 Tools
Low Down Blues 00:00 Tools
Sweet on You Baby 00:00 Tools
Looking Up at Down 00:00 Tools
She's Love Crazy 00:00 Tools
Everyday, Every Night 00:00 Tools
Play with Fire 00:00 Tools
I Love My Whiskey 00:00 Tools
Memphis Slim USA 00:00 Tools
The Blues Had a Baby (and they Named It Rock & Roll) 00:00 Tools
I Want You By My Side 00:00 Tools
San Antonio Blues 00:00 Tools
St. James Infirmary 00:00 Tools
Don't Set Me Free 00:00 Tools
Girl in the Valley A.K.A. Water Coast Blues 00:00 Tools
Goin' by the River 00:00 Tools
A Mother's Prayer 00:00 Tools
Just Got to Hold You Tight 00:00 Tools
Rockinitus 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy's Jump 00:00 Tools
What's on the Menu Mama 00:00 Tools
Let's Work It Out 00:00 Tools
Going Back to Arkansas 00:00 Tools
I'll Forget About You 00:00 Tools
Playing With The Blues 00:00 Tools
Oh Baby 00:00 Tools
Dance for Me Baby 00:00 Tools
Baby Jane 00:00 Tools
Get Out of Here 00:00 Tools
Greenback 00:00 Tools
You Better Cut That Out 00:00 Tools
Night Watchman Blues 00:00 Tools
Somebody Help Me With These Blues 00:00 Tools
Work Song 00:00 Tools
Black Gal Blues 00:00 Tools
Baby Left Me a Mule to Ride 00:00 Tools
Mellow Chick Swing 00:00 Tools
You Don't Love Me No More 00:00 Tools
Why Is Everybody Down On Me 00:00 Tools
Polly Put The Kettle On 00:00 Tools
Greenville 00:00 Tools
New Jail House Blues 00:00 Tools
You're My Girl 00:00 Tools
Evalina 00:00 Tools
I Hear My Name Ringing 00:00 Tools
Home In Your Heart 00:00 Tools
Sinner's Prayer 00:00 Tools
Sugar Mama 00:00 Tools
Good Morning Little Schoolgirl 00:00 Tools
Three Harp Boogie 00:00 Tools
Around This Old Juke Tonight 00:00 Tools
Evaleena 00:00 Tools
Blues In A Natural 00:00 Tools
Blackjack 00:00 Tools
I Wish You Would - Original 00:00 Tools
come here baby 00:00 Tools
Squeeze Me Tight 00:00 Tools
1 To 99 00:00 Tools
Hello Baby 00:00 Tools
Love Me Baby 00:00 Tools
I wish I would 00:00 Tools
Annie Lee 00:00 Tools
$1,000 Dollar Bill 00:00 Tools
Two Drinks Of Wine (LIVE) 00:00 Tools
Boogie & Shuffle 00:00 Tools
Goin' Back To Arkansas 00:00 Tools
Every Night, Every Day 00:00 Tools
El Dorado Cadillac 00:00 Tools
Trust My Baby 00:00 Tools
Keep on Rubbing 00:00 Tools
Decoration Day 00:00 Tools
It Was Just a Dream 00:00 Tools
Springtime Blues 00:00 Tools
Just Your Fool 00:00 Tools
Ten Million Dollars 00:00 Tools
Half-a-Pint 00:00 Tools
You're So Fine 00:00 Tools
Rider Rider Blues 00:00 Tools
Water Coast Blues aka Girl In The Valley 00:00 Tools
My Babe 00:00 Tools
I Done Got Over It 00:00 Tools
Tomorrow Night 00:00 Tools
Rider, Rider 00:00 Tools
Collector Man Blues 00:00 Tools
Going Home 00:00 Tools
Cell #13 00:00 Tools
Cut That Out 00:00 Tools
Tell Me Baby 00:00 Tools
Easy Street 00:00 Tools
When I Get To Thinking 00:00 Tools
Somebody Help Me 00:00 Tools
Yellow Roses From Texas (Just Love Won't Do) 00:00 Tools
Just a Little Bit 00:00 Tools
When I Get to Thinkin' 00:00 Tools
Hi Heel Sneakers 00:00 Tools
Last Night 00:00 Tools
He's a Jelly Roll Baker 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna Move 00:00 Tools
No, No, No,No, No 00:00 Tools
Blue & Lonesome 00:00 Tools
Living on Easy Street 00:00 Tools
Can't Hold Out Much Longer 00:00 Tools
Dirty Mother F! 00:00 Tools
I'll Be Up Again Someday 00:00 Tools
I Here My Name Ringing 00:00 Tools
Rock 'N Roll 00:00 Tools
Cryin' & Pleadin' 00:00 Tools
Rock 'N' Roll 00:00 Tools
Come See Me Early In The Morning 00:00 Tools
Cryin' And Pleadin' 00:00 Tools
Sugar Momma 00:00 Tools
Christmas Time Part 1 00:00 Tools
She Don't Love Me That Way 00:00 Tools
Blues And Lonesome 00:00 Tools
Rockin'itis 00:00 Tools
Pleading and Crying 00:00 Tools
My Daily Wish 00:00 Tools
Streetwise Advisor 00:00 Tools
Dirty Mother For Ya 00:00 Tools
Blues Before Sunrise 00:00 Tools
Shake You Hips 00:00 Tools
Sugar Gal (Live) 00:00 Tools
Come See Me Early In The Morning (Take 2) 00:00 Tools
Interview With Billy Boy Arnold 00:00 Tools
Come See Me Early In The Morning (Take 1) 00:00 Tools
It Ain't Right 00:00 Tools
Prisioner's Plea 00:00 Tools
Shake Your Boogie 00:00 Tools
You Got To Love Me (1992 Box Set Version) 00:00 Tools
Dirty Muther Fuyer 00:00 Tools
Mother's Prayer 00:00 Tools
Kissing At Midnight - Original 00:00 Tools
Oh! Me! Oh! My! Blues 00:00 Tools
Sugar Gal - Live 00:00 Tools
