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Big walter horton biography channel


Big Walter Horton, a.k.a..

Born April 6, 1918, in Horn Lake, MS; died: Dec. 8, 1981, in Chicago, IL..

Big Walter Horton was a virtuoso blues harmonica player who, ironically, never achieved the fame of the renowned harpists he taught and inspired--including James Cotton, Little Walter Jacobs, and Rice Miller.

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Horton is remembered as a gentle man who never quite escaped poverty and poor health he was born into. Bruce Iglauer, who produced the 1972 record Big Walter Horton with Carey Bell, called him one of "only four great creative geniuses of modern blues harmonica," ranking him alongside Jacob, Miller, and John Lee 'Sonny Boy' Williamson.

Those three harp players were "recognized, honored and extensively recorded with their own bands," Iglauer wrote, but Horton remained relatively obscure at his death in 1981. "Perhaps ...

Walter Horton, known as Big Walter or Walter "Shakey" Horton, was an American blues harmonica player.

  • Little Walter is widely credited as the major innovator of electronically amplified blues harp playing, but Horton says he first played amplifed harp in 1940.
  • Big Walter Horton, a.k.a.
  • Walter Horton--also known as Big Walter Horton and "Shakey" Horton--was born in Horn Lake, MS, in 1917.
  • Explore Big Walter Horton's vinyl records and top albums.
  • this shy, withdrawn man (was) never aggressive enough to hustle a contract with a major record label. Or perhaps ... his harmonica is so subtle, so delicate, that it requires hard, concen