Earl Hooker
Biography
Earl Zebedee Hooker (January 15, 1930 – April 21, 1970) was a Chicago blues guitarist known for his slide guitar playing. Considered a "musician's musician", he performed with blues artists such as Sonny Boy Williamson II, Junior Wells, and John Lee Hooker and fronted his own bands. An early player of the electric guitar, Hooker was influenced by the modern urban styles of T-Bone Walker and Robert Nighthawk. He recorded several singles and albums as a bandleader and with other well-known artists. His "Blue Guitar", a slide guitar instrumental single, was popular in the Chicago area and was later overdubbed with vocals by Muddy Waters as "You Shook Me". In the late 1960s, Hooker began performing on the college and concert circuit and had several recording contracts. Just as his career was on an upswing, he died in 1970, at age 40, after a lifelong struggle with tuberculosis. His guitar playing has been acknowledged by many of his peers, including B. B. King, who commented, "to me he is the best of modern guitarists. Period. With the slide he was the best. It was nobody else like him, he was just one of a kind".
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

George Thorogood And The Destroyers
1977

The Chess Box
1988

History Of British Blues (Volume One)
1973

Whiskey & Wimmen (John Lee Hooker's Finest)
2017

The Chess Blues-Rock Songbook: The Classic Originals
1997

Tops
1988

One Fair Summer Evening
1988

I Couldn't Believe My Eyes
1973

Steady Rollin' Man
1973

Hunh!
1970

Don't Have To Worry
1969

Sweet Black Angel
1969

2 Bugs And A Roach
1969
Credited work
503 releases · 122 albums · active 1952–2025
- Performance · 1,155
- Other credits · 16
- Engineering · 2
Studios: Dimension Sound Studios, Boston · The Mixing Lab, Newton, Mass. · Sound Studios, Chicago · Vault Studios, Los Angeles
Frequent collaborators
- Various
- Junior Wells
- Muddy Waters
- John Lee Hooker
- Otis Rush
- "Johnny ""Big Moose"" Walker"
- Magic Sam
- Jimmy Witherspoon