Boy Promo 00:00 Tools
Goodbye 00:00 Tools
Rockin' it is 00:00 Tools
Kissing a Midnight 00:00 Tools
One Way Out 00:00 Tools
I Love You Only 00:00 Tools
prisoners plea 00:00 Tools
Angel Child 00:00 Tools
Rockin' Itis 00:00 Tools
Holiday Blues 00:00 Tools
Night Before Last 00:00 Tools
$1, 000 Dollar Bill 00:00 Tools
1 2 99 00:00 Tools
I Wish You Would - BBC Session 05/10/1977 00:00 Tools
The Blues Had a Baby (and they Named It Rock Roll) 00:00 Tools
Christmas Time (feat. Tony McPhee) 00:00 Tools
Move Back to the Woods 00:00 Tools
I'm Ready - Bbc Session 05/10/1977 00:00 Tools
Baby Please Don't Go - BBC Session 05/10/1977 00:00 Tools
Left my happy home (alternate take) 00:00 Tools
Please Remember Me 00:00 Tools
Night Watchmen Blues 00:00 Tools
Interview 00:00 Tools
Billy boys jump 00:00 Tools
- Playing With The Blues 00:00 Tools
Catfish Blues 00:00 Tools
Left My Happy Home (Alt.) 00:00 Tools
Cryin'& Pleadin' 00:00 Tools
Rockin'ites 00:00 Tools
My Heart Is Crying - Original 00:00 Tools
I Aint Got You 00:00 Tools
Christmas Time, Part 1 00:00 Tools
I Was Foole 00:00 Tools
Don't Stay Out All Night - Original 00:00 Tools
Cryin and pleadin 00:00 Tools
Sugar Gal 00:00 Tools
Left My Happy Home-alt. 00:00 Tools
Goin' Away Baby - BBC Session 05/10/1977 00:00 Tools
05 - SUNNY ROAD 00:00 Tools
Mattie Mae 00:00 Tools
We All Gotta Go 00:00 Tools
I ain´t got you 00:00 Tools
I Was Fooled - Original 00:00 Tools
Talk It Over 00:00 Tools
I Wish You Would - Billy Boy Arnold 00:00 Tools
Rock-n-roll 00:00 Tools
Cryin' and Bleedin' 00:00 Tools
You’re So Fine 00:00 Tools
Don’t Stay Out All Night (feat. Tony McPhee) 00:00 Tools
Catfish (With Tony McPhee) 00:00 Tools
Rockinits 00:00 Tools
Done Got Over It 00:00 Tools
Everyday I Have The Blues 00:00 Tools
Come See Me Early In The Morning-take1 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Got You (Alt. Version) 00:00 Tools
Dirty Mether Fuyer 00:00 Tools
Dirty Motherfuyer 00:00 Tools
Trouble Blues 00:00 Tools
New B and O Blues 00:00 Tools
Don´t Stay Out All Night 00:00 Tools
My Friends Don't Know Me Now 00:00 Tools
Dirty Motherfoyou 00:00 Tools
Rockintis - Original 00:00 Tools
Rockin ' It Is 00:00 Tools
Hi-Heel Sneakers 00:00 Tools
You Got To Love Me Baby 00:00 Tools
These Blues Is Killing Me 00:00 Tools
New B&O Blues 00:00 Tools
Whiskey, Beer, & Reefer 00:00 Tools
My Friends Don't Know Me 00:00 Tools
Oo-Wee - BBC Session 05/10/1977 00:00 Tools
1/2/99 00:00 Tools
Come See Me Early in the Morning - (take 2) 00:00 Tools
Left My Happy Home - (alternate take) 00:00 Tools
Just One More Time 00:00 Tools
Blue And Lonesome (feat. Tony Mcphee) [Blues] 00:00 Tools
Rockin’ Itis 00:00 Tools
But I Ain't Got You 00:00 Tools
Sinner´s Prayer 00:00 Tools
Back Door Friend [Blues] 00:00 Tools
Every Day and Every Night - Original 00:00 Tools
You Don't Love No More 00:00 Tools
Come See me Early In The Morning-take2 00:00 Tools
Crying And Pleading 00:00 Tools
Left My Happy Home [alternate take] 00:00 Tools
Yellow Roses From Texas 00:00 Tools
Eldorado Cadilac 00:00 Tools
Dont Stay Out All Night - Original 00:00 Tools
Cryin and Bleedin 00:00 Tools
If You Would Just Let Me Love 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy´s Jump 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy Arnold - Sinner's Prayer 00:00 Tools
You've Got Me Wrong - Original 00:00 Tools
Heres My Picture 00:00 Tools
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Billy Boy Arnold (born William Arnold, 16 September 1935, Chicago, Illinois) is a leading American blues harmonica player, singer and songwriter. Billy Boy Arnold is back. With his 1992 Alligator Records debut, BACK WHERE I BELONG (AL 4815), Arnold firmly reestablished himself as one of the foremost practitioners of classic Chicago blues. His wailing harmonica playing and soulful vocals are a perfect match for his streetwise songwriting. The combination of Delta-influenced blues with a more urban sophistication not only defines Arnold's sound, but was also a significant contribution in the early, formative days of rock and roll. His early work with Bo Diddley and his highly influential singles in the late 1950s (including I Wish You Would and I Ain't Got You), brought him some local attention, but he never received the