News Archive

New pictures added
Monday, 28. July 2003 - 07:40


Pictures of the following show were added to the Picture Gallery:

Source: Julien Benz

Chuck Berry Japan Tour 2003
Thursday, 24. July 2003 - 10:47


05.08.03 - Tokyo, Japan - Akasaka Blitz
06.08.03 -
Tokyo, Japan - Akasaka Blitz
07.08.03 -
Tokyo, Japan - Akasaka Blitz
08.08.03 - Osaka, Japan - Hatch Hall
09.08.03 - Fukuoka, Japan - Zepp

Ticket details: 
www.hipjpn.co.jp

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Chuck Berry: Creator of Rock and Roll
Friday, 18. July 2003 - 12:28


Chuck Berry: Creator of Rock and Roll

By Gwen Gibson, May-June 2003

Raised to the beat of Baptist hymns, Chuck Berry ignited the rock and roll 
revolution with "Maybellene," his first hit.

As a child, he was steeped in gospel music and Baptist hymns. As a young man, he 
absorbed the down-home blues of Muddy Waters, the smooth love songs of Nat King Cole, 
the phrasing of guitarists of T-Bone Walker, Charlie Christian and Elmore James 
and the fascinating rhythms of boogie, swing, soul and "hillbilly" music.

Chuck Berry drew on all of these influences to create his special brand of the hard-driving, 
youth-focused music called rock 'n' roll. Other black innovators, notably Little Richard 
and Bo Diddley, contributed to the advent of rock. But Berry's first hit, "Maybellene," 
released in 1955 on the Chess label, was the lightning bolt that ignited the rock and 
roll revolution. As John Lennon put it: "If you tried to give rock 'n' roll another 
name, you might call it Chuck Berry."

Fiercely energetic, Berry wrote and recorded a series of hits between 1955 and 1962 
that formed the bedrock of the rock 'n' roll repertoire. These included "Roll Over 
Beethoven," "Brown-Eyed Handsome Man," Rock and Roll Music," "Johnny B. Goode," "Sweet 
Little Sixteen," and more.

Berry's fast-moving career was derailed in 1962 by his troubles with the law. But the 
76-year-old rock 'n' roll icon has never stopped writing, recording, or performing.

These days, he doesn't "go on tour," says Dick Alen, Berry's long-time friend and agent. 
"He goes out when the dates are right for him. He's well off; he has taken care of his 
own money. He doesn't need to work."

Berry still performs at Blueberry Hill, a club in St. Louis, and he has "special" dates 
scheduled into 2004, Alen adds.

One recent special date found Berry performing in Washington, D.C., with Aretha Franklin, 
Lee Ann Womack, Richard Chamberlain and the National Symphony Orchestra in the annual 
July 4 concert on the west lawn of the United States Capitol.

Wearing a shining red-sequined shirt, the still tall and trim "poet laureate of rock" 
had the crowd rockin' and rollin' with him the moment he pranced on stage. His act was 
short—only two numbers. But he executed his famous "duck walk," crouching down and 
"motorvatin'" across the stage on one leg while playing piercing, rapid-fire riffs 
on his electric guitar.

Charles Edward Anderson Berry was born October 18, 1926, in St. Louis, Missouri, and 
grew up in a close-knit, church-going family. His mother, who played piano, and his 
father, a carpenter, often sang Baptist hymns at home. "Long before I could walk, 
I was patting my foot to those Baptist beats," Berry writes in his autobiography, 
published in 1987 by Harmony Books. "Sometimes I wonder if that was the roots of my 
rockin' rhythm."

Self-taught, Berry was playing a six-string Spanish guitar in high school shows and 
backyard parties by his early teens. But he was precocious, and at age 17 he had his 
first run-in with the law when he and two friends stole a car on a weekend romp. For 
this, Berry spent three years in a Missouri reformatory.

Released, he went "straight," working as a janitor, carpenter, and hair dresser. But 
Berry, a born showman, was also a singer, songwriter, guitarist, and comedian, and he 
was soon fronting a trio with the great boogie-woogie pianist Johnnie Johnson and the 
wonderful drummer Ebby Hardy playing behind him. The trio played weekend gigs in 
St. Louis bars for several years.

Berry's big break came in 1955 when he went to the Palladium club in Chicago to hear 
his idol, Muddy Waters. The old blues man advised the young guitarist to take his 
material to Chess Records. A week later Berry presented owner Leonard Chess with a 
tape of four new songs: "Thirty Days," "You Can't Catch Me," "Wee Wee Hours," and a 
jumping country tune called "Ida May," that Berry wrote as a black man's satire of 
hillbilly music.

Chess released "Ida May," renamed "Maybellene," and created the first Chuck Berry 
blockbuster. Berry's career was on the fast track until 1962, when he was imprisoned 
for violating the Mann Act for driving an underage white girl across state lines. 
The often-sensational press coverage of his trial, which was marked by racism, left 
Berry, in his words, "averse to ever giving interviews."

He used his 20 months in federal prison to earn his high school diploma and to write 
five more rock standards: "No Particular Place to Go," "Nadine," "Tulane," "You Can 
Never Tell," and "Promised Land."

