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  1. The program's sponsor, Max Moore, began billing Miller as Sonny Boy Williamson, apparently in an attempt to capitalize on the fame of the well-known Chicago-based harmonica player and singer Sonny Boy Williamson (birth name John Lee Curtis Williamson, died 1948).

    • Who Was Sonny Boy Williamson II?
    • Who Came Up with The Lie?
    • What Happened to The Original Sonny Boy Williamson?
    • How Influential Was Sonny Boy Williamson II?

    Sonny Boy Williamson II, as he is now titled, is admired by musicians as esteemed as Van Morrison, Eric Clapton, and The Rolling Stonesfor his songwriting and his ability to conjure a rare and richly innovative tone from his harmonica. But he was one of the biggest rogues in music. The facts of his life are mired in mystery – his birthdates vary fr...

    It is simply not known who came up with the deceit. Some people have claimed it was the musician’s idea, some claim that Interstate Grocery Owner Max Moore came up with the plan as a ruse to market his goods to African-Americans who liked the blues. The original Sonny Boy Williamson was already a well-known figure (he had scored a hit with his song...

    Perhaps everyone involved believed that because the show was broadcast in the South it would not come to the notice of the real Sonny Boy Williamson – John Lee Curtis Williamson – but word of the deception reached him, and the Chicago-based musician went to Arkansas in 1942 to confront the man who had stolen his name. Lockwood was later quoted as s...

    With his namesake dead, the new Sonny Boy Williamson’s career went from strength to strength. In the 50s he recorded a host of blues classics, including “Cross My Heart,” “Eyesight To the Blind,” “Nine Below Zero,” “One Way Out,” and “Bye Bye Bird.” Some of his songs, such as “Don’t Start Me Talkin’,” “Keep It To Yourself,” and “Take Your Hands Out...

    • 2 min
  2. Mar 11, 2012 · Sonny Boy Williamson II. Instrument: Harmonica Born: March 11, 1897 Died: May 25, 1965

  3. Mar 11, 2018 · He returned to Helena in 1965 and rented a room at a boarding house at 427 ½ Elm Street, telling everyone who asked that he had “come home to die.” He resumed playing King Biscuit Time, now broadcast from KFFA’s studio atop the Helena National Bank Building.

  4. Back in the US, Sonny Boy talked about returning to Europe, however his dream died with him in May 1965. 'Don't start me to talking, I might tell everything I know.' Sonny Boy Williamson II

  5. Sonny Boy Williamson was, in many ways, the ultimate blues legend. By the time of his death in 1965, he had been around long enough to have played with Robert Johnson at the start of his career and Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Robbie Robertson at the end of it.

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  7. Sonny Boy Williamson II was one of the most influential blues harmonica players, singers, and songwriters of the mid-twentieth century. His history is mysterious, but nothing is more uncertain than Sonny Boy Williamson II’s real name. The enigmatic harmonica player has been called Aleck Miller, Alex Miller, Aleck Ford, Alex Ford, and Rice (probably a […]