recognition he rightly deserved. Now, with his new release, ELDORADO CADILLAC (AL 4836), he shows that he is not only back where he belongs, he is back to stay. ELDORADO CADILLAC's 13 songs, including nine Arnold originals, feature his "wah wah" harmonica style, smooth vocals and colorful lyrics. The album kicks off with a hard-edged reinvention of Arnold's VeeJay hit, I Ain't Got You. He moves effortlessly from the warnings of Don't Stay Out All Night to the sound advice of My Mama Told Me to the braggadocio of Man Of Considerable Taste to the smooth, sophisticated vocals on It Should Have Been Me and Sunny Road . Along with a tough backing band (featuring fellow Alligator recording artist Steady Rollin' Bob Margolin on guitar), Arnold is in the driver's seat, and he's riding his Eldorado Cadillac right into blues stardom. Billy Boy Arnold was born in Chicago on September 16, 1935. Unlike the many blues artists who migrated to Chicago from the South, Arnold is among the first generation of bluesmen actually born and raised in the city. He fell in love with the blues at an early age and was especially moved by the records of the first Sonny Boy Williamson. In 1948, young Billy found out that Williamson lived nearby, and he set out to find him. "To me, this was a burning desire-I wanted to be like Sonny Boy," recalls Billy. Williamson took a liking to the young fan and revealed his trademark style of "choking" the harp to Billy. Shortly after their third visit together, Williamson met his untimely death. But the few visits were enough to make Billy determined to become a bluesman. In the ensuing years, Arnold befriended many of the local blues legends, and he began to learn everything he could about the blues. Blind John Davis, Big Bill Broonzy, Memphis Minnie, Muddy Waters, Johnny Jones, Johnny Shines, Otis Rush, Little Walter, and Earl Hooker all played a part in Arnold's musical education. In 1952, the teenaged Billy landed his first recording contract with Chicago's Cool label. It wasn't until his first record came out (I Ain't Got No Money b/w Hello Stranger ) under the name "Billy Boy Arnold" that he realized he had a nickname. "I didn't like it at first," recalls Billy Boy. "I was 17 and looked 15 but told people I was 19, so I didn't want to be known as a boy. I wanted to be a man." Though the recording was admittedly immature, the name stuck, and Billy Boy Arnold was on his way. While still a teenager, Arnold hooked up with a young street musician/electronics buff named Ellis McDaniel (Bo Diddley) who fashioned an amplifier for Billy Boy out of an orange crate. Billy Boy eventually talked Diddley into auditioning for Chess Records. In 1955, with Billy Boy playing his signature "stop time" harmonica, Diddley scored the first of his many hits for Chess with Bo Diddley/I'm A Man . The future looked very bright, but Billy Boy didn't want to be a sideman. He wanted to make records under his own name. After a misunderstanding with Leonard Chess (Bo Diddley told Arnold that Leonard didn't like him), Arnold crossed the street to the offices of VeeJay Records, where he was promptly signed. He recorded I Wish You Would (reportedly the first blues session to feature an electric bass), and it quickly became a regional hit. He was playing across the South Side of Chicago with stars like Little Walter and Junior Wells, and local radio airplay for his song was heavy. Even the great Muddy Waters took a liking to the young bluesman. "You made a good record," Waters said of I Wish You Would. "You keep on making those good records." And that's just what Billy Boy did: I Ain't Got You, She's Fine, She's Mine and Prisoner's Plea followed. Although only 20 years old, Billy Boy Arnold had arrived. Arnold continued to play the Chicago clubs and record 45s throughout the late 1950s. His debut album, 1963's MORE BLUES FROM THE SOUTH SIDE for the Prestige label, remains a classic. But the gigs began to dry up, and the difficulty of raising a family and keeping a band together led Arnold to pursue a career as a Chicago bus driver and truant officer and later as a parole officer for the State of Illinois. By the middle of the 1960s, the first generation of British blues bands were taking notice of