Meanwhile, Berry was becoming the "sung hero" of the rock world. The Beatles recorded 
"Roll Over Beethoven," taking it to the top of the charts and giving Berry highly 
deserved credit. The Rolling Stones drew heavily from his catalog. And the Beach Boys 
rewrote "Sweet Little Sixteen" as "Surfin' U.S.A." to win their first million seller.

Berry was soon back in full swing—touring, recording, making movies, and television 
appearances. In 1972, he scored a number one hit with his impish rendition of the 
ribald song "My Ding-A-Ling," recorded live at an arts festival in Coventry, England.

In 1979, Berry was imprisoned for a third time for income tax evasion. He used his 
four months in California's Lompoc Prison Camp to complete his autobiography.

Alen paints this flamboyant old rocker as "a very private person who goes to clubs, 
but doesn't drink, doesn't hang out with the bands, and doesn't go back stage to have 
his picture taken."

While he admits to many affairs, Berry has been married since 1948 to Themetta "Toddy" 
Suggs. They have three daughters, a son and a dozen grandchildren.

Alen says Berry is working on a new album in his studios at Berry Park, the estate in 
Wentzville, Missouri, outside St. Louis, that he has owned since 1957. Once an amusement 
park, complete with nightclub, Berry Park is used today, says Alen, only for picnics, 
private parties and other special events.

Through all of his triumphs and troubles, Berry has remained philosophical. A long 
original poem on the last pages of his autobiography ends with this quatrain:

"Some days are like hours of music
Some songs are like stories you'd tell
Some views that came down from the hippies
are now classics, like rock is as well."

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Chuck Berry in St. Louis, MO
Wednesday, 16. July 2003 - 09:15


CHUCK BERRY
14.08.03 - ST. LOUIS, MO - BLUEBERRY HILL


TICKETS


Prices
:
General Admission: 25,00 $

Category details
:

General Admission: Unreserved Seating

Tickets available through
www.metrotix.com

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Fats Domino scheduled to perform two shows in Bay St. Louis, MS
Saturday, 12. July 2003 - 14:09


The "Fat Man" hardly performs shows outside of his hometown New Orleans, LA these days. 
In August, there will be two exceptional performances in Bay St. Louis, MS:

29.08.03 - Bay St. Louis, MS - Casino Magic
30.08.03 -
Bay St. Louis, MS - Casino Magic 

Internet Onsale Info
Onsale to General Public:
Thu, 07/17/03, 10:00am
www.ticketmaster.com

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Chuck Berry France Tour 2003: Pictures added
Tuesday, 08. July 2003 - 19:43


Heiko Baumann sent us his pictures of the show in Amneville. 
Visit the Picture Gallery and enjoy!

Sources: Heiko Baumann

Chuck Berry France Tour 2003: Pictures added
Sunday, 06. July 2003 - 10:51


I am back home from Chuck Berry's France Tour 2003. There are 
pictures, set lists and more to come. Today we start with some pictures, 
taken in Divonne. Those pictures were just added to the Picture Gallery.

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Chuck Berry, Little Richard in Trenton, NJ
Sunday, 06. July 2003 - 10:51


CHUCK BERRY, LITTLE RICHARD
13.09.03 - TRENTON, NJ - SOVEREIGN BANK ARENA


TICKETS


Prices
:
1st category: 75,00 $
2nd category: 55,00 $
3rd category: 45,00 $
4th category: 35,00 $

Category details
:

1st to 4th: Reserved Seating

Tickets available through
www.ticketmaster.com

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Chuck Berry, James Brown, Robert Cray Band, Walter "Wolfman" Washington, Marcia Ball, The Holmes Brothers in Bridgeport, CT
Sunday, 06. July 2003 - 10:51


CHUCK BERRY, JAMES BROWN, ROBERT CRAY BAND, WALTER "WOLFMAN" WASHINGTON, MARCIA BALL, THE HOLMES BROTHERS
30.08.03 - BRIDGEPORT, CT - BRIDGEPORT BLUES FESTIVAL


TICKETS


Prices
:
General Admission: 50,00 $

Category details
:

General Admission: Standing

Tickets available through
www.terrapinpresents.net

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Chuck Berry, Little Richard in Atlanta, GA
Sunday, 06. July 2003 - 10:51


CHUCK BERRY, LITTLE RICHARD
20.08.03 - ATLANTA, GA - CHASTAIN PARK AMPHITHEATRE


TICKETS


Prices
:
1st category: SOLD OUT
2nd category: SOLD OUT
3rd category: 46,87 $
4th category: SOLD OUT
5th category: SOLD OUT
6th category: 30,82 $
7th category: 24,40 $

Category details
:

1st to 6th: Reserved Seating
       7th: Unreserved Seating

Tickets available through
www.ticketmaster.com

Source: Wolfgang Guhl

Chuck Berry in St. Louis, MO
Sunday, 06. July 2003 - 10:51


CHUCK BERRY
16.07.03 - ST. LOUIS, MO - BLUEBERRY HILL


TICKETS


Prices
:
General Admission: 25,00 $

Category details
:

General Admission: Unreserved Seating

Tickets available through
www.metrotix.com

Source: Wolfgang Guhl