Leonard Chess (
March 12,
1917 -
October 16,
1969) was a record company executive, founder of
Chess Records. Born in
Poland, Chess was influential in the development of
electric blues. He and his brother,
Philip[?],were pivotal in the
Chicago nigtclub scene by
1947. They soon became associated with
Aristocrat Records[?], and moved the company closer to pure blues music with artists like
Muddy Waters,
Sunnyland Slim[?] and
Willie Dixon. In
1948, the Chess brothers took control of the company and renamed it Chess Records. "My Foolish Heart" (
Gene Ammons), "Rollin' Stone" (
Muddy Waters) and "That's All Right" (
Jimmy Rogers) showcased the company's new direction. Perhaps most influential of the early signees was
Little Walter[?], whose distinctive
harmonica-playing revolutionized the blues.
Chess contacted Sam Philips[?] (of Sun Records) to help find new artists. Philips found Howlin' Wolf, Bobby Bland, Rufus Thomas[?] and Dr. Isaiah Ross[?]. Of these, Howlin' Wolf became the most popular and influential on Chess Records at the time. Soon, more legendary artists joined up, including Bo Diddley and Sonny Boy Williamson[?]. In the 1950s, Chess Records' commercial success only grew with artists like The Moonglows, The Flamingos, Chuck Berry, Etta James, Fontella Bass[?], Koko Taylor[?], Little Milton[?], Laura Lee[?] and Tommy Tucker[?]. Leonard Chess died in 1969.
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License