Arnold's talent-his VeeJay singles became valued collectors' items among the musicians. The Yardbirds and The Animals each had hits with Billy Boy's songs. Later, The Blasters and David Bowie both covered his material. All of this interest led Billy Boy to tour and record in Europe (and play the occasional U.S. festival gig) during the 1970s, 1980s and into the 1990s. With the release of BACK WHERE I BELONG in 1992, Billy Boy Arnold enjoyed the greatest success of his career. "Billy Boy Arnold delivers the goods," exclaimed the Los Angeles Daily News. "Highly recommended," agreed Jazz Times. "Triumphant," added Billboard. Features and reviews ran in magazines and newspapers from coast to coast and in Europe, including Rolling Stone, Audio, CD Review, Living Blues, Blues & Rhythm, The Chicago Tribune, and The Washington Post . Everyone agreed. Billy Boy Arnold had created an album of songs that not only equaled the strength of his early hits, but indeed surpassed them in their maturity and execution. The strength of BACK WHERE I BELONG brought Arnold back into the public eye. Since the album's release, he's played clubs and major festivals in the United States and Europe, including England's Burnley Blues Fest; Germany's Breminale Blues Fest; the Montreal Jazz Fest; Norway's Notodden Blues Fest; Toledo's Rock, Rhythm and Blues Fest; the Chicago Blues Fest; the Poconos Blues Fest; and the Long Island Blues Fest. Performance after performance, Arnold has delighted old fans and made scores of new ones. Eagerly, everyone waited for Arnold's next move. With ELDORADO CADILLAC, the wait is over, and Arnold's fans will not be disappointed. His singular harmonica playing and silky vocals - not to mention his songwriting talents - place him at the forefront of classic Chicago blues artists. Finally back where he belongs, this bluesman is prepared to take his music to more people than ever before. So sit back and enjoy the ride-and leave the driving to Billy Boy Arnold. Quotes: "A blues legend is back...The grand Chicago blues sound of the 1950s presented with authenticity and vitality by an underappreciated harmonica great." -- CHICAGO TRIBUNE "Arnold blows fine in the old Chicago style with a meaty, undiminished attack." -Rolling Stone "Arnold is singing and playing harp as well as ever...he remains a creative musician rather than a mere caricature of his former self." -Living Blues "Triumphant..." -Billboard "A fully realized, wide ranging blues workout, as authentic as it is joyous...." -CD Review "Contrasting melodic hooks and rhythms...boundless energy and original blend of elements...Arnold excels in rhumba-boogies, quick shuffles, and deliberately mid-tempo drags; he gives his stories entertaining, close-up details, and his harp is recorded with glorious in-your-face presence." -Audio "Arnold hasn't lost anything to the years. He still blows his mouth-harp in the wah-wah riff style of his mentor Sonny Boy Williamson, and his vocals have grown deeper, darker and fuller with age... implying a hard-earned experience the teenaged Arnold could only guess at." -Washington Post "Veteran Chicago blues singer/harpist Arnold can swing from suave to raunchy in a heartbeat." -New Review Of Records "Chicago blues harpist and singer Billy Boy Arnold delivers the goods...distinctive." -Los Angeles Daily News "A gritty, expressive vocalist and harmonicat...jagged harmonica playing in the country-rooted style of Sonny Boy Williamson." -Request "Arnold is smoother and more powerful than ever. Highly recommended." -Jazz Times "In the hands of Billy Boy Arnold, the blues can sound as lively as a razor fight in a Mississippi juke joint. Matching the lilting drive of Chuck Berry with the ominous power of Muddy Waters, Arnold earns much respect for keeping the blues alive and well." -Option "Arnold is a powerful purveyor, innovator, and certified master of the Chicago blues sound created by Muddy Waters and Little Walter. Combining his soulful vocals with poignant harp riffs and crafty songwriting, Arnold's musicianship authenticates his place among the great blues harmonica players in history." -Blues Revue Source: Alligator Records - Billy Boy Arnold Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.