Lonnie Mack, Singer and Guitarist Who Pioneered Blues-Rock, Dies at 74, A artist whose active recordings afflicted guitar players including Stevie Ray Vaughan has died in Nashville, Tennessee. Lonnie Mack was 74.
Alligator Almanac Label said in a account that Mack died on Thursday of accustomed causes. He lived in Smithville, Tennessee, about 65 afar east of Nashville.
Born Lonnie McIntosh in West Harrison, Indiana, Mack played sessions for almanac labels in Cincinnati with dejection and R&B greats such as James Brown, Hank Ballard and Freddie King.
His 1963 recording of Chuck Berry’s “Memphis,” became a radio hit, and he followed that with “Wham!”, which aggressive the appellation “whammy bar” for the tremolo bar he had on his Gibson Flying V.
Alligator Almanac Label said in a account that Mack died on Thursday of accustomed causes. He lived in Smithville, Tennessee, about 65 afar east of Nashville.
Lonnie Mack, Singer and Guitarist Who Pioneered Blues-Rock, Dies at 74 |
Born Lonnie McIntosh in West Harrison, Indiana, Mack played sessions for almanac labels in Cincinnati with dejection and R&B greats such as James Brown, Hank Ballard and Freddie King.
His 1963 recording of Chuck Berry’s “Memphis,” became a radio hit, and he followed that with “Wham!”, which aggressive the appellation “whammy bar” for the tremolo bar he had on his Gibson Flying V